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I heard that many people were evacuated because of this, but when I checked, it was plutonium scattered from Shina's nuclear tests.

I heard that many people were evacuated because of this, but when I checked, it was plutonium scattered from Shina's nuclear tests.
March 12, 2018

The following is a chapter I sent out on 2017-12-07.
It is from an article by Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
In this chapter, he proves my assessment of him correct as well.
A friend of mine bought today's weekly Shincho issue for me.
The reason was to read the column by Masayuki Takayama, the only journalist in the postwar world, which was the latter part of this weekly magazine.
It was also to read the column by Yoshiko Sakurai, who preceded him in the series.
His article in this week's issue is also genuine and will reaffirm to the wise eyes of the world that I am correct in my assessment.
The emphasis in the text other than the headline and *~* is mine.

The Asahi Shimbun of rumor
Merkel saw Fukushima and said she would quit nuclear power, and they, the smart ones, would make do with renewable energy. 
Germans have always hated Japan because they still hold a grudge over their past defeat and capture at Qingdao.
*That is why the Asahi Shimbun and the Germans have been in step.
The Asahi Shimbun's editorial board members' praise of Germany proved their abnormality.*
Therefore, her policy of looking down on Japan and abandoning nuclear power generation was greeted with unreserved praise. 
However, pretty words do not always work.
Renewable energy is a pipe dream, and Germany's economy will easily collapse if it relies on it. 
In the end, nuclear power plants will remain.
But this is the land of Volkswagen.
They have the technology to cheat the world of emissions.
They will probably put a smoke device on the plant and say, "Hi, we are burning coal," to get around it. 
Emi Kawaguchi-Mahn, a German living in Japan who knows what is going on behind the scenes, walked through Fukushima and wrote a book, "The Japanese Theory of Reconstruction," which exposes the deception that surpasses that of Germany. 
The book's subtitle is "The Fukushima No One Wrote About."
These are painful words for a newspaper person who has been in Japan and written nothing about it. 
On 3.11, the world marveled at the Japanese people's patience, discipline, and consideration for one another. 
But now, years later, Mahn felt that the Japanese had clearly deteriorated. She traced the roots of such change and found the good-natured media at the end of it. 
They were spreading foolish rumors and inciting the residents to be miserable under the guise of beating up on the evil significant capital and the country on behalf of the residents. 
The "press" does not say which newspaper it was, but I am sure it was the Asahi Shimbun.
But I am sure it was the Asahi Shimbun.
Rumors and agitation are Asahi's forte. 

*NHK, too, should not be forgotten, for on its 7 o'clock news on Sunday, November 26, Inoue Asahi spent a lot of time narrating about Fukushima and thyroid cancer, etc., without any medical evidence...in other words, propaganda. The "Fukushima" and "thyroid cancer" propaganda was a propaganda piece.*

Immediately after 3.11, plutonium was detected at TEPCO Fukushima.
Plutonium has a half-life of over 20,000 years.
Freelance writer Takashi Uesugi wrote that if inhaled, internal exposure to radiation would be the end of the story, and the Asahi newspaper got on board and made a fuss about it. 
Many people evacuated from their homes because of this, but when we checked, we found that it was plutonium scattered from China's nuclear tests.
Asahi, as usual, is not even pardoned. 
Even when the Kawauchi Nuclear Power Plant resumed operations, Asahi spread rumors on its front page. 
The article, which was full of realism, stirred up people's allergy to nuclear power plants. 
It said that radiation monitoring equipment was useless and that residents did not know where to run in an emergency. 
The whole article was a lie.
Shunichi Tanaka, a member of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, also condemned the article's outrageousness, saying, "It is now a crime to use even an editorial to stir up residents' anxiety with baseless lies. 
Another issue that Shunichi Tanaka pointed out in the Asahi report was the contaminated water problem at TEPCO's Fukushima plant.
A large amount of groundwater flows into the contaminated area, and the entire region becomes contaminated. 
However, 90% of the contaminated water is tritium, which is considered harmless.
The water can be discharged into the sea, but the fishermen are against it.
The argument is that they are afraid of rumors. 
Tanaka says that newspapers should suppress rumors and convey correct knowledge.
That is what Asahi does not do.
On the contrary, they write about contaminated water to scare the fishermen. 
The other day, the same paper devoted an entire page to reporting that the 34.5 billion yen frozen soil wall, designed to stop groundwater inflow, was not working.
The paper scoffed at the 800 tanks holding contaminated water, saying that thanks to the wall, the number had already ballooned to 800. 
In quiet tones, Mahn denounces the Asahi Shimbun, the "media" that does not even try to quash rumors. 
On the other hand, she also depicts the prefecture residents who pretend to be unaware of the fact and receive 100 million yen per house even though they know much of the truth.
Fukushima is indeed deteriorating.

2024/3/10 in Tokyo

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