American conservationist Terry Williams of Corona, California is a descendant from a Mormon clan and argues that the fallout of the nuclear testing in Nevada around the 1950's and 1960's was the cause for the growth in cancer in Utah. Breast cancer has taken the lives of many of her loved ones, one major person being her mother. Altogether seven died from cancer. Only two have survived all rounds of chemotherapy and she had problems with her biopsies, including having a small tumor in her. She had a borderline malignancy. Ms. Williams had to deal with their battles and all their shortcomings. Sadly for her, cancer was something she started getting used to being around every day. She describes some lawsuits that were filed against the United States regarding the potential cause of cancer because of these nuclear testing in Nevada.
Ms. Williams tells the readers that the Mormons are taught to sit back and let the leaders do their job. She starts to feel that maybe she does not want to be a follower anymore. She implies that the fear and the inability to question authority, that ultimately killed rural communities in Utah during atmospheric testing of atomic weapons is the same fear I saw in my mother's body. Williams goes on saying that she can't prove that these plants are what gave her loved one's cancer, but she also can't prove that they didn't. As a factor, in Ms. Williams' findings that Breast Cancer is hereditary and genetic. Cancer was a big part of her families' life. Williams goes on to provide the reader with a brief summary of the nuclear situation at the time. She writes about how the government told the public nuclear testing was not dangerous and was needed to beat the enemy, and writes about the important lawsuit "Irene Allen vs the United States of America" which started educating the people and even the government about the harmful effects of nuclear testing near and around the public. On May 10, 1984, the United St...