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Two nuclear waste "dump" facilities located in Memphis

Memphis has two nuclear waste "dumps" located here. 

 Many of you knew about R.A.C.E(Race-Radiological Assistance, Consulting & Engineering, LLC).., but its holdings were taken over by Studsvik Processing Facility.  I have attached a document that explains what they take in or you can download it for yourself here. Plutonium, uranium, nuclear radiated  material, alll being brought into Memphis.

 The other facility is under a company called EnergySolutions. Last year they petitioned the federal government to bring in 20,000 tons of nuclear waste.  How much could possibly come to Memphis? You can read about it here and here and here

There are conflicting reports on what they are dumping in the landfills in Shelby County, you can find it here. I think regardless of politics this affects us all. They recently did a story on this issue titled ""Tennessee Loophole" Used For Radioactive Dumping"

These are the facilities:

Preparing Americans for Hyperinflation

Watch the movie in a fuller screen by clicking  here:

Federal Reserve Says Judge Erred in Requiring Bank Disclosure

source: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=adB2HN_jgpuE

Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve said a U.S. judge erred in ruling that the central bank should identify companies that received emergency loans last year, according to court papers filed to overturn the decision.

U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska improperly used the standard of “imminent harm” to a borrower’s competitive position rather than a lesser standard of “likely harm,” according to papers filed yesterday by Fed lawyers led by Senior Counsel Yvonne Mizusawa.

Bloomberg News, a unit of Bloomberg LP, the New York-based company majority-owned by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, won a ruling in Manhattan federal court on Aug. 24 affirming the right of U.S. taxpayers to know about the financial firms that borrowed money. Bloomberg’s response to the Fed’s appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Manhattan is due Dec. 7 and a hearing is expected to be held the week of Jan. 4.

The information sought by Bloomberg would demonstrate the central bank’s tactics in its bailout of the U.S. banking system. The Fed last year began extending credit directly to companies that weren’t banks for the first time since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Divulging specifics about the loan program might touch off a run by depositors, unsettle shareholders and hurt the central bank’s “ability to perform important statutory functions at a time of economic upheaval,” Fed lawyers have said in legal filings.