Published: August 28th, 2012 at 6:03 am ET
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Title: Survey revealed psychological trauma in Fukushima nuclear plant workers
Source: The Denki Shimbun (The Electric Daily News)
Date: Aug. 28, 2012
The result of a survey conducted on about 1,500 workers employed at the Fukushima I and II nuclear power stations on their psychological health has been released. The survey result was compiled by a study group set up jointly by Japan’s National Defense Medical College and Ehime University, and was published in the August 15 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The Denki Shimbun interviewed Jun Shigemura, lecturer at National Defense Medical College, who took part in the study as a joint researcher.
The survey was conducted over the period from May to June 2011 following the great earthquake. While the survey result found that the workers at the Fukushima I and II have suffered various forms of stress, the damage that had the greatest impact on the workers was the experience of discrimination and slander. According to Shigemura, some of the workers have been the victims of verbal abuse at evacuation centers, harassment over the lease of apartments, refusal of care at hospitals and other traumatic experiences.
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Published: August 28th, 2012 at 6:03 am ET
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sending...
17 months on, it clearly shows that the government, local officials don't care, doctors are too afraid to stand up for what they are qualified to do. Children are used as guinea pigs etc
It's really showing the true face of Japan. You thought it was a unique, beautiful country? Well, anyone can put on a make-up, bit of a good clothes and look as good as being on TV.
A resident from Kawamata-cho went to the local office and requested for decontamination because the area measured 12 microSv/h, only to be told that there are places with 20, 30, 40 microSv/h so please clean up yourself! :O
I think someone should make a tv documentary called "All the wrong things that happened since 311" and make a collection of interviews of people.
So heartless.
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Perhaps we really are a failure as species, as evidenced by our organized corporate and governmental cruelty to each other.
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@charlie3
You can't be responsible for others…apart from your children.
In other words, you can't control other people, you can only make decision for yourself so don't blame yourself for the world failure. Anyway, it's impossible for one person to put the world in order, that is a tall order. You can blame yourself though…if you must
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The vast majority of humans are not serial killers. Most humans are actually surprisingly generous. However, the vast majority of the nuclear industry and their lackeys are responsible for the murder of innocents on a daily basis.
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I agree with your points. As I read the story I wondered if there are also possibly people in these positions there who are maybe furious with ANYTHING TEPCO too. It may not only be a radiation-phobia slash collective denial stance in which these transgressions unfold, right? Why would an apartment manager discriminate against a TEPCO worker? Is he scared of the tenant's radiation or hates that he works there? I don't think we have a true read yet about what the Average Joe there thinks about TEPCO and its meltdowns. I think if it happened here there'd be alot of hate going on.
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Dear Anthony,
'I don't think we have a true read yet about what the Average Joe there thinks about TEPCO and its meltdowns. I think if it happened here there'd be alot of hate going on.'
Absolute furor, no doubt.
This, and many other reasons illustrate the importance of ENENews. It's about personal courage, of all folks world-wide, to consider difficult truths. It's about asking queations and getting answers by links or directly from persons who are themselves, seeking truth.
I believe you are correct, the US populace is still mostly unaware of multiple 'bamboozles', mostly (like most) because it's 'inconceivable'.
I can only brace myself.
Aloha.
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This may seem unsympathetic but…maybe being treated like crap is a good reason for people to avoid working at a nuclear plants!
If there were no nuclear plant workers there would be no nuclear plants and then there would be a lot less toxic pollutants in the world hurting young children, mothers with children, fathers etc.
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Hello many moons,
I've just watched a docu "Nuclear Ginza"
It is an appalling and criminal industry that sacrifices workers and much, much more..
part 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNq0qyQJ5xs
part 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7okfjwy4Vw
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A (presumably unintended) side-effect of this story is that the "Fukushima 50" is now the "Fukushima 1500". Another myth bites the dust.
I'm extremely wary of possible agenda-driven reports from this source "Japan’s National Defense Medical College" – perhaps I am unfairly wary.
My sense of the spin here is: society should be nice to the nuclear workers so that Tepco will always have an unlimited supply of them, and also… if anything goes wrong (e.g. if a disgruntled worker "goes postal"), it's society's fault, not the industry's fault.
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If there is spin here, and part of me says "When isn't there in Media where Nuclear is concerned?" I agree that "..be nice to the nuclear workers…" would certainly fit the theme of "Lets all pull together!" and all that unity stuff for a better Japan tomorrow with a new and better regulated nuclear industry blah blah blah.
How do we know nuclear workers there haven't "gone postal"?
Or is the cultural equivalent of that committing suicide?
What's the alcoholism rate among nuke workers?
Are they being prescribed tranquilizers?
If they quit are they "blackballed" in the labor marketplace?
Exactly who is being studied? Plumbers? Electricians? Instrumentation specialists? Control room operators?
Are Japanese kids raised with guilt complexes?
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Might they have water?
A cot to lie on?
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This is a sign of things to come. Soon the deteriorating health conditions of the world's populations due to the Fuku radiation will collapse the world's health systems. The insurance companies are all broke, all the governments with socialized medicine are broke, tell the doctors and nurses they aren't going to get paid (like Greece) – you can see where all this is headed.
How many canaries have to die before people realize the mine is poisoned?
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Dear Folks,
'Shigemura: My team of seven psychiatrists prioritizes workers with higher levels of responsibility, which alone amounts to more than 1,000 people. Within that group, we treat special risk cases, meaning people who have lost their colleagues, their families or who are in financial difficulties. Of course I would like to see all the workers, but that would be impossible. We had to make compromises.'
'Shigemura: I am currently treating a man in his early forties. He had a house on the coast close to Daiichi that was destroyed by the tsunami. That's when he lost his 7-year-old son. The man had to flee and he tried to rent an apartment somewhere else. But the landlord rejected him because he works for TEPCO. When he finally found a flat the neighbors posted a paper on his door: TEPCO workers get out. Because the man received quite a high dose of radiation, he had to change to another department. Now he's got a desk job that he doesn't enjoy and isn't trained for. He is afraid that he might get ill with cancer, he is in financial difficulties because his salary was cut and he lost his house. He also has problems with his family. His mother lost her husband to the tsunami and she feels guilty, because she couldn't save him and her grandson. She cries a lot. When my patient gets home after work, he doesn't feel comfortable there either.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/the-fukushima-psychiatrist-it-s-amazing-how-traumatized-they-are-a-818054.html
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Con't:
What I don't understand is how the Japanene gov't hasn't provided military-type barracks with full support (including medical) for these heroic workers. It absolutely boggles my mind… they're left fending for themselves when they're obviously not well. Can this lack of support implicate those withholding it should a worker's performance falter?
Sincere thanks to Admin for illuminating this inhumanity.
Aloha.
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They owe them that, I agree.
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Thanks for posting andagi. It's wicked what people do but for me totally believable.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Mahalo in advance.
I'm challenged by these truths, but glad they are coming out into the open. We all need to understand, even if it's diffucult.
So, in Japan, is the situation at the reactors so nationally unimportant that it's acceptable the workers are treated so poorly (many left untreated)? Dr. Shigemura states his group works only with TEPCO essential persons. Are contracted workers worse off? I guess, yes.
The Japanese gov't has no social or humanitarian responsibility/accountability toward its people? The rest of the world can only observe or wait to be consulted?
I'm having trouble putting this all together today and would appreciate anyone's input
Aloha.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Somehow, today's a challenging day.
'There is no evil that cannot be done by the liar, who has transgressed the one law of truthfulness and who is indifferent to the world beyond.'
11. Buddhism. Dhammapada 176
Take good care.
Aloha.
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@andagi
Please don't stress yourself out
It is what it is in Japan for god knows how long. It's just that the ugly head poked itself out. At the end of the day, it's Japanese people, community who are in it has to decide enough is enough and change for the better. Outsiders like us can influence but ultimately it's their doing for good or bad.
People who are in weak position don't get support or even worse, they are either purposely ignored e.g. sick, children, elderly, unemployed, homeless and fukushima workers! I'm sure contractors are in worse condition. But it is right in front of our eyes. Just look at how they are not protected from day one! Contractors still wears the 1000 yen tyvek which doesn't shield the radiation ray. At least in Chernobyl, they were given lead aprons!
Look at all these children that have come back to Fukushima to start the new term. Before the disaster, there were 271 students but now only 65.
Also, see how contractors lift the fuel rods but absolutely no protection!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPY0ZZHZRJw
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
This is unstoppable.
Thank you for caring. It is very important to me that this 'culture', as isolated as it still thinks itself to be… isn't. Pride must go by the wayside. Ask for help!!Japan is part of the world community, and we are here
I believe that this is somehow perpetuated, this separatist thinking. In the US, our industry and gov't are just as guilty regarding Fukushima, but our people are 'waking up' and support the brave ones in Japan!
There are countless medical professionals in Japan who have received training abroad, even married outside their culture. They will be convicted in their own hearts, unable to lie and keep silent anymore. They will unite, speak, study, lecture and create change. I believe this with all my heart, because they, of all persons have deepest regard for humanity
We must be relentless in our efforts to navigate the squid ink!
Please take care.
Aloha.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Somehow I just can't comprehend folks there as 'giving up'. I admit, it's my problem.
Aloha.
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@andagi
People haven't given up. Some people are still going strong as ever. It just that majority of them didn't get going in the first place lol
It really puzzles me to see children living and playing in an area where radiation is so high. I am beginning to think may be they ARE really immunte to it!!!
I believe, language barrier is lot to blame for. You know, if a person can communicate English a whole lot of culture and knowledge opens up and Japan is an island as well as having an intellectual restriction due to language barrier. In a way, I was lucky? (didn't think so for many years but!) to forced to learn English. The barrier also affected the way they think and they were stuck with this island mentality whereas UK is an island too but it's so multi-cultural that white english people are minority…probably in London.
Japan will change but it takes time… 5, 10 years for people to gradually change.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,

I deeply recognize your honesty and thank you for posting, however, I am moved to say, the world needs you
No time for 5-10 years. Anyone who has come outside your culture must summon their inner courage to act now! You, who have gone beyond, and have become part of the world(in a sense), are the enlightened guardians of the culture you love and cherish. Unless you've been bamboozled, embrace and implement your educated multicultural gifts with all your hearts and minds, for only you can truly understand and find the answers!
Please accept, no one can do this like you folks can!
We are here for you, when someone gives us permission to participate. Until then, my heartfelt very best wishes for your collective success and that somehow we can begin to address this …
Aloha.
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@andagi
I don't know how to put this… perhaps we are slightly going OT but it could also be all part of understanding the Japanese society. It was interesting that 311 gave me an opportunity to meet with other Japanese who have spread out to all corners of the world. If it wasn't for the disaster, I wouldn't have gone onto the Ustream chatroom or twitter to exchange our experiences. It was eye opening because what I experienced living in abroad, what I thought was almost identical to what others have experienced. e.g. subtle racial attacks like bucket of water thrown over the head, stones thrown at me, others got worse and even eggs were thrown at them! As for our views on Japan, we valued unique and old tradition of Japan but realised ridgetness. Difficulty with parents, abuse or bullying is so great that if stayed in Japan, it would probably have lead to committing suicide! We collectively experienced more or less the same thing and that's why I think there is something really wrong with the society. We all thought that Japanese children should see the world, learn English to broaden their horizon, only then, they'll be able to see what we have realised. I know there will be some painful times along the way but that can't be avoided, it's all part of living in another country and understanding, especially we're not white. Anyway, I am mumbling on. I wanted to say, you guys positive thought IS participation and supporting the change, I do believe that. Thank you!…
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Interesting post, andagi. I'm trying to think about it at a different level than the sad theme of workers suffering.
For example, who hired Shigemura (from the National Defense Medical College) and the "team of seven psychiatrists"? Whom do they work for? What are they trying to accomplish? How do they come to have a worker as "patient", when the worker "is in financial difficulties because his salary was cut and he lost his house"? Who pays the psychiatric bills, how and why? Do the workers request the psychiatric assessment or is it "provided for them"? On and on….
I have no answers to these questions but it strikes me that these are not normal doctor/patient relationships in the slightest.
If this is TepGov's attempt to show how they care for the workers by offering them free psychiatric care, then it backfires because part of the story is how the workers have virtually no other (non-psychiatric) care.
Shigemura's closing message is "… such an attitude that hurts the feelings of the workers by thoughtlessly viewing them as just doing what they have to, when they are struggling to fulfill their missions…."
That is spin – but to what end? Why does TepGov find it necessary/useful to glorify the workers at this stage of the ongoing fiasco, while still providing them few resources, according to the story?
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Dear aigeezer,
'… it strikes me that these are not normal doctor/patient relationships in the slightest.'
Absolutely!! What a conundrum! What control! Selected physicians, selected workers and complete lack of transparency?
All embraced by internationally excused/condoned 'duck 'n cover' (your a*#) in this 'modern age'. Geesh!
I believe there are Japanese healthcare professionals who are fast-approaching their personal max, seeing beyond whatever their normal coping mechanisms for insanity, and like your fabulous avatar…
Eh, tanks
Aloha.
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'…it strikes me that these are not normal doctor/patient relationships in the slightest.'
These kind of 'relationship' exists in the US too. After all, the US doctors and pharmaceutical industry are very much driven by money too. It's everywhere, not just in Japan.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
'Affirmative'. But, is it another 'Bamboozle'?
I apologise if I overpost this. His words just seem so relevant to our times, and we always have new readers
Aloha.
“One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We’re no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It’s simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.” -Carl Sagan.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Healthcare professionals in the US have been enduring a ~25yr siege from business. Folks have fought long and hard, preserving for individual care and practice. We still are.
Aloha
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@andagi
re: bamboozle You mean like….
If someone's been told a lie over and over again, it become the truth?
We are approaching full moon in Pisces (humanitarian compassionate sign) in 3 days time so that could explain you are getting all buzzed
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
're: bamboozle You mean like….
If someone's been told a lie over and over again, it become the truth?'
Yes. Now get to work!
Aloha.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Please don't give me squid ink. I appreciate you being here.
I need to say, that a day like this might come for any country, world-wide. A time is coming where we will be (and are) faced with health concerns, clean-ups and accountabilities for actions which we were not informed of, yet will be responsible for. Our benchmarks are Chernobyl and Fukushima. If we are wise, we will learn.
From what I've read, the industry is adhering to outdated standards, the Japanese public is misinformed 'for their protection', the future of Japan is at stake (more corruption/deception) and the MSM is deaf, dumb and blind.
This is not to be afraid of. Persons world-wide are used to difficult truths, and always rise to the occasion as tribes and individuals. Yet, the level of deception that goes over and beyond comprehension, which now is becoming our reality is unpresidented.
All of us need to rapidly embrace our differences, gifts, purpose and talents. We need to purposefully be present as best we can in our own lives, locally and globally.
Thank you ENENews, and all. We are creating a wonderful community,
Aloha.
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@andagi
…I might substitute for blank ink though as squid ink might be radioactive!
hehehe, you have given me an idea..squid ink huh!?
On a more serious note, I am aware that this situation could happen anywhere as we are surrounded by many NPP. I've learnt a lot from the history of Chernobyl and from Fukushima and I am still learning. God forbid, should anything like this happen again, and as you say, it could happen anywhere, people should be prepared, that's what I also want to spread.
I've come to the point, if anyone laughs about it, I just leave them, move on and keep on talking because those that can't take it seriously perhaps ought to perish anyway….slightly harsh but as you say, there is no time to waste.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
You're a great soul. I was going to respond to you above, but now…
Keep being you!
Aloha, friend
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Hi aigeezer ! Good questions, as usual. As usual, few answers.
But still worth asking.
Any Tepco employees here? Speak up!
Who hired Shigemura?
Yamashita? Hosonos' office? Next up on the pet list?
Is this a handy employment scheme for academics? Are they known governing party supporters? Is my head going to explode?
Is there any over-arching logic in this madness, apart from the self-sustaining logic of the insane or the mundaneity of business as usual and no disaster should ever be a wasted opportunity for advancement?
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Dear or-well,
Superb questions!
'Is my head going to explode?'
Not if mine doesn't first
Aloha.
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Dear or-well,
Sorry, should have appeared above.
Mahalo.
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@andagi..thanks for this excellent post.
It's real poeple ..real lives..
Elderly Evacuees from Futuba-machi Living School Bldg. In Saitama Will be Made to Pay for Thier Boxed Meals.
http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2012/08/elderly-evacuees-from-futaba-machi.html
Aloha….
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Dear Heart of the Rose,
Oh, my 'inconceivable meter'!
These folks need leadership IMHO. Someone needs to speak up, create some cohesiveness, make some extra musubi and help the elderly get through this! -Geesh!
Aloha.
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It makes sense. The workers' bodies become badly contaminated, they become a hazard to everything and everyone around them.
A bad problem for sure.
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Not only Japan. The world. Nuclear plant disasters happen in different countries, and the finger pointing follows each disaster.
Allowing the existence of nuclear plants (is the only problem).
When we outlaw and remove the plants, the myriad of insurmountable problems that follow a disaster will vanish.
For good.
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You're a nuclear worker -that's stress by itself -
who's immune to that (besides magical elves)?
Perhaps you lost family in the earthquake or tsunami,
your home gone or condemned by the triple whammy
or it's value reduced but mortgage forgiveness refused.
Family, relatives, friends, your own community
displaced, threatened, upset, without immunity,
treated with disregard for their calamity,
watching Authority act with venality -
Truth and Fact in suspension, you in apprehension,
in a plant gone to shit – do I detect tension?
Now add to that shunning, discrimination,
concerns of food, air and water contamination -
it's bad enough just reading the news,
I can't imagine working next to the fuse
when a shiver from Gaia or one mighty breath
could topple a fuel pool and disseminate Death.
Of course there is worry, stress, tension and trauma!
Even without all the ongoing drama
of Lets Pretend decon and incineration
there's rightful concern for the next generations!
This is not apologia for the nuke-workers
but in-their-shoes-standing imagination
of how I would feel, subject to degradation
and humiliation, of what powers their Will
to remain at their stations,
what binding to Duty or Hope is their inspiration?
What of those not studied, such as non-skilled rag-wipers
or those by sub-contracting Yakuza hired?
Is there a threat of mass work-refusal?
How great the threat of rad-induced confusal?
I'm out of my word limit,
what new takes Hope &…
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Good to see you or-well! "Is there a threat of mass work-refusal?" – interesting possibility. I would guess that the supply had dried up rather than mass-refusal, but the effects would be similar.
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@or-well
August 28, 2012 at 11:49 am
And in the midst of such a calamity
The Indian government loads Kudankulam with reality
Designed without any regard for safety of all the living community
Why they disregard thousands of cancer mortality
Thousands of infant mortality
That by fudging data they declare publicly
Irradiating the community is harmless genetically
Future generations are glorified into electricity
Only to find the balance sheet powering not the community
But only the nuclear industry
Over the entire lifetime of the irradiating monstrosity
And horror of terrors with such stupidity
Of not having learnt from water scarcity
They will reach criticality without adequate cooling facility
What will they do when by nuclear like daredevilry
The dams of the world cause Kudankulam to melt ravenously heatedly
Into the only ground water bodies of the entire community?
The unaffected people will then make the irradiated community
A dispensable useless living radiating community
But those wasted lives can no longer be disposed off safely
All the world deadened spiritually
Forever death dealing walking creatures deadly
Brahma's night of 4.32 billion years lifeless desolate reality
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@Ramaswami Kumar,
I take this opportunity to personally thank you for helping to further globalise the information here with perspective on the situation in India, a country and indeed an entire region of the world irresponsibly neglected in our media except for occassional pieces of nuclear boosterism and profit-focused investor-ism.
Your fine piece well illustrates so many fundamnetal – er, freudian or finger slip? – fundamental flaws with nuclear power.
Inconceivable as it may seem to some, even my own country is regionally bumping up against the limits of fresh, potable, uncontaminated water while many suffer the illusion we have unlimited supply and fantasize infinite growth from that perspective.
You point out future generations being sacrificed for profit now for the few: a reality applicable wherever nuke power is being deployed.
May more hearts and minds open to the messages surrounding us.
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or-well
August 28, 2012 at 1:07 pm
Thanks for your comments in these times when we require to remain enthusiastic about our goals in the face of seemingly hopeless realities. At all times we should keep cool and revitalise ourselves. Your poignancy brings out the difficulty of the situation, and as Wendell Berry puts it, the more difficult it is, the more efforts we will all put in to emerge successful in achieving value- the fulfilment of our desire for a nuclear free world.
Alls well that ends well, hopefully.
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or-well and Ramaswami Kumar for President!
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@NoNukes
Thanks. I'm not greedy. Dictator For A Year will suffice.
No wait – my own Time Machine! Yeah! hehehe…
I've often wondered what would have happened if Cro-Magnon hadn't come along…
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@NoNukes
August 28, 2012 at 1:11 pm
What you and Or well are really saying is NO NUKES.
May we achieve this value by actions which will lead to this goal soon.
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or-well:
Cheers.
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Dear Folks,
Keep posting, reading, sharing ENENews! Sometimes all we can do is find the courage to educate ourselves in order to acknowlege/validate our inner truths so as to become our most effective selves 
Newsers Rock!!
I am forever greatful to this blog, contributers past/present and future. We are carefully creating a community here at ENENews which is exponentially making a difference, everyday, 24/7.
Aloha.
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@andagi
August 28, 2012 at 12:53 pm
Yes!
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@andagi, thanks for posting that spiegel article, it helped flesh things out a little. Too bad "a little" is all we usually get.
I too am grateful for all enewserai, past, present and future.
You said earlier "Somehow, today's a challenging day."
I find that to be so more often, at least in reference to confronting the scope of what we face, or finding anything to say I haven't essentially said already. So I truly value those who persist on these forums, and contribute for the benefit of all, especially the stream of those who keep their presence to themselves.
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Dear or-well,
'So I truly value those who persist on these forums, and contribute for the benefit of all, especially the stream of those who keep their presence to themselves.'
I have tears in my eyes. Keep posting, dear or-well.
Aloha.
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Umm.
Could the headline be wrong?
Baseless sensationalism?
May I ask where in the source article is said that hospitals refused to treat Fuku workers?
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Dear Atomfritz,
…probably
Squid ink!
Aloha.
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@andagi
Hopefully, we won't get arrested.
If you ever come over here, we'll have a squid ink fight in Hyde Park
You bring the ink, I'll provide the super soaker! LOL
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
If I'm to bring squid ink, how will you find me – quite off topic, I know -but had to ask! You're great!
Aloha.
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Dear GlowInTheDark,
Arrested? Only if caught! Squid ink!
Aloha.
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@andagi
How will I find you? hmnn you'll have to wear a pointy tin hat so that I can recognise you.
You get the idea, squirt and run, well that's squids do. LOL
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"According to Shigemura, some of the workers have been the victims of verbal abuse at evacuation centers, harassment over the lease of apartments, refusal of care at hospitals and other traumatic experiences."
Reading comprehension helps open the mind to what is real and what is not…
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Umm.
I probably completely misunderstood.
"refusal of care" is synonymous to "refusal of treatment"?
I once had a (luckily small) accident and was waiting in the hospital's emergency.
A drunk lady was constantly blaring how long she had to wait and that the medical crew didn't care.
She didn't take notice that serious cases were treated first with priority.
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They know they are all dead…….its all too obvious.
TPTB dont give a flying &^$%
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