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Long Lost Navajo Remedy Restores Hearing For 33,477 People...

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Navajo-Hearing-System)
Wed Jun 1 17:52:01 2016

Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 11:06:01 -0400
From: "Navajo-Hearing-System" <Navajo-Hearing-System@emmlmarket.xyz>
Reply-To: "Navajo-Hearing-System" <Navajo-Hearing-System@emmlmarket.xyz>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>

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Long Lost Navajo Remedy Restores Hearing For 33,477 People...
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Can This Long Forgotten Navajo Remedy Restore Your Hearing Too?

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Long Lost Navajo Remedy Restores Hearing For 33,477 People...

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to re-move 
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This specific Superfund site for the AUMs on Navajo land has been in existence since 1994. This is following many years of research on the health effects of uranium mining which eventually led to the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act in 1990. Since its acceptance as a Superfund site, many federal, tribal, and grassroots organizations have come together to assess and remediate contamination sites on the Navajo Nation. Due to the fact that there are hundreds of contaminated sites, there have been a few big successes and many communities stuck in limbo. The following is a history of this Superfund site, the organizations that have collaborated on this environmental remediation, and recent criticisms of the handling of this large and complicated problem.
The Abandoned Uranium Mines on the Navajo Nation were established as a Superfund site in 1994 in response to a Congressional hearing brought by the Navajo Nation on November 4, 1993. This hearing included the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Department of Energy (DOE), and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Superfund status stems from the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) which allows the United States federal government to assign funds for environmental remediation of uncontrolled hazardous waste sites. The Navajo Nation is located in Region 9 (Pacific Southwest) of the Superfund which serves Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, the Pacific Islands, and Tribal Nations. The site’s official EPA # is NNN000906087 and it is located in Congressional District 4. According to the EPA’s Superfund site overview, other names for the AUMs may include “Navajo Abandoned Uranium Mines” or “Northeast Church Rock Mine.” Church Rock Mine is one of the EPA’s most successful clean-up sites among over 500 sites spanning the 27,000 square mile Navajo Nation.
Nearly four years after the initial Congressional hearing, the EPA announced their first helicopter survey for the AUMs in September 1997. Located in the Oljato area in Southeastern Utah near the Utah-Arizona border, this was first of several helicopter surveys that aimed to measure “naturally occurring radiation (gamma radiation) coming from abandoned uranium mining areas.” The stated purpose of these surveys was to “determine if these sites pose a risk to the people in the area and if so, what measures should be taken to minimize that risk.”
Over ten years later, on June 9, 2008, the EPA announced its five-year plan for the clean-up of uranium contamination on the Navajo Nation. This five-year plan contained nine specific objectives for 2008-2012: assess up to 500 contaminated structures and remediate those that pose a health risk; assess up to 70 potentially contaminated water sources and assist those affected by it; assess and require cleanup of AUMs via a tiered ranking system of high priority mines; clean Church Rock Mine, the highest-priority mine; remediate groundwater of abandoned uranium milling sites; assess the Highway 160 site; assess and clean Tuba City Dump; assess and treat health conditions for populations near AUMs; and lastly to summarize the action of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) in its assistance to the Navajo Nation’s cleanup efforts. Since the introduction of the five-year plan, the EPA has released a progress report (available online) each consecutive year. As of August 2011, the EPA lists its accomplishments as: screening 683 structures, sampling 250

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<h1 style="font-size: 28px; padding: 0px 0px 10px 20px; display: block; border-bottom: 1px solid rgb(228, 228, 228); color: rgb(221, 2, 0);"><a href="http://emmlmarket.xyz/uixeNBjcVRGHvaEJcpSb2VYrlAOW_2RNl0ILHsXRayE" style="text-decoration:none" target="_blank"><span style="color:#FFD700;"><b style="font-size:30px;color:Orange">Long Lost Navajo Remedy Restores Hearing For 33,477 People...</b></span></a></h1>

<div style="margin-left: 40px;">Hello,<br />
<br />
You may find this Shocking, but recently, a retired Aerospace Engineer with<br />
Navajo heritage found an old recipe that was given to his great grandmother many years ago.<br />
<br />
The recipe belonged to a <strong>Navajo Medicine</strong> Man (or Hatalii) and it was a remedy that repairs hearing loss.<br />
<br />
The engineer gave his wife and mother the remedy and within three weeks had<strong> ASTONISHING </strong>Results!<br />
<br />
<a href="http://emmlmarket.xyz/uixeNBjcVRGHvaEJcpSb2VYrlAOW_2RNl0ILHsXRayE" target="_blank"><img src="http://emmlmarket.xyz/3ac77be2095d575976.jpg" /> </a><br />
<br />
So far, over <b>33,477 people</b> from all around the world with a vast variety of<br />
hearing issues have drastically improved their hearing with the remedy.<br />
The feedback has been incredible!<br />
<br />
Follow the link below to find out how you can have pristine clear (and lasting) <strong>hearing in just a few weeks. </strong><br />
<br />
<a href=" http:=" target="_blank"><b><strong>&gt;&gt;Go Here Now To Fix Your Hearing Forever! &lt;&lt;</strong></b></a><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<b><strong><b>Ibrahim Conway</b></strong></b></div>

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<p style="margin-left: 40px;"><b><strong><a href="http://emmlmarket.xyz/2_Iuuw5TWOufrLXPlrZvQtiYR7EanG3t5t8m5p1BT78" target="_blank"><img src="http://emmlmarket.xyz/31868aff42aec2ed63.jpg" /></a> </strong></b></p>

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						<b><strong>The Navajo people strictly refused to let any industry mine their land when in the 1930s, the appointed federal Guardian to the Navajo nation attempted to decide what mining should take place on their land. The tribal council and Navajo delegates remained in control of mining decisions until 1ential health effects. This was because the understanding of the mining effect of radon exposure was not at the time fully appreciated, not only in the USA. The story of the Navajo struggle to receive acknowledgment and compensation for the injustices of the uranium mining industry are well documented in such books as Doug Brugge&rsquo;s The Navajo People and Uranium Mining and Judy Pasternak&rsquo;s Yellow Dirt: An American Story of a Poisoned Land and a People Betrayed.<a href="http://emmlmarket.xyz/2u8QfHv2t9TRypuFu9KRx7W2UdOstyuK6tU_UZYnOvY"><img src="http://emmlmarket.xyz/85255c9c73028c3291.jpg" /></a> <img height="1" src="http://www.emmlmarket.xyz/DprERLLpHyVGezm_OeqVLzWKA1S7pvJC3wNNIfi0hYI" width="1" /> </strong></b>

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