Watch: The Devil We Know 2018 123movies, Full Movie Online – A group of citizens in West Virginia challenges a powerful corporation to be more environmentally responsible..
Plot: Unraveling one of the biggest environmental scandals of our time, a group of citizens in West Virginia take on a powerful corporation after they discover it has knowingly been dumping a toxic chemical — now found in the blood of 99.7% of Americans — into the local drinking water supply.
Smart Tags: #water_pollution #cover_up #farmer #dead_cattle #teflon #chemicals #chemist #civil_discovery #birth_defect #cancer #industrial_waste #contamination #chemical_exposure #blood_sample #bioaccumulation #archive_footage #home_movie #ohio_river #toxic_waste #deposition #death
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7.8/10 Votes: 1,189 | |
100% | RottenTomatoes | |
N/A | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 19 Popularity: 3.033 | TMDB |
From your friendly water treatment operator.
This is an eye opening, gut turning, factual film that tells the stories of people who have been directly affected by PFOA and PFOS chemicals. This is not a history story, it applies in our world now, and in our future.These chemicals are the biggest threat to having safe and accessible drinking water, and it is effecting water systems across our country and the world!! The more our public learns the better we can protect ourselves. Don’t take your safe tap water for granted And dont assume big corporations care about you and the water you drink.
Shocking!!! – Former DuPont Employee
First – the documentary. I thought the evidence was damning and generally well presented. It leaves little room for doubt about the harmful effects PFOA and the misguided attempts at damage control by DuPont. The documentary reminds everyone that watches it that the impact of this chemical is global and virtually everyone is impacted, although to what extent is unclear.Although I consider a 7 star review “very good,” I felt balance of time was weighted a little too heavily on a few individuals that were (or may have been) affected by PFOA vs. what took place in the courts. It seemed clear that the producers had access to a fair amount of company documentation and some very telling interviews with company spokesmen as well as attorneys for the plaintiffs and it was those sequences that had the biggest impact for me.
As a retired Mech. Engr. for DuPont, I can honestly say I have never encountered any circumstances where I saw or was asked to do anything morally or legally wrong. I was the project lead on a multi-million dollar solvent capture project, and I can say that our internal Environmental Dept. Representatives were often more trying to deal with on regulatory requirements than the local EPA representatives. That’s not to say I dispute the message in this documentary. It’s clear some company officials made some very misguided decisions in an effort to limit the financial impact to the corporation.
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 35 min (95 min), 1 hr 25 min (85 min) (TV) (Norway), 59 min (TV) (2019) (Finland)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated N/A
Genre Documentary
Director Stephanie Soechtig, Jeremy Seifert
Writer N/A
Actors Sue Bailey, Bucky Bailey, Ken Wamsley
Country United States
Awards 3 wins & 2 nominations
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Website N/A
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Printed Film Format N/A