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fair point hmmpic.twitter.com/IotwN7aUdf
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How many depleted uranium rounds were even used? I thought it was mainly for anti-tank stuff, and there weren't many tanks facing off against us soldiers in iraq after the first few months.
Many kinds of AP rounds for 20-40mm autocannons in use with lesser US and NATO armor, designed against Soviet tank waves in Fulda Gap. Highly likely that huge Cold War stockpiles are dumped by shooting up random houses and dunes in Mid.East to make room for buying new stuff.
I believe it’s a toxic metal even without the radioactivity.
heavy metal poisoning? afaik the liver cant cleanse some metals and the buildup carries over
I know a retired Special forces guy. He carried DU rounds slung over his back and got spine cancer. His buddy who carried them slung by his belly got stomach cancer. Not proof, but it makes me go hmmm.
Hold up. DU rounds are anti-vehicle. The smallest I can quickly google are 25mm for the Bradley and LAV-25. They're heavy, and not the kind of thing an SF guy would be humping around. Not saying you're lying, but it sounds funny.
i'm sure this is totally unrelated decaying nerve and mustard agent stockpiles seeping into groundwater is perfectly healthypic.twitter.com/BiqFoQeYvY
Didn’t read the article but I think the headline frames “organs spilling out of their abdomens” as some kind of crazy freak of nature but gastroschisis and omphalocele are pretty well-described birth defects that can occur spontaneously, no glowing green goo required
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