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Tuesday, 10/19/2010 11:02:40 PM

Tuesday, October 19, 2010 11:02:40 PM

Post# of 23480
CNN concurs with Gregg Hall: Oil lurks 6 inches below top beach sand
http://www.opednews.com/populum/linkframe.php?linkid=120443
( You will want to click on the link above for the story and embedded links to videos and websites as only the text is available below. This is a HUGE step here folks! CNN agrees with Gregg Hall and acknowledged his reports from videos on YouTube. )

Mainstream news has intervened in Breaking News to help break mass public denial about the Gulf Operation by reporting what Pensacola reporter, "Pcola" Gregg Hall has been finding daily, denied by government and local tourism official. CNN reports finding layers of oil and tarballs from the Deepwater Horizon BP #oilspill buried in the sand in Florida and Alabama. (See CNN report (video))

Hazardous beaches and waters


Skytruth recently received this report on its Gulf Oil Spill Tracker site:

"We live on Navarre beach Florida. While walking along the Santa Rosa Sounds yesterday 10.14.2010, I say many, many tar balls that had washed up on the beach of the Sound. There were still others attached to the sea weed still in the water."

Jeff Rense recently interviewed Hall who spoke about caked oil being found that is as moist as a "sticky chocolate brownie just out of the oven."

Hall also documents that clean-up crews have not been allowed to dig below six inches. Their shovels were then taken so they could not dig to clean the beaches.

Workers have been filling buckets of poison using their hands and kitty litter scoopers to "clean" the beaches upon which children are encouraged to play, according to Hall.

In CNN's report, Rob Marciano interviews research scientists, one of whom states that the "reality" is that oil is still there.

As Hall and Rense discussed, crude toxins are seeping into Gulf Coast water supplies. This means deadly toxins are moving into homes, into bathing and drinking water.

Public health realities

Gulf beaches and water are hazardous to public health, as explained in the Rense-Hall interview. (rense.gsradio.net:8080/rense/special/rense_G_Hall_101110.mp3)

Hall is among many Gulf Coast residents experiencing numbness of extremities, a symptom of neurotoxins. His feet are numb. He tested positive for six of the nine VOCs. (Also see report from Gulf Coast resident "Elizabeth Brown" who became ill after the Gulf Operation and has "dead arms" plus is internally bleeding: Censored Gulf news: Chemically raped, bleeding mom mourns bayou, Examiner)

In October, an Examiner reader commented after reading about Brown, the chemically rape Bayou Chico mom who is internally bleeding and experiencing numb arms:

"ugh...... these are my very symptoms. i've started taking some heavy metal detox pills that are helping curb the nose bleeds. my heart cries out to her. i hope she will take dr. ott's letter to the doctors with her. i've heard one report of a doc. in daytona reading and following her instructions. i hope we can get some help down here soon. but so many people are scared of the system these days."



Florida Oil Spill Law has posted three videos of Doctor Harbut entitled, "Cancer Specialist: Endocrine disruptors, mutagens in Gulf are a 900 pound elephant in the living room."

Hall and Rense discuss the tragic and frustrating apathy of American environmental organizations apparently not facing reality.

"Where are the environmentalists? Where are the environmental groups? Where are the people who believe in what we are trying to do? Where are the people who could support what we are doing?" asked Hall.

Even in Halls' recent report of body parts washing ashore as discussed in the Rense-Hall interview, , there has been little public response much less outrage and investigations called. (See: Censored Gulf news: Human body parts washed-up, covered-up (video)

"Everyone wants someone else to fight the fight for them," said Hall, inviting the reader to go down to the Gulf Coast and walk it with him.

"We spend every nickel we have. I could put everything I own in the back of my truck with 150,000 miles on it," said Hall. "Where are the people who could help?"

Perhaps the CNN report will influence Americans to better understand the gravity of the Gulf ecocide and genocide that has been ongoing for almost six months.