January 10, 2026

Space fumes, earthbound outrage

Workers at Redmond SpaceX lab exposed to toxic chemicals

Neighbors say they breathed SpaceX’s mess as fans clash over safety vs space dreams

TLDR: A report says SpaceX’s Redmond lab leaked hazardous chemicals affecting nearby workers. Commenters split between calling out a pattern of unsafe behavior and urging caution, while even fans demand serious investigation; the thread mixes outrage with memes about “trusting” search results, making worker safety the headline everyone’s debating.

InvestigateWest says hazardous chemicals from a SpaceX lab in Redmond seeped into the lungs of workers next door — and the internet exploded. One commenter dropped the source link to the reporting here and the threads turned fiery fast. The loudest voices accuse SpaceX of a pattern of bad safety vibes, dredging up past headlines and alleging sketchy practices. Defenders showed up too, but even some die-hard fans said space dreams don’t excuse hurting people.

The hottest clash? Fans of the company versus safety-first folks. A self-described superfan admitted that building cities in space is vital, but still argued that if anyone “knowingly” caused serious harm, investigations should be severe. That line sparked a courtroom-of-the-internet moment, with others warning against jumping to legal conclusions without facts.

Meanwhile, the thread’s comic relief came from someone who got a popup for a Fox News browser add-on promising you can “trust your search results.” Cue memes about information wars and “who do you believe” energy. It’s tabloid chaos meets workplace safety: rocket hype colliding with real-world health. Whether you’re Team Space or Team Safety, commenters agree this story demands answers — and receipts.

Key Points

  • InvestigateWest reported hazardous chemicals escaped from a SpaceX lab in Redmond.
  • The contaminants reached a neighboring workplace and were inhaled by workers.
  • Workers next door were unaware of the exposure when it occurred.
  • The incident involved airborne migration of hazardous chemicals between adjacent spaces.
  • The report focuses on the exposure; specific chemical details and responses are not provided.

Hottest takes

"Company that likes illegally discharging wastewater ... multiple times the industry-average injury rate" — Veserv
"knowingly causing miscarriage of a pregnancy should be investigated as manslaughter" — apolloartemis
"a popup for a Fox News browser add-on that makes it so you can 'trust your search results'" — water-data-dude
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