nuclear radiation in Japan

A nation that can run Bullet Trains safely bungles Nuclear Power. Surprising.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster has been a tourism & public relations disaster too, of course.

There’s as much confusion as information. Bloomberg cites the highest radiation levels yet, while the Financial Times tells that levels around Greater Tokyo have fallen.

Politicians are driven to publicity stunts like this — drinking a glass of water taken from puddles inside the damaged plant.

Personally I’ve not been worried at all for my safety over 7wks here.

The government is handing over $64 billion to Tokyo Electric Power. Part goes for compensation to 89,000 people.

That company needs to be nationalized, temporarily, at least. Japan needs power.

This is what gives me nightmares.


more photos of Hiroshima on The Big Picture

If you want to worry about something, worry about what will happen when some dictator or terrorist uses a nuclear weapon. It would be highly unlikely that the attacked nation would not retaliate in some way shape or form.

If you had told me when I was age-20 that I’d be visiting Hiroshima at age-54, I’d have laughed out loud. I was convinced that the world would be destroyed by now, by Nuclear war.

… yet somehow the planet has lasted this long.

Hiroshima had been left largely untouched by American bombing campaigns; that was, however, intended to ensure a more accurate measurement of the atomic bomb’s effect.

On Monday, August 6, 1945, “Little Boy” was dropped … directly killing an estimated 80,000 people. By the end of the year, injury and radiation brought total casualties to 90,000–140,000.

For those killed immediately (mostly women and children), it was a fast death. For the rest — horrific.

Three days later a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. Another 80,000 were dead by the end of the year.

details on Wikipedia

… I’ve always wondered whether it was necessary to drop the second bomb so soon after the first. Yet it was another 6 days before Japan surrendered. Emperor Hirohito requested an end to the war personally.

Another big factor in the Japanese surrender was the Soviet Union launching surprise attacks at the same time.

Actually, the USA had a timetable for more bombs. We’re lucky that only two were used.

… Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson, had honeymooned in Kyoto and argued to keep it off the list for as long as possible. One small blessing.

Ron embarrasses Kate AGAIN

Seems Rockin’ made some comic business cards for Kate. Using old photos to humourous effect.

… Late that afternoon, I began noticing that the photographs on the cards I was doling out weren’t all the same. Most contained a picture of my smiling face, but one featured me with an iguana on my head, and another showed me wearing a highly unbecoming English Bobby’s hat. Stanley had evidently thrown in a few unappetizing images from our family photo collection. …

I don’t see what she’s complaining about. 🙂

details on Kate is Great – High and Low in Hogtown

… looks like I’ll be out to visit the Shewchuks just before that holiday Ron shares with Jesus.

03 /11/11 Earthquake in Japan

I was enjoying a Tokyo restaurant with Shiro when the seat began to sway and shake — my first earthquake. (Actually I’d slept through a couple in the past.)

That was nothing, he told me. … Happens all the time.”

… the Great East Japan Earthquake (東日本大震災) … Friday, 11 March 2011 … was the most powerful known earthquake ever to have hit Japan, and one of the five most powerful earthquakes in the world overall since modern record-keeping began in 1900.

One minute before the earthquake was felt in Tokyo, the Earthquake Early Warning system … sent out warnings of impending strong shaking to millions. It is believed that the early warning by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) saved many lives. …

… A 400 km (250 mi) stretch of coastline dropped vertically by 0.6 m (2.0 ft), allowing the tsunami to travel farther and faster onto land …

Earthquakes are scary. One woman told me she ran out into her yard and hugged the biggest tree.

But the damage was mostly caused by the tidal wave. Over 230,000 vehicles were destroyed. More than 90% of the deaths were from drowning. Here’s a glimpse of what happened in one coastal town.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Life is short. Be thankful every day you have without earthquake. Especially if you live near a fault line.

And don’t forget the people in Japan.

Sensei Shiro Tanaka

Sensei is an honorific meaning “master” or “teacher”.

That’s Shiro’s 96yr-old Mom, still living independently. The eldest person I’ve ever met.

Gaijin like me in Japan often feel big, hairy, smelly and clumsy — particularly if they really are big, hairy, smelly and clumsy.

We don’t know the thousands of different rules of etiquette.

Happily, Shiro has been 25yrs teaching at the Osaka University Center for Japanese Language and Culture, Minoh Dormitory for Foreign Students.

He’s eminently qualified to try to teach a dumb tourist like me.

Thanks for trying, Sensei.

Shiro and his wife have their first Grandchild.

thank you Risshō Kōsei Kai

One of my first gymnastics coaches, Shiro Tanaka, invited me to attend a Buddhist English language festival in Tokyo hosted by the International Buddhist Congregation, a division of Rissho Kosei-kai. IBC offers an English language service every Sunday.

Here’s the Great Sacred Hall, only one building of what’s almost a small city in their Tokyo Headquarters.

Though I have studied the Buddha, I didn’t know much about Japanese Buddhism. The RKK teachings are not as strict as what’s practiced in Thailand, by comparison, more welcoming to lay people.

“Buddhism for Today”

We stayed at the excellent Pilgrimage Hall residence. Pilgrims.

Here’s a statue of co-founder Nikkyo Niwano (1906–1999). He’s remembered for his interfaith work, his calls for global peace and disarmament.

… As of 2010 there are over 240 churches and centers in 20 countries. Membership currently stands at 6.5 million members, with the majority living in Japan. …

All good. Shiro feels the organization should have more Canadian members, though.

A special thanks to Reverend Suzuki who gave me a personal summing up of the RKK teachings.

See more photos of our two days at RKK with the IBC.

The Lady and the Monk

For a National Cultural Holiday in Japan — my host Shiro Tanaka wrote and acted in a comic skit performed at a Buddhist English language festival.

The short play was intended to make a Buddhist parable more memorable by being FUNNY. It worked. Especially when Shiro mixed up the order of his lines.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Hosted by the International Buddhist Congregation, part of Rissho Kosei-kai. IBC offers an English language service every Sunday.

We stayed at the excellent adjacent Pilgrimage Hall at no cost.

curtain call

Thanks Shiro and IBC for inviting me.

“online backup” is SLOW

I paid for 1yr of Carbonite online back-up storage. Then quit as it was WAY TOO SLOW to be practical. (I’m back to using external hard drives.)

Now Apple is building in similar cloud back-ups. Will it work?

… I have not had the best experiences when experimenting with Lion Internet Recovery. One attempt to use it on my MacBook Air during the week when iOS 5, iCloud and the iPhone 4S launched resulted in a recovery, just for Mac OS X Lion, that was going to take well over nine hours to complete! Ouch. …

… recovering and restoring a computer to full working order could take up to two days …

Cult of Mac – The Reason Why The World Isn’t Ready For Lion Internet Recoveries [Opinion]

new Nokia / Windows phones are here

My buddy Andy from Microsoft showed me an unreleased version in August. So I knew they would be cool.

Quite different, too, from Apple and Android.

Here’s the first available commercially, I believe, though not in North America. You can order one in Europe, including the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

That’s the Nokia Lumia

It’s getting good reviews, even from the Apple fanboys.

I’m still likely to get an iPhone 4S in December. It will take some time to work out the bugs in the Windows phones.

I’m getting an iPhone 4S in December

The feature I like best is the camera.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

If I actually use the device for navigation, email, social networking … I’ll want excellent syncing between phone and my MacBook Air. Not perfect, it looks like Apple is on the way to getting that working.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

It’s the first iPhone that is easy to use internationally. But it’s critical I know how to turn off roaming and data.

related – International iPhone: Avoiding iPhone Data Roaming Charges

on the road with Shiro

This is my old mentor / gymnastics coach Shiro Tanaka. He was up at 4:30am today, getting ready for our road trip.

It’s a National Cultural Holiday in Japan — Shiro wrote and acted in a comic skit performed at a big Buddhist English language festival.

Hilarious.

Here’s the professor at work at University of Osaka where he’s been the past 25yrs.

He’s looking to the future. Retiring in about 2yrs. HELLO from Shiro to all his old friends.