from daniel ellsberg and others who camped out, and thereererotests felt they, younodnntke wh r tnyha rthid one of the things that i wanted to stress in the book was this idea of secrecy and silencing, and how secrecynd silencing at the leofamil ri coun coort, te' price for that, and so that's one of the things i wanted to bring out. it happened in so many ways. when you have that silencing and secretinin the counit i via un e'cttsos, residents, and often people at odds even the workers who were contaminated and became ill from the work at rocky flats, and thfoea aer o rked out . ny workers were proud of, but there's friction amongst the works, those who were sick, those who didn't, what story do we tell about rocky flats? it's been interestingore inouhe cry lkabthok a inatop h fukushima changed the conversation. we're talking about these things in aery different way now, and i think for whatever reason people are ready toalk about rocky flatinay th inas s a itat he nuclear weapons systems in the country. it was one of 13 facilities. rocky flats was the factory. we produced re than 70 play