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Censored Gulf evacuation news: Aid for Americans fleeing chemical rape

Human Rights Examiner

Deborah Dupre’

Gulf Coast residents attempting to flee today’s lethal “chemical rape” and further non-consensual human experimentation before forced evacuations begin need compassionate Americans’ help. A group of women have launched an aid program to connect the new American refugees with helping hands of Individuals, businesses and charities across the nation.

The new non-government organization, Help the Gulf People!, has launched its website, helpthegulf.lefora.com, a portal to match incoming ‘refugee’ needs with incoming resources.

On June 25, Ashiya Austin created a Facebook Group in hopes of assisting people needing to leave the Gulf Coast due to the lethal toxic chemical crisis, the “BP Gulf War Syndrome.” Now, Louann Edwards of Louisiana, Faith Dyson, Jhenya Lovering and Angelique Collins have joined forces with Austin to help fill the widening gap of survival needs that people fleeing the Deep South have.,,,,,,

Most people find that US military and private army supported companies are using lethal chemicals to gas Americans too horrid to face. They cannot plan to leave. These are among reasons that Intel Hub Radio’s Shepard Ambellas interviewed Matt Smith of Project Gulf Impact and Dr. Mark Sircus of IMVA on July 7.

Smith, a West Coast resident, established Project Gulf Impact due to U.S. government/media suppression of what is actually happening in the Gulf Coast area and to the people there since the explosion. He and his team of filmmakers and reporters are traveling the region, investigating and reporting through alternative media sources with a conviction that “the success in one’s life is not measured by status achieved, but by the impact on the lives of others.”

Project Gulf Impact has been documenting economic, environmental, and human health impacts of the Deepwater Horizon oil explosion. It is providing a voice for the voiceless residents of the Gulf and capture the social, political, and environmental climate surrounding one of the greatest environmental disasters of our time.

Smith explained that it is “really sad” to see people’s reaction to the crisis and compared it to the grief of death. People go through stages after a loved one dies, the first of which is denial.

“These people are in denial.”

[more...]

Related posts:

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  2. Censored Gulf dispersant news: Act of war (Pt II) The art of chemical warfare
  3. Censored Gulf news: Scientists call on Obama to stop chem-spray
  4. Censored Gulf news: Terror in Deep South for Agenda 21 (Pt III) Disinformation, depopulation
  5. Censored Gulf alert: Entire La. communities where vomiting blood
  6. Censored Gulf news: Children crying, covered in blood. Spray-poisoning backyards

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