Killer Chemistry
Something in Appalachia’s storytelling cuts closer to science than most people expect: the idea that certain things attach themselves, linger, and reshape your life even when you can’t see them. We use that lens to follow a real contaminant that behaves exactly that way, a synthetic forever chemical tied to Teflon production that doesn’t break down in the environment or move quickly through the human body. If you’ve heard “PFAS” or “PFOA” and wondered why communities describe it like a haunting, we make the mechanism clear and the stakes impossible to ignore. We walk from the hills of West Virginia to the water systems that carried C8 beyond the places anyone was watching. The chemistry matters here: perfluorinated compounds are built to resist heat, water, and degradation, which is great for manufacturing and brutal for public health. When PFAS contamination leaches into groundwater, private wells, and the Ohio River, it doesn’t simply “wash away.” It accumulates, and its half-life stretches into years, turning exposure into a long game that many families never agreed to play. Then the story tightens around paper. After Wilbur Tennant’s cattle deaths raised questions near the Washington Works plant, attorney Rob Bilott pulled on a thread that led into DuPont’s own records. What came back wasn’t clarity, but volume: decades of dense documents, shifting terminology, and code names that muddied the search for truth. We talk about why naming a chemical matters, how confusion blocks testing, and the moment corporate leaders knew containment wasn’t possible yet chose to wait because it wasn’t economically attractive. If this helped you see PFAS, C8, and corporate accountability in a sharper light, subscribe to Killer Chemistry, share, and leave a review so more people can find the story. Support the show [https://ko-fi.com/killerchemistry]
6 episodios
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