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Japan quake / tsunami
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senders
March 15, 2011, 3:42am Report to Moderator
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WOW!!! JUST WOW!!!


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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bumblethru
March 16, 2011, 9:12am Report to Moderator
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Anyone notice how calm the Japanese are and how there is NO LOOTING??

Just think of what it would have been like in this country!

It would be turned into a 'political' fiasco!


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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MobileTerminal
March 16, 2011, 9:16am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from bumblethru
Anyone notice how calm the Japanese are and how there is NO LOOTING??

Just think of what it would have been like in this country!

It would be turned into a 'political' fiasco!


Yet, the melee in Albany where cars were destroyed in a drunken atmosphere, makes national news.  

Who's the civilized society?
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Box A Rox
March 16, 2011, 9:51am Report to Moderator

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This video is a great representation of the seismic activity around Japan showing earthquakes between March9 and March14.

1 hour = 1 second

[img][/img]


The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral
philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.

John Kenneth Galbraith

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bumblethru
March 16, 2011, 1:37pm Report to Moderator
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When Chernoble(sp) melted down, they filed it with sand and concrete to stop the radiation spread. Isn't that an option here?


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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Yossi
March 17, 2011, 8:41am Report to Moderator
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The following was just sent ot me by Rabbi Arthur Waskow part of the Tikuun community.  I offer it to those of you of the Christian faith--but the bigger sentiment would apply to Jews and Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists.  As a Jew who has been to Israel and visited the Via Doloroa this reflection is even more poignant.  

“Part of Lent's turning back to God and God’s way means standing with the distraught, the grieving, the suffering people of the world as best we can. And so we mourn for our Japanese sisters and brothers, and everyone from Haiti to Afghanistan, and try to support them as best we can ... Indeed, the whole world seems to be undergoing the Stations of the Cross. One day, we’ll each take our turn carrying that cross, but surely, each one of us is called now to accompany those who are carrying it."

—John Dear, SJ, “Japan's Tsunami, the Stations of the Cross, and Resurrection,” NCR Online, March 15, 2011


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Kevin March
March 17, 2011, 9:40am Report to Moderator

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http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/03/15/california.student.japan/index.html?hpt=C1

Quoted Text
California student from Japan finds family alive on YouTubeBy Michael Martinez, CNNMarch 16, 2011 1:01 p.m. EDT

Riverside, California (CNN) -- Akiko Kosaka, a student from Japan attending the University of California at Riverside, had lost all hope for her family in Minamisanriku, the fishing village where more than half of the 17,000 residents are missing and feared dead in the aftermath of last week's tsunami.

For three days, she scoured the Internet. She received one e-mail that her youngest sister, Yukako, 13, was likely safe in her middle school's shelter. But what about her parents, paternal grandparents and older sister, who all lived under the same roof?

When the mayor was quoted in the media as saying he barely survived the tsunami, Kosaka thought the worst, because her father's pharmacy was located near the town hall.

"I didn't think they survived," Kosaka, 20, told CNN during a tearful interview Tuesday. "I cried for three days -- Friday, Saturday, Sunday."

Then she received word Sunday night from a friend in Japan of the existence of a 45-second YouTube video showing her family home as the only one standing amid the rubble. The video highlighted her older sister holding a sign to a TV news crew saying in Japanese "we are all safe."

Kosaka expressed relief upon hearing of the video, but became distraught after she couldn't find it online, despite staying up all night looking for it.

Then a contact through a Japanese social network e-mailed her the link Monday morning.

When seeing the video for the first time inside the home of her host family, Kosaka's reaction surprised everyone in the household.

"I screamed, and my host parents woke up and they thought it was really bad," Kosaka said. "They asked what happened. And I said, 'They survived!'"

In the video, her 24-year-old sister, Shoko, is standing on the family home's balcony, off Kosaka's bedroom, and is asking the TV crew to pass along word to her sister in America that she's safe.

Now Kosaka is trying to respond by using the media and the Internet to inform her relatives she's aware of their message -- though she's still concerned about them in the obliterated coastal village, which media accounts liken to a ghost town.

Kosaka has yet to see her father, Katsumi; mother, Noriko; or paternal grandparents on any video -- or receive any word from them.

Though she speaks English, Kosaka extended a message to them, in Japanese, through a CNN news crew: "My older sister, Shoko, I saw your video. Thank you very much for being alive. It made me really happy that you are worried about me even in this tough situation.

"Grandpa and grandma, how is your health? Dad and mom, I know that everything is tough right now with your job and everything but I am so glad that you are alive. I really look forward to seeing you guys again."

In the offices of the University of California at Riverside Extension program, where she began a year-long study of English last September, Kosaka provided a personal narrative to the stark footage of her hometown street now in ruins.

Kosaka's family home is the only one left standing on a hill because her father reconstructed the two-story house with a basement five years ago, Kosaka said. The other houses in the neighborhood were aging, she said.



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Kosaka expressed shock that the earthquake or the tsunami demolished the block because she thought the area would be safe on high ground, she said. Her family's house has a scenic view of the ocean, just a five-minute walk away, she said.

In the video, a news crew approaches the family house, and Kosaka's older sister is wearing a white helmet and holds up one sign saying, "Kosaka Family," and then another saying, "We are all safe."

At another point in the video, the older sister indicates she's holding up the signs to the camera crew "because my younger sister is in America. We are all okay."

When Kosaka heard of the video's existence, she thought to herself, "I couldn't believe it. It's a miracle," she said.

Since seeing the video, she watched it over and over again -- at least "50 or something" times within about 24 hours, she said, offering a wild guess.

As she reviewed the video again Tuesday morning, Kosaka was still incredulous.

"This is my house," she said, viewing the video on a university office computer. "When I saw this video, I was very shocked by it. I thought (the hillside community) was safe. There were houses next to my house, but they were destroyed. That means the tsunami came up to the house."

She was moved to see her sister shouting to the news crew from the balcony. "It makes me very happy," Kosaka said. "It's the only way to hear her voice."

Her sister's voice, though, struck Kosaka as "tired and depressed."

"Maybe she tries to stay strong for my family. So I'm very proud of her," Kosaka said.

She believes her parents are likely OK, but her grandfather, Yoshio, is 85 and grandmother, Soyoko, is 80.

"My grandparents are old, so I'm worried about their health," Kosaka said, adding no one in her hometown probably has water, and the winter weather is still cold, with snow.

She's also worried about the family pharmacy, where her father, 52, is a pharmacist and her mother assists. The family opened it 10 years ago.

"I think it was his dream," Kosaka added.

Since Kosaka saw the video, she has been sharing her story with classmates. "I cried in front of them too much," she said Tuesday.

The University of California at Riverside Extension is the continuing education branch of the university and has an enrollment of 4,000 students from 60 countries who participate in English-language study or certificate programs, said Bronwyn Jenkins-Deas, associate dean and head of international programs.

Of the 4,000 students, 109 of them are from Japan, and five of them had families affected by the quake or tsunami or both, Jenkins-Deas said.

It is only Kosaka, though, who has yet to have direct contact with her family, Jenkins-Deas said.

"The story is quite amazing," Jenkins-Deas added.



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Admin
May 12, 2011, 12:32pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted Text
Quake shifted Japan; towns now flood at high tide


ISHINOMAKI, Japan – When water begins to trickle down the streets of her coastal neighborhood, Yoshiko Takahashi knows it is time to hurry home.

Twice a day, the flow steadily increases until it is knee-deep, carrying fish and debris by her front door and trapping people in their homes. Those still on the streets slosh through the sea water in rubber boots or on bicycle.

"I look out the window, and it's like our houses are in the middle of the ocean," says Takahashi, who moved in three years ago.

The March 11 earthquake that hit eastern Japan was so powerful it pulled the entire country out and down into the sea. The mostly devastated coastal communities now face regular flooding, because of their lower elevation and damage to sea walls from the massive tsunamis triggered by the quake.

In port cities such as Onagawa and Kesennuma, the tide flows in and out among crumpled homes and warehouses along now uninhabited streets.

A cluster of neighborhoods in Ishinomaki city is rare in that it escaped tsunami damage through fortuitous geography. So, many residents still live in their homes, and they now face a daily trial: The area floods at high tide, and the normally sleepy streets turn frantic as residents rush home before the water rises too high.

"I just try to get all my shopping and chores done by 3 p.m.," says Takuya Kondo, 32, who lives with his family in his childhood home..................................>>>>..............................>>>>....................................http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/201.....A3F1YWtlc2hpZnRlZA--
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senders
May 16, 2011, 2:49pm Report to Moderator
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interesting....I bet it's global warming....anyone find Al Gore? ask him?


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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