Fasting
for Fukushima on Third Anniversary
9
March, 2014
Fasting
can be a way of mourning, of cleansing, of meditation, of focus.
On Tuesday,
March 11, the third anniversary of the beginning of the disaster
at Fukushima,
we will abstain from food from dawn to dusk. Our purpose is tied
to the atomic disaster that continues to threaten life on Earth.
The
three melt-downs, four explosions, scattered fuel rods and continual
gusher of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean at Fukushima have
torn a deadly hole in the fabric of our ability to survive on
this planet.
Its
corporate perpetrators were repeatedly warned by tens of thousands of
citizen activists not to build these reactors in an earthquake zone
that has been washed by tsunamis. Not only did they build them, they
took down a natural 85-foot-high sea wall in the process that might
have greatly lessened the damage of the tsunami that did come.
The disaster
that has struck Fukushima has much about it that’s unique.
But it’s just the tip of the radioactive iceberg that is the
global atomic reactor industry.
There
are other
reactor sites threatened by earthquakes and tsunamis. Among them
is Diablo Canyon, whose two reactors could be turned to rubble
by the multiple fault lines that surround it, spewing radiation that
would irradiate California’s Central Valley and send a lethal
cloud across the U.S.
There
are other reactors threatened by suicidal siting, such as the triple
reactor complex at South Carolina’s Oconee, downriver from a dam
whose failure could send also send a wall of water into multiple
cores.
Throughout
the world more than 400 rust
bucket reactors are aging dangerously, riddled with operator
error, shoddy construction, leaky cooling systems, least-cost
corner cutting and official lies.
In
all cases, the revolution
in renewables has made them economically obsolete. The
long-dead hype of a failed “too cheap to meter” technology has
been buried by a Solartopian vision, a green-powered Earth in
the process of being born.
What
would speed that process most is the rapid shutdown of a these
old-tech dinosaurs that do nothing but cost us money and harm our
planet and our health.
For
decades we were told commercial reactors could not explode. But five
have done just that.
The
industry said that radiation releases could do no harm at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, during the atmospheric bomb tests, with medical
x-rays, with atomic waste storage, at Three Mile Island,
Chernobyl, Fukushima, and of course at the next major melt-down and
the one after that and the one after that.
The
automatic industry response is always the same: “not
enough radiation has escaped to harm anyone.” Push a button, no
matter what the disaster, no matter where the radiation goes and
how little anybody knows about it, that’s what they say now, and
will say yet again each time another nuke bites the radioactive
dust.
So
today we live in fear not only of what’s happening at Fukushima,
but of what is all-too-certain to come next.
This
must finally stop. If we are to have an economic, ecological or
biological future on this planet, all atomic reactor construction
must halt, and all operating reactors must be phased out as fast
as possible.
To
honor this vision, we won’t eat from dawn to dusk on March 11.
It’s
a small, symbolic step. But one we feel is worth taking. Feel free to
join us!
Visit
EcoWatch’s FUKUSHIMA page
for more related news on this topic.
——–
Harvey
Wasserman edits NukeFree.org and
wrote Solartopia!
Our Green-Powered Earth.
Jill
Stein was
the Green Party’s 2012 Presidential candidate. She is now
organizing for Earth Day to May Day, a wave of action for People,
Planet and Peace over Profit, atGlobalClimateConvergence.org.
David
Swanson is
working to organize a movement to end war at WorldBeyondWar.org. His
books include War
Is A Lie. He blogs
at davidswanson.org and warisacrime.org and works
for rootsaction.org.
He hosts Talk
Nation Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson andFacebook.
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