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Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:Funny that the spook-media hasn't mentioned the enormous nuclear disaster in the Soviet Union in late 1957.
Oh, but the US and UK civilian nuclear power industries were just beginning. Can't stop that psychic shock-absorber project for a nuclear horrified public merely
because worst-case-scenario had already happened.
The Consul wrote:If we had an honest government, what advice would they give us?
Since we (the world) are all the subjects of corrupt, criminal enterprises, what can we do? Stay inside, don't drink milk, move to New Zealand?
But practically, what food is safest, where should one get their water, and what are the risks of outside activity?
The Consul wrote:I'm guessing that stocking up on bottled beer is probably okay.
Nordic wrote:The Consul wrote:If we had an honest government, what advice would they give us?
Since we (the world) are all the subjects of corrupt, criminal enterprises, what can we do? Stay inside, don't drink milk, move to New Zealand?
But practically, what food is safest, where should one get their water, and what are the risks of outside activity?
Fuck it, do what you want, eat what you want, go outdoors all you want, dance naked in the rain if you want. It's life. Ain't none of us getting out of it alive. If this shortens our lives, oh well. Make every day a good day to die, and you've won.
No goddamn way am I staying indoors and avoiding fresh food.
They can toss my dead cancer ridden body straight into the reactor when I'm done with it. Goddamn them.
Release of radioactive water made at request of U.S.: Cabinet adviser
Kyodo
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ ... 518x3.html
SEOUL — Japanese playwright Oriza Hirata, who serves as a special adviser to the Cabinet, claimed in a recent lecture given in Seoul that the dumping of low-level radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean followed a "strong request" from the United States, a person who attended the lecture said Wednesday.
The release of the water from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant last month generated anxiety about the possible spread of radioactive contamination from the seaside power station.
The Japanese government had apparently given its permission for the release of the water after receiving a report from plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Hirata's remarks, made Tuesday, that the release was not carried out based on Tokyo's independent judgment but rather on a request from Washington is likely to ignite a debate.
South Korea and other neighboring countries have protested the lack of prior notification of the discharge.
Hirata's lecture in Seoul was titled "Earthquakes and the Revitalization of Japan." In response to a question at the venue, he called Japan's failure to give advance notification a communication error.
While acknowledging that the release of the water caused concern in South Korea, he said the thousands of tons of water were not highly radioactive.
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