02 April 2011 By Stephen
Lendman Despite a disaster multiples
worse than Chernobyl, major media reports all along
downplayed it. Now they largely ignore it, moving on
to more important things like celebrity features and
baseball's opening day, besides pretending
American-led Libya bombing is well-intended when, in
fact, it's another brazen power grab - an imperial war
of conquest, explained in numerous previous articles. The horror of all wars aside,
waged solely for wealth and power, never humanity,
Japan deserves regular top billing, given its global
implications and potential millions of lives affected.
Ignoring it is scandalous, yet it's practically
disappeared from television where most people get
news, unaware only managed reports are aired omitting
vital truths. Over three weeks and counting,
Japan's crisis keeps worsens. Radiation levels in
Fukushima's underground tunnel water reached 10,000
times above normal and rising. In nearby seawater,
they're 4,385 times too high. Heavy rainfall
exacerbates the problem. Food, water, air and soil
contamination is spreading. On March 31, New York Times
writer Henry Fountain headlined, "Cleanup Questions as
Radiation Spreads," saying: At issue is "how to clean up
areas that have been heavily contaminated by
radioactivity," stopping short of suggesting they're
dead zones that may affect all northern Japan, an area
comparable to Pennsylvania, potentially making it
uninhabitable. On March 31, the IAEA (the
industry's global promoter) "said a soil sample from
Iitate, a village of 7,000 about 25 miles northwest of
the plant, showed very high concentrations of
cesium-137," a harmful gamma ray-producing isotope,
contaminating air, water and soil for decades. Levels found are "double" those
in Chernobyl's dead zone, raising concerns about
extending Japan's evacuation, not done so far.
Moreover, they're rising daily and will continue for
months, perhaps years, creating permanent
contamination combined with uranium, plutonium, and
other hazardous toxins. On April 1, Al Jazeera headlined,
"Japan nuclear evacuation will be 'long term,' "
saying: "Residents of evacuated
areas....have been warned that they may not be able to
return to their homes for months," if ever, given
increasing hazardous contamination levels. Cleanup
will take decades and fall far short of making areas
toxin-free. Experts call conditions "unchartered
territory," wondering what, if anything can be done.
The nuclear genie is out of the bottle. The
imponderables are huge, and potential implications
staggering. On March 25, Helen Caldicott
highlighted "a medical problem of vast dimensions,"
saying "the situation has grown increasingly grave." A
week later, it's worse with no end of crisis in sight,
Caldicott calling nuclear power's harm "the greatest
public health hazard the world will ever see." On March 31, physicist Michio
Kaku said "three (Fukushima) raging meltdowns" plus
one or more (melting) spent fuel ponds opened to the
air are ongoing, adding: "This is huge," involving
"uncontrolled radiation releases into the
environment," including plutonium, the most toxic
substance known. "A speck of plutonium, a millionth of
a gram, can cause cancer if ingested." Moreover, if
the plant site is abandoned, "we could be in free
fall." Before it ends, Kaku believes it may far exceed
Chernobyl. Perhaps it already has, though no one's
admitting it or knows for sure. Experts like Harvey Wasserman agree. On March 27, he headlined, " 'Safe' Radiation is a Lethal TMI Lie," saying: -- No amount of radiation is safe; they're harmful, cumulative, permanent and unforgiving; -- It's why pregnant women aren't x-rayed; -- "Any detectable fallout can kill;" -- Fukushima's "serious danger" requires everyone to "prepare for the worst;" -- "Fukusima is deadly to Americans;" -- Minimally, "it threatens countless embryos and fetuses in utero, the infants, the elderly, the unborn who will come to future mothers now being exposed;" -- There's "no defense against even the tiniest radioactive assault;" -- "Science has never found such a 'safe' threshold, and never will;" -- "All doses, 'insignificant' or otherwise, can harm the human organism;" -- Three Mile Island (TMI) victims experienced "cancer, leukemia, birth defects, stillbirths, sterility, malformations, open lesions, hair loss, a metallic taste and much more....;" -- Pennsylvania's Department of Agriculture also documented the farm and wild animal death and mutation rate; -- TMI was minor compared to Fukushima; its radiation is "pouring into the air and water;" operators reported levels "a million times normal, then retracted the estimate to a 'mere' 100,000;" -- Most frightening is what's unrevealed; coverup after TMI and Chernobyl was scandalous; -- All North America and Europe are affected, especially by rain, increasing soil and water contamination; -- "Fukushima's worst may be yet to come," by far the worst ever environmental and human disaster; -- "The response of the Obama Administration has been beyond derelict," claiming Americans face no threat; he lied and now remains silent; -- " 'Impossible' accidents continue to happen, one after the other, each of them successively worse." What will it take to stop this monster? Because of enormous industry profits, perhaps it will take ending human life to convince skeptics. Candidate v. President Obama In 2008, candidate Obama was skeptical about nuclear power, telling NBC Meet the Press host Tim Russert on January 15, 2008: Unless a "safe way to produce (and store) nuclear energy (is found), then absolutely we shouldn't build more plants." At a January 13, 2008 town hall meeting, he said: "Nuclear is bad because we don't know how to store it. And it poses security hazards." On December 30, 2007, he said: "....(N)uclear energy is not optimal so I am not a nuclear energy proponent....I am much more interested in solar and wind and bio-diesel (to produce) clean energy and (new) jobs....I have not ruled out nuclear (but) only so far is it is clean and safe." Earlier he said: -- "Nuclear power is not working for us right now;" -- The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is "a moribund agency that needs to be revamped, and it's become captive of the industries that it regulates and I think that's a problem." He also called storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain "a bad idea." Nuclear power "has a host of problems that have not been solved," and "I don't think there's anything that we inevitably dislike about nuclear power. We just dislike the fact that it might blow up....and irradiate us....and kill us. That's the problem." Even candidate Obama was less than candid. On July 4, 2007, CounterPunch co-editor Jeff St. Clair and contributor Joshua Frank called him "another automaton of the atomic lobby" in their article headlined, "Barack Obama's Nuclear Ambitions," saying: During the 1990s, "the atom lobby....had a stranglehold on the Clinton administration and now they seem to have the same suffocating grip around (Obama's) neck, (the Democrat's) brightest star...." It showed (and still does) in generous industry contributions. As of late March 2007, he "accepted $159,800 from executives and employees of Exelon, the nation's largest nuclear power plant operator." They previously funded his 2004 Senate campaign, contributing $74,350. In return, he helped kill an amendment to stop large industry loan guarantees "for power-plant operators to develop new energy projects the public will not only pay millions of dollars in loan costs but will also risk losing billions of dollars if the companies default." In 2005, Nuclear News praised him for "keeping an open mind" on nuclear power. In other words, for supporting it despite the unforgiving hazards. "The atom lobby must certainly be pleased." Why else would they help elect him president. A previous article explained Obama's longstanding industry ties, including with Chicago-based Exelon. Its web site says it operates 17 reactors at 10 stations in Illinois, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, providing 20% of US nuclear capacity. In addition, Obama's former top political aide, David Axelrod, once lobbied for Exelon, and Rahm Emanuel, his former White House chief of staff (now Chicago's mayor-elect), profited handsomely as an investment banker, arranging mergers that created the company. In his proposed budget, Obama includes $36 billion in industry loan guarantees for new facilities - free money. He's committed to jump-start new construction, halted since Three Mile Island in 1979. Already takers are lining up, 20 or more applications pending before the NRC. In fact, he and Energy Secretary Steven Chu downplay Fukushima, ignoring industry hazards, including 23 US nuclear plants at 16 locations using the same failed GE-designed Mark 1 containment vessels. Earlier, the NRC called them susceptible to explosions and failure because of cost-cutting design features. Its 1985 study warned that failure within the first few hours after a core meltdown was very likely. Its top safety official at the time said it had a 90% probability of failing if an accident caused overheating and melting. When reactor cooling is compromised, the containment vessel is the last line of defense. However, GE's design is hazardous and unsafe. Today, Obama supports the NRC, the same agency Karl Grossman calls "an unabashed promoter of nuclear power," the one candidate Obama called "moribund, (a) captive of the industries it regulates." The one with a perfect record - never having denied applicants new plant licenses. The one now dangerously extending operating lives of aging, poorly maintained plants with deplorable safety records to 80 years, assuring multiple likelihoods of trouble. It now says no new regulation or oversight is needed. No moratorium on new construction or old plants will be instituted, and, in fact, Vermont's trouble-plagued Yankee plant (using the same type Fukushima reactor) got a 20-year extension instead of being shut down. That in spite of recent reports highlighting serious industry "near misses," safety violations, failures to reveal legally-required information regarding defective equipment, electrical supply system inadequacies, and other examples of industry mismanagement and criminality, risking an American Fukushima disaster. According to nuclear technician Tom Saporito: "The administration, including the president of the United States, is recklessly endangering the population by promoting the construction of nuclear plants and by not taking affirmative action to deal with known safety problems." In fact, shutting the industry down is crucial, especially as Grossman, a longtime industry expert, says: "Safe, clean, renewable energy technologies fully implemented can provide all the power we need - and energy that we can live with" safely, unlike the hazardous nuclear roulette played each day these ticking time bombs operate. As president, however, Obama fronts for Wall Street, war profiteers, Big Oil, Big Pharma, other corporate favorites, and his nuclear industry friends, risking a major disaster to assure generous 2012 campaign contributions for another four years to complete wrecking America and other nations globally. That's his "change we can believe in" plan, not the one sold to constituents.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening. http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/. Comments 💬 التعليقات |