https://deeprootsathome.com/how-to-detox-ohio-train-derailment-toxic-exposure/

Friends and regular readers, let’s talk about the train derailment in Ohio, subsequent toxic exposures, and how to best support our bodies during a crazy situation like this.
This environmental disaster occurred in Ohio, but since air and water are not easily contained, it will affect larger regions. If you live within 5 hours of Ohio, I would pay attention.
Overview: On Feb 3, 2023, 50 cars on a Norfolk Southern Railroad train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio. They were full of toxic chemicals, including vinyl chloride. They were then set on fire by the government, apparently to make it easier to clear the railroad tracks. This was the worst possible decision.
Most coverage of the train wreck in Ohio fails to mention dioxin. Burning vinyl is the most serious source of dioxin in the environment — whether from trash incinerators, house fires or chemical spills.
Dioxins were the extremely toxic component in the Vietnam War-era defoliant Agent Orange. The were at the Love Canal in Niagara Falls; they were the toxin involved in the evacuation and dissolution of Times Beach, Missouri. They are the cause of toxic shock syndrome from bleached paper tampons.
Toxic ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate and isobutylene were also released.
(source)

A pic of the Ohio Chemical Cloud taken from a plane that flew overhead (source)
According to the radar data from the NWS in Pittsburgh, that plume went over 3,000 feet into the air! It was blown by the prevailing winds across Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York State, toward the population centers of the northeastern U.S.
Water travels, of course, so this will affect a LOT of people, livestock, wells, and aquatic life in the Ohio River Basin. This 3 minute video reveals a lot that you won’t find elsewhere.
Dead birds littered a parking lot in Lexington, KY., 350 miles away from East Palestine, OH.
