We
surpassed the tipping point, and the car began to fall. At the same
instant I gave up the struggle and heard my inner voice say, without regret, I had a good life. The car fell gently,
and I checked out before impact. A final scene consisted of meeting
with bewildered elders in a place nearby; they weren't there to
assign blame, but they genuinely wanted to know how I could have let
it happen.
In Devil's Tango: How I Learned the Fukushima Step by Step Cecile Pineda has delivered a poetic,
profound meditation on the slowly unfolding death of the natural
world by man-made radiation. She's not the only one who sees it, but
she's in a very small group of people currently alive on the planet
who are able to face annihilation without blinking. Oprah will likely
not be picking up her book, but I will be finding Pineda's novels
(Face, The Love Queen of the Amazon, Frieze) to read as we
coast downhill toward oblivion.
When I remember Hiroshima (the first
place destroyed with nuclear weapons 67 years ago yesterday) and
Nagasaki (the second place destroyed by a different type of nuclear weapon 67 years ago) I can't help but continue to remember
Fukushima. Here I think in terms of a table or chart juxtaposing what
my fellow citizens think they know about these far off places with
names difficult to pronounce, and what I think I know about places I
visit only in my mind.
-->
Place in Japan | What U.S. citizens “know” |
What I “know”
|
Hiroshima 広島市 |
Bombing it saved untold numbers of U.S. lives by making a ground invasion of Japan unnecessary | Japan was already negotiating for surrender, and had long since lost the war; their economy was so crushed that they were building kamikaze planes without landing gear in order to save yen; President Truman said: we have spent so much money building these weapons, we have to use them. |
Nagasaki 長崎市 |
The Japanese still didn't surrender after Hiroshima, so we had to show them we weren't kidding. |
福島市
Pineda uses Fukushima as a jumping off point to make a convincing case that production of nuclear fuel for whatever purpose is effectively conducting war on the living inhabitants of the world. She acknowledges that a culture built on attending to the shiny surface of things is designed to overlook: The hundreds of thousands of nameless Russians who died burying Chernobyl. The fact that your government makes weapons out of depleted uranium, weapons that have been used in Iraq and Afghanistan and many other places, creating soil and dust that produces human fetuses so deformed they are not recognizably human. The fact the U.S. is full of G.E.-built Mark I Boiling Water Reactors, many sitting on top of seismic faults, others sitting right on the shoreline of the Pacific or Atlantic region of Earth's one ocean.
The fact that, if you're my age, you can probably no longer count the people you've known who survived, or did not survive, cancer. Cause and effect break down when cause is an invisible, tasteless, odorless substance that takes longer to break down than does the human body.
Pineda suggests reading Greg Palast's Vulture's Picnic for a more detailed examination of the central nuclear industry truth, "it turned out that fixing the regulators was cheaper than fixing the problem." In case you want to know why your government uses your own money to kill you for the profits of a few. Pineda herself is more interested in examining the details of who stops cooperating in the death-for-profit game. She quotes a farmer who helped bring a lawsuit to block yet another Japanese nuclear plant from starting up, Hatsumi Ishimaru: "Women are at the head of the anti-nuclear campaign because we value life more than economic gain."
Official pronouncements coached by top dollar public relations firms can steer public perception, but they cannot change facts on the ground. Pineda writes:
...it's conceivable that in the larger scheme, Mother Earth may be the "decider" notwithstanding her failure to be recognized by the government -- or any other government for that matter -- with the exception of the government of Bolivia.
If she has any hope left, it's riding on the rise of the global 99%. She quotes Takanobu Kobayashi, an activist who leads Japanese citizens in the relentless pursuit of life over death: "We do not trust the government anymore."
4 comments:
I think a good rule is that someone has the right to commit suicide, but that person has no right to take other people along.
I'll add the suggestion (from a police officer I met) that people who commit suicide actually shut themselves off a while, he said a day or two, in advance, and from that time are no longer reachable by friendly persuasion (if you believe there is such a thing).
Excellent review. Many thanks!
If only everyone read this book... Spread the word, ask everyone you know to read it.
We cannot appeal to Governments, or Corporations like PG&E, or the regulatory agencies like EPA or NRC. What does everyone think we should do? We, the people?
If only everyone read this book... Spread the word, ask everyone you know to read it.
We cannot appeal to Governments, or Corporations like PG&E, or the regulatory agencies like EPA or NRC. What does everyone think we should do? We, the people?
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