@igelsQTs That's before the unification of Germany isn't it? I remember this based guy called the Kaiser who did something like that.
@igelsQTs Why does Germany treat Austria like it's not what caused a century of problems?
@igelsQTs Interesting.
@igelsQTs I hear the divide is still visibly noticeable to this day. Its economy isn't doing well. It's quite sad to see.
@igelsQTs I don't think they were called communists when they were still alive. Better dead than red.
Time for Germany to start projects. The Army seems too small to protect the country. Immigrants should serve in the military.
@igelsQTs There's nothing wrong with a stronger Germany. There's the problem that politicians don't want to touch and that's the chemical weapons buried all across Germany. It's in the water supply and it includes the first Nerve Agents.
@igelsQTs It doesn't take a German Chemist to find ways to treat the affected areas and deal with water pollution without distillation. The Arsenic compounds are going to have different properties than other compounds in the soil. The NA is scary but they can be thermally decomposed or a good oxidizer should rip them apart. I don't know the potentials of the molecules or exactly how they have been occurring.
Chlorine, electric Fluorination and production of highly reactive halogen salts should rip the molecules apart when they form strong bonds and are subsequently cleaved by one mechanism or another (intense UV radiation). Fluorine and Chlorine aren't as good with Nucleophilic Addition because they don't form good leaving groups. Iodine is much better for this. Flourine and Chlorine love to form bonds. A simple hydrocarbon and chlorine will react in sunlight to go boom.
Apart from that, activated charcoal will take a lot of it into the surface of the charcoal (This is why it's issued with NBC gear). Membrane filters are going to pose the problem of now what. The charcoal can be put into containers and loaded in furnaces where either heat alone or heat and a catalyst will decompose it.