Tuesday, April 15, 2008

More Lethal Poisons Found in New Jersey!

"Three Artificial Turf Fields Shut Down Due to Lead Levels," http://www.MSNBC.com/id/24115686 April 15, 2008
Attempts to print items from my computer, including this article, leave me with a blank page bearing this address:
http://ad.doublick.net/adi/N3285.msn_cusa/B2343920.61;sz=300x250;ord=1929529606? (Cuban American National Foundation?)

"TRENTON, N.J. -- A New Jersey sports field was closed Monday after tests of its artificial turf turned up unsafe levels of lead. It's the second time since December that a ballfield in the state has been closed over concerns about elevated levels [of lead and other poisons] found in turf fibers." (emphasis added)

Hudson County and most urban areas of New Jersey are saturated with life-threatening chemical poisons and carcinogens making the state's real name "cancer alley." As a result of decades of corruption and illegal dumping of dangerous chemicals by, allegedly, mafia-owned waste removal companies and carriers, the residents of the ironically nicknamed "Garden State," have been endangered or even killed.

No wonder they don't want you to read these writings. (See "Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "Jaynee LaVecchia and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey.")

Ms. LaVecchia strenuously denies any affiliation with the Gambinos, allegedly. How about the Luchese family? Environmental protection laws in New Jersey have become another politicians' lie, along with most of the state's fraudulent institutions -- especially those entrusted with protecting Constitutional rights, including rights to privacy and free speech. My essays were vandalized and defaced, yet again, overnight. I will struggle to make the necessary corrections. April 15, 2008 at 12:14 P.M.

Hudson County's older gas stations, for instance, are often in violation of state environmental protection laws. Seepage of petrochemical products is not unusual. Illegally dumped chemicals and other waste is rumored to contaminate the territory not far from Giants' Stadium, in Secaucus and parts of North Bergen. The authorities will neither confirm nor deny the validity of these allegations, while Weehawken's lovely views of the Manhattan skyline are seen from territory reportedly poisoned by chromium and other buried industrial pollutants. Every day residents are diagnosed with forms of cancer linked to exposure to these poisons.

Efforts to persuade N.J. politicians to pause from their busy schedules of thievery in order to protect the public have been met with derision and indifference. Meanwhile, more persons are diagnosed with "pancreatric cancer" -- to mention only one example -- and other illnesses directly linked to prolonged exposure to such chemicals. (See "Senator Bob, the Babe, and the Big Bucks.")

If you are one of the persons diagnosed with these often fatal illnesses, then you can thank New Jersey's political mafia for killing you and bringing suffering to your loved-ones, in addition to stealing your money. Hey, isn't that kind of thing "unethical"?

"Hoboken attorney Steven Kleinman said the city shut the playing field at Frank Sinatra Park after the tests by state officials found lead levels far exceeding the Environmental Protection Agency's allowable concentration of the metal."

Inspectors are, allegedly, routinely, BRIBED. The bribe money flows back up to the bosses and underbosses who look the other way as the lives of residents -- including their own relatives -- are further endangered. In addition to unprecedented levels of theft of public funds, sexual bribery of judges and other officials, incompetence in courts and state agencies, there is a lethal surprise awaiting anyone unfortunate enough to find him- or herself living in these marshy territories of partly decomposed bodies and moral as well as industrial rot. (See "One of New Jersey's Highly Ethical Attorneys Has a Problem" and "New Jersey's Legal System is a Whore House.")

How is everyone at the feces-covered Brennan Courthouse? Everything peachy-keen?