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dixiegrrrrl

(60,011 posts)
Tue Jan 17, 2012, 04:13 PM Jan 2012

A book that may be too scary to read:

The Plutonium Files.
by Eileen Welsome
Pub date: October 10, 2000

IN 2000 I would have have been VERY skeptical, thinking incidents as the Tuskegee experiments, or the famous
Buck vs Bell case which revealed a systematic practice of forced sterilization of the mentally ill, were all "behind us"
and were aberrations of a norm.
Until I saw this book.

Here is the blurb from Amazon:

In a Massachusetts school, seventy-three disabled children were spoon fed radioactive isotopes along with their morning oatmeal....In an upstate New York hospital, an eighteen-year-old woman, believing she was being treated for a pituitary disorder, was injected with plutonium by Manhattan Project doctors....At a Tennessee prenatal clinic, 829 pregnant women were served "vitamin cocktails"--in truth, drinks containing radioactive iron--as part of their prenatal treatment.
In 1945, the seismic power of atomic energy was already well known to researchers, but the effects of radiation on human beings were not.
Fearful that plutonium would cause a cancer epidemic among workers, Manhattan Project doctors embarked on a human experiment that was as chilling as it was closely guarded: the systematic injection of unsuspecting Americans with radioactive plutonium.
In this shocking exposé, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Eileen Welsome reveals the unspeakable scientific trials that reduced thousands of American men, women, and even children to nameless specimens with silvery radioactive metal circulating in their veins.

Spanning the 1930s to the 1990s, filled with hundreds of newly declassified documents and firsthand interviews, The Plutonium Files traces the behind-the-scenes story of an extraordinary fifty-year cover-up. It illuminates a shadowy chapter in this country's history and gives eloquent voice to the men and women who paid for our atomic energy discoveries with their health--and sometimes their lives.

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A book that may be too scary to read: (Original Post) dixiegrrrrl Jan 2012 OP
Nah, I'm not surprised. Neoma Jan 2012 #1

Neoma

(10,039 posts)
1. Nah, I'm not surprised.
Tue Jan 17, 2012, 04:45 PM
Jan 2012

I usually end up reading "scary" stories like in this book. Humans are used as genie pigs, I've always known that.

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