Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
In 2007, Rick Weiss reported for the Washington Post potential hazards of genetic medicine and the failed regulatory apparatuses designed t...
-
March 11 is the anniversary for the Fukushima Daiichi disaster of 3 nuclear meltdowns, at least one melt through, and a fire in at least ...
-
The weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal reports that PG&E suffered a massive loss of control of the utility's databases, le...
Strange wildlife events on the west coast of North America and even stranger in Japan. Of the 69 huge blue tuna in the Tokyo Sea Life Park that were "healthy" three months ago...one is the sole survivor in February 2015.
ReplyDeleteAnd why did Japanese spot a 30 ton whale and 100 dolphins migrating to the world famous 200 mile long Inland Sea in Southern Japan? That large of an ocean species is rarely ever found in that huge inland waterway. The Ice Age-created Inland Sea opens near Hiroshima to the Sea of Japan and has another opening in the east coast of Japan several hundred miles south of Fukushima.
Answer...smart beings fleeing the devastation of radiation in the Pacific waters along east coast Japan. It must be deadly toxic all along the coastline down to Tokyo Bay. The whales and the dolphin know when to flee.
But humans are stuck because they are helpless victims caught in a massive power struggle of nuclear industry and government economics.