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On This Day

Shortly after midnight on December 3, 1984, about 40 tons of deadly gas leaked out of a pesticide factory in the central Indian city of Bhopal. The highly toxic methyl isocyanate (MIC) – used as an intermediary chemical for making pesticides – drifted across the city, exposing nearly half a million residents.

npr.org

No one knows exactly how many thousands of people died. Union Carbide put the number at 3,800. Municipal workers who collected bodies, loading them on to lorries to be buried in mass graves or burned on funeral pyres, say they handled at least 15,000 corpses. Based on numbers of burial shrouds sold in the city, survivors make the conservative claim that about 8,000 people died in the first week alone. But the dying has never stopped.

The Guardian.com

'Many more people would've lost their lives that night but for the valour and courage of The Railwaymen'

Union Carbide shut down the site and left it to rust. It has never been cleaned up and so the poisoning continues. In 1999, testing of groundwater and well-water near the site revealed mercury levels up to 6m times greater than what is accepted as safe by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

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In 2001, the Michigan-based Dow Chemical Company bought Union Carbide, acquiring its assets and liabilities. Dow, however, has steadfastly refused to clean up the Bhopal site. Nor has it provided safe drinking water, compensated the victims or shared with the Indian medical community any information it holds on the toxic effects of MIC.
 
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Two years since the Russian Army blundered into Ukraine.


Ukrainian authorities are cagey about their losses but independent estimates reckon 70,000 troops and 30,000 civilians killed, while Russia admits to losing 350,000 soldiers. Almost half a million dead.
 
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It was fifty years ago today when the United Nations General Assembly voted to adopt Resolution 3379, which determined that Zionism “is a form of racism and racial discrimination.” The vote passed with 72 nations in favor, 35 against, and 32 abstentions. Those who voted yes included all the Arab nations, as well as those in the Communist bloc, plus others seeking favor from the Soviet Union. Only a handful of democracies, among them the United States, Canada, Australia, and most of Western Europe, opposed it.
 
On this day, 6,000 years ago, my two Corgi ancestors walked off of the Ark onto solid ground!!
 
It was fifty years ago today when the United Nations General Assembly voted to adopt Resolution 3379, which determined that Zionism “is a form of racism and racial discrimination.” The vote passed with 72 nations in favor, 35 against, and 32 abstentions. Those who voted yes included all the Arab nations, as well as those in the Communist bloc, plus others seeking favor from the Soviet Union. Only a handful of democracies, among them the United States, Canada, Australia, and most of Western Europe, opposed it.
Would it not be tidier to keep all your Zion bashing in one place ? It seems to leak into most threads.
 
In 1965, the U.S. Army’s first major military operation of the Vietnam War began with the start of the five-day Battle of Ia Drang. If you haven't read the book, watch the movie 'We Were Soldiers'.
 
On Nov. 28, 1925, the Grand Ole Opry (known then as the ‘WSM Barn Dance’) debuted on radio station WSM in Nashville, Tennessee; it continues today as the longest-running radio broadcast in U.S. history.

 
It was fifty years ago today when the United Nations General Assembly voted to adopt Resolution 3379, which determined that Zionism “is a form of racism and racial discrimination.” The vote passed with 72 nations in favor, 35 against, and 32 abstentions. Those who voted yes included all the Arab nations, as well as those in the Communist bloc, plus others seeking favor from the Soviet Union. Only a handful of democracies, among them the United States, Canada, Australia, and most of Western Europe, opposed it.

And 78 years ago today the United Nations General Assembly approved the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine.[31]
 
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