Fukushima,
denial, and
the ethics of extinction
by
Mary Poppins
14
May, 2012
Fukushima
The
problem first became apparent in 1985. I was sitting on a porch in
the mountains in Arizona reading a Scientific
American article
by one of the early researchers investigating the unlikely
possibility that adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere might be a
problem. Over the previous months there had been a number of similar
pieces on things like the ozone layer and the decline in fisheries.
Then a ‘eureka!’ (actually, a ‘holy shit’) moment. Clearly
there was going to be serious trouble in maybe 20-30 years unless
something changed. I tried hard and for a long time to help that
change happen, because it sure didn’t look good, even back then.
Skip
forward to now. The window of time during which our species could
have changed course and averted this has slammed shut. The forces we
blindly set in motion are far beyond our ability to control, despite
the geoengineering fantasies of the technologists. Ever see The
Sorcerers Apprentice?
There
are several irreversible processes under way that would each, alone,
be sufficient to kill off if not everything at least the upper part
of the food chain, which now consists mostly of humans..Two of them
are the release of the methane
now beginning to boil out of the Arctic ocean and permafrost
and ocean acidification.
These
are disasters from which the living planet will not recover for
perhaps millions of years, and the composition of the recovered
biosphere will include few currently extant species. Cockroaches look
good to go, primates not so much. But life has made it through these
sorts of things before, these great extinctions, and probably would
yet again recover and flourish although we will not be around to see
it. The third problem is different, new to the world.
We
have created astoundingly toxic substances which have not been
present on the surface of this planet in billions of years; some have
never been here before. All are made in nuclear reactors — they do
not occur in nature. The particulars of this problem are well
documented and need not be repeated here, except to note that earth’s
living beings do not have eons of genetic adaptation to constant high
radiation levels. All other problems allow some optimism about the
long term prospect for recovery after the human rampage is over. This
threat is different in kind from other environmental problems because
radioactivity directly disrupts or destroys the ability of genes to
accurately replicate. This is not repairable. We menace everything,
not just ourselves.
For
about seventy years, we’ve been building and operating reactors
with design lives of maybe 40 years. There are roughly 450 operating
civilian reactors, and a guesstimated 500+ military, research, and
other reactors, all of which continue to produce radioisotopes with
half-lives ranging from seconds to millions of years in containments
designed as temporary until the waste problem is solved.
Unfortunately, no solution has been found, and when the containments
begin to fail significantly, all the garbage sitting in them will
disperse into the environment. There is no other choice- remove this
crap from the biosphere, or eat, breathe, and wear it, wash with it,
walk on it and drink it when the containment fails.
You’re
now looking down the barrel of the gun that is the likeliest of all
to kill you, me and everyone we know. It’s not vague any longer.
This is the specific problem that will end civilization and ruin the
biosphere, with a specific mechanism of action and a very short time
frame. Unless, of course, something can be done to secure those SFPs
and reactors until a currently unknown technology can be invented
capable of removing the spent fuel to another place before the
earthquakes and entropy make the effort moot. Is it even possible?
Denial
Maybe,
but we’re unlikely to ever find out. The first step in solving or
mitigating a problem is to acknowledge it, all of it, and humans
don’t if they can possibly avoid it.
When
I was in my twenties and reading a lot of history, there were a
couple of years where I got fascinated by the Holocaust, how that
could have been, what people thought they were doing. One aspect in
particular struck me; it was in a book whose title is long forgotten,
about the response of the Jewish community in Germany to the rise of
the Nazis. In a nutshell, denial.
Nobody
in the Jewish community, especially the well-off, wanted to believe
that the words they were hearing from the Nazis as they rose were
serious.
Respectable
authorities, rabbinical celebrities reassured everyone that Hitler
was just posturing, nothing would come of it. As the vise grew
tighter, the denial grew more fervent. Those few who defied the
consensus and insisted on the reality of the danger were admonished,
ridiculed, and finally shunned, in the old-fashioned sense — nobody
would have anything to do with them. Reality was just too damn
uncomfortable, so they chose to die rather than face it. This is not
uncommon; in fact, it is pretty normal behavior. People would often
rather die than give up comfortable lives.
That
is what we’re doing. For a minimum twenty years it has been clear
to anyone who actually look that industrial civilization is a suicide
machine based on a false premise; that the Earth offers both endless
resources and a bottomless pit for waste. Wrong on both counts,
obviously- but admitting that is to acknowledge the destruction we
create merely by living in this briefly possible fashion, this
remarkably comfortable suicidal fashion.
So
you and me, naturally above average in awareness, intelligence,
spiritual development, so hip and edgy that we read Nature Bats Last,
been worried about this stuff for years, tsk tsk — we gonna give it
all up and live on what can be had from the interaction of air, soil,
sunlight, water and intelligence?
Do
you sometimes drive for pleasure, say, out to eat and a movie? Been
known to blast out a few Btu to get the hot tub ready? Get on an
airplane? Buy convenient plastic items (gotta have music) that will
still be leaking toxins in a millennia or two?
Me,
too.
And
there’s your answer: No.
Proposed
solutions to any of this mess which require humans to behave better
than we do are worthless, just another form of denial. Please
consider the environment in which the creatures whose descendants we
are, evolved. To be successful in evolutionary terms means only one
thing, breeding.
The
champion breeders (sorry, I can’t resist: did you know one sixth of
the human population carries genes from the most successful breeder
of all, Genghis Kahn?) in our line of descent were those who were
best at acquiring food, water, shelter, and a mate- short term
challenges. The critters who were best at short term challenges did
well; there were no bonus points awarded for worrying about the ozone
layer. As a result, we are hard wired for short term motivation, and
long term problems are mostly invisible to our emotional perceptions
(and it’s the emotional process that dictates our actions despite
these fond illusions of intellectual rigor). We’re going to behave
the way we’re wired to behave, with some rare exceptions. The
wiring isn’t going to change quickly.
An
aside, scientists are wired on the same plane as the rest of us. They
are just as addicted to denial and comfort as anyone else, and as
unwilling to look at harsh reality. I had a mentor in radiation
monitoring for a while, a retired physicist with a background in that
area. He was great as long as we were talking about equipment and
procedures, but I made the mistake of telling him about Fukushima,
and he declared himself too depressed to continue and cut off
contact.
Another
interesting thing this situation has turned up is the apparent
inverse relationship between social rank and ability to grasp the
consequences of the situation. Wealthy and powerful people rarely
seem to understand that not all problems can be handled with spin,
force or money. People who deal with physical reality for a living
take a look at this information and quite often get it immediately.
So
denial it is and will be, until the situation gets so immediately,
undeniably awful that denial will no longer work, at which point
everybody starts demanding immediate action; that usually occurs long
after there is any effective response possible. We’re most likely
there now — the time available to reinforce SFP 4 is melting away
as the next earthquake approaches.
Plus
there’s another problem that may make doing anything impossible.
Tepco is almost out of workers. The experienced workers at all levels
have far overstepped the radiation dosages which bar them from
further work and must leave. There is no one to replace them, and it
is getting extremely difficult to find anyone willing to go out there
for any amount of money, as the ambient radiation hits higher and
higher levels and continues to rise. Reactors 2 and 3 cannot even be
approached anymore, and there appears to be an ongoing
release of yellow, radioactive steam cracks in the ground.
It seems likely that the plant will be abandoned soon, not by policy,
but because anyone going there will die.
What
to do?
In
all likelihood, Fukushima is going to blow and the chain of dominos
will fall; if some miracle occurs this time it won’t matter for
long, because all commercial reactors are being run by for-profit
companies under a de facto policy of “run to failure” — that’s
how you maximize profits. And then there are those other lethal
problems if we get past this one.
Why
do anything?
The
ethics of extinction
My
ethics are personal and therefore subjective, as I think is
ultimately true for everyone. So since I’m going to talk about
ethics, I need to tell you a little about mine to keep things up
front. My effort in life is to grow in kindness and integrity, which
to me look like necessary components of each other. I don’t have a
religion or gurus, but let me tell you about a story in the Los
Angeles Times some
years ago, when the newspaper were doing a series on the poorest of
the poor.
The
story was about a couple living in a hut with their child in a barren
wasteland in Africa. Poor doesn’t begin to convey their situation.
None of them had shoes or more than a rag or two. Every day the man
went scrounging in this desolate, empty place for some way to get
enough calories for another day of life. Because repeated failure
would doom them all, he always had to eat first even when if child
went hungry. The woman made her efforts closer to home. One day a
near miracle occurred; out scavenging, she found five potatoes, which
could be traded for nearly a week’s worth of millet, a huge
windfall.
Walking
home, she encountered a mother with a baby who hadn’t eaten in two
days and whose milk had failed, who asked her for help. She thought
about it for a moment, and then she gave the mother three of the five
potatoes.
I
think that this woman is a very advanced soul, and if I can make some
progress towards her ethics then this life will have been a success.
To
my subjective perception, service is the expression of kindness, and
it seems incumbent upon me to try and do whatever I can to make
things better for the beings around me.
So
here are some personal, subjective reasons to keep trying, even in
the face of human extinction:
We have just seen a sudden mass movement intentionally triggered by a small group — Occupy Wall Street — significantly change the political debate in this country overnight. It may be possible to do something similar regarding Fukushima. It won’t solve the problem, but it could be part, even an important part, of a larger effort which mitigates things a bit.
That’s about as much hope as the visible landscape will bear. It isn’t much, and granted, the likeliest outcome by far is the worst one.
If there was nothing at stake except our sorry selves, then maybe sinking back into the familiar numbness of inertia would be defensible.
But that isn’t the case. There are uncountable numbers of living beings, some of them human and very small, who will suffer and die horribly and slowly when Fukushima blows. Almost all of them are innocent, and powerless to prevent this.
You and I are neither powerless nor innocent. We didn’t stop gobbling the world even when we knew that others will be paying for our little party with their futures, including our own children. We have failed as guardians of their future.
Our unbridled selfishness has ruined the ever-changing web of living interaction known as the biosphere. This has been called biocide, and if the worst happens with the worlds radioactive waste, that may become literally true. Our debt is very large indeed, and it is owed to our own victims. It is just possible that an enormous effort may help somewhat.
What kind of person am I if I will not try?
__________
Many of us have treasured deep connections to certain places (the deserts and mountains of Arizona, in my case) and done our best to keep them alive and vibrant, to leave hawk and juniper, and ponderosa, elk and wolf room to thrive, to push back against the death culture with every tool available. We failed, and for those who know what is now gone the loss is hard to bear.
Consider love of life as a reason to keep working, love for what was and the astounding grace of having known the beauty and intelligence of a flourishing living ecosystem before the chance was gone, and love manifested as a willingness to make it possible again. I will keep trying in gratitude, and in hope that possibly the recovery can be expedited in some small way by something I do.
That’s reason enough.
__________
Who will you chose to be now, in this painful, nightmare time? This is an existential crisis in the most literal sense. The future existence of our species, and likely everything above the cockroach level is seriously in question, and our individual lives and the lives of our children are immediately at risk from Fukushima. One quake, one lengthy glitch in the water flow to any spent fuel pool, and immense suffering ensues instantly.
The situation may still seem abstract and unreal on an emotional level because humans cannot perceive radiation directly, and usually only personal perception of danger registers. But this will change over time as the cover-up cracks, or immediately if a pool burns. At some point the denial will break, followed by much disorder as people try to make themselves and their loved ones safe when it is impossible to be safe.
In disasters people can both show great kindness and commit terrible crimes, but mostly there is fear and running, hiding and shocking, paralyzing confusion. Responding to this situation requires courage, not least the courage to look directly at the horror we are facing and still not be broken, to refuse to stay safely passive as our species kills itself and everything else.
I think that for myself, integrity requires I keep trying until I no longer have the ability.
__________
I adore little kids. A yard full of happy pre-schoolers is about as much fun as I know how to have. I am reading about what is happening to kids in Japan, and it breaks my heart and make me very sad and very angry- children dying of cardiac arrest in fifth grade, children forced to consume huge amounts of radiation to protect the reputation of Fukushima produce, refusal to test children for internal radiation. It goes on and on it is sickening and horrifying and as a human being I will not stand idly by while this happens there and spreads around the world, regardless of any other reason to try.
Fuck the murderous corporate scumbags doing this. I will fight them to my last breath. It is too late for Japan, but it may not be so everywhere. WE MUST NOT PASSIVELY LET THEM POISON MORE CHILDREN. And to those displaying a sophisticated, cynical superiority such that even this doesn’t signify a moral imperative to act: consider living with yourself when they start dying here. Is this who you chose to be? Is this really who you chose to see in the mirror every morning?
How much cowardice is currently showing?
Because this is really what it comes down to, isn’t it- taking full responsibility for who we are and what we do, and making and living that hard decision to always do the right thing. I am a fighter by nature and by path, and for me this is the essence of life for an honorable warrior. It’s only secondarily about fighting, although defending those who need it is certainly a necessity. The true essence is always doing the right thing regardless of personal consequences. Fear, and overcoming it, is just part of the work. There are many depending on us to do this, for they cannot help themselves and without our help they will die in great misery. For your sake as well as theirs, I hope you will undertake to become courageous and help them.
So
there it is, one person’s reasons for trying regardless of whether
or not it makes any difference, of whether or not the universe offers
meaning beyond that which we construct, whether or not anyone else
does anything. I will never stop trying to make things better, so
long as I am able to choose. And sometimes there is a success.
It
is enough.
SOMETHING,
HOWEVER SMALL AND IMPERFECT, IS BETTER THAN NOTHING
But
the form of the effort may change. No matter what we do, it may not
be possible to avert biocide and our own extinction.
Then
what?
There
is a Zen monastery near Fukushima, currently a place of immense
suffering. The citizens there have effectively been condemned to
death by their government because admitting the truth and evacuating
them would cause an intolerable loss of face. They are watching their
children sicken and die, while the medical profession refuses to test
for radiation and diagnoses the problems as “flu” and “stress”
and “hysteria.” The area will not be habitable again for
thousands of years; it is truly a lost cause helping them.
One
of the insane things that is happening there is a truly bizarre and
useless effort to decontaminate areas by digging up contaminated
soil. The citizens have been told this will work and of course it
doesn’t, but they are conditioned to believe what authority tells
them and to obey. So this process generated many tons of highly
contaminated soil in plastic bags, with no place to put it, and there
were many anxious homeowners thinking that if only they could put
this stuff someplace, their children would be helped. Where to put
it?
The
Abbott of the temple opened the gates and invited anyone who needed a
place to dump, to bring the bags to the temple.
That
is what to do: just give kindness. It’s the only thing you can
always offer.
That’s
enough words for now. There are a few of us involved in a project to
get the word out, and there are plans to set up radiation monitoring
networks and a non-government controlled radiation measurement lab so
people can see what their kids are eating, and more. If someone is
interested in that, or if you’ve got a better idea contact me, or
maybe we can have a discussion in the comments? I’ve never done
this before and I don’t know how it works
I
hope someone finds this essay useful.
Kindness
to all beings, as best I am capable of doing it. And best wishes to
you
Mary Poppins, a long-time environmental activist can
be reached via email at info@fukushimaresponse.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.