How Did Walmart Frozen Shrimp Become Contaminated With Radioactive Material?
As I have already heard, the Food and Drug Administration issued a warning about the frozen shrimp bags sold under the “Great Value” brand of Walmart because of concerns about radioactive pollution.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also stated in a statement, the frozen shrimp and shrimp parcels used by the Walmart BMS contractor in Indonesia positively for Cesium 137, which is a radioactive and secondary output of nuclear fission.
Although only one shipment of shrimp contains CS-137, the counterpart is shortened, poisoning from bad things. It also explains the centers of control and prevention of diseases, which can communicate with them, which can cause “burns, acute radiation disease, and even death.”
From the beginning, the details about the CS-137 pollution were strange. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said that pollution was found only in one charge, but those containers that tested positively for radioactive counterparts in four large American ports: Los Angeles, Houston, Miami, Savanna, Georgia. The Agency also insists that there are no polluted shrimp bags that have entered into trading in the United States, but it continued to include three many of those involved in 13 states.
To make things more confused, the FDA (FDA) has admitted in the microscopic printing of its statement that the shrimp “seems to have been prepared or packed or kept under non-lustful conditions, as it may be contaminated with CS-137 and may be a source of safety anxiety,” although he has not provided any other explanation.
Phil Broughton, a healthy physicist and deputy laser safety official at the University of California Berkeley, presented a simple – and total hypothesis.
As Proton also appeared on Bluesky, this cross pollution could have occurred during some old -style good artifacts, as cheap shipping companies refused to pay attention to “which containers are accustomed to what, less clean for them.”
The planetary astronomer Michael Bush repeated the updated statement of FDA and suggested in another post in Bluesky that radioactive pollution occurred somewhere in the supply chain, “and not originally in the shrimp.”
With a little information to continue, we cannot say with certainty that unclean shipping containers pollute shrimp. In fact, we do not even know What It will be inside these containers before crustaceans.
We have contacted the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ask us whether he can provide more information about this radioactive pollution, but thanks to these useful Blue scientists, we will drop the fully beloved shrimp in the meantime.
More about food pollution: Dark rumors revolving when the pig’s head is planned to reopen a disgusting meat treatment plant
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2025-08-19 23:44:00



