Anger in Japan, over nuclear devastation of Fukushima man-made disaster
“Foreigners think the Japanese are sheep,” said one of them, Kuniko Tanioka. “But we’re raising our voices now, saying no to nuclear power, no to reactivation.”
“The top people in the company that caused radiation contamination are still in their executive boardrooms, drawing high salaries. That’s odd, isn’t it?”
Mainichi: “Nuclear devastation” for Japan, in peace time — Fukushima disaster “the same as war” -Buddhist Nun http://enenews.com/mainichi-nuclear-devastation-for-japan-in-peace-time-fukushima-disaster-the-same-as-war-buddhist-nun
By ENENews
Title: Complacency perished in the Fukushima nuclear disaster
Source: The Japan Times
Author: MICHAEL HOFFMAN
Date: Aug. 26, 2012
[…]
Japan, complacent beneath the American nuclear umbrella, has in fact
contributed remarkably little to the cause of nuclear disarmament.
Note, besides, [Prime Minister Yoshihiko] Noda’s reference to “nuclear
devastation in war,” and what that leaves unsaid — namely, nuclear
devastation in peace.
[…]
“In my mind, Fukushima is like a third nuclear victim, following
Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” added Fukushima evacuee Sachiko Sato.
Nuclear devastation in peace is war, a 90-year-old Buddhist nun named
Jakucho Setouchi goes so far as to say. Setouchi is a writer of
considerable reputation whose collected works, published in 2002, run
to 20 volumes. Speaking to Shukan Asahi magazine, she said, “The
earthquake and tsunami were natural disasters, but (Tokyo Electric
Power Company’s Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant) was a manmade disaster,
and therefore the same as war.”
[…]
“The atmosphere today,” says Setouchi, “is exactly like 1941, ’42.”
Back then, the public and mass media bought the official line that
Japan’s victory was assured. In our own time, the public and mass
media bought the official line that the safety of nuclear power was
assured.
[…]
Future historians looking back on our time may conclude that the
nuclear accident changed Japan not much less than the atomic bombs
did. There’s a lot happening, where little was before. The weekly
Shukan Gendai talks to three female lawmakers who lately bolted the
governing Democratic Party of Japan, largely over its decision to
reactivate two nuclear reactors in Oi, Fukui Prefecture. “Foreigners think the Japanese are sheep,” said one of them, Kuniko Tanioka. “But we’re raising our voices now, saying no to nuclear power, no to reactivation.”
[…]
“Perpetrators of the subway sarin affair were given death sentences,”
she says. “The top people in the company that caused radiation
contamination are still in their executive boardrooms, drawing high
salaries. That’s odd, isn’t it?”
[…]
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