Summary The Silkwood Movie is about a nuclear facility, and the lives of three people who worked there. This movie is based off a true story, about the conditions and safety concerns for the nuclear plants, back when the research was still lacking. The main problems in the movie, is when it came to the health of the workers from the chemicals let off from the nuclear plant. The three main characters are: Karen Silkwood (the main character), Drew Stevens (the boyfriend), and Dolly Pelliker (the roommate). All of these characters worked in the nuclear plant and were exposed to the plants poor safety conditions. Being exposed to the plutonium caused the main character Karen Silkwood, to raise awareness of the health concerns to the workers, from the exposure of plutonium. In an article by, Live Science, plutonium is explained as a “radioactive silver metal, that is a byproduct of the nuclear power industry” ( sjkdfkljshd). Plutonium has also been linked to causing cancer in people who were exposed to high levels of the chemical. Karen’s main focus was to get the Union on her side, because many of the workers already knew the health risks and decided to ignore them. Most of the workers did care about their health, however; they needed the job from working at the nuclear facility. Later Karen was exposed to high levels of plutonium, but the causes of her death were unknown.
How the movie pertains to class In Safety Education there are many safety concerns and conditions
The movie Black Robe serves as a perfect example of the "middle ground" that existed between the Algonquian Indians and the French colonists. Throughout the movie, there are numerous depictions of the cohabitation between the two groups. Using the movie, Black Robe, the following question will be answered through examples presented in the movie; how does the film portray the "middle ground" between the Algonquian Indians and the French colonists?
In the early 1900’s, the discovery of a luminescent material, radium, arrived on the scene to the delight of a fascinated and eager public. At first, it seemed to be a miracle remedy, not just harmless but even beneficial. However, when a multitude of watch dial painters were exposed to this substance on an extremely consistent basis, the negative effects began bubbling to the surface. These “Radium Girls” were unknowingly consuming a potentially lethal substance and would be the first victims of radium poisoning and radioactivity. Not many people knew about the dangers of radioactive substances or radium poisoning and many others had made judgements that were clouded by the perfection of the glowing sensation. In spite of this, the horrific afflictions that the Radium Girls endured helped shift the public perspective of radium from “wonder drug” to “pitiless poison” and started the country on a path to regulating the handling of radioactive
In “The Clan of One-Breasted Women,” it talks about Terry Tempest Williams’s family and how her family generations have breast cancer. She explains that the cause of breast cancer in her family may be due to the nuclear bomb testings that happened during the 1950s in the south west of America, where her family is from. Williams also discusses about the inability of the people to speak out against the authorities about the nuclear bomb testings. Personally, I found this article really interesting because Williams start off with her own story about her family dealing with breast cancer and then she brings up the general idea of nuclear bombing in the south west and the reaction of the people living there. By introducing her text with an anecdote,
During Erin’s discovery of the facts of the case we begin to see the breakdown of the ethical values of PG&E. The dramatization focuses on the deception that PG&E has cast over the inhabitants of Hinkley, California. For years, the company has been polluting the environment with a known deadly toxin, Chromium six. The toxin seeped into natural underground water reservoirs then into the unsuspecting town
DuPont was aware of the harmful effects this chemical had on animals and people but ignored the issue in accordance of high profit. Not only were people affected in the local community, but people in surrounding areas were also affected. Thousands of people and large amounts of property were inflicted with poor air quality and poor drinking water. DuPont had later discovered that there were dust fumes emerging from the factories that were unhealthy for people to inhale, and later found it in the drinking water. DuPont also found an astonishing key of evidence, they had found PFOA in the water, and it was twice the amount of what was allowed, and could cause some serious issues. They had known about the levels and did not notify any workers or anyone in the community due to the fear of loss of profit. Men and women were coming home with a fever, nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. These workers endured injurious experiences, and were never notified about the condition in which they were working. DuPont was named as not trustworthy, and at times known to practice illegal activity. After going through the experiences of which they just endured, they might go through the process of mental thinking or what they just went through was not right and should not have happened to me. That process is known as
Flatland the book and film are very different because the book focuses more on the Victorian society and the movie focuses more on the levels of dimensions.
Your paper should be organized around a thesis statement that clarifies what you will attempt to accomplish in your paper, and how you will proceed. Additionally, you must conclude with a restatement of the thesis and a conclusion paragraph.
In the film, we got to see how a national public health emergency unfolded all starting in the town of Libby located in Montana. This disaster spread across the United States and the material responsible for this is still around us everywhere. The material that is the cause of this health crisis is asbestos. In the early 1920's a company name WR Grace began harvesting this material from the earth. The material began to be extremely useful in creating a lot of products from insulation to fertilizer and much more. The conditions the workers of WR Grace had to work him were absolutely horrible. The dust created from the mining and processing
The Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee case raised new questions about safety of workers in the nuclear industry. At the plant where Silkwood was employed, employees worked with plutonium, which presents a high risk of serious health complications on the internal organs, tissues, and bone,
The Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee case raised new questions about safety of workers in the nuclear industry. At the plant where Silkwood worked, employees worked with plutonium, which presents a high risk of serious health complications on the internal organs, tissues, and bone, especially if the element is inhaled or has any sort of internal contact. Silkwood was a laboratory analyst
Brown writes, “A visit to Sichuan province -- a former steel town on the outskirts of Chengdu where a mill closed nine months ago after being labelled a heavy polluter -- reveals that 16,000 workers lost their jobs” (para. 20). Although job loss is an awful situation for the workers and their families in an economic standpoint, it’s not necessarily a subject that will pull at the heartstrings. This company was a heavy enough polluter to be shut down; so, the workers were probably putting their health at risk working there to begin
In the early 1970s, Silkwood worked as a lab analyst in an Oklahoma Kerr-McGee plant which manufactured plutonium pins used as fuel for nuclear reactors (The Karen Silkwood Story, 2004).. Plutonium, a radioactive chemical element, is known to be highly toxic and carcinogenic. Silkwood, an elected union official and outspoken critic of Kerr-McGee’s health and safety practices, began collecting and recording information to substantiate her charges that employees at the plant were dangerously exposed to toxic chemicals. In early November 1974, Silkwood was
The Black Robe is a movie fixed in 1634 and the retelling of when Jesuit missionaries from France came to what is now known as Quebec City to share Catholicism to the indigenous Algonquin Indians. Samuel de Champlain who is the founder of the settlement decides to send out Farther LaForgue on a catholic mission in a Huron village. Father LaForgue is a young Jesuit priest who also goes by the black robe throughout the movie. LaForgue is accompanied by an assistant named Daniel and a group of Algonquin Indians to guide him to the Huron village. In the eighth scene LaForgue is abandoned when Daniel decides to stay with one of the Algonquin ladies, although the tribe returns to attempt to find LaForgue due to feelings of remorse. A fight broke
“A tiny speck of plutonium-239, as little as three millionths of a gram, can cause lung cancer. One pound of plutonium-239 contains enough specks to kill nine billion people instantly” (Pringle 26). Plutonium-239 is a human-made element, also known as the most dangerous substance on earth. As a by-product of uranium fission, plutonium-239 is created by generating electricity from nuclear sources. Contrary to popular belief, nuclear energy is hazardous and threatening to health. The use of nuclear energy should be banned as evidenced by the number of accidents, health effects, and global impact.
Throughout the movie, The Notebook, there were many different aspects that corresponded with the material learned throughout the semester. There were times were you were able to pin point why each problem was faced based on different character backgrounds. As began to watch the movie, you start to understand the culture aspects of each individual by the way they talk and present themselves, which caused many situations to arise. Also, these many situations arise throughout the movie that affected the outcome of decisions made: biological, psychological, and social/environment. However, diversity played a magnificent role from the beginning to the end. So, therefore, throughout this paper you will have a better understanding of the analysis of this film, which should provide information about the movie.