The whole burden of Kristen Iversen is about a family living near the nuclear weapons factory of Rocky Flats. It also discusses the physical impact of workers and their work at the factory. Rocky Flats is full of secrets and lies. In the meantime, you can see how sociology will happen in Rocky Flats. The workers and their boss showed us the conflict theory. They work with two different social classes. Conflict is that the boss knows what happened, but they are to protect the secrets of the workers.
Iversen's new book "Burden of the whole body: growing with the shadow of nuclear energy of Rocky Flats" is part of a memoir on her family affair, and several dozen on environmental scandals involving Rocky Flats and its nuclear pollution It is a yearly survey. After the FBI agent attacked the factory in 1989, weapons production ended here. The business operator later convicted of a violation of the environmental law. However, in the early childhood of Iverson, people living near Rocky Plains did not know that construction of ballistic parts is near their home or that radioactive waste leaks into the surrounding environment. The factory's daily activities are very secret. In fact, the family of Iversen did not know that a neighbor working at the factory is making a living.
Kristen Iversen spent several years looking for something to write in Europe and then noticed that the biggest story she had ever reported was in her backyard. Iverson spent his childhood near the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons Factory in Colorado State, was playing in the field and was swimming in the lake and stream, now it seems that it is contaminated by cockroaches. After that, as a single mother, Iverson worked at the factory, but until she saw the function at night, I knew little about the environmental and health risks.
A year and a half ago, my wife Christine was an English teacher. Currently she is a full time software engineer at Microsoft. I took her first "Hello World" program, then her first complete stacked web app, apprenticed and finally got a full-time job. In the process, I was very interested in how she chose to learn programming: online tutorials, face-to-face classes, intensive coding training camps and more. Each option has its own strengths and weaknesses, and each choice is (like hopefully) a way to interrupt software engineering work. The challenge is to find the right part and connect them in the right way.