Let’s be honest. In russia, the way of living has different meaning than in rest of the world
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Among the old-timers of Ozersk, the first – old – cemetery came into use under the name “Lysenko’s farm”: after the name of the first deceased. Who he was, what facility he worked at – it is impossible to establish. By the way, in the city’s territory in its early years there were several burials that have not survived or are barely recognizable by the rare mounds. Naturally, the burials of labor army soldiers or prisoners are completely impossible to find. The same applied to demobilized front-line soldiers who ended up working on construction. Many of them were already old, and, for example, when asked about illnesses, they answered evasively: “We are sick, but whether from the front, or from this hot water (in Kyzyltash), I don’t know. Some even died here…”
At first, the workers of the plant had their blood tested for radiation sickness. “But then suddenly the young boys and girls began to have trouble sleeping, they began to have asthma attacks, and their general condition was very poor. The first people to fall ill were all diagnosed with the same disease – tuberculosis. But when people aged 30-32 began to die one after another, the doctors realized that this was a new, special disease, which they called plutonium pneumosclerosis…” L.P. Sokhina recalled that of all those with whom she began working in the barracks of Plant “V”, ten years later there were practically no survivors…
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Let’s be honest. In russia, the way of living has different meaning than in rest of the world
Among the old-timers of Ozersk, the first – old – cemetery came into use under the name “Lysenko’s farm”: after the name of the first deceased. Who he was, what facility he worked at – it is impossible to establish. By the way, in the city’s territory in its early years there were several burials that have not survived or are barely recognizable by the rare mounds. Naturally, the burials of labor army soldiers or prisoners are completely impossible to find. The same applied to demobilized front-line soldiers who ended up working on construction. Many of them were already old, and, for example, when asked about illnesses, they answered evasively: “We are sick, but whether from the front, or from this hot water (in Kyzyltash), I don’t know. Some even died here…”
At first, the workers of the plant had their blood tested for radiation sickness. “But then suddenly the young boys and girls began to have trouble sleeping, they began to have asthma attacks, and their general condition was very poor. The first people to fall ill were all diagnosed with the same disease – tuberculosis. But when people aged 30-32 began to die one after another, the doctors realized that this was a new, special disease, which they called plutonium pneumosclerosis…” L.P. Sokhina recalled that of all those with whom she began working in the barracks of Plant “V”, ten years later there were practically no survivors…
Why my tea is spicy?
-**_Geiger counter rattling noises_**