Published: June 11th, 2012 at 10:44 am ET
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June 10, 2012 post by Minamisoma city council member Koichi Oyama translated by Dissensus Japan:
[...]In front of Fukushima Prefectural Office: Over 3 million Bq. Pity.. Expectation proved right
[...]
Cesium 134+137. Unit = Bq/Kg
Minamisoma odaka-ku Kanaya Shimokugino 2,970,000
[...]
Minamisoma odakaku 5,570,000
[...]
Fukushima-city Sugitsuma-cho (Prefectural Office) 3,148,238
[...]I wonder how much Bq it is going to be if Plutonium and Strontium are included.
So terrifying. I don’t need them to fly over on me.I feel deeply regret that the radioactive materials that have been released from Fukushima-Daiichi won’t be recovered, and they are just going to be taken into our bodies.
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Published: June 11th, 2012 at 10:44 am ET
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sending...
Councilor is correct..but there are things We can do to mitigate this. Watch the jet streams, research radiation and protocols to reduce effects. Research abounds, as well ways to duck & cover from the rads
http://realitycheck.no-ip.info/forum/index.php/board,24.0.html
Fukushima fallout forecasts to share with loved ones and friends
http://realitycheck.no-ip.info/nnn.html
Maybe with the news blackout, these folks still need to know?
http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml
A deep bow to the entire world
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This is a favorite ploy of the, for lack of a better term, eggheads:
"There is nothing you can do."
As Chomsky says, your first job is to get information – find out and become aware. Just that, no more.
Step Two: do something.
1. avoid the rain
2. avoid foods which concentrate radiation (mushrooms, seaweed etc)
3. stay away from nuclear power plants
4. write to your local and national politicians
5. get a HEPA filter
6. move kids away from contaminated areas
7. keep your ear to the ground (i.e. enenews.com)
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Thank you chemfood … a deep bow to you
Truth will come like a balm, when needed …
In peace, hoping …
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TEPCO and the Japanese government have sealed the fate of the people of Minamisoma and other areas surrounding Fukushima Npp.
What shall we call the knowledge of "this" by the people?
Stress? Stress?
I haven't damned them lately..
Here it stands.
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PS..Where is Gundersen on this ..huh?
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Keep in mind Gundersen is a nuclear engineer, not an epidemiologist.
He's part of a team, as we are.
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"Damn it, man, I'm a doctor, not a physicist!" (Star Trek)
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/I'm_a_doctor,_not_a…
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I thought @ 1st you meant Dr. Spock, the pediatrician/author who protested against nukes decades ago. He'd know what to do, too. Good comments Pu.
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Nope. Sorry. Stupid, here.
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http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20120610a6.html
Sunday, June 10, 2012
1,000 U.S. high school students to start volunteer work in tsunami zones
Kyodo
Around 1,000 high school students and youths from the United States will visit the Tohoku region in three groups from Sunday to carry out volunteer work in four disaster-hit prefectures at the invitation of the Japan Foundation.
Each group will stay in the country for a fortnight and engage in various exchanges with locals in Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima and Ibaraki prefectures, according to the foundation, which specializes in cultural exchanges.
Participants in the program will come from 40 schools across the United States, including areas affected by natural disasters in the past, including Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The last group will arrive in late July.
Some of the students are from the former schools of two young American teachers killed by the March 2011 tsunami — Taylor Anderson from Virginia and Montgomery Dickson from Alaska — who were teaching English at schools in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, and Rikuzentakata in Iwate. Those students will visit both cities, which were devastated by the Great East Japan Earthquake.
All those taking part will also visit Kobe to witness the city's recovery from the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake.
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