Paul G's Corner
Paul G's Corner

Paul G's Corner

PAUL G NEWTON

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Where monsters don’t hide, heroes don’t come easy, and the only way to know the difference is to Think Your Way Through It. paulgnewton.substack.com

Recent Episodes

Buried Alive. 26 Children. One California Quarry
FEB 26, 2026
Buried Alive. 26 Children. One California Quarry
<p>Buried Alive: 26 Children. One Quarry.</p><p><strong>Chowchilla, California – July 15, 1976</strong></p><p>We’ve all seen the buried-alive clock on television.The confined space.The ticking air supply.The rescue that comes down to inches.</p><p>Most of the time it’s fiction.</p><p>On July 15, 1976, it wasn’t.</p><p>Twenty-six children and their bus driver were kidnapped in Chowchilla, California. They were driven to a quarry, forced into a moving van converted into an underground bunker, and buried beneath tons of earth while their kidnappers demanded five million dollars in ransom.</p><p>The plan was clinical.Ventilation pipes.Water.Mattresses braced against metal doors.A battery-powered fan.</p><p>And then soil.</p><p>What the kidnappers did not calculate was the one variable they never controlled: the will of the people they buried.</p><p>This episode covers:</p><p>The mechanics of the kidnapping</p><p>The bunker construction and burial</p><p>The search and ransom demand</p><p>How the children and Ed Ray fought their way out</p><p>The arrests of Frederick Woods and the Schoenfeld brothers</p><p>The guilty pleas and life sentences</p><p>The later parole hearings and releases</p><p>What it means when a crime becomes a television trope</p><p>Because for most viewers, “buried alive” resets at the end of the episode.</p><p>For the children of Chowchilla, it does not.</p><p>Sources & Historical Record</p><p>Primary court records and reporting from 1976–1978California Department of Corrections parole documentationContemporary newspaper archives covering the kidnapping, arrests, and plea agreementsPublic parole hearing transcripts (2012, 2015, 2022)</p><p>You’re listening to <strong>Paul G’s Corner</strong>, where history proves that saying it can’t happen here usually means it already did.</p><p>If you want to support the show and keep the archive growing, you can visit <a target="_blank" href="http://paulgnewton.com"><strong>paulgnewton.com</strong></a> for official merch.</p><p>Rate and review if you’re inclined.</p><p>And if you ever see a television episode where someone is buried underground and it feels too cinematic to be real —</p><p>You now know it wasn’t invented.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Paul G's Corner at <a href="https://paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe</a>
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16 MIN
Church Rock, 1979
FEB 14, 2026
Church Rock, 1979
<p>On July 16, 1979, at approximately 5:30 a.m., an earthen dam at the United Nuclear Corporation uranium mill in Church Rock, New Mexico, breached.</p><p>The tailings pond behind it held acidic liquid waste and radioactive solids from uranium processing. When the dam gave way, an estimated <strong>94 million gallons of contaminated liquid</strong> and roughly <strong>1,100 tons of radioactive mill waste</strong> surged into Pipeline Arroyo and into the Rio Puerco.</p><p>It remains the largest accidental release of radioactive material in United States history.</p><p>It happened just four months after Three Mile Island.</p><p>One event dominated national headlines and congressional hearings.</p><p>The other mostly didn’t.</p><p>Where It Happened</p><p>Church Rock sits just east of Gallup, New Mexico, along Interstate 40, on the western edge of the Navajo Nation.</p><p>The Rio Puerco is typically a dry wash, running seasonally after storms. When it runs, it carries whatever sits upstream.</p><p>That July morning, it carried uranium mill waste.</p><p>Why It Failed</p><p>The tailings dam was constructed of compacted earth, raised incrementally as the pond filled. Cracks and seepage had been documented prior to the breach. Later reviews pointed to foundation instability and uneven settlement beneath portions of the dam.</p><p>There was no explosion.No dramatic plume.Just structural failure under sustained load.</p><p>The system functioned the way it had been allowed to.</p><p>Immediate Impact</p><p>Radioactive water traveled downstream across Navajo land.</p><p>Sheep drank from it.</p><p>Livestock deaths were reported in the days that followed. Families who relied on those animals for food and income absorbed the losses first.</p><p>No immediate human fatalities were recorded.</p><p>That absence shaped how the story was treated nationally.</p><p>Legal Fallout</p><p>The Navajo Nation filed suit against United Nuclear Corporation. In 1983, a $10 million settlement was reached.</p><p>It was compensation for livestock loss and land damage.</p><p>It was not restoration.</p><p>In 1990, Congress passed the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, acknowledging harm to uranium workers and certain affected populations during the Cold War era. It took more than a decade after the spill for that recognition to exist in law.</p><p>Even then, not all impacted residents qualified.</p><p>The Long Tail</p><p>Hundreds of abandoned uranium mines remain across the Navajo Nation today.</p><p>Contamination in sediment and soil from the Rio Puerco area has been documented for decades. The Church Rock site later became part of long-term federal cleanup efforts.</p><p>The spill did not disappear.</p><p>It simply stopped being discussed.</p><p>Why This Matters</p><p>In 1979, America was already focused on nuclear safety.</p><p>Three Mile Island triggered national panic, televised coverage, and sweeping debate.</p><p>Church Rock released more radioactive material into the environment.</p><p>It did not become shorthand.</p><p>There were no anniversary specials.</p><p>No ritualized remembrance.</p><p>Just paperwork.</p><p>If you listened to the episode, you already know this isn’t about spectacle.</p><p>It’s about scale.</p><p>It’s about risk that doesn’t announce itself loudly enough.</p><p>It’s about the difference between an event that becomes cultural memory and one that becomes a footnote.</p><p>And if you’ve read this far, you are now among the minority who know the name Church Rock.</p><p>If you want to support independent storytelling that goes digging through inspection reports and forgotten enforcement actions instead of doom scrolling, paulgnewton.com has the usual suspects.</p><p>History does not always roar.</p><p>Sometimes it leaks.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Paul G's Corner at <a href="https://paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe</a>
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13 MIN
The Day Philadelphia Dropped a Bomb on Itself
DEC 27, 2025
The Day Philadelphia Dropped a Bomb on Itself
<p>On May 13, 1985, Philadelphia dropped a bomb from a helicopter onto a residential neighborhood.</p><p>That sentence is not metaphorical.</p><p>In this episode of <em>Paul G’s Corner</em>, we examine the MOVE bombing on Osage Avenue. A standoff between the city and a radical communal group escalated step by step until authority, certainty, and momentum converged into fire. Eleven people died, including five children. Sixty-one homes were destroyed. The event unfolded live on television, and then, somehow, slipped out of collective memory.</p><p>This is not a story about villains in dark rooms.It’s a story about reasonable people, confident plans, procedural logic, and the moment when “under control” quietly started meaning “let it burn.”</p><p>Episode Title</p><p><strong>The Day Philadelphia Dropped a Bomb on Itself</strong><em>When “under control” meant let it burn</em></p><p>Topics Covered</p><p>The MOVE organization and its leader, John Africa</p><p>Mayor Wilson Goode and the city’s authority dilemma</p><p>Police Commissioner Gregore Sambor and the final decision</p><p>The helicopter drop and the fire that followed</p><p>Aftermath, accountability, and collective forgetting</p><p>Learn More / Primary Sources</p><p>MOVE Bombing Overview (Encyclopedia Britannica):<a target="_blank" href="https://www.britannica.com/event/MOVE-bombing">https://www.britannica.com/event/MOVE-bombing</a></p><p>Philadelphia Inquirer archive coverage:<a target="_blank" href="https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/move-bombing-philadelphia-history.html">https://www.inquirer.com/philly/news/move-bombing-philadelphia-history.html</a></p><p>PBS: <em>Let the Fire Burn</em> documentary background:<a target="_blank" href="https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/documentaries/let-the-fire-burn/">https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/documentaries/let-the-fire-burn/</a></p><p>City of Philadelphia official apology (2020):<a target="_blank" href="https://www.phila.gov/2020-11-13-philadelphia-apologizes-for-1985-move-bombing/">https://www.phila.gov/2020-11-13-philadelphia-apologizes-for-1985-move-bombing/</a></p><p>Support the Show</p><p>If you enjoy episodes like this, share it. Friends, family, coworkers, strangers on the internet, people you mildly resent. I’m not picky.</p><p>You can also rate and review the show. Not because I’m chasing validation, but because the internet runs on math and gets weirdly hostile when you don’t.</p><p>And if you want to support what I’m doing and grab the official swag, head to <a target="_blank" href="https://paulgnewton.com"><strong>https://paulgnewton.com</strong></a>. I’ve got shirts and designs that pair nicely with the realization that most disasters don’t start with evil plans. They start with ordinary people, confident decisions, and the assumption that someone else will deal with the consequences.</p><p>Just make sure you’re not the one expected to live next door to it.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Paul G's Corner at <a href="https://paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">paulgnewton.substack.com/subscribe</a>
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15 MIN