Takechanpoo wrote:the moment earthquake happened at Aeon of Tagajo, Miyagi pre.
And after this at the same place.....
The store has now reopened. Operating outside from the rooftop carpark:

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Greji wrote:Interesting email circulating about after the quake and tsunami in the US. Honto ka na?
Ten Things to Learn from Japan
You right. I thought it would be overkill.....Coligny wrote:Ya forgot the usual punch line, "if you don't forward this email to 4523 people you don't know, we will kill this unicorm"
I think it's simply a case of being stupid while American.cstaylor wrote:From the article, I'm getting the feeling that this is CYA from upper-levels in case something goes wrong later.
damn name wrote:
2. I thought it would be obvious that having 2 out of 3 diesel backup generators failing without water damage is troublesome. We don't know why they failed. The installation standards need to be reevaluated ASAP and any similar installations being used now for other online reactors should be tested immediately.
Susumu Sugawara looks bemused and a little embarrassed at all the attention he's getting.
The 64 year old has become a local hero on the Japanese island of Oshima. Smashed boats adorn the coastline of this once-idyllic tourist spot, but Sugawara's pride and joy, "Sunflower" is intact and working overtime transporting people and aid to and from the island. It can hold around 20 people at a time.
When the tsunami came, everyone ran to the hills. But Sugawara ran to his boat and steered it into deeper waters. "I knew if I didn't save my boat, my island would be isolated and in trouble," he tells CNN.
As he passed his other boats, used for fishing abalone, he said goodbye to them, apologizing that he could not save them all.
Then the first wave came. Sugawara says he is used to seeing waves up to 5 meters high but this was four-times that size.
"My feeling at this moment is indescribable," he says with glistening eyes. "I talked to my boat and said you've been with me 42 years. If we live or die, then we'll be together, then I pushed on full throttle."
"Here was my boat and here was the wave," he says, holding one hand low and the other stretched high above his head. "I climbed the wave like a mountain. When I thought I had got to the top, the wave got even bigger."
Sugawara's arms flail wildly as he describes the top of the wave crashing down repeatedly onto his boat. "I closed my eyes and felt dizzy. When I opened them, I could see the horizon again, so I knew I'd made it."
Then the next wave came. Sugawara can't remember if there were four or five waves, but he says he did not feel afraid, he was just focused on steering his boat.
Suddenly the sea was completely calm and he knew he had beaten the tsunami. Sugawara stayed at sea until dark, pumping water from the boat's engine room. He believed his island had been destroyed by the wave. He says he didn't cry but felt angry and utterly helpless. He didn't know if his family had survived.
Trying to get back to Oshima, he had to navigate carefully past wrecked houses, boats and other debris that floated past him. The island of Oshima was in complete darkness; the only way he could find his way was with the guide of raging fires at Kesunnuma -- 5 kilometers (3 miles) away.
For twenty days, he has been making hourly trips to the mainland. For the first two weeks at least he provided almost the only connection with it. Without Sugawara and the Sunflower, the island would have been completely cut off.
He doesn't ask passengers for money if they have none. Those that can, pay just 300 yen (US$3.5) towards fuel...
Yokohammer wrote:So ... I'm still looking for the long line of TEPCO execs who are stepping up to offer support ...
Mike Oxlong wrote:Defiant Japanese boat captain rode out tsunami
Kyodo News wrote:NEWS ADVISORY: Above-limit radiation found just outside 30 km area around Fukushima plant
I think that it is clear Arnie Gunderson is not in favor of nuclear power. This probably influences his viewpoint. But he is doing the type of analysis that is so lacking in most of the mainstream press. Note, the arguments he brings to bear here are the type that bring very significant claims to the table that can be logically evaluated, cross referenced, and even tested.
As best I can tell, the ultimate claim here is that conditions for the workers at the plant are more serious than we are being told, and they are almost surely having to deal with a lot more than we are being made aware of.
Yokohammer wrote:I'm still looking for the long line of TEPCO execs who are stepping up to offer support ...
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