Will Japan rise once more? Six month after the triple disaster.

by Uwe Paschen | September 8, 2011 at 03:45 am
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By Uwe Paschen.
The impact of radiation on the food chain in Japan is far more serious than first thought. Back in March after the gravity of the nuclear accident in Fukushima became clear the World Health Organization warned that tap water, leafy vegetables, eggs, meat mushrooms and milk in an 80 kilometer radius of the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant were placed on its ‘danger list’.The organization warned that Japan needed to act ‘quickly’ and ban food sales from areas around the plant if products there are found to contain excessive levels of radiation.A spokesman for the Geneva-based agency said radiation in food can accumulate in the body and that it poses a greater risk to health than radioactive particles in the air, which disperse within days. WHO spokesman Peter Cordingley said: ‘It’s a lot more serious than anybody thought in the early days when we thought that this kind of problem can be limited to 20 to 30 kilometers.‘It’s safe to suppose that some contaminated produce got out of the contamination zone.’Those statements form the WHO where made by the end of March, today six month after the melt down of three nuclear reactors at the Fukushima dai ichi power plant from TEPCO we know that tea leaves, rice and other products show in some cases over five times the permissible maximum radiation levels and this reaching as far as the prefectures of Saitama, Chiba and Tokyo. (exceeding a 300 kilometer radius from the Fukushima nuclear power plant.)The areas that were the most affected by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami are also some of the main supplier of food products such as rice, milk, fruits, also fish, poultry, beef and pork. Japan needs the East to feed the nation. Banning food from Eastern Japan due to radiation will create a political and economical disaster. No nation could afford to compensate all those farmers for their losses all the wile importing food products from oversea. The collapse of the Japanese food industry would create massive unemployment and plunge the country into an crisis of cataclysmic proportions. Why, the government is now desperately trying to find ways to lower the radiation levels in the soils and the sea and this with drastic measures such as removing the top 30 cm of the soil in all affected areas and replacing the contaminated soil with new clean top soil. This project is almost bordering madness, since the volumes of soil in question here are titanic and be on what most may be able to fathom. The cost is equally phenomenal. Sadly though that is not all, since all the removed soil that is radioactively poisoned has to be stored now and decontaminated with means that are still unclear, since no one has ever tried to undertake such a massive project. Some may wonder why would Japan not just move all the people and its agriculture some where else and leave the contaminated area for a few centuries until it is save once again to live and farm there. Well, Japan being smaller than California or the Netherlands and with a population of 127 millions does not have much room to play with. Further, who would want to take in a few million Japanese as refugees, since those want to preserve their culture, their language and their customs. Russia or Canada even though being the two largest countries on this planet and also having the lowest population density would not dream of taking in a few million refugees, no matter where they came from. This issue of refugees due to wars, climate changes, natural disasters or men made disasters needs to be dealt with on a global level. We humans are born into a setting which is be on our control or choice, we do not chose our ethnicity, nationality, religion or sex, we are just born into it. Most would never dare question their culture, religion or social rank into which they are born. Most accept all this with out giving it much thought. However, if we stand by our ideals of equality, fraternity, justice and freedom then it is unacceptable to allow some few humans to control wast areas of land and resources wile most of humanity is being plunged into a cataclysmic era of natural disasters and famines in large part due to climate changes that are generated and made worth to some extend by those countries that now refuse to take in refuges in large enough numbers, namely the United States, Canada, Russia and Australia. I have not forgotten the EU, however, the EU has already one of the highest population densities and will be affected to a far greater degree by climate changes than other areas of this planet may. Further, the EU has been accepting refugees in large numbers until recently. Japans population is in decline and this may very well be what will help save Japan over the next century. Unfortunately, the worlds population is still increasing and our planet will simply not be able to handle it, especially not the way we manage it. Disasters such as Fukushima or Tchernobyl will only multiply, simply because we will face more natural and men made disasters and because our economies are in trouble and when ever that happens safety is usually the first to be cut and aging power plants that should be shut down will find them self still running long after their time was up. Through out the world we are facing a massive loss of farm land due to expanding cities and we also lose production on the remaining cultivated land in the agricultural sectors due to climate changes, pollution and other factors. When we look rationally at all those factors, we have to come to the unpleasant conclusion that Japan will have no other choice than to allow radioactive contaminated food to be sold to its population and the Japanese population will have to accept that it will have to pay the price for generations of mismanagement and wrong choices that all lead to this disaster. The next four generation will have to learn to live with radiation and accept shorter life expectancies, health troubles and lower quality of life so that the country may be able to recover and take a new, a wiser and more humbler course allowing future generations to be able live better again. The era of consumerisms and wants is coming to an end and we have to relearn to live simpler with less comfort, less luxuries and less help. Japan is not alone to have to face those facts, Europe, North America, Australia and  others will have to engage in the same process very soon. However, due to the triple disaster last March, Japan has been forced to face those realities much sooner than others and maybe this will help Japan to come out of all this much stronger and better than others that still refuse to face the realities at hand that will force us all to change with in the next generation.           

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2
liamssoft

Excellent article

2
YankeeJim

The resilliance of the Japanes people to overcome incredible disasters is a credit to their culture. Something is different among the people that can't be attributed to religion or politics. I think it has to do with a sense of community rooted in family values.

1
Uwe Paschen

The Japanese culture is in deed unique and wile some of it is shaped by the society it self and the family, religion does play a strong part here as well. The Japanese follow a personal version of Buddhism that was introduced in Japan in the eighth century. The schools of Zen that currently exist in Japan are the Sōtō (曹洞), Rinzai (臨済), and Ōbaku (黃檗). Of these, Sōtō is the largest and Ōbaku the smallest. Rinzai is itself divided into several subschools based on temple affiliation, including Myoshin-ji, Nanzen-ji, Tenryū-ji, Daitoku-ji, and Tofuku-ji. Japanese, in general, believe that all objects, plants, animals and even the elements such as water, fire, air and earth have a spirit or soul. A lot like the American Indians or the old Germanic believe structure with Odin Thor and so forth. This believe structure seems to help them to recover and rebuild no matter how devastating it may seem. They keep their calm and go about it looking to nature it self and taking their lead from the insect world and their ancestors that are deeply respected.   

2
ishambat

On related issue (Japanese beliefs and their relation to current world):

http://my.nowpublic.com/health/spiral-spirituality-and-social-progress

0
Scrivener

NOTE:  The comments webform is blurry, a sign that I am posting to a spoofed, counterfeit page that apparently has been inserted into my connection by a covert USG censorship regime run by Lockheed Martin under contract to various U.S. agencies/commands.

These links may be relevant to Japan's seemingly "bad luck:"

http://nowpublic.com/world/japans-hell-microwave-weapon-act-war-end-days-zealots

http://nowpublic.com/world/japan-pre-quake-atmosphere-rapid-electromagnetic-heat-nasa


 

 

1
The 1

Good luck Japan ! Though all the hardship, come back even better than before !

1
DrMarty

Also enjoyed the article and comments.  Will the Japanese rebuild their nuclear plants on the western coast of the island, and use more modern, inherently safe nuclear technology?  If not, are they signing on to massive conservation efforts?

0
Uwe Paschen

Japan has already signed on to massive conservation efforts due to the March 11 triple disaster and this rather successfully. Further, the Japanese government has stated under Naoto Kan that it will not rebuild the Fukushima nuclear power plant but moth ball it once the decontamination process is completed. Also, in June 2011 the Government stated that Japan should faze out nuclear power all together and replace this one with renewable energies. The Japanese people seem to look towards Germany and what they are doing, since Germany, Italy and Switzerland have all made public their intend to faze out nuclear power completely with in the next decade.


0
Kei Yuuki

One must remember that TWO nuclear bombs were Dropped on Japan to end World War II. We Survived them both then Flourished, and we will do it once again!

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First Flagged at 4:01 AM, Sep 8, 2011 by liamssoft
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