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#silkwood — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #silkwood, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Heute ist der Todestag von Karen Gay #Silkwood, (28) *19.02.1946 in Longview, Texas; sie kam bei einem Autounfall am 13.11.1974 auf der Route 74 ums Leben. Sie hatte Beweise in Papierform über Unregelmäßigkeiten in einer Atomanlage, die nach dem Unfall »verschwunden waren«. Der Prozess um ihren Tod dauerte Jahrzehnte.

  2. Good ol' #KerrMcGee. You remember them, right? #KarenSilkwood's employer!

    Karen #Silkwood's sudden death unpacked in ABC documentary

    The four-part podcast unearths never-before-heard audio tapes.

    ByDoc Louallen
    November 14, 2024

    "Fifty years ago, the death of a 28-year-old #plutonium plant worker and whistleblower in Oklahoma -- a death many found mysterious and sparked decades of speculation -- shocked the nation.

    "The official story was that Karen Silkwood died in a one-car crash on Nov. 13, 1974. She was on her way to meet a New York Times journalist, reportedly to hand over documents she'd secretly been collecting at her job at a #NuclearFacility. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded that Silkwood fell asleep at the wheel -- possibly under the influence of prescribed drugs --- drove off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and died.

    "'We’ve never believed it,' Mike Boettcher said of the official narrative. Boettcher and his reporting partner Bob Sands, both veteran Oklahoma journalists, say many in Oklahoma speculate that Karen Silkwood may have died for what she knew.

    "Silkwood's story has become widely known, inspiring several books, articles, and a major motion picture.
    Silkwood worked at a nuclear fuel production plant that manufactured #plutonium fuel rods to power a new type of nuclear reactor, which was part of a multi-million dollar experiment to enhance #nuclear energy. When she noticed what she felt were #unsafe working conditions -- such as leaks, spills and co-workers frequently getting #contaminated with #RadioactiveMaterial -- she spoke up and tried to make improvements.

    "'Karen became nuclear energy's first #whistleblower, though the term whistleblower was just starting to be used,' Boettcher said. 'This was at a time when the idea of someone inside of a big corporation exposing alleged misdeeds was shocking.'

    "Silkwood's allegations, contamination, and untimely death sparked an investigation by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, an FBI inquiry, a civil lawsuit, several appeals, a congressional hearing and two appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court."

    Read more:
    abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/k
    #CoverUp #NoNukes #NuclearIndustry #BigOilAndGas #WhoKilledKarenSilkwood #NuclearPowerCorruptionAndLies

  3. Good ol' #KerrMcGee. You remember them, right? #KarenSilkwood's employer!

    Karen #Silkwood's sudden death unpacked in ABC documentary

    The four-part podcast unearths never-before-heard audio tapes.

    ByDoc Louallen
    November 14, 2024

    "Fifty years ago, the death of a 28-year-old #plutonium plant worker and whistleblower in Oklahoma -- a death many found mysterious and sparked decades of speculation -- shocked the nation.

    "The official story was that Karen Silkwood died in a one-car crash on Nov. 13, 1974. She was on her way to meet a New York Times journalist, reportedly to hand over documents she'd secretly been collecting at her job at a #NuclearFacility. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded that Silkwood fell asleep at the wheel -- possibly under the influence of prescribed drugs --- drove off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and died.

    "'We’ve never believed it,' Mike Boettcher said of the official narrative. Boettcher and his reporting partner Bob Sands, both veteran Oklahoma journalists, say many in Oklahoma speculate that Karen Silkwood may have died for what she knew.

    "Silkwood's story has become widely known, inspiring several books, articles, and a major motion picture.
    Silkwood worked at a nuclear fuel production plant that manufactured #plutonium fuel rods to power a new type of nuclear reactor, which was part of a multi-million dollar experiment to enhance #nuclear energy. When she noticed what she felt were #unsafe working conditions -- such as leaks, spills and co-workers frequently getting #contaminated with #RadioactiveMaterial -- she spoke up and tried to make improvements.

    "'Karen became nuclear energy's first #whistleblower, though the term whistleblower was just starting to be used,' Boettcher said. 'This was at a time when the idea of someone inside of a big corporation exposing alleged misdeeds was shocking.'

    "Silkwood's allegations, contamination, and untimely death sparked an investigation by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, an FBI inquiry, a civil lawsuit, several appeals, a congressional hearing and two appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court."

    Read more:
    abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/k
    #CoverUp #NoNukes #NuclearIndustry #BigOilAndGas #WhoKilledKarenSilkwood #NuclearPowerCorruptionAndLies

  4. Good ol' #KerrMcGee. You remember them, right? #KarenSilkwood's employer!

    Karen #Silkwood's sudden death unpacked in ABC documentary

    The four-part podcast unearths never-before-heard audio tapes.

    ByDoc Louallen
    November 14, 2024

    "Fifty years ago, the death of a 28-year-old #plutonium plant worker and whistleblower in Oklahoma -- a death many found mysterious and sparked decades of speculation -- shocked the nation.

    "The official story was that Karen Silkwood died in a one-car crash on Nov. 13, 1974. She was on her way to meet a New York Times journalist, reportedly to hand over documents she'd secretly been collecting at her job at a #NuclearFacility. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded that Silkwood fell asleep at the wheel -- possibly under the influence of prescribed drugs --- drove off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and died.

    "'We’ve never believed it,' Mike Boettcher said of the official narrative. Boettcher and his reporting partner Bob Sands, both veteran Oklahoma journalists, say many in Oklahoma speculate that Karen Silkwood may have died for what she knew.

    "Silkwood's story has become widely known, inspiring several books, articles, and a major motion picture.
    Silkwood worked at a nuclear fuel production plant that manufactured #plutonium fuel rods to power a new type of nuclear reactor, which was part of a multi-million dollar experiment to enhance #nuclear energy. When she noticed what she felt were #unsafe working conditions -- such as leaks, spills and co-workers frequently getting #contaminated with #RadioactiveMaterial -- she spoke up and tried to make improvements.

    "'Karen became nuclear energy's first #whistleblower, though the term whistleblower was just starting to be used,' Boettcher said. 'This was at a time when the idea of someone inside of a big corporation exposing alleged misdeeds was shocking.'

    "Silkwood's allegations, contamination, and untimely death sparked an investigation by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, an FBI inquiry, a civil lawsuit, several appeals, a congressional hearing and two appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court."

    Read more:
    abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/k
    #CoverUp #NoNukes #NuclearIndustry #BigOilAndGas #WhoKilledKarenSilkwood #NuclearPowerCorruptionAndLies

  5. Good ol' #KerrMcGee. You remember them, right? #KarenSilkwood's employer!

    Karen #Silkwood's sudden death unpacked in ABC documentary

    The four-part podcast unearths never-before-heard audio tapes.

    ByDoc Louallen
    November 14, 2024

    "Fifty years ago, the death of a 28-year-old #plutonium plant worker and whistleblower in Oklahoma -- a death many found mysterious and sparked decades of speculation -- shocked the nation.

    "The official story was that Karen Silkwood died in a one-car crash on Nov. 13, 1974. She was on her way to meet a New York Times journalist, reportedly to hand over documents she'd secretly been collecting at her job at a #NuclearFacility. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded that Silkwood fell asleep at the wheel -- possibly under the influence of prescribed drugs --- drove off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and died.

    "'We’ve never believed it,' Mike Boettcher said of the official narrative. Boettcher and his reporting partner Bob Sands, both veteran Oklahoma journalists, say many in Oklahoma speculate that Karen Silkwood may have died for what she knew.

    "Silkwood's story has become widely known, inspiring several books, articles, and a major motion picture.
    Silkwood worked at a nuclear fuel production plant that manufactured #plutonium fuel rods to power a new type of nuclear reactor, which was part of a multi-million dollar experiment to enhance #nuclear energy. When she noticed what she felt were #unsafe working conditions -- such as leaks, spills and co-workers frequently getting #contaminated with #RadioactiveMaterial -- she spoke up and tried to make improvements.

    "'Karen became nuclear energy's first #whistleblower, though the term whistleblower was just starting to be used,' Boettcher said. 'This was at a time when the idea of someone inside of a big corporation exposing alleged misdeeds was shocking.'

    "Silkwood's allegations, contamination, and untimely death sparked an investigation by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, an FBI inquiry, a civil lawsuit, several appeals, a congressional hearing and two appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court."

    Read more:
    abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/k
    #CoverUp #NoNukes #NuclearIndustry #BigOilAndGas #WhoKilledKarenSilkwood #NuclearPowerCorruptionAndLies

  6. Good ol' #KerrMcGee. You remember them, right? #KarenSilkwood's employer!

    Karen #Silkwood's sudden death unpacked in ABC documentary

    The four-part podcast unearths never-before-heard audio tapes.

    ByDoc Louallen
    November 14, 2024

    "Fifty years ago, the death of a 28-year-old #plutonium plant worker and whistleblower in Oklahoma -- a death many found mysterious and sparked decades of speculation -- shocked the nation.

    "The official story was that Karen Silkwood died in a one-car crash on Nov. 13, 1974. She was on her way to meet a New York Times journalist, reportedly to hand over documents she'd secretly been collecting at her job at a #NuclearFacility. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded that Silkwood fell asleep at the wheel -- possibly under the influence of prescribed drugs --- drove off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and died.

    "'We’ve never believed it,' Mike Boettcher said of the official narrative. Boettcher and his reporting partner Bob Sands, both veteran Oklahoma journalists, say many in Oklahoma speculate that Karen Silkwood may have died for what she knew.

    "Silkwood's story has become widely known, inspiring several books, articles, and a major motion picture.
    Silkwood worked at a nuclear fuel production plant that manufactured #plutonium fuel rods to power a new type of nuclear reactor, which was part of a multi-million dollar experiment to enhance #nuclear energy. When she noticed what she felt were #unsafe working conditions -- such as leaks, spills and co-workers frequently getting #contaminated with #RadioactiveMaterial -- she spoke up and tried to make improvements.

    "'Karen became nuclear energy's first #whistleblower, though the term whistleblower was just starting to be used,' Boettcher said. 'This was at a time when the idea of someone inside of a big corporation exposing alleged misdeeds was shocking.'

    "Silkwood's allegations, contamination, and untimely death sparked an investigation by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, an FBI inquiry, a civil lawsuit, several appeals, a congressional hearing and two appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court."

    Read more:
    abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/k
    #CoverUp #NoNukes #NuclearIndustry #BigOilAndGas #WhoKilledKarenSilkwood #NuclearPowerCorruptionAndLies

  7. One of the first observers to recognize the impact of NSA’s capabilities in the emerging digital landscape was #David #Burnham,
    -- a pioneering investigative journalist and author who passed away earlier this month at 91 years of age.

    While the obituary that ran at his old home,
    The New York Times, rightly emphasized Burnham’s ground-breaking investigations of police corruption and the shoddy safety standards of the nuclear power industry
    (depicted, respectively, in the films “#Serpico” and “#Silkwood”),

    those in the digital rights world are especially appreciative of his prescience when it came to the issues we care about deeply.

    eff.org/deeplinks/2024/10/appr

  8. @uthark They did a decent job telling her story back in 1983. The role of #KarenSilkwood was played by Meryl Streep.

    Movie: #Silkwood (1983)

    Synopsis

    The story of Karen Silkwood, a metallurgy worker at a plutonium processing plant who was purposefully contaminated, psychologically tortured and possibly murdered to prevent her from exposing blatant worker safety violations at the plant.

    justwatch.com/us/movie/silkwoo

    #whistleblower #Whistleblowers

  9. Some of the stories I'll be posting about later today...

    - #Radiation release in #Khabarovsk #Russia
    - #Canadian government blocking #IJC action on #Selenium poisoning from mines -- affecting #FirstNations downstream
    - How a case involving #MorningSickness drugs and #BirthDefects was thrown out of court because of a loophole that #corporations are taking advantage of
    - #Boeing #whistleblower #JohnBarnett did not sound like a person who was suicidal. Sounds like he was "#Silkwood-ed"
    - Speaking of whistleblowers, have you heard about #Trump's revenge against #JulianAssange?

    Tune in for these stories and more...!

  10. Recently I was adjusting my son’s parental control on his tablet, and thought ya know I guess I really should just allow my iCloud.com email (that I don’t really use) to make me more findable for messsages and FaceTime.

    Not even 47 hours later I r had four scams texted to me and randomly added to some crazy group. Uh no. We’l just leave that stupid thing turned off now. Yikes.

    #iCloud #iMessage #scammy #INeedAShower #silkwood #Apple

  11. Recently I was adjusting my son’s parental control on his tablet, and thought ya know I guess I really should just allow my iCloud.com email (that I don’t really use) to make me more findable for messsages and FaceTime.

    Not even 47 hours later I r had four scams texted to me and randomly added to some crazy group. Uh no. We’l just leave that stupid thing turned off now. Yikes.

    #iCloud #iMessage #scammy #INeedAShower #silkwood #Apple

  12. Recently I was adjusting my son’s parental control on his tablet, and thought ya know I guess I really should just allow my iCloud.com email (that I don’t really use) to make me more findable for messsages and FaceTime.

    Not even 47 hours later I r had four scams texted to me and randomly added to some crazy group. Uh no. We’l just leave that stupid thing turned off now. Yikes.

    #iCloud #iMessage #scammy #INeedAShower #silkwood #Apple

  13. Recently I was adjusting my son’s parental control on his tablet, and thought ya know I guess I really should just allow my iCloud.com email (that I don’t really use) to make me more findable for messsages and FaceTime.

    Not even 47 hours later I r had four scams texted to me and randomly added to some crazy group. Uh no. We’l just leave that stupid thing turned off now. Yikes.

    #iCloud #iMessage #scammy #INeedAShower #silkwood #Apple

  14. Recently I was adjusting my son’s parental control on his tablet, and thought ya know I guess I really should just allow my iCloud.com email (that I don’t really use) to make me more findable for messsages and FaceTime.

    Not even 47 hours later I r had four scams texted to me and randomly added to some crazy group. Uh no. We’l just leave that stupid thing turned off now. Yikes.

    #iCloud #iMessage #scammy #INeedAShower #silkwood #Apple

  15. "It was 49 years ago when a nuclear fuel production facility near Crescent, made famous by the movie "Silkwood," shut down. To this day, records show that radioactive material is still present."

    #Oklahoma #nuclear #Silkwood #NuclearPower #NuclearWaste

    koco.com/article/oklahoma-kare

  16. Roughly two months out from the #US national #election, & I've half a plan for how to #vote without bringing the #Coronavirus back home.

    It involves lots of #PPE, a 20-minute walk, a train ride, & timing everything so I show up right at opening of early #voting ... & possibly a #Silkwood / #TwelveMonkies decontamination before getting near anyone when I return.

    It can be done.

    A bit much? Not with the #Dallas transmission rate, & with how few people I see outside my window in masks.

    #COVID19