Wearing a face mask of what the president of the United States calls the ‘invisible enemy’, the fatal coronavirus, Chernovial’s staff lit candles in memory of those killed at the factory three years later through his own ‘invisible enemy’: the hundred radioactive elements he vomited in the air that fateful night on April 26, 1986 , when reactor number four melted and infected more than 58,000 square miles from Ukraine, Belarus and Russia.
The turn of fate was the result of a flawed reactor design, reduced Soviet costs, poor construction, corruption and a culture of secrecy. When the Soviet Union collapsed and Ukraine became independent in 1991, his government barred visitors from visiting two “exclusion zones” that circulate through the plant, roughly along Rhode Island. But in 2011, the executive motivated tourism in 75% of the deceptive considered safe.
LIMITED TIME OFFER, GET YOUR FIRST MONTH OF FOX NATION FOR $0.99
Last September, I visited Chernovial with a small Fox Nation production team sometime after HBO broadcast a miniseries about the twist of fate that saw through millions of Americans circulating the world.
What we saw in Chernobyl st haunts me, just as the turn of fate itself haunts Ukraine.
Would HBO docudrama generate renewed interest and visits to the devastated and dangerous site? As a journalist, in one post I visited large facilities of transparent walnuts and Soviet-era germ guns and our own control site in Nevada, contaminated a larger friend, just 6 miles north of Las Vegas, where he checked over 1000 atomic bombs in the 19th.
But what we saw in Chernobyl suntil haunts me, just as the turn of fate itself haunts Ukraine. And now you may be able to travel with me to this “Pompeya Nutransparente”, my most virtuous friend, watching our documentary about the Fox Nation “Desticountry Chernobyl”.
You can meet Serhii Plkhy, the editor of an innovative bok in the accident, who is concerned about The Chernobyl sessions and the nutransparent force we don’t seem to learn.
You can see the nutransparent ghost of the city of Pripyat, the Soviet “atomic city” 10 minutes from the factory where 50,000 employees and their families lived before the accident.
You can walk in the now plant-covered football box where teenagers once played, see the book of radiated algebra, covered in radioactive dust in the circumference of a decrepit school, the tattered, smiling doll in an apple bed tibig in an abandoned building, the Big Wheel, the city’s amusement park, frozen for eternity.
Nearly 1,000 dogs, descendants of those abandoned when the Soviets evacuated the city, 36 hours after the turn of fate, roam the city and its surroundings. They’re not friendly. Scientists say they’re only four years averaging.
The forests are green and lush, with deer, moose, wolves, eagles and horses imported from Mongolia. But that’s also misleading, Plkhy says. There are no cobwebs in those woods. The soil remains too contaminated.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE OPINION NEWSLETTER
For example, in April, when wildfires (the natural best friend or the one who started intentionally have not been unleashed) swept away more than 8,600 acres of birch trees and approached the nutransparent power plant, scientists feared that radioactive soil dust could endanger all three. millions of other Americans in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. 60 miles away. But the fires were contained and only Soviet-era tourist attractions were destroyed.
10 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR DISASTER
During my excursion, I played a dosimeter to measure my exposure to radioactive isotopes, some of which can also last 25,000 years. Having an official representative allowed the team and I not to stay too long with the infected victims. But to the young Ukrainians mabig apple, who cannot or do not want to pay the fees of around $100, according to what the user charged through an excursion or those who are not consistent, love to get into the deception by themselves. The Mabig apple of so-called “stalkers” also uses dosimeters. Look at one of them as the illegitimate best friend of being in deception as a true ‘exconsistente psychedelic attention’.
Because the coronavirus took Ukraine to near its borders in mid-March, there are no more tourists here. But Sergii Mirnyi, director of Chernobyl Tours, has ambitious plans once the deceptive reappears: kayaking on the Dnie according to the disabled factory and its giant “sarcophagus,” the world’s largest cellular metal design that covers tons of radioactive debris from the reactor. four and five days of “spa” vacation. “Very relaxing,” he tells us.
The government also wants to motivate tourism here. In July, President Volodymyr Zelensky, 42, former comedian, screenwriter, film maker and director elected in the spring of 201, nine with more than 73% of the vote, signed a decree encouraging Chernobyl tourism. Calling it a “unique” site, he said he was looking to give “a new life” to this desolate region of Ukraine.
The exclusion zone control company, which is guilty of protecting the critical plant infrastructure, has other ideas. One official told us that the company has a tendency to buy nutransparent waste here in the area, not only from the five Ukrainian nutransparent reactors that continue to produce electricity from the country, but also waste from other European cloud reactors.
READ MORE ABOUT JUDITH MILLER’S WORK IN FOX NATION
Plokhy calls it a bad idea. Although it makes sense to buy nutransparent waste at an infected site anywhere, the deception is never very composed of solid hard rocks involving radioactive curtains for many years, it tells us, however, non-solid and highly porous swamps.
But even he thinks that other Americans travel to Chernobyl if only to understand the possible danger of nutransparent force in incompetent or malicious hands. The turn of fate itself continues to weigh on Ukraine, which continues to pay direct compensation to families of no fewer than 35,000 Americans who died from Chernobyl-like cancers.
CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP
Valuable sessions can be learned from what Adam Higginbotham of “Midevening in Chernobyl”, another challenging group about disaster, calls this “Radioactive Eden”.
But when my team and I left Chernobyl, I wondered if we were ever going to be shaped. Watch “Desticountry Chernobyl” by Fox Nation and for yourself.
To watch “Desticountry Chernobyl,” adding Miller’s interperspecies with the Ukrainians who have experienced the disaster, go to Fox Nation and sign up today.
LIMITED TIME OFFER, GET YOUR FIRST MONTH OF FOX NATION FOR $0.99
Fox Nation systems are visual to and from the app of your mobile device, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Head to Fox Natidirectly to start a loose trial and see the great library of Tomi Lahren, Pete Hegseth, Abvia Hornacek, Laura Ingraham, Greg Gutfeld, Judge Andrew Napolitano and many of their favorite Fox News personalities.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION ON JUDITH MILLER