Fukushima's
Nuclear Plume Is Heading Toward My SoCal Beach
Dina
Gilio-Whitaker
25
November, 2013
Not
a lot of good news has been coming out of Japan lately. This week at
the United Nations COP 19 climate talks meeting in Warsaw it was
announced thatJapan
will renege on its carbon emissions pledge. This means that
instead of lowering its emissions of greenhouse gases by 2020 its
emissions will actually increase based on 1990 levels. The reason
Japanese officials give is because of the shutdown of its fifty
nuclear power plants, which will mean more reliance on fossil fuels
to meet its energy needs.
Of
course, the shutting down of the nuke plants is not a bad thing,
especially in light of the Fukushima disaster which until very
recently seems to have been suffering from a bit of a news blackout
by the mainstream corporate media. This is especially troubling given
the imminent passage ofa
new censorship lawin Japan that could make reporting news about
Fukushima a crime in the name of protecting state’s secrets (gee,
sound familiar?).
How
much you knowabout the situation on the ground at the crippled
Daiichi plant depends on how much you are intentionally seeking the
information. Many people I talk to still don’t seem to fully
comprehend the scope of the problem, likely because it hasn’t
dominated the evening news. There is a lot to know but the most
troubling facts are 1), that 300 tons of radioactive water have been
spilling into the Pacific Ocean every day and is seeping into the
groundwater; 2) the clean-up process is so risky that it continues to
be delayed and has been called the world’s It’s also been
called“the
potentially the biggest ticking time bomb in human history.”
The
crisis is obviously bad enough for the Japanese, but what keeps me
awake at night is the radioactive plume making its way across the
Pacific. It worries me because I live in a Southern California beach
community, and as surfers committed to a healthy lifestyle, my family
and I spend a lot of time in the ocean. I think also of the many
Native nations in the US and Canada whose ancient ways of life depend
on the “big waters” of the Pacific and this is just the newest
threat to those ways.
Perceptions
of the seriousness of the radioactive plume (to say nothing of the
radiation being released into the atmosphere) seem to, not
surprisingly, run along ideological lines between those who support
nuclear energy and those who don’t. On the anti-nuclear side, high
profile experts such asHelen
CaldicottandDavid
Suzukimince no words about the danger it poses, especially to the
North American west coast, to say nothing of all the life in the
ocean. Other more conservative industry experts tend to downplay the
seriousness of the radioactive plume, saying the ocean will dilute
the radioactive particles to negligible levels. Naturally, they
arecritical
of the anti-nuke voices.
The
proliferation of nuclear energy is a symptom of the insanity of
Western-based modern science. It is reflective of a people who have
so little respect for life that they are willing to sacrifice their
own grandchildren’s generation to satisfy today’s desires for
wealth, all in the name of progress and the betterment of humanity.
That is what happens when you deem acceptable a technology that
produces a waste byproduct so toxic and dangerous that not only is it
impossible dispose of safely, but it remains life threatening for
tens of thousands of years.
Although
Japan was victimized by America's use of nuclear weapons at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, it has fully embraced the values and technology of
Western (i.e. Euro-American) culture. But in Fukushima’s wake a
growing chorus of Japanese intellectuals is denouncing Japan’s
attachment to nuclear power. Professor Mitsui Murata, former Japanese
Ambassador to Switzerland, said ina
videowidely circulating the internet that “the Japanese people
realize from experience that nuclear energy generates unacceptable
calamities…Japan must assume the historic role of promoting
denuclearization, both civilian and military.”
In
another fascinating documentary which
highlights two of Japan’s top philosophers, Fukushima is
characterized by the renowned Takeshi Umehara as a “civilization
disaster,” because “civilization” as we know it is based on
Western philosophic ideas. “Humanity cannot survive with Western
philosophy,” Umehara declares. He calls for Japan to turn to its
ancient ways of thinking to escape the “dead end of Western
philosophy” and build a new civilization. Inspired by ancient
Buddhist concepts and those from Japan’s indigenous Ainu people,
Umehara embraces principles very similar to the principles of
indigenous peoples in the US. For example, the concepts emphasize a
nature-centered existence where everything in nature has a spirit and
humans and nature are interconnected. It also stresses that
recognizing the continuity with an enduring past translates to a
reverence for nature that is required in order for life to go on.
To
me this sounds an awful lot like our concept of thinking ahead 7
generations in order to take right action today. Humanity’s
addiction to nuclear power, like its addiction to fossil fuels, must
end. And this is the number one lesson from Fukushima.
Dina
Gilio-Whitaker (Colville) is a freelance writer and Research
Associate at the Center for World Indigenous Studies. She was
educated at the University of New Mexico and holds a bachelor’s
degree in Native American Studies and a master’s degree in American
Studies.
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