News of the Japan Quake and Reactor Disaster 2011

One of the safety posters seen inside plant: A cute poster warning against the danger of heat exhaustion… “Don’t get too hot”, the girl says.

Helen Caldicott Nuclear Factsheet

Radiation Dose Chart

After Fukushima: Enough Is Enough

By HELEN CALDICOTT
Published: December 2, 2011 New York Times

The nuclear power industry has been resurrected over the past decade by a lobbying campaign that has left many people believing it to be a clean, green, emission-free alternative to fossil fuels. These beliefs pose an extraordinary threat to global public health and encourage a major financial drain on national economies and taxpayers. The commitment to nuclear power as an environmentally safe energy source has also stifled the mass development of alternative technologies that are far cheaper, safer and almost emission free — the future for global energy.

When the Fukushima Daiichi reactors suffered meltdowns in March, literally in the backyard of an unsuspecting public, the stark reality that the risks of nuclear power far outweigh any benefits should have become clear to the world. As the old quip states, “Nuclear power is one hell of a way to boil water.”

 

July 22, 2014

50 Reasons We Should Fear the Worst from Fukushima

Government Reacts to Fukushima Radiation Crisis By Raising Acceptable Radiation Standards … Instead of Fixing Anything

Japan Times: Time bomb in Tokyo metropolitan area — Experts warn of accumulating Fukushima contamination

Plume-gate: Secret documents prove global cover-up of continued Fukushima radiation pollution

Is Fukushima Leaking … Or Are the Reactors Wholly Uncontained?

Neurologist Warns Aluminum in Chemtrails Could Cause “Explosive Increase in Neurodegenerative Diseases”

January 29, 2013

Fukushima Rescue Mission Lasting Legacy: Radioactive Contamination of Americans

BY ROGER WITHERSPOON – NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

The Department of Defense has decided to walk away from an unprecedented medical registry of nearly 70,000 American service members, civilian workers, and their families caught in the radioactive clouds blowing from the destroyed nuclear power plants at Fukushima Daiichi in Japan.

The decision to cease updating the registry means there will be no way to determine if patterns of health problems emerge among the members of the Marines, Army, Air Force, Corps of Engineers, and Navy stationed at 63 installations in Japan with their families. In addition, it leaves thousands of sailors and Marines in the USS Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group 7 on their own when it comes to determining if any of them are developing problems caused by radiation exposure.

November 29, 2011

Japans Radioactive Rivers

River Near Fukushima Daiichi Found Contaminated with over 50 Billion bq of Cesium per Day


November 24, 2011

TEPCO: Radioactive substances belong to landowners, not us

During court proceedings concerning a radioactive golf course, Tokyo Electric Power Co. stunned lawyers by saying the utility was not responsible for decontamination because it no longer “owned” the radioactive substances.

“Radioactive materials (such as cesium) that scattered and fell from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant belong to individual landowners there, not TEPCO,” the utility said.


Sunday 06 November 2011

Women Fight to Save Fukushima’s Children
by: Suvendrini Kakuchi, Inter Press Service

Tokyo – Hundreds of Japanese women have been converging on the Japanese capital demanding better relief for some 30,000 children exposed to nuclear radiation by the Fukushima meltdown.


Koriyama City in Fukushima to Feed School Kids with Local Rice Harvested This Year

Did anyone say in the comment section that it was a duty of adults to protect children? I guess not in Koriyama City, which is located in high-radiation “Nakadori” (middle third) of Fukushima Prefecture and where 500,000 becquerels/kg of radioactive cesium was found in the rice hay.

The city will start using this year’s rice harvested in the city in the school lunches, starting next Tuesday.


Radiation in Japan: NHK Calls 20 Millisieverts/Year Radiation “Low Level”, and Hosono Lies

NHK has been quite busy recently spreading the good news that radiation exposure is somehow not what you’ve been led to believe by silly bloggers and tweets, if you only listen to the government experts and politicians.


University Researcher: U.S. topsoil with up to 8,000 pCi/kg of cesium from Fukushima — Over 10,000% higher than highest levels found by UC Berkeley

Monday morning in Washington D.C., Marco Kaltofen, PE, of the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, discussed current issues concerning radiation exposure in Japan.


What are the Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Meltdown? Japanese Press Assessments

In a September 21 editorial, the Mainichi Shimbun called into question statements of government spokesmen suggesting that the Fukushima Daiichi reactors are well on their way to stabilization. They point out that a rise in temperature in one of the cores is still possible, calling into question the optimistic forecasts of officialdom.


Radiation from Fukushima I Nuke Plant: It Was 850,000 Terabecquerels, NISA Now Says, and Not 370,000

In April when it nonchalantly raised the INES level of Fukushima I Nuclear Plant accident to “Level 7”, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) said the total amount of radioactive materials (iodine and cesium) released into the atmosphere from the plant was 370,000 terabequerels.

 “154 terabecquerels per day as of April 5” – Dept. Nuclear Engineering UC, Berkley

…according to data released by the Cabinet Office’s Nuclear Safety Commission on Saturday. (April 25,2011)


The Japanese Nuclear Meltdown and the Need to Shift Away from Nuclear Power

by J.J. Hurtak, Ph.D. and Desiree Hurtak, Ph.D.


Experts: Fukushima ‘off-scale’ lethal radiation level infers millions dying


Why I Am Leaving Vancouver British Columbia CanadaDr. Helen Caldicott

After Fukushima: Enough Is Enough

By HELEN CALDICOTT
Published: December 2, 2011 New York Times

The nuclear power industry has been resurrected over the past decade by a lobbying campaign that has left many people believing it to be a clean, green, emission-free alternative to fossil fuels. These beliefs pose an extraordinary threat to global public health and encourage a major financial drain on national economies and taxpayers. The commitment to nuclear power as an environmentally safe energy source has also stifled the mass development of alternative technologies that are far cheaper, safer and almost emission free — the future for global energy.

When the Fukushima Daiichi reactors suffered meltdowns in March, literally in the backyard of an unsuspecting public, the stark reality that the risks of nuclear power far outweigh any benefits should have become clear to the world. As the old quip states, “Nuclear power is one hell of a way to boil water.”


Report: 76 trillion becquerels of Plutonium-239 released from Fukushima — 23,000 times higher than previously announced


Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant Hi-Res Photos


Radiation effects in Iraq as extreme Birth Deformities – In an act of stark cruelty, the US dominated Sanctions Committee refuses to permit Iraq to import the clean-up equipment that they desperately need to decontaminate their country of the Depleted Uranium ammunition that the US fired at them. Approximately 315 tons of DU dust was left by the use of this ammunition.The Sanctions Committee also refuses to allow the mass importation of anti-cancer treatments, which contain trace amounts of radio-isotopes, on the grounds that these constitute ‘…nuclear materials..’


Fukushima: How Many Chernobyls Is It?


Radiating Americans with Fukushima rain, food: Clinton’s secret pact


Fukushmia Diary


Shocking 0.378 Microsieverts In Tokyo Train Station – Vid


Yokohama City To Dump Radioactive Ash In The Ocean


Plugging Fukushima Leaks Critical To End Crisis

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