Anti-Nuclear Protest in Downtown Tokyo

I happened upon this interesting event during my travels in Tokyo yesterday, a rather large,well-organized, peaceful but very noisy anti-nuke protest march. I took the opportunity to shoot a quick video of the event, sorry for the low quality and also for the fact I was a little bit too far from the march itself to document it very well, but it was certainly of interest to me as I’ve seen a lot of anti-nuke stickers and posters and other forms of more passive complaints but this was the first real protest I’ve seen in the downtown area (in fairness, I don’t get out much lol…I have heard of these protests on the news but this was my first encounter with such).

I’m not quite sure where I really fall on the issue, personally. Of course, I went through a long period of stress and worry last year along with everyone else who lives within a few hundred miles or less of Fukushima. And I can certainly understand the concerns these people have, as I do share them to some extent, although in fairness I have no inkling of what the people of Fukushima are still going through, some of whom had their very lives turned upside down by the disaster.

However, even taking all of that into consideration, I think it is a touch unrealistic for people to be shouting for “no more nukes!” since I really just don’t see that happening anytime soon. The problem is, we modern humans are absolutely voracious consumers of power (just stroll through downtown Tokyo at night for plenty of neon evidence everywhere you turn), and for a country like Japan which is short on pretty much any other natural resource, nuclear is just an inevitable reality given the lack of alternatives. All the trappings that go hand in hand with a modern lifestyle do come at a cost, . So although I can appreciate the sentiment, I just don’t think it’s going to happen and I feel as though it would be better to try and have a more realistic conversation about what we can and can’t do about our need for energy and what we must do to make sure it is conserved as much as possible and made as safe as we can make it, particularly for those who live within range of these power plants of course.

If I lived a good deal closer to the disaster perhaps I’d think differently. I might very well feel as though a complete elimination of nuclear power is the only alternative. There are some people here in Japan who’s lives have been forever altered by this disaster, there’s no questioning that fact, and I certainly wouldn’t be one to go up to them and tell them they shouldn’t be protesting, or even that they shouldn’t be calling for an end to nuclear power. It’s just not that simple though, that’s what keeps going through my mind.

Thanks for reading!

Korean Kid Overjoyed about Disaster in Japan

There’s a video making the rounds on YouTube featuring a supposedly Korean youngster making rather vile comments about his happiness in hearing about the disaster in Japan. I’ll not link to it as I don’t want to offer any support, implicit or otherwise, but you can find it easily enough if you’re of a mind to do so. In any case, he says some hate filled things such as “So you guys are already contaminated with the radiation?” and “I’m always thinking about Japanese people dying but I can’t kill them directly”.

What really struck me is how young this person is. Whenever I see a kid engaged in such hate mongering, the first thought that comes to mind is “okay, who taught this kid to think this way?”, because it’s obvious in this case as in so many others that the kid isn’t speaking of any personal life experience he himself went through, rather he was clearly trained by his elders.

And that’s sad. It’s sad because the sort of people who would seek to warp young peoples’ minds aren’t just satisfied with their own hatred, they want to pass it along and ensure it’s generational survival. And that provides a horrendous disservice to the kids themselves, along with their whole generation, as it’s impossible to even attempt a clean slate or even begin to find a way forward under these conditions.

The saddest thing of all is that the trainers have been hurt or injured in some way and want revenge. This is understandable if not acceptable in modern society. But what they are really doing is making sure that their own kids and grandkids suffer just as much as they did, albeit vicariously in most cases, so in attempting to carry their anger and hatred forward in order to harm their enemies they are instead poisoning the minds of their own people and ensuring that cycle of hatred and suffering will continue.

I wonder if they ever thought about it that way.