Asahi: Radiation tests on Fukushima preschoolers “bogus” says Japan Professor — “Very problematic, because they may overlook people really suffering from internal exposure”

Published: January 27th, 2012 at 9:38 am ET
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Title: Fukushima group calls QRS radiation tests bogus -
Source: AJW by The Asahi Shimbun
Author: AKIKO OKAZAKI
Date: Jan 27, 2012

A Fukushima day-care group sent letters earlier this month warning its members of what it sees as fraudulent tests to measure internal radiation exposure among kindergarteners and preschoolers.

The Fukushima prefectural branch of Nihon Hoiku Kyokai told its members that “a civil group has called on us to beware because it is a fraud,” the letter said.

Orders for the tests were received by the Japan QRS Health Management Association, and the tests were conducted by various laboratories, one of which was [Tokyo's] Seirikagaku Laboratory [...]

Representatives of the health association and lab said the tests are conducted by taking 20-30 pieces of hair [...]

Many scientists have also questioned the effectiveness and legitimacy of the QRS. [...]

Macoto Kikuchi, a physics professor at Osaka University

  • “The QRS is an offspring of a device developed by a U.S. physician about a century ago, but it is not recognized as medical equipment either in the United States or Japan”
  • “It is perceived as ‘bogus’ by scientists”
  • “The extent of internal exposure should be indicated in units of becquerels”
  • “Assessment of health should be impossible without figures (in becquerels)”
  • “The tests are very problematic, because they may overlook people who are really suffering from internal exposure”

Takeshi Kawaguchi, president of Seirikagaku Laboratory

  • “No child has so far been found with internal radiation”
  • “A QRS can tell about 3,000 items, including cancer, back pain and mental distress, at likelihoods of 70 to 80 percent”

Read the report here

Published: January 27th, 2012 at 9:38 am ET
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48 comments

Related Posts

  1. High internal radiation exposure detected in young children — 16 people with internal exposure over 1 millisievert October 22, 2011
  2. Mainichi: Gov’t tells university researchers to stop radiation tests on Fukushima residents — “Testing people stirs uneasiness, so we would like you to stop it” June 14, 2012
  3. WSJ: Many in Fukushima exposed to radiation well above permitted level, new research shows — “Survey did NOT look at internal exposure” December 13, 2011
  4. Hospital doctor says patients suffering high-level radiation exposure from Fukushima — Complains media are not reporting his findings February 13, 2012
  5. Report: “Severe internal exposure” — 252,422 Becquerels of radioactive cesium detected in person outside evacuation zone (PHOTO) August 11, 2011

48 comments to Asahi: Radiation tests on Fukushima preschoolers “bogus” says Japan Professor — “Very problematic, because they may overlook people really suffering from internal exposure”

  • Whoopie Whoopie

    Posted to HP http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/25/japan-nuclear-crisis-report_n_1230580.html
    BUT I’m gonna post this again. Warning FACEBOOK USERS! Posts go directly to Tepco!! FACEBOOK BREACHES GOODWILL BY FORWARDING POSTS CONTAINING ‘TEPCO’ TO TEPCO company
    http://nuclearhistory.wordpress.com/2012/01/27/facebook-breaches-goodwill-by-forwarding-posts-containing-tepco-to-tepco-company/


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  • lam335 lam335

    from article: “Representatives of the health association and lab said the tests are conducted by taking 20-30 pieces of hair, each 3-4 centimeters long, and putting it on a device called a quantum resonance spectrometer (QRS) under a weak electric current. They said a numerical indicator on the spectrometer can determine levels of internal radiation exposure from eight substances, including iodine, cesium-137 and strontium.”

    I’m not a scientist, but how could hair analysis indicate levels of iodine, which concentrates in the thyroid, or strontium, which concentrates in bone? How could it tell if plutonium has lodged itself in one’s lung or deposited in one’s liver or gonads? Perhaps there are some elements that would turn up in hair–Busby has also mentioned hair analysis (I think for uranium?), but it seems like only certain elements/isotopes would tend to go to one’s hair, while others tend to go to other parts of the body.


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    • aigeezer aigeezer

      Interesting question, lam335. I can’t speak to the efficacy of this particular methodology, but in general “concentrates in” would not be the same as “exclusively found in”.

      So, for example, one might say the fat in middle aged adults is concentrated in their abdomen, but their limbs may be fatty also.


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    • aigeezer aigeezer

      Digging a bit deeper… there’s a lot of stuff on the Net about “quantum resonance spectrometer” issues.

      Here’s an example (well worth watching):

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsPMSZFIL0c

      I’m left wondering whether, as Arthur C. Clarke famously said “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic”, or whether this is like one of those “run your pickup truck on water, send me $5.00 for the secret” scams.

      Regardless, it’s a big business already:

      http://www.qrssys.com/

      Ask me about it again in 50 years – my mind will be made up by then.

      What do you all make of it?

      PS: Can you keep a secret?… Good, so can I. ;-)


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      • GoFrodo

        I don’t think qrssys.com is the same as quantum resonance spectrometer.

        QRS is a company in Plymouth, Minnesota that makes standard medical diagnostic equipment.

        A Quantum Resonance Spectrometer, according to the YouTube video you linked, is made in Japan and China. This article says the device is from Quantum Science Research Laboratories (it’s also interestingly listed on that site under an “Eastern Medicine” category).

        From the little I know of these tests they are running on the children, I would suspect the people running the tests more than I’d suspect the tests themselves. Something is definitely not right if they are making the ridiculous claim that these kids have no internal radiation!


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        • GoFrodo

          Forgot to put this link for above the mention of “Quantum Science Research Laboratories”. It’s:
          http://sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200301/000020030102A0873860.php


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        • aigeezer aigeezer

          “QRS is a company in Plymouth, Minnesota that makes standard medical diagnostic equipment.”

          Thanks GoFrodo. The quantum resonance spectrometers are being described (in Japan) as standard medical diagnostic equipment and the Plymouth site advertised a strong Asian presence, so I jumped to the conclusion that it was the same technology. It’s looking now like it’s just coincidence.

          Thanks for your careful digging. I now think you are probably correct.


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          • GoFrodo

            No problem. It’s fun stuff to look up.

            Now that you mention it, though, I did notice that there seem to be a lot of manufacturers of these kind of devices (Amway??). So, for all I know, that company in Minnesota does make them (it’s possible companies do make traditional and progressive medical equipment). I just wanted the full story on what the device is. And I didn’t see any indication of the Minnesota company making or distributing them, but I’ll keep my eye open seeing as they are named “QRS”.

            There is a lot of interesting stuff I found about how the technology originated, and from the video you posted. But I need to finish watching it and looking things up, probably later.


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      • GoFrodo

        Here is the only real information I’ve found so far regarding this device. It’s a really nice explanation of the integration of quantum mechanics and Chinese medicine, as written by Wei Wang in the Journal of Accord Integrative Medicine.
        http://www.accordinstitute.org
        /2011_7_3_quantum_theory_and_modernization_of_chinese_medicine.htm

        In the 1st section, Wang includes, “We can apply resonance principle to tell whether one wave is the same or difference from the other. If the wave the same, then it will produce resonance. It not, it won’t produce resonance. Extreme high sensitive weak magnetic field measurement device installs Quantum Resonance Spectrometer (QRS). It is based on this principle to detect whether the wave inside one matter is similar to the coded wave of instrument or not. If the wave is similar, then it will produce resonance voice. If not, it will produce non-resonance voice.”

        And, the last part of the 2nd section says, “It assumed that the foundation of Chinese medical theory is quantum theory. It only lacks large amount of systemic research to prove it. The QRS quantum resonant measurement device helps us to detect quantum signal of diseases and to provide method to conduct research of quantum theory of Chinese medicine.”

        In the 3rd section, Want starts by asserting, “Quantum resonant measurement device is one breakthrough point to apply quantum theory to conduct in Chinese medicine.” They state that research is being done in the areas of using the QRS for, “Drug therapeutic measurement”, “Research of Chinese medical theory”, and “Quantum analysis of active ingredient of Chinese medicinal formulas.”

        I’m a little familiar with quantum medicine in theory and practice. None of these assertions seem far-off to me. It’s important to respect the culturally-based Chinese medicine as their standard. They do claim to quantify substances, which I don’t find problematic (if it’s true). Except for the fact that internal emitter…


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        • GoFrodo

          (continued)…

          Except for the fact that their supposed results for internal emitters are obviously wrong. Somebody appears to be lying or fudging results, or else their devices don’t work as well as intended, because there is absolutely no way that those kids in Fukushima escaped internal emitters from the food and water.

          Another thing is that the device may still be experimental. This medical study mentions the “novel device” at the end of the article.
          http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10426509908546406

          “A novel device Quantum Resonance Spectrometer (QRS) could read the subtle bio-magnetism memorized in serum samples, demonstrating quantitative values reflecting the patho-physiology of OLETF rats.”

          It’s clearly meant to be used to quantify things, but we know that’s not going on or not being reported if people at the Japan QRS Health Management Association, and Seirikagaku Laboratory claim what they claimed.

          So, yes, as nifty as quantum medicine is, I do question this device, especially if nobody is found to be fudging results.

          It would be nice to know which scenario is going on. Either one – bad device or lying health and diagnostic personnel – bodes bad for people in Fukushima and possibly in all of Japan.


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        • GoFrodo

          Link for the Accord Institute article above didn’t work. Maybe this will work:
          http://www.accordinstitute.org/2011_7_3_quantum_theory_and_modernization_of_chinese_medicine.htm


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      • GoFrodo

        Here is the translated site of the Japan QRS Health Management Association:
        http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ja&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jpnqrs.jp%2F&act=url

        QRS Healthcare Association of Japan’s general
        Grace Building 6F 6-4 Gobancho Gobancho living plants, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
        TEL 03-3222-7732 FAX 03-3222-7731
        Established on November 11, 2011
        from http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ja&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jpnqrs.jp%2F&act=url

        It says on that page, “QRS: Check with your health at quantum resonance spectrometer
        Storage of the hair business ” and lists these representatives:
        “Representative Director Hiroshi Shirota
        Miki Hayashida managed to live
        K. Tsuda, it management”

        In “news” on this site that’s in construction still, it says “QRS demonstrated a branch to everyone in Koriyama, Fukushima, Fukushima Prefecture of Japan Nursery Association, October 26, 2011.” So does this mean they demonstrated their technology to that association in October? Was this testing by them getting lined up starting then?

        Japan Nursery School Association:
        http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ja&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nhhk.net%2F&act=url

        As far as the Tokyo Seirikagaku Laboratory, Seiri Kagaku seems to mean “Physiological Sciences”. Checking with the original article, this laboratory is at the “Institute for Physiological Sciences”, in the city of Okazaki in Aichi Prefecture. It is actually called the “National Institute for Physiological Sciences” (NIPS).
        http://www.nips.ac.jp/eng/

        (It is a part of the “National Institute of Natural Sciences” (NINS), which calls itself an “inter-university research institute.”)


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        • GoFrodo

          More on the Japan Nursery School Association. There is also a message on the site’s home page from the Nursery General Health Council of Japan – parent organization?

          I have to wonder if the Japan Nursery School Association is at least partially responsible for setting up this bad testing of the children.

          It may be good to know that Fukushima is classified under its “Second block” in the geographical division system is seems to have (bottom of page):
          http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ja&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nhhk.net%2F&act=url

          In their October 27, 2012 conference called “18th Japan Society of Health nursery notice”, the theme is going to be “Health care – I support the local nursery – you can do” (must mean “you can too”). It has listed as “Committee Head”: Endo, Ikuo (President, Association of Corporate Hamacho children’s hospital and medical)”.

          Their site and training seems to focus a lot on allergies, besides infectious diseases in nursery schools. Will they educate anyone on the effects of radiation in the children? Or will it be swept under the rug because their so-called tests showed no internal exposure? “Support the local nursery” indeed.


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        • GoFrodo

          CORRECTION: The Seirikagaku Laboratory is not the NIPS. It’s exactly what the name said (but I read it wrong from the Google Translate version, and not the Enenews-linked cleaner English version!).
          http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ja&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=www.seirikagaku.com&act=url

          It lists Ken Kawaguchi as the Director of the “Institute for health advice”. I imagine it’s the same Takeshi Kawaguchi who’s listed as the President in the original article on Enenews above.


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    • My limited understanding is that they are NOT analyzing the hair chemically as a standard hair test does, but magnetically.

      Somehow they analyze the magnetic signature of the hair while it is sitting on a test plate, without using any of it, without altering it, and without really even touching it.

      Has anyone ever seen radiation from anything/anyone measured using a magnetic test of any kind?


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  • StillJill StillJill

    The hair is incredible! Almost like a live blood analysis. The hair holds the answers,…BUT,…it is limited, cheaper than internal emitter scans,…and that is I think why TPTB may go that way. Hair analysis is a great first step I would agree. From there, a bad finding SHOULD warrant an IES,…(my abbreviation) internal emitter scan.

    The PTB have the technology to remediate some of this,…we do not. Take a look at this:

    Facts About DTPA
    What is DTPA?
    DTPA is a kind of medicine called a chelating agent. Chelating agents work by binding and holding on to radioactive materials or poisons that get into the body. Once bound to a radioactive material or poison, the chelating agent is then passed from the body in the urine. Chelating agents help decrease the amount of time it takes to get a poison out of the body. This fact sheet from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gives you some basic information about DTPA.

    What does DTPA do?
    When radioactive materials get into the body through breathing, eating, drinking, or through open wounds, we say that “internal contamination” has occurred. Over the past 50 years, almost all cases of internal contamination have happened in people who use radioactive materials in their work. Since the 1960s, doctors have used DTPA as a chelating agent to treat internal contamination from radioactive materials such as americium, plutonium, californium, curium, and berkelium. Currently, DTPA is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for chelation of only three radioactive materials: plutonium, americium, and curium.”–http://www.bt.cdc.gov/radiation/dtpa.asp


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    • or-well

      Thanks StillJill.From that site:
      “Over the past 50 years, almost all cases of internal contamination have happened in people who use radioactive material in their work.”
      Everyone else just held their breath I guess.
      “DTPA cannot reverse the health effects caused by radioactive materials once these materials have entered the body.”
      “Doctors and public health officials will work together to decide who will likely benefit from DTPA treatment.”
      I feel so much better. Not.
      Better than nothing I suppose.
      I get the sense one would do better looking to nature for remediative measures after looking at that. (JoyB was talking about that recently.)
      Plus shutting nukes down now of course.


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      • The kind of remediative measures I mentioned are primarily systemics that would tend to “flush” contaminants (of any kind) from the body. IOW, not things like potassium iodide to pack thyroids (best done prior to exposure) or Prussian blue (binds cesium to take it out in urine).

        Flushing begins always with ample hydration. With non-contaminated water, of course. With a diuretic to increase urine flow. Herbs/foods that provide lots of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants. Choose those that show strengthening effects on blood/lymphatic system, organs, etc. Some with antibacterial properties to help control opportunistic infections in weakened systems. And the anti-virals to specifically target cells with DNA damage, to help trigger their death and elimination or strengthen repair mechanisms.

        Which would help minimize damage from chronic low-level exposures, but would be less effective for higher doses. People can survive some surprisingly high acute doses if their immune system and cells generally are robust. It’s the chronic exposures that wear systems down over time, and can sicken people with surprisingly low doses. I would think that urine testing would give a better indication of internal exposures. Though that wouldn’t give a becquerel level for blood/organs, just for radioisotopes going out of the body (indicating there’s contamination in there, so more direct testing should be done).

        I can’t believe they’re still ALLOWING people to live there, children or adults. Much less forcing them to stay for lack of resources to relocate.


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        • or-well

          Thanks JoyB. Perhaps herbology will attract more students now. We are fortunate there is now much published on Herbology and immune strengthening.
          It’s always good to hard copy -BOOKS!
          Just in case…


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          • or-well

            edit: to HAVE hard copy.
            sheesh!


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          • I’ve been interested in natural healing since childhood. Shared a room with my sis until she went off to college – to study biology/plant physiology. Her doctoral thesis was on American Mandrake as a likely treatment for cancer due to alkaloids that are exuded from their shallow root networks during growth, flowering and fruiting in early spring, which serve to keep other plants from growing/competing within the network’s extent just for that time period. She’s more biochemical detail-focused, I’m more system-focused (went into physics instead).

            My life’s experiences with western allopathic medicine haven’t been very inspiring. Too much testosterone informing the entire approach – as if it’s some kind of war – slash, burn and poison. Had leukemia when I was 7, back in bomb testing days when there were no treatments or cures. So they just took me out of school and waited for me to die. But I didn’t. Spent my days wandering the woods and meadows (as I’d always done), munching on my favorite plants, flowers, fruits and seeds… things I learned about from bird friends.

            The docs shrugged when I got well. I always wondered why they weren’t curious enough (since they’d taken so much ‘sick’ blood from me) to try and analyze my suddenly healthy blood. Military medicine at its finest…

            Imagine spontaneous remission in a bottle or a cup of tea. Most valuable commodity on the planet – to people, but not to allopathic medicine or cancer-causing modernity, obviously. They are taught to wage war on nature. We all die of something someday, health maintenance is all about reaching for the gift of time. This article is about stealing precious time from children – a crime they commit on purpose.


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            • or-well

              JoyB, for the children:
              Most defenceless,
              innocent of crime,
              open-hearted,
              loving and benign,
              babies and children,
              utterly harmless,
              their health and safety
              cannot be promised
              when ego-rampant
              Dogs of More
              through Sate denial
              and nuclear whores
              Compassion, Truth and
              Sanity ignore.

              I’m sorry it’s a repeat. I’m too sad to do a new one.


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              • +++ Entirely apropos as usual, or-well.


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              • By the way, there’s a pretty darned good natural for use here that I’ve neglected – even as I harvested last fall’s beets just a couple of days ago and have been busy processing (ongoing, pretty big harvest). I slice and dry them to preserve the most nutrients (I’m big on food drying rather than canning), will powder them and use in table salts and broth mixtures for soups and such. Family’s not fond of beets by themselves, so I sneak ‘em in…

                Anyway, to keep the slices fresh before drying (which takes awhile), I put them in water with some ascorbic acid (vitamin C). The water turns beautiful bright red with beet juice. My spring water is seriously fine, nothing upstream but National Forest and the continental divide – a little bit mineral – gold, corundums (ruby and sapphire), hematite and mica, very minute.

                Anyway, am saving this water to drink. Not just because it’s pretty, but because it’s so hugely Good For You. Wonderful blood tonic, which is pretty specific for low level contamination. Link: Red Beets & Beet Juice.


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            • Bobby1

              Doctors that specialize in nutrition and prevention have always been the lowest in terms of status, in the medical community.


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              • Western allopathic medicine is a weird sort of “Manifest Destiny” extension. That’s why the testosterone-overdosed white guys (and it was ALL guys back then) waged serious, murderous war on all the “Herb-Granny” types they called witches. Both in Europe and in America. Though certainly there were some great male herbalists, especially here in America where the natives never thought healing was an exclusively female pastime even though it does encompass more female energies.

                I learned from both male and female healers. As well as from my own friendships with the natural world and its denizens. The guys like to find hard logics to explain their knowledge, the women just tend to know what works and don’t care as much about why. In my experience. Best teachers came from the native traditions and I was lucky to have married into that.

                Sometimes allopathic slash-and-burn is necessary and you’d better go for it because there’s no time for anything else. But for general maintenance and management of chronic issues the gentle approach has – also in my experience – worked much better.


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            • GoFrodo

              Won’t the herbs be contaminated too? Then what?


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              • StillJill StillJill

                Then, you build a small greenhouse and grow your own clean(er) herbs! :-)


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                • Dogleg Dogleg

                  Been looking into greenhouses lately


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                  • We built one after 3/11 and our winter garden is in there. Have observed .08 mcSv average in greenhouse when it was .19 outside and .17 in our house (!!). So it seems totally worth it. Not least because it’s watered from a well instead of the rain. Today, a very quiet .11 here.


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                    • StillJill StillJill

                      Nice risabee! Mine is just completed–has totally become my favorite room in the house (it’s attached). New life,….sinking your hands in warm soil,….Yum. God is still good,…and so are all His creations!

                      Let’s enjoy! :-)


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                • GoFrodo

                  Right!

                  Though there are some caveats to me doing that: light coming through the windows, indoor mold contaminating the plants (?), etc., electricity needed to grow them if we can’t get enough light. And what if electricity becomes very scarce?

                  I think we need to completely convert our country’s network of food-growers to greenhouses and such.

                  This may be an elementary question, but don’t beta and gamma particles go through walls anyway?


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            • So to what do you credit the recovery from Leukemia specifically, or was it the whole smorgasbord of everything you ate in the forest?


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    • A lab is only as good as the process and equipment.

      There are many hair analysis labs, but the quality of the result ranges from very poor to excellent.. How does a person know which is which?

      I know nothing about this lab. But if the intent is to find nothing, just pick a poor quality, obsolete equipment lab. Or find a lab and pay them to NOT find anything, in exchange for a long term contract.

      Anything is possible when the chief medical doctor says smiling will protect you from radiation, and dosimeter badges for kids not even worn and sent back for testing in Fukushima Province showed ‘normal’ radiation exposure.

      And then we have the hospitals posting signs at the front door, announcing that they DO NOT do internal radiation testing.

      Personally, I would find a high quality lab to to any radiation testing in another country, where all of this convoluted and intertwined political, cultural, legal and financial stuff is not so prevalent.

      Check with Gunderson or Busby. They KNOW who does good radiation testing and who the charlatans are…


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    • GoFrodo

      I agree that they need a (traditional medical science) internal emitter scan.

      This Macoto Kikuchi who criticized the tests in the Asahi article, in my opnion, is obviously an old-school traditional physicist who doesn’t appreciate alternative medicine quantum physics. I can agree that the New Age crowd can take their theories too far and misuse them and get stuck in logical “dichotomies” which he explains below, definitely. But he is going to another extreme by dismissing the whole ball of wax.
      http://www.mizuno.org/ph.html (see him criticize the water-imprinting theories like those of Masaru Emoto there)

      However, this device is feeling more and more wrong to me for testing the children. The anti-quantum-physicists are quick to criticize the device, which I’m sure does have some uses, but in this case I have to say they are probably correct. And if this device is used to deceive people, it might make quantum medicine look worse, too.

      The ones who ran this bogus testing are the ones who truly look bad. A test with “likelihoods of 70 to 80 percent” is not good enough for the children of Fukushima.

      To be sure of what’s going on, I think we would need more information about their methodology. It’s still not good enough, whatever it is.


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  • StillJill StillJill

    If this crap works,…why not GET IT TO THE CHILDREN OF JAPAN?

    Oh yeah,…we’d rather sit with those retractable thumbs up our asses,….shame on me for thinking higher of you!


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  • or-well

    One would think it reasonable to follow up in various ways any evidence of exposure.

    The unreasonable “Don’t look, don’t find.”
    stance of Tepco and the Gov’t as it relates to both human exposure and geographical contamination by the WHOLE RANGE of radionuclides should be apparent.

    I believe it IS apparent to the Japanese medical community. Praise and support to those who resist, who pursue, and insist the health of their people tops the priority list.


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  • gottagetoffthegrid

    “No child has so far been found with internal radiation”

    B.S.

    what about the urine tests showing high levels of Cs 134/137 this summer? i cant see how youd have Cs in your urine if it wasn’t internal…


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  • rebelgroove

    It is truly a pity that the Japanese suffer so badly from protecting their superiors from embarrassment. Blind obedience deserves tyranny.


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  • Anthony Anthony

    Great article with some relevance:
    ***Say goodbye to the false power of institutions

    It would be nice if our future leaders remembered the importance of liberty and personal responsibility, of course. The answer to all the world’s problems, it turns out, is freedom — freedom in medicine, freedom in economics and freedom from government tyranny.

    Because, let’s face it: The root cause of most these problems that are bringing down our world right now is bad government. It is bad government (Big Government) that approved the GMOs. Bad government enforced the medical monopoly and allowed the pesticides to kill the honeybees. Bad government drove us into inescapable debt and costly foreign wars. Bad government outlawed health freedom and protected the monopolistic practices of the food companies, drug companies and chemical companies.

    The downfall of modern human civilization is, as you probably guessed, also the downfall of the very idea that Big Government creates a better society. Because if there’s one idea that needs to stay dead after the collapse, it’s the idea that We the People somehow need another group of people (government workers) to live off our hard work while hounding us with their false authority, directing every little detail of our lives.

    What we need in our world isn’t more government, but more freedom. If we had freedom, integrity and personal responsibility, we wouldn’t even be facing the global collapse that has already begun. But alas, the human race is an infant species and it must learn some lessons the hard way, it seems.

    This lesson should be long remembered: If you let the corporations, the banks and the governments run your economies, your farms and your lives, they will enslave you and steal your future while you sleep; they will inject silent poisons into the very world around you until you awaken one day to find that all you created has been destroyed. **** http://www.naturalnews.com/032258_economic_collapse_2012


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    • aigeezer aigeezer

      Nice piece, Anthony. I suggest the phrase “our future leaders” is a trap though, as it invites someone to “lead” and others to “follow”, and we know how that tends to work out.


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  • bleep_hits_blades

    The testing of the kids with these bogus tests sounds like yet another psy-op. The govt. looks like it cares, the tests falsely reassure that their kids are fine so not to worry.

    Those at the top of the power heap don’t want us to heal and thrive and stay alive. They really do want a lot of us dead. According to their view, there are many millions too many of us human beings on the planet.

    This is a big paradigm shift for just about all of us.

    The evidence and clues are all around us, but we really don’t want to believe it.

    Re chemo-therapy, I have read that most doctors (70%) refuse chemo when they get cancer. And even more oncologists refuse chemo. Statistically, I have read, those who refuse allopathic treatment live longer than those who undergo it.

    Also have read in several places that Facebook and Myspace are USG intel agency data-mining projects. Personally, I think it is very naive to post one’s personal info on them or anywhere else on the internet.

    Remember that adage for the modern era of BIG government and BIG business in the saddle and riding high (in more senses of the word than one) – “No matter how paranoid you are… you probably AREN’T paranoid enough…”


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