The System works because you work!

The System works because you work!

DEATH BY GOVERNMENT: GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER

DEATH BY GOVERNMENT: GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER
All told, governments killed more than 262 million people in the 20th century outside of wars, according to University of Hawaii political science professor R.J. Rummel. Just to give perspective on this incredible murder by government, if all these bodies were laid head to toe, with the average height being 5', then they would circle the earth ten times. Also, this democide murdered 6 times more people than died in combat in all the foreign and internal wars of the century. Finally, given popular estimates of the dead in a major nuclear war, this total democide is as though such a war did occur, but with its dead spread over a century

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Thursday, March 17, 2011

With no food! No home! No help! No hope! Now the Japanese people's despair turns to anger at the govt!


No home. No help. No hope: Now Japan's despair turns to anger

Tempers fray as the homeless wait for food and medicine
By Andrew Buncombe in Sendai
Thursday, 17 March 2011
A woman walks away from the wreckage of her home in Kesennuma
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A woman walks away from the wreckage of her home in Kesennuma
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As it struggles to gain control of a nuclear crisis and to feed and shelter the thousands of people left homeless by last week's devastating tsunami, the Japanese government is facing a growing chorus of criticism for its handling of the catastrophe.
Amid vociferous unease in the Japanese media at the apparent lack of progress in providing people in the country's stricken north-east with the bare essentials they need to survive, the governor of Fukushima prefecture, Yuhei Sato, has voiced frustration at shortages that were slowing evacuations. "Anxiety and anger felt by people have reached boiling point," he said. He warned evacuation centres did not have enough hot meals, medicine or petrol.
Meanwhile, in the first sign that international frustration at the Japanese government's reticence on the status of the stricken Fukushima power plant has reached a critical moment, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency issued a thinly-veiled rebuke to Prime Minister Naoto Kan's administration.
"We do not have all the details of the information, so what we can do is limited," said Yukiya Amano, who is Japanese himself. "I am trying to further improve the communication."
The UK government was sufficiently alarmed by the situation, especially the radioactive leaks, that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office announced: "British nationals currently in Tokyo and to the north of Tokyo should consider leaving the area."
Since the news of difficulties at the plant first emerged, many analysts say the government in Tokyo has underplayed the situation. There was a hint that unease was reaching the very highest levels of the government when reports emerged that Mr Kan had lost his temper with executives from the plant operator, Tepco. "What the hell is going on?" he is said to have demanded, according to the Kyodo news agency. Tepco has been responsible for most of the information coming out of the plant.
But the sharpest reproach for the government was visible in the country's north-east yesterday. With lines for food stretching six city blocks, temperatures below freezing in many places and snow further hampering relief efforts, people in the region are struggling with shortages of necessities that the government appears unable to supply.
In the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami, when the attention of the authorities was focused on rescue efforts and trying to save as many people as possible, it would have been understandable if the supply of basic commodities had been interrupted.
But six days later, and with it still impossible to buy a bottle of water in a city located just five hours' drive from Tokyo, people are beginning to wonder what is happening. In many cases the absence of fresh water, electricity and gas is adding to the misery. The government has offered no explanation.
"It took me 10 hours to queue up to get petrol," said Ota, a 45-year-old office worker from Sendai. "And then each person was only allowed 10 litres. Nobody there was able to give me any information." Ota, who declined to give his second name, said a friend had told him that when he visited a store and bought some snacks, he was charged "100 times" the usual amount. "My friend had to buy the food," he added. "He has to live."
The shortage of supplies has not triggered panic. People queuing to get into the few shops that are open do so calmly and efficiently, even though the line could wait for more than an hour. Many of the shops have employed officials with flags to direct the queues.
"I had to get in line for an hour. Then there was no milk, no bread. People were allowed two snacks each and one tin of food," said Tsugitaka Chiba. "In my neighbourhood, people have been giving food away. There's just no information about the resupply of the shops."
However difficult things may be for people in Sendai, where large parts of the city have electricity and water, a far more pressing situation exists in those towns and villages closer to the coast. There, there is no electricity and often no fresh water. There is also precious little to eat; at an elementary school in the town of Higashi Matsushima that had been turned into an emergency shelter for several hundred people who were homeless, there were boxes of instant noodles and a communal kitchen serving miso soup.
How long the supplies would last was unclear. There are similar reports from communities all along the coast. Officials believe 440,000 have been evacuated, either from the area struck by the tsunami or else from the proximity to the nuclear reactors. There are hundreds of shelters set up for those with nowhere else to go, but large numbers of people in isolated areas are still waiting for assistance and food. The government has sent 100,000 troops to assist in the aid effort and delivered 120,000 blankets, 120,000 bottles of water and 110,000 litres of petrol to the worst-hit areas. But these can only be temporary measures. Officials warn it could take many days to restore supplies of power and water.
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  • zochoten 12 hours ago
    The Japanese government and the opposition are the children and grandchildren of the same people that have always run the country and they select who will run for office and who will not. The Japanese people have next to no say in who governs them. The party selects and the people (much like in the UK) only get to vote for who is put forward. Big business runs Japan from behind the scenes, it always has.

    There are on occasions one or two politicos that try to bring about change, but when they push too hard they fall very quickly. Koizumi Jun’ichiro did well to have lasted as long as he did. I don’t even know where to begin with his family of politicos there are so many. Abe Shinzo is another that comes from a family of politicians dating back generations and married into other political families. Aso Taro the same. Hatoyama Yukio’s family go all the way back to the Meiji period as politicians. Kan Naoto is different but I am beginning to wonder if he is being put up to be sacrificed. He comes from a business family rather than a political one. The man that we really need to watch here is Odano Yukio, he is what people in the West would see as a real politician in the old sense of the word, tough and straight, though that might well be, along with what is happening at the moment what brings him down, he has already been stabbed in the back within his own party when they put Katsuya Okada (old school political family) up for prime minister in front of him.

    The West sees the high tech country but what they don’t see is what lies behind that, The Tokugawa Shogunate didn’t end it transmuted into Sonny, Mitsubishi, (there are several of these, but really only two, a real monster plus a lesser monster) and the list goes on, many you will know by one name or another. These are the real owners and controllers of Japan and they do not care if a few tens of thousands die.

    Japan is a face and no none Japanese is going to see behind that face. Tepco has a face that it is not allowing anybody to see behind, not even the government of Japan can get them to admit that they have made a total mess of things. In a few months time there will be apologies and yes a suicide or two and that will put everything back in place until the next time and the next time.

    If any good could come from the horrors of this last week it would be that somebody like Odano Yukio might make it into power and have the people behind him to fight against the old guard and big business. But it hasn’t happened in the last 400 years so I am not expecting too much. Behind that high tech mask is a feudal society where everybody (almost) knows their place and the nail that sticks up gets hammered down.
  • The chance to read a posting such as yours is the reason I read the Independent. I have no doubt that the power structure functions just as you describe it, and the chance for change are small. Unfortunately, this system is also in place in America. The heads of multi-national corporations, Wall Street brokers, and giant banking firms now control American politics. President Obama was elected with a mandate to change the country, but has been largely stymied by a Congress that is in the pay of powerful special-interest groups. The behavior to Governor Walker in Wisconsin is a direct result of his owners, the Koch Brothers, being able to put him into office and do the bidding of his corporate masters. America's seeming inablity to take action in this crisis and the ones now exploding in the Middle-East are a result that elected government officials need the permission of the wealthy elites before any decisions can be made. The power elites are simply waiting to see who wins the wars for liberation before they pick a side. As for Japan, they do not want the truth to be told about this terrible disaster because American industry is posed to begin building even more and larger nuclear power plants. The decision to ramp up the nuclear power industry was made by Vice President Dick Cheney's secret energy committee. Time for the people of every country to power back from the wealthy elites and their corrupt politicians.
  • Left wing rubbish. Wisconsin is broke - thanks to the unions and the bloody socialists. Time for less govt, less tax, less interference and for people to actually be responsible for their own well being and not the demanding 'I want, I want' culture the left have been piling on society for years.
  • But the US doesn't have a "left" - just a "right" and an "extreme looney right".
  • Goodness, how can you call this 'left wing'. He did not argue for an 'I want' culture, just for taking power back power so the people can, as you say, be responsible for their own well being. He did not mention anything about tax. Don't distort the debate.
  • That's right it is broke but it wasn't the people and the unions that broke it. It never is. Ever! That's just the bullshit we're all fed and some like you believe. It is broke because those in power have exploited it until there was nothing else left and exactly the same thing is happening all over the world, including here in the UK. If people are unemployed or broke, who buys the goods so cheaply produced by exploiting those workers left in employ? Instead of responding emotively, think it through. It isn't the ramblings of lefties, it's just the way it is.
  • .....the similarities between Japan and the uk are frightening - centuries of entrenched power and money but when it comes to the crunch......they have no idea.
    CameraOn & Co take notes please.......................
  • ...and a nominal Royal Family also in Japan.
  • Thank you for enlightening us about the Japanese eco-social system...
    the Japanese imperial dynasty is still live and kicking, only rebranded if I got you right...

    this is what the Tories are trying to achieve in the UK by turning back the clock and making us travel back to the 18th Century feudalist Britain where also everybody had to know its place...
  • Nothing to do with the Imperial Dynasty. They haven't been the power in Japan for hundreds of years. Zochoten is talking about the people who actually have power and yes, it's a little like the equivalent in the UK.
  • I have been saying (mainly to myself) for some time, that we are being forced backwards to a feudal state, and the pressures are increasing. This did not start only recently.
  • Well said zochoten. The quality of your post is superior to most of the superficial fluff that passes for reporting from Japan. And how correct is Antipodies below in likening Nippon to the UK! OGT
  • adamsson66 4 hours ago
    No country anywhere in the world could cope with this scale of disaster.

    Because Japan is highly developed it coped better than almost anywhere else would have done with the earthquake and tsunami and the relief effort will be better again because it is more developed.

    The down side is when you have very little losing everything is no great shock but when you have everything there is more to loose.

    But you just carry on patronising them about how they can't cope without British and American help
  • If I'm ever in a situation like theirs, I hope someone will patronise me with offers of help.
  • "The down side is when you have very little losing everything is no great shock but when you have everything there is more to loose".

    I feel confident someone, somewhere, will ensure they don't lose their debts.
  • I agree. If this had happened anywhere else, the disastrous effects would be 10 fold. This is a country well prepared for such events, probably better prepared than anywhere else in the world, but on that scale, it overcame even those. I do hope those suffering keep up hope and stand tall, and don't degenerate into the lawlessness that unsues in most countries when disaster happens. Central governments are always slow at responding (too much having to go through chain of command?). But at least the localities are doing what they can in the meantime, and I'm sure the flow of relief will be more swift than relief from other central governments at times of crisis.
    And I don't think he's saying it's patronising to offer help, but patronising to say they can't cope 'without' America and Britain. And I agree, as if America and Britain have shown how great they are at times of emergency.
  • leeblued 5 hours ago
    This is unfortunately what you get when everything is privatised and run by the greedy ,money grabbing companies that exploit all and sundry. A lame government ,with no real authority and all those responsible running for cover !

    Watching the displaced people in the very poor shelters that have been made available and seeing the shortages and hardships that they are suffering , I must ask the question " why the Hell are Companies like Toyota, NTT , Honda , Nissan, Tokyo Denki, Cannon ,J R East, Kansai Denki, Sony etc etc instead of reopening their plants to make more cars or whatever consumer BS, not diverting some of their huge capacity to help their people ?
  • I don't agree with this view. It is not a matter of private v public. This argument comes out more and more but it means absolutely nothing because it is just ordinary people in both. We elect governments not private companies to run the country for us and the blame must always be on the government no matter what the problem. If there is indeed problems with the way private companies operate then the government should deal with it.

    You can hardly expect manufacturing companies to help. They haven't the experience to deal with emergencies.
  • I find your comments ridiculous. While those businesses could shut down, they are not food producers and can provide far more value to Japanese citizens by continuing to bring foreign money to Japan through running profitable businesses. Japanese businesses are taxed at 40+%, higher than most areas of the world. You want to shut off that money supply to the Japanese government when it needs it the most?
  • I am actually wondering where the appeals are for Japan. The last one in Pakistan, you could not turn the news on but there was an appeal on the ticker tape.
  • thruthseeker 13 hours ago
    How much of a threat is the nuclear crisis in Japan? That question is on the minds of millions of people around the globe tonight. Unfortunately, the Japanese government and the mainstream media have both been doing their best to downplay this crisis. Even though there have been massive explosions at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility, authorities in Japan have still been very stingy with information and they keep insisting that the situation is under control. But the situation is not under control. In fact, it just seems to get worse with each passing day. Radiation levels are now incredibly high at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex and the radiation cloud is starting to spread. Radiation levels in Tokyo are already 10 times above normal levels, and there are reports in the international media that some people have begun to flee the city. It is imperative that the Japanese government tell the truth about what is going on because this could potentially affect the health of millions of people. There are over 12 million people in the city of Tokyo alone. If this nuclear crisis continues to get worse it could potentially end up killing more Japanese than the tsunami just did.

    Yes, things really are that serious.

    We are not just talking about a repeat of Chernobyl.

    We are possibly talking about “many Chernobyls”.

    It is somewhat understandable that the Japanese government and the mainstream media do not want to panic the public, but the reality is that people need the truth about what is going on.

    Unfortunately, it is not likely that the Japanese government or the mainstream media are going to “change their stripes” overnight, so in order to try to get an idea of what is really going on we need to look at the clues.

    Sometimes it is much more important to watch what people are doing rather than what they are saying.

    For example, a significant number of foreign governments are now evacuating personnel from Tokyo.

    Why would they be evacuating if there was no threat?

    Posted below are 27 signs that the nuclear crisis in Japan is much worse than either the mainstream media or the Japanese government have been telling us. When you take all of these clues and you put them together it really does paint a frightening picture….

    #1 Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan is urging all people living within 30 kilometers of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility to stay indoors.

    #2 Andre-Claude Lacoste, the head of France’s Nuclear Safety Authority, says that the containment vessel surrounding the No. 2 reactor at Japan’s Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex is “no longer sealed“.

    #3 Radiation levels in Tokyo are already 10 times above normal levels.

    #4 Reuters is reporting that some residents of Tokyo are already starting to flee the city.

    #5 Radiation levels in one city north of Tokyo, Utsunomiya, were recently reported to be 33 times above normal levels.

    #6 Radiation levels in the city of Saitama have been reported to be 40 times above normal levels.

    #7 According to Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, the “possibility of further radioactive leakage is heightening.”

    #8 The Japanese government is admitting that radiation levels near the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex are very harmful to human health.

    #9 According to the World Nuclear Association, exposure to over 100 millisieverts of radiation a year can lead to cancer. At this point the level of radiation being measured right outside the number 4 reactor at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex is 400 millisieverts per hour.

    #10 A U.S. Navy crew that was assisting in relief efforts was exposed to a month’s worth of nuclear radiation in just a single hour.

    #11 According to the U.S. Navy, low levels of radiation have been detected at their bases in Yokosuka and Atsugi.

    #12 The USS Ronald Reagan recently detected significant levels of radiation 100 miles off the Japanese coast.

    #13 The operator of the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex has pulled out 750 of the 800 workers that were working at the facility.

    #14 The French embassy in Tokyo is advising French citizens to leave the city.

    #15 The German embassy in Tokyo is advising all German citizens to leave the country entirely.

    #16 German technology company SAP is evacuating their offices in Tokyo.

    #17 Austria has announced that it is moving its embassy from Tokyo to Osaka due to fears about the radiation.

    #18 Finland is urging all of their citizens to leave Tokyo.

    #19 The Czech military is sending planes to Japan specifically to evacuate the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra.

    #20 Air China is canceling many flights to Tokyo.

    #21 The Chinese Embassy has announced that it will be evacuating all Chinese citizens from the Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaraki and Iwate prefectures.

    #22 Russia is making preparations to evacuate civilians and military units from the Kuril Islands.

    #23 Physicist Frank von Hippel recently told the New York Times the following about this disaster: “It’s way past Three Mile Island already”.

    #24 The president of France’s nuclear safety authority says that this crisis is now almost as bad as Chernobyl was….

    “It’s clear we are at Level 6, that’s to say we’re at a level in between what happened at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.”

    #25 There have been reports of extremely high radiation at another nuclear facility in Japan. It has been reported that at the Onagawa nuclear plant radiation that is 700 times the normal level was detected at one point.

    #26 One anonymous senior nuclear industry executive told The Times Of India that Japanese power industry managers are “basically in a full-scale panic” and that “they don’t know what to do”.

    #27 It is also being reported that there were over 600,000 spent fuel rods stored at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex. Most of these rods were apparently stored near the top of the 6 reactor buildings. There have already been major explosions at three of those buildings. It is now feared that there is now nothing to prevent many of these spent fuel rods from releasing radiation into the atmosphere. That is really, really bad news.

    So is there a threat that nuclear radiation from Japan could reach the United States?

    Well, actually everyone agrees that radiation could reach the United States. The controversy is whether or not it will be enough to be harmful to human health.
  • I was always a proponent of nuclear power generation. I suppose I still am. But I would have thought that siting your plant in a geologically stable area would have been fairly high up in the design and construction criteria.
    Apparently not.
  • Your posting is quite informative, thank you for taking the time to share this information.
  • Your last two points are good, thank you. In addition, in the last couple of days, the Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), which owns the power station, has omninously warned: "The possibility of re-criticality is not zero".

    But the first 25 points are pretty unfair and obscure those important points, if I may say. Background levels of radiation are low so having a short period of 10 times background does not mean anything like even one Chernobyl, I think. People are leaving mainly because that is a normal reaction to all the uncertainty and the possible worsening of the crisis, not an indicator themself that the problems are really severe.
  • This is what the worst nightmares are made of...

    it started as a natural (God) disaster, now it is developing as a man made one...
    let us pray for Mercy against our foolish man made contraptions...

    God Almighty, forgive our excesses and extinguish the harmful radiations,
    God of the Skys and the Earths, you are ever capable of everything,
    you are the Omnipotent and the Powerful above all your Creation...
  • Go away, use some other platform to talk to your imaginary friend.
  • That was unnecessarily rude.
  • People like you have no imagination, no knowledge of the history of humanity, and a childish arrogance that is quite pathetic.
    If NABIL wishes to have faith that is his right, there is no need for you to open your big fat mouth in such a rude manner.
  • no imagination? That sums up religion. Well done.
  • Nabil has a right to his faith, plus his totally irrational belief that his faith is somehow going to provide a miraculous solution to the nuclear crisis in Japan: Clintlegend has a right to his opinion that Nabil's faith is a load of b*ll*cks. You're the only one who's actually being personally insulting and rude.
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