文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

A collaboration between Masayuki Takayama's must-read article and my photographs. Part 1.

2024年09月06日 10時14分12秒 | 全般
A collaboration between Masayuki Takayama's must-read article and my photographs. Part 1.
A collaboration of Masayuki Takayama's article and my photos, a must-read for all Japanese citizens.
April 25, 2023
Naoto Kan used such moldy US-made bogus figures as criteria for eviction during the TEPCO Fukushima accident.
July 01, 2022

The following is from Masayuki Takayama's column in the latter section of Shukan Shincho, released yesterday.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
His reason for publishing this article is to point out the root of the current electric power administration's stupidity in Japan and worldwide.

Good Radiation
Herman Muller's interest in genetics led him to the laboratory of Professor Thomas Morgan at Columbia University in the United States.
Here, he found deformities in Drosophilidae and studied how they were inherited.
Professor Morgan discovered that "genes are on chromosomes," for which he received a Nobel Prize.
Muller, too, dreamed of this and worked hard at his research.
One day, he irradiated Drosophilidae.
The offspring were full of deformities, and the next generation inherited these deformities.
Under certain conditions, he found that the next generation would be entirely female.
If there were only females, the species would become extinct.
Muller's study was published before the Great Depression and sent worldwide shockwaves.
Would humans also be deformed by radiation and perish?
Researchers competed with each other to verify Muller's research.
However, no deformities were produced even when bluebottle flies were exposed to radiation.
No abnormalities were found in frogs or mice.
Is radiation dangerous?
When life began, there was a lot of uranium-235 around, and the ground was full of radiation.
If it were dangerous, life would have ceased to exist.
In summary, the cells of humans and other living creatures become healthy when exposed to high doses of radiation.

*This might be why people in Western countries, where natural radiation levels are higher than in Japan, grow faster than in Japan. *

Of course, genetic cells may also be damaged.
Deformities will be born, but damaged cells in many living things die independently.
If it survives, it will give birth to deformity.
That is why they choose death.
It is reminiscent of the Japanese spirit.
It is called apoptosis, and cells in the human body often commit suicide.
In Drosophilidae, however, the damaged cells do not commit suicide but survive and give birth to deformities.
It was a rare exception.
We only knew a little then, but Muller's research looked dubious and soon forgotten.
Ten years later, Pearl Harbor was attacked.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. was motivated to build an atomic bomb.
Concerned about the effects of radiation on the human body, the U.S. government sought out Muller and had him resume his research.
However, his research stopped at Drosophilidae.
By the time the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Muller had been fired.
At that time, only the United States had atomic bombs.
The power of the bomb was proven in Hiroshima.
The problem was the radiation it scattered.
If radiation had the aftereffects of producing deformities and ruining a nation, as Muller claimed, who would have stood against the U.S.?
So, the U.S. got Sweden to give Muller the Nobel Prize.
And so the legend "Radiation causes deformities" was born.
The world was made to believe that if they defied the U.S., hundreds of thousands of people would be killed, deformed children would be born due to radiation, and their race would be destroyed. 
On the other hand, greenery was sprouting in the A-bombed cities where it was said that not even grass or trees would grow anymore, and even those who had been exposed to the atomic bombing were becoming second- and third-generation citizens and living long lives, far exceeding the average life expectancy.
The U.S., seeing the public's puzzlement, came up with the Muller data, a plausible, acceptable figure of "1 millisievert per year," based on the weight of a Drosophilidae.
It was endorsed by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) in the U.K. 
According to the book "DNA Loves Radiation" (Sadao Hattori), when humans are exposed to 500 times the amount of radiation, their cells are activated, and "both diabetes and amyotrophy are improved," according to a report by Professor Seinori Yamaoka of Okayama University.
C.T. scans exposed humans to 10 millisieverts, the standard 10-year dose, at one time, but human cells remained normal, and apoptosis was also confirmed to function.
Naoto Kan used such a moldy US-made bogus figure as the standard for eviction during the TEPCO Fukushima accident.
Moreover, they unnecessarily stirred up fears about radiation, leading to many people jumping on the bandwagon and moving out.
TEPCO still paid 100,000 yen per month to all those evicted, and taxpayers nationwide paid a 2.1% reconstruction tax.
However, the people of the prefecture wanted more.
In addition to the 1 millisievert petty theft, they held the government responsible for natural disasters, but the Supreme Court kicked them out.
How does the world look at the people of Fukushima?
Do you know?


2024/9/5 in Mihara, Hiroshima

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