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New World War: Revolutionary Methods for Political Control

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Volume I: Current Political Situation


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Volume III: Weapons of The New War


Volume IV: The Coverup


Appendix


The Exxon Valdez Tanker: A Conceivable Weapon of Mass Destruction
November 07, 2021

The Exxon Valdez disaster of March 1989, that contaminated several thousand miles of pristine coastline, from Prince William Sound to the Alaska Peninsula, appears to have been another unconventional attack.

I've determined that the Exxon Valdez tanker was employed as an improvised weapon of mass destruction (WMD) by the international crime network, that has been orchestrating such catastrophes all over the planet.

Like other attacks that they've arranged using industrial infrastructure, the resulting damage was social, cultural, biological, economical, & psychological.

The subsistence-based economies of the stricken communities were damaged. Their staple food supply was reduced & polluted. The lasting psychological component of the attack, includes: post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, despair, & depression. Crime & social vices rose in the wounded towns after the spill.

The disaster is said to have torn the social & cultural fabric of the affected communities. I think this was all by design — unconventional warfare.

To this day the impacted Alaskan communities have not fully recovered. According to some data the coastline will be chronically tainted. This contamination serves the softkill depopulation & global A2/AD objective.

Although my focus is on the documentary, in the future I'll post a summary of how I arrived at my conclusion that this disaster was a planned ecological attack using crude oil as a makeshift CBRNE agent.

Sources

New York Daily News, Future Looks Bleak For Gulf: Alaska Still Hasn't Recovered From Exxon Valdez Disaster 21 Years Later, June 19, 2010

History, Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, March 24, 2021

Ocean Concervancy, Exxon Valdez: 29 Years Later, March 22, 2018

Hakai Magazine, Wounded Wilderness: The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill 30 Years Later, March 22, 2019

WBUR, Native Alaskans Still Reeling 25 Years After Exxon-Valdez Oil Spill, March 24, 2014

The Day the Water Died: Cultural Impacts of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, January 1997

CNN, After 25 Years, Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Hasn'T Ended, March 25, 2014

Sociological Spectrum, Social Disruption and the Valdez Oil Spill: Alaskan Natives in a Natural Resource Community, April 1992

CBS News, BP Played Central Role in Exxon Valdez Disaster, May 25, 2010

The Whole Truth, Brief Of The State Of Alaska In Support Of Respondents, January 29, 2008