This discovery to my own eyes is so terrible, so awful, it should be on mainstream news. It is happening now and I fear not just for the good people of Missouri but all of us.
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This discovery to my own eyes is so terrible, so awful, it should be on mainstream news. It is happening now and I fear not just for the good people of Missouri but all of us.
I believe this will premiere in Italy in December ...
A general release date is not available yet ...
Fukushima - a Nuclear Story Trailer - 2015
Quote:
Director: Matteo Gagliardi
Narrator: Willem Dafoe
Sound Design & Mix : Giorgio Vita Levi
Runtime: 84 min
Synopsis
An exclusive journey of four years inside the triple tragedy which hit Japan on March 11, 2011, following Italian Sky News reporter Pio d'Emilia who has lived in Japan for more than thirty years. Pio was in Tokyo the day of the earthquake. After traveling across all the municipalities hit by the tsunami and after illegally entering the so-called “exclusion zone” already established but loosely enforced by the government he actually reaches the gate of the nuclear plant. He was not allowed inside the plant though: to do this he had to wait until June 2013 when Tepco, the plant operator, allowed entry to the first group of foreign journalists. In his quest to unfold Fukushima's still on-going nuclear disaster, he collected over 300 hours of footage consisting of shocking images and interviews with local people, local authorities and officers, focusing on what he calls the social "collateral effects" of past and present decisions by the government and the nuclear community. An in-depth exclusive interview on what really happened at Fukushima with ex-Prime Minister Naoto Kan eventually tells us how Tokyo - and probably Japan - was saved from a much greater catastrophe by chance.
Official website: http://www.nuclearstory.com/
Published on Oct 5, 2015
http://vimeo.com/141632272
the latest ...
Fukushima Radiation Found Off US Coast
TheLipTV
Published on Dec 5, 2015Quote:
Radiation from Japan’s 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster continues to contaminate Pacific Ocean water as cesium-137 isotopes have been detected by scientists off the shores of Oregon, Washington and California as well as Canada’s Vancouver island at the highest level in the area to date. How long before this radiation becomes a threat to human or marine life? Watch it on the Lip News with Jo Ankier and Nik Zecevic.
Radiation from Japan nuclear disaster spreads off U.S. shores
https://youtube.com/watch?v=PFO0Kob5ooI
^^
NOTE:
the levels found are "reported" to be of no concern to animals or humans (which means they are ULTRA ULTRA safe because they run by the "no exposure" rule).
Sneaky writing style.... It mentions distances in miles and kilometers, but no radiation measurements (which is the most important data for an article)Quote:
The latest readings measured the highest radiation levels outside Japanese waters to date some 1,600 miles (2,574 km) west of San Francisco.
It certainly never hurts to watch!
will share this here ...
Via the Schwartz Report
Fukushima Keeps Fighting Radioactive Tide 5 Years After Disaster
http://static01.nyt.com/images/2016/...-master675.jpg
Here is the latest on Fukushima. This cancer will go on it is estimated another 40 years, although it could
be another century. In addition to the $20 billion already spent it will take another $120 billion at least.
And thus we see the real cost of nuclear. Utterly unproductive, incredibly toxic, and enormously expensive.
JONATHAN SOBLE - The New York Times
TOKYO — Of the thousands of workers who have answered the help-wanted ads at Fukushima Daiichi, the ruined and radioactive nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan, the part-time lettuce farmer and occasional comic-book artist Kazuto Tatsuta must be among the least likely.
“I needed a job,” Mr. Tatsuta, 51, recalled of his decision in 2012 to accept work at the site of one of the world’s worst nuclear accidents.
His duties included welding broken water pipes and inspecting remote-controlled robots that survey radioactive hot spots. And his comic strips, once populated with baseball players and gangsters, now tell stories of middle-aged, blue-collar men like himself who do the grunt work at Fukushima, some of whom find a sense of purpose and belonging they lacked in the outside world ... Read the rest