Just caught a conspiracy (overreach IMHO) theory on the link between the COVID internment camps soon to hit Washington state and their "passing laws to destroy the bodies with lye and wash them down the drain to be put on your foods" by Health Ranger. I spent about 3 hours down that rabbit hole and thought I'd share MHO so you don't waste your time.
I thought I knew about "alkaline hydrolysis" aka "green cremation" or "aquamation" that the "sustainers"/"environmentalists" are pushing as a cleaner cheap form of burial and way to save space. I knew human remains were put in a stainless steel vat, mixed with water and "lye" , stirred at high temperature and pressures, and the family may receive a product only slightly different from traditional incinerator/heat cremation ashes, and then there was something about "fertilizer for the garden" I must admit I dismissed. So, the bones do indeed produce a white powder.
But about the rest of the remains, what would be the majority of the body - well that actually usually just goes into the local sewage system (down the drain). That then is typically reconstituted as "Biosludge" along with solid remains from regular sewer processing that is converted to "organic fertilizer" and offered to farmers. Yes, so the technically if you choose this method of disposal for loved ones they literally could be fertilizer your veggies. Not put on your food per se but...yes fertilizer, you get the idea.
Will this method be used by interment camps to "hide bodies"? No, I doubt it. Why? First of all, this process is legal only in about 20 states so far (a few more are considering it), but it does require those facilities to be have the right set up, and it typically takes much longer (8+ hours depending on temperature) than standard cremation. It technically is "greener" in terms of gases produced etc. than traditional cremation but we know that is a ruse to TPTB in terms of practicality. Don't really see any advantage of this method over cremation for just convenient disposal other than maybe a little more clandestine in no smoke being produced.
Now the topic of Biosludge is a worthy topic in and of itself - since there is no regulation of the "soil" or "fertilizer" produced. Any and everything flushed down a toilet or sink, including from industrial plants, is included and not subject to any regulation. It is typically marketed as "organic fertilizer", but can literally contain a lot of sh*t besides excrement (street & pharmaceutical drugs, toxic chemicals, infectious organisms). Health Ranger did do a good documentary on this topic, free on Brighteon, that at 2x speed takes about 35minutes and was interesting if not disconcerting. But I give a thumbs down to the alkaline hydrolysis link-to-the-camps hype. The Biosludge documentary is pre-Covid, 2018.
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