Is US media sensationalizing the nuclear angle

Mark Roberts mroberts37 at mail-central.com
Mon Mar 21 03:39:05 EDT 2011


I also have the impression that the Western media has been over- 
amplifying the nuclear threat, using language that tends to make  
something in potentia seem in esse. The focus on the threat of  
radiation also seems to be a function of the greater fear factor, as  
has the resonance with public memory of the Three Mile Island and  
Chernobyl incidents. Some Western media reports also seem to be  
responding to a deep legitimation crisis, especially in the United  
States, in which a large chunk of the public simply does not trust  
official discourse on environmental and food safety, and it doesn't  
really matter which country the officials belong to. There are many  
points of contention around "approved" levels of chemicals used in  
industrial agriculture both in the U.S. and in Japan, so I would fully  
expect "acceptable levels" of radioactivity to be questioned as well.

Meanwhile, there are now news stories in Japan about radioactive  
Iodine being found in Tochigi, Gunma, Tokyo, Saitama, Chiba and  
Yamanashi. Radioactive Cesium has been found in Tochigi and in Gunma.  
Kyodo news reported that the Japanese government has been testing tap  
water in different prefectures since 1990 and this is the first time  
they have discovered significant amounts of these elements.  
Radioactivity has also been detected in milk and on spinach. They are  
saying the levels being found now do not pose a health hazard, though  
of course more testing is required to see how this develops. One head  
of spinach could be okay, but the next one might not be. Two days ago  
the reading could be low. Tomorrow, after a full day of rain in Kanto,  
the readings could be different. The government has very sensibly  
stepped up its testing regime.

For anybody even slightly familiar with the science, it was  
predictable that some Iodine and Cesium would enter the food chain. It  
may be that hyping disaster is just part of reporting disaster today  
in the West, but in this instance I share Joseph's concerns. We are  
talking about incredibly toxic stuff that is being released into the  
environment. Just checking Wikipedia, it seems that 44 micrograms of  
Cesium-137 per kg of body weight is considered lethal within three  
weeks. That's about 0.003 grams for a 70 kg mammal. It's now entering  
tap water and the food chain. Though the levels are very low, this is  
still a fresh crisis. Are the levels going to stabilize? Go down? Up?  
If they go up, there may be more questions about food safety, and that  
means potential conflicts of interest between the general public and  
agricultural producers. How would the government negotiate those  
conflicts? Will "acceptable" radiation levels be revised upward to  
offset economic impact on farmland, just as the exposure levels were  
for workers in the nuclear power industry, after the crisis started?

However this plays out, I would expect discord between official  
discourse and accounts given by independent observers.

This seems exactly the sort of issue that documentary filmmakers could  
explore.

Mark Roberts
Research Fellow, University of Tokyo Center for Philosophy
http://utcp.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/members/data/mark_roberts/index_en.php



On Mar 21, 2011, at 2:04 PM, Mark Mays wrote:

> I haven’t read any reports, whether it is claimed there is no danger  
> outside the evacuation radius or not, that said the situation was  
> under control. The US govt has been suspicious of the reports coming  
> from JPN govt/TEPCO, which is why I think the NRC chair went public  
> with his misgivings. After that, Kan or someone, allowed US  
> assistance. However, the NRC now believes the TEPCO employees have  
> made significant progress. That’s the reporting we’re seeing now.
>
> Many minds in the crowdsource intelligentsia are focused on what’s  
> happening with cooling the plants. It will be interesting to read  
> what is said when they turn their attention to long term effects.
>
> Guess I can’t speak for everyone on all listserves but I don’t think  
> calling the US media out on bad or alarmist reporting equals an  
> ostrich like attitude towards a story that isn’t over yet.
>
> From: Joseph Murphy
> Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 11:40 PM
> To: KineJapan at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu
> Subject: Is US media sensationalizing the nuclear angle
>
> Dear Colleagues,
> One of the most interesting things about being in Japan during a  
> global event, is seeing the difference between how it is reported in  
> Japan, and how it is reported in Europe and America.  I've heard,  
> from many of my colleagues in the Japan studies field, a similar  
> take, that the US media is overplaying the nuclear angle. I'm no fan  
> of the US media, but as an engineer, I am frankly appalled.  If  
> article after article, and expert after expert are asserting that  
> there is absolutely no danger  outside the immediate vicinity, they  
> are wrong.  While the acute effects of a worst-case scenario  
> involving catastrophic release of gamma radiation would be confined  
> to a 20-30 km radius, the possible long-term effects are serious,  
> and reach much further.  You've got 3 different primary contaminants  
> (iodine, cesium, strontium), with 3 different half-lives, and 2  
> different possible ways of diffusion (air and water).  In a serious  
> meltdown, airborne contamination could certainly reach Tokyo within  
> hours, depending on prevailing winds (do we really want to put our  
> eggs in the offshore wind basket), contaminants fall on the ground  
> where they are absorbed by plants, animals eat the plants, it's in  
> the food supply, popping up potentially anywhere in the country, for  
> years.  This is not a one in a million scenario, it was one in  
> twenty at times last week for Fukushima Dai-ichi.
> That's largely iodine contamination, which dissipates to safe levels  
> in 6 months.  Cesium and Strontium, with much longer half-lives, are  
> around for 100's of years at dangerous levels.  The cesium and  
> strontium plume from Chernobyl is currently nearing the Kiev water  
> table.  The lump of radioactive material from a meltdown sits there  
> for centuries.  The surrounding 30 km area would be a no-persons'  
> land.
>
> The engineers at Fukushima Dai-ichi worked heroically, they have so  
> much pride in their plants they will risk their lives, but the fact  
> that multiple personnel died, and 50+ endured life-threatening  
> levels of radiation, say clearly that this was not under control.   
> The industry plans based on insurance actuarial tables for 100 year  
> scenarios, that is the legal obligation to their shareholders.  Then  
> a 1000 year scenario visits, as geological time is likely to do.
>
> Anyway, unlike Hurricane Andrew, unlike Katrina, unlike the  
> earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia, the relief effort in Japan was  
> compounded over the first week by an escalating, potentially  
> catastrophic nuclear crisis, that could itself affect all aspects of  
> recovery, from infrastructure to food production.  The downplaying  
> of this I've seen on Japan studies lists which 20 years ago would  
> have been resolutely anti-nuclear is fascinating.  Possibly a  
> tactical downplaying because of the way this could be used to ramp  
> up fossil-fuel consumption, maybe a theoretical problem with seeing  
> Japan's natural disasters as "particularly" technical.  But they  
> don't seem to proceed from a serious analysis of the situation at  
> the plant.
> yours,
> J. Murphy
>
> On Mar 18, 2011, at 4:23 AM, Lindsay Nelson wrote:
>
>> As someone who has been in Tokyo since August (currently in Kyoto  
>> to have a bit of a break from the aftershocks), I can say a few  
>> things.
>>
>> 1. The nuclear power plant story is being ridiculously  
>> sensationalized in the American media. Article after article and  
>> expert after expert have declared that there is absolutely no  
>> danger to anyone outside the immediate vicinity of the plant, and  
>> yet the major news outlets ignore these stories and continue to  
>> vamp up the fear. Worse, they do this at the expense of reporting  
>> on the real crisis, which is the 400,000 + people in the northeast  
>> who have limited food, water, and shelter and are already dying as  
>> a result.
>>
>> 2. Many people have made the decision to leave--at least  
>> temporarily--for a variety of reasons. Aftershocks were constant  
>> for the first 24 hours after the quake, and they continue even now.  
>> I personally have not slept much at all for the past week-- 
>> partially because of the stress of the aftershocks, and partially  
>> because I have been dealing with frantic, panicked family members  
>> who were horrified that I hadn't fled the city. I also worried  
>> about blackouts as my only heater is electric, it's getting very  
>> cold, and kerosene / space heaters are completely sold out. I've  
>> left for a few days to get some sleep and try to re-group, but I  
>> plan to return. The bottom line is that even if there is no danger  
>> from the power plant, there are plenty of other reasons why people  
>> might choose to leave. And given the changing nature of the power  
>> plant situation and the huge amount of conflicting information  
>> available, I can understand why some people would be concerned  
>> enough to leave.
>>
>> 3. Regarding film archives and screenings--for the most part it's  
>> business as usual in Tokyo. The scheduled blackouts have been  
>> avoided so far because people are doing a great job of conserving  
>> energy. Some universities have postponed classes and some smaller  
>> companies have shut down to allow their employees to spend time  
>> with their families, but most places are up and running. Very few  
>> Japanese are leaving the city (the shinkansen were crowded today as  
>> I headed for Kyoto, but Monday is a national holiday, so that's not  
>> too surprising). If regular blackouts become a necessity this will  
>> of course impact daily life considerably, but for now other than  
>> slightly reduced train service, a gasoline shortage, and shortages  
>> of items like bread, milk, and rice (really just the result of over- 
>> buying, not an actual shortage), Tokyo seems pretty normal to me.
>>
>> I provide informal updates about the situation on the ground and  
>> links to helpful articles at http://gradland.wordpress.com.
>>
>> --Lindsay Nelson
>>
>> On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 12:03 AM, Quentin Turnour <Quentin.Turnour at nfsa.gov.au 
>> > wrote:
>>
>> William,
>>
>> Perhaps to shift things just to the issue of film archives...Thanks  
>> for your great and thoughtful post, Odd also considering I've just  
>> spent the morning doing a run through of the NFC's 35mm print of  
>> the SHINGUN/MARCHING ON and also reading your great on-line article  
>> about this unusual early Showa silent.
>>
>> Literarily a few minutes after your post came up, Kae Ishihara at  
>> the Film Preservation Society posted an email and link to English- 
>> speaking FPS members http://www.homemovieday.jp/English/latest-news/
>>
>> In the last few days I've had some contact with her, Akira Tochigi  
>> at the NFC and a few others in the Japanese screen culture  
>> community (such as Fujioka Asako of the Yamagata Doco festival - a  
>> cultural event which of course takes place within a prefecture once  
>> removed but still very close to the tragedy of the tsunami). But  
>> Kae's email is a great summary of what's happening with the NFC and  
>> regional film archives, and     even some Japanese film industry  
>> matters - Sony's HDCam tape plant was at Sendai, for example.
>>
>> As I alluded to, ironically we've been doing a season here of 1920s  
>> Japanese silents from the NFC and Matsuda, and the reconstruction  
>> of the Kanto area post-1923 obviously looms as a sub-text in many  
>> of the films we were screening... Or as a text on some of the  
>> mid-1920s Ministry of Education Tokyo reconstruction films, such as  
>> the eccentric PUBLIC MANNERS TOKYO SIGHTSEEING (...which has led us  
>> to making the decision to postponed a screening of these films).
>>
>> Our program included a visit by the benshi Mr. Kotoaka Ichiro, who  
>> bravely went ahead with a performance of his final session only  
>> minutes after getting the news of the earthquake and then had some  
>> difficulties getting back to Tokyo from Australia the following  
>> day. We are currently ben asked to hold the prints from this series  
>> for the NFC until advised; as the FPS's site indicate it seems not  
>> so much that their facilities have been damaged, but shipping  
>> services are still unreliable, power is a problem and staff simply  
>> have having trouble getting to work
>>
>> Finally, and noting the debate that your email inadvertently  
>> sparked over foreign perceptions... Those who know some of the  
>> history of what happened in the wake of Great Kanto will remember  
>> that immediate international goodwill degenerated badly in mutual  
>> recrimination in the weeks and months following; especially in  
>> Japanese-US relations. Whilst some of this had to do with the  
>> coming of US legislation restricting Japanese immigration, the  
>> beginnings of militant nationalism, and a   trickle of  
>> international press accounts of bad Japanese official behaviour  
>> (especially of the anti-Korean pogroms), lets hope the same thing  
>> doesn't happen again.
>>
>>
>>
>> Quentin Turnour, Programmer,
>> Access, Research and Development
>> National Film and Sound Archive, Australia
>> McCoy Circuit, Acton,
>> ACT, 2601 AUSTRALIA
>> phone: +61 2 6248 2054  |  fax: + 61 2 6249 8159
>> www.nfsa.gov.au
>>
>> The National Film and Sound Archive collects, preserves and  
>> provides access to Australia's historic and contemporary moving  
>> image and recorded sound culture.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ReelDrew at aol.com
>> Sent by: owner-KineJapan at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu
>> 18/03/2011 02:27 PM
>>
>> Please respond to
>>
>> KineJapan at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu
>>
>> To
>> KineJapan at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu
>> cc
>> Subject
>> the eerie silence on KineJapan is maddening!
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> I have been a member of KineJapan for the last ten years. I joined  
>> originally out of a need to obtain translations of the intertitles  
>> of Japanese silents on VHS in my collection. I am very grateful to  
>> those members on KineJapan who aided me and made it possible for me  
>> to, among other things, write an article on Hiroshi Shimizu that is  
>> published on Midnight Eye.
>>
>> Since then, I have regularly received almost daily the messages  
>> that have been posted here. In all honesty, a large number--perhaps  
>> the majority, in fact--have been of limited interest to me inasmuch  
>> as they tend to deal with contemporary Japanese films. Consistent  
>> with my enthusiasm for films in other countries, including my own,  
>> produced in earlier decades, it is my interest in the Japanese  
>> cinema of the past, especially the films of the 1920s and 1930s,  
>> that has been of consuming interest to me. Nevertheless, from time  
>> to time issues involving those golden years do come up here.
>>
>> However, whether or not the topic has been of particular interest  
>> to me, I have always valued the fact that KineJapan has always been  
>> there, an extremely valuable resource to be consulted when needed.  
>> Never before since I've been here did this group shut down.  
>> Certainly, it was very active right through the events of 9/11 as  
>> were other film discussion groups in which I participated.
>>
>> Since the tragic events that began a week ago, though, this place  
>> has suddenly turned into a ghost town. Aside from a very limited  
>> amount of posts specifically on the topic of the tsunami, there has  
>> been absolutely nothing here. No one has even bothered to post how  
>> things are going on in Tokyo, while all sorts of wild, apocalyptic  
>> rumors circulate unchecked in the US that Tokyo is about to become  
>> irradiated, that it may be doomed. I believe a few welcome posts  
>> here from knowledgeable people in the Japanese capital might help  
>> to clarify the situation and perhaps alleviate some of these fears.
>>
>> I have had a consuming obsession with early Japanese cinema for the  
>> last 36 years. In trying to interest people in the West in this  
>> topic and to recognize the value of Japanese films from those  
>> years, I have long had to confront an enormous amount of  
>> indifference and insensitivity to these achievements by too many in  
>> America and elsewhere in the outside world. It has taken so long to  
>> bring attention to these films here. Indeed, it was only this  
>> January that the premier venue for classic cinema in the United  
>> States, Turner Classic Movies, after being on the air for 17 years,  
>> finally presented three Japanese silents--Ozu's famous  
>> masterpieces, "Tokyo Chorus," "I Was Born, But. . .," and "Passing  
>> Fancy." So it is only very recently that this neglected period of  
>> Japanese film is just starting to receive some recognition here.
>>
>> Given this obession of mine, I would very much like to know how the  
>> archives and other collections of Japanese cinema are coping with  
>> the current crisis in Tokyo. Are they able to function normally in  
>> their work of preservation considering the power blackouts etc.? If  
>> there really should be an evacuation of the capital, has there been  
>> discussion of removing films and other cultural treasures from  
>> Tokyo to Kyoto, a much safer city and which I personally feel  
>> should be restored to the position of Japan's capital?
>>
>> As to whether now is the proper time to discuss the preservation of  
>> culture in view of the terrible loss of life and the continuing  
>> threat, I believe that, far from being at odds or incompatible, the  
>> preservation of human life and humanity's cultural heritage are  
>> inseparable. The heroic people of Egypt have shown all of us the  
>> way recently in this area. During a time of turmoil in which a  
>> corrupt, discredited dictatorship was attempting to hang on to  
>> power by employing ruthless methods against the protestors,  
>> demonstrators courageously appeared to form human chains around the  
>> Library in Alexandria and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo to protect  
>> these treasures of our history. I would hope that, should it ever  
>> become necessary, a similar sense of cultural responsibility will  
>> be demonstrated in other countries, including Japan. The heritage  
>> of Japan, including its film history, is the common property not  
>> just of one country but indeed, the legacy of all the people of the  
>> earth.
>>
>> In all those non-Western countries that the West chose to lump  
>> together as "Oriental," for much of the 20th century the four most  
>> significant in terms of creating outstanding cinemas in the first  
>> half of the last century were Japan, China, India, and Egypt. This  
>> preeminence in the new art of film was emblematic of these nations'  
>> continuing cultural leadership in the modern world. In terms of  
>> documenting and preserving the     national film heritage, however,  
>> Egypt under the Mubarak regime was scandalous. The Egyptian film  
>> archive was by far the worst run in the entire world, mismanaged by  
>> members of Mubarak's family. So neglected was the state of the  
>> archive that it was a common sight to see rats crawling out of cans  
>> of film in the vaults. The situation with the Egyptian archive was  
>> thus symptomatic of the larger ills afflicting the society under  
>> the corrupt regime that ruled Egypt for thirty years. Needless to  
>> say, with the present rebirth of Egypt through revolution there is  
>> a far greater hope that the glories of Egyptian cinema from its  
>> bright beginnings in the silent era to the achievements of later  
>> decades will be at last properly preserved.
>>
>> While the infrastructure of Japan including its archives can hardly  
>> compare to its counterparts in Egypt in the Mubarak years, there  
>> has nevertheless been a steady decline in Japan in the two decades  
>> since the economic bubble burst in the early 1990s. Egypt is now  
>> trying to recover from a social disaster, Japan from a natural one  
>> exacerbated, it seems, by a variant of the same corruption and  
>> cronyism that long afflicted Egypt. I think Japan, like Egypt, will  
>> need to transform itself anew, but as with Egypt, that  
>> transformation must be solidly based on the preservation and  
>> dissemination of past achievements including a glorious legacy of  
>> early cinema. Consequently, in addition to my general concern at  
>> the eerie silence that has suddenly taken over KineJapan, as though  
>> all its members have been struck dumb, I would in particular like  
>> to know how the film archives and other institutions consecrated to  
>> cinema history in Japan are faring during the present crisis.
>>
>> William M. Drew
>>
>>
>
>
> <>---<>----<>-----<>------<>
> Assoc. Professor and Assoc. Chair
> Dept. of Languages, Literatures and Cultures
> University of Florida
> Gainesville, FL 32601-5565
> www.clas.ufl.edu/users/murphy7312
>

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