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DESCRIPTION:11/7/20 The Olympics, Fukushima & The Madness\n\nPanel Discussion November 
 7, 2020 (Saturday) 7:00 PM \n\nNo Nukes Action is hosting an international 
 panel on the proposed 2021 Olympics and the continuing health and nuclear 
 crisis at Fukushima.\n\nAlthough the Covid-19 pandemic continues unabated 
 in the US and around the world, the Japanese govern- ment and Prime 
 Minister \n\nSuga says that they plan to have the Olympics in 2021 
 regardless of the conditions.\n\nAt the same time, the govenment still has 
 not removed the  melted nuclear material from the 3 reactors in Fukushima, 
 and release millions of gallons \n\nof radioactive water in tanks 
 surrounding Fukushima and also still plan to have part of the Olympics in 
 Fukushima.\n\nWe will look at the situation and the MADNESS dominating the 
 plan to have the 2021 Olympics in the mid- dle of a world pandemic with the 
 continued dangers in Fukushima. \n\nSpeakers:\n\nGeorge Wright, Professor 
 Emeritus\nSarah Yamasaki, Journalist, Tokyo\nEric Sheehan, NOlympics 
 LA\nDr. Nayvin Gordon, People’s Medical Doctor\n\nTo join meeting:\nNNA 
 The Tokyo Olympics, The People of Japan, Sports & Fukushima \n\nTime: Nov 
 7, 2020 07:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)\n\nJoin Zoom 
 Meeting\n\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/83397516505?pwd=ZEd3VFdoMldLeHd1K2NLSnlCSFJadz09\n\nFor 
 more info:\n\nOn The Tenth Year Of Fukushima, The Olympics & The 
 Resignation Of Abe\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAumSj1yz0o\n\nThe 
 Japanese Government Cover-up On “The Tenth Year Of 
 Fukushima”\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-FpjYE_WSM\n\nNo Nukes 
 Action Committee\n\nhttps://nonukesaction.wordpress.com\n\n\n\nCancel or 
 proceed? Public statements reignite debate on Tokyo Games\nOrganizers say 
 another postponement of the 2020 Olympics is not an option\n\nWith hundreds 
 of thousands of athletes, coaches, trainers, celebrities, journalists, 
 politicians and spectators expected to descend upon the country, one need 
 only imagine the mayhem a single positive test result — let alone a 
 cluster infection — would cause to recognize the gravity of the task at 
 hand.\n\nhttps://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/10/08/national/cancel-or-proceed-public-statements-reignite-debate-on-2020-games/\nWith 
 the issues that presaged the postponement of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and 
 Paralympics remaining unresolved, and the resulting questions largely 
 unanswered, the possible scenarios for the global sporting event have been 
 reduced to a binary.\nExperts and organizers say there are two choices: 
 stay the course and hold the games to give the country’s battered economy 
 a lifeline, or cancel them and avoid exposure to what could still be an 
 ongoing global pandemic.\n“Either the games take place or they're 
 canceled,” said Richard “Dick” Pound, the longest serving member of 
 the International Olympic Committee, during a phone interview with The 
 Japan Times.\n“COVID-19 is not going to be gone by July 2021,” he went 
 on, adding that postponing again is not an option. “The fact that it’s 
 under full — or virtually full — control in Japan doesn’t answer all 
 the questions.”\nNeither option is ideal. But if the games are to be 
 canceled, experts remain divided over how soon the decision needs to be 
 made, not just for the sake of political expediency but to prevent severe 
 damage to the Japanese economy and to give stakeholders a fighting chance 
 to recoup their losses.\nOn Wednesday, the Tokyo Organising Committee 
 announced that organizers agreed during a meeting in late September to 
 reduce the total budget of ¥1.35 trillion by ¥30 billion — or roughly 2 
 percent — under a “simplified” plan to hold the games next summer. 
 The tentative plan entails 53 revisions including reduced spectatorship, 
 shortened employment terms for organizing committee staff and fewer 
 decorations at competition venues.\nThe ¥30 billion reduction, however, is 
 a fraction of the additional cost unleashed by the one-year deferral, which 
 organizers estimate could exceed ¥300 billion and push the total budget 
 past ¥1.6 trillion.\nMeanwhile, cash handouts and zero-interest loans 
 issued by the government to individuals and businesses, many of which are 
 still suffering from the economic costs of the lengthy pandemic, have laid 
 a heavy burden on an already slumped economy.\nIn July, only a quarter of 
 people in Japan were looking forward to the games, according to a Kyodo 
 News poll. More recent surveys show that, despite ballooning costs, 
 wavering public support has since rebounded.\nMedia and business sponsors, 
 however, are apparently nervous, with reports claiming some have ended 
 their contracts even though renewal negotiations were expected to begin 
 later this month.\n“The cost of canceling the games depends on the 
 timing,” said Andrew Zimbalist, an economics professor at Smith College 
 in Massachusetts. “Canceling beyond December could cost more than holding 
 the games and trying to recover the losses.”\nThe debate resurfaced in 
 early September after organizers and political leaders doubled down with a 
 string of high-profile statements solidifying their commitment to the 
 current plan.\nThe 2020 games will proceed “with or without COVID-19,” 
 proclaimed International Olympic Committee Vice President John Coates and 
 Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto. Tokyo 2020 President Yoshiro Mori and Tokyo 
 Gov. Yuriko Koike said the games will be held “no matter what,” while 
 Olympic Minister Seiko Hashimoto said they will happen “at any cost” 
 and then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe insisted the country will host the event 
 “by all means.”\nAfter he became the country's leader in mid-September, 
 Yoshihide Suga met with Koike to reinforce these sentiments.\nSuccessfully 
 holding the games, they say, would symbolize the resilience of 
 humankind.\n“All of them are cheerleaders,” Zimbalist said. “I regard 
 those comments as hortatory — they're meant for public consumption as 
 words of encouragement but they shouldn't be interpreted as actual 
 projections of reality.”\nLeading up to the announcement in March that 
 the 2020 Games would be postponed until summer next year, messaging from 
 the same individuals was scattered and officials seemed to avoid breaking 
 the news until the last possible moment.\nThe sequence of coordinated 
 statements this time, said sports journalist Aaron Bauer, suggests a 
 decision has already been made behind closed doors.\n“When you have all 
 the groups in lockstep, that means there's a lot of decisions that have 
 already been taken behind the scenes,” Bauer said. “They still have to 
 figure out how to get athletes from countries that are in hot spots to 
 areas where they can train safely and participate in the Olympics at peak 
 athletic capability.”\nThe 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were 
 expected to draw more than 15,000 athletes from over 170 countries to 
 compete over the course of 30 days in 43 venues. As the pandemic continues 
 to upend life in all corners of the globe, it seems impossible to predict 
 how much of that original plan will remain come next summer.\nLast month 
 the government put forward virus countermeasures for Olympic and Paralympic 
 athletes before and after they have entered the country.\nAthletes 
 competing at next year’s games will be exempted from entry restrictions 
 currently placed on 159 countries but will still have to test negative for 
 COVID-19, and will be asked to monitor their health within the 72 hours 
 before they leave their own country. Upon arrival, they will be tested 
 again and have their movements monitored during their stay.\nOfficials will 
 most likely announce a similar plan for travelers from abroad in 
 spring.\nThe chief concern that critics have of hosting the games next year 
 is the self-evident risk of inviting people from all over the world during 
 an ongoing health crisis.\nWorldwide, the novel coronavirus has infected 36 
 million and taken more than a million lives.\nWhile the United States, 
 India and Brazil are suffering the heaviest casualties at present, recent 
 numbers indicate many Western countries are on the precipice of a second 
 wave.\nMeanwhile, the situation in Japan is significantly less severe. As 
 of Wednesday, the country has recorded more than 86,000 infections and just 
 over 1,600 deaths.\nOther Southeast and East Asian countries and regions 
 — Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong, among others — all saw waves of new 
 infections but more recently seem to be in a lull.\nEarlier this month, the 
 World Health Organization announced that, including Japan, 167 countries 
 accounting for about 70 percent of the world population had signed onto a 
 program striving to achieve the fair and equitable distribution of a 
 vaccine.\nIn September, IOC President Thomas Bach warned that a COVID-19 
 vaccine won’t act as a “silver bullet.” Indeed, while research in 
 several countries is showing promising signs that a vaccine could be 
 produced early next year, the prospect of eradicating the virus completely 
 remains hypothetical.\nThe timing and efficacy of a COVID-19 vaccine will 
 largely determine how quickly the world rescues itself from this crisis. 
 However, socioeconomic factors such as the rate of production, price and 
 the willingness of individuals to voluntarily receive the vaccine could 
 create a bottleneck, said Kenji Shibuya, director of the Institute of 
 Public Health at King’s College London.\nWe may see a vaccine developed 
 by the end of the year, Shibuya said, but the real question is whether it's 
 effective, lasts long enough and not only prevents symptoms but blocks 
 transmission as well.\nEven if Japan has subdued the virus by then — an 
 unlikely scenario, experts say — the influx of foreigners from countries 
 that haven’t could trigger another major outbreak. With hundreds of 
 thousands of athletes, coaches, trainers, celebrities, journalists, 
 politicians and spectators expected to descend upon the country, one need 
 only imagine the mayhem a single positive test result — let alone a 
 cluster infection — would cause to recognize the gravity of the task at 
 hand.\n“Japan has not suppressed the virus. Infections have been 
 fluctuating but there has been constant community transmission since 
 May,” Shibuya said.\n“Japan needs to show that it can contain the 
 virus,” he said. “It hasn't done that yet.”\n\nOLYMPICS/ IOC gets 
 official look at simplification for Tokyo Games In Middle Of a 
 Pandemic\nOrganizers have said it won’t be until the end of the year, or 
 early in 2021, when detailed steps will be announced about how to hold the 
 Olympics in the midst of a 
 pandemic.\n\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/13792993\nTHE ASSOCIATED 
 PRESS\nOctober 6, 2020 at 15:40 JST\n\n\nIn this Sept. 24 photo, IOC 
 President Thomas Bach, on the screen, speaks remotely with Tokyo 2020 
 Organizing Committee President Yoshiro Mori, left, and Tokyo Gov. Yuriko 
 Koike, right, during an on-line meeting focused on how to pull off the 
 delayed Tokyo Games. (AP Photo) \nThe IOC and local organizers are trying 
 to “simplify” the postponed Tokyo Olympics, promising to save money in 
 what one study says is already the most expensive Summer Olympics on 
 record.\n\nThe executive board of the International Olympic Committee is 
 expected to review the proposed cuts on Wednesday. They include about 50 
 changes to fringe areas that leave the number of athletes--15,400 for the 
 Olympics and Paralympics--and all sports events untouched for next 
 year.\n\nAlso largely untouched will be the opening and closing ceremonies, 
 the heavily sponsored 121-day torch relay, and competition areas that will 
 be seen on television broadcasts. This means the so-called field of play, 
 and areas immediately adjacent.\n\nSome of the proposed cuts listed in a 
 detailed document from the organizers include: fewer decorative banners; a 
 10-15 percent reduction in “stakeholders” delegation sizes; five fewer 
 international interpreters from a staff of 100; fewer shuttle buses; 
 reduction in hospitality areas; suspension in production of mascot 
 costumes; cancellation of official team welcome ceremonies.\n\nBig savings 
 are not easy to find.\n\nOrganizers and the IOC say they had already 
 slashed several billion dollars in costs before the Olympics were postponed 
 six months ago because of the COVID-19 pandemic. This included moving 
 events to existing venues rather than building new facilities.\n\nMost of 
 the big-ticket spending had already taken place, such as the $1.43 billion 
 national stadium, and the $520 million swimming venue.\n\n“We have many 
 measures, and sometimes they look small. But when you take them all 
 together it will represent a large result in terms of both simplification 
 and hopefully... produce some significant savings,” Christophe Dubi, the 
 IOC executive director for the Olympic Games, said late last month when the 
 plans were presented in Tokyo.\n\nDubi said a search for more cuts would 
 continue.\n\nTokyo and the IOC have not offered an estimate of the savings 
 but estimates in Japan put them at 1-2 percent of official spending of 
 $12.6 billion. However, a government audit last year said the real cost of 
 the Olympics might be twice that much.\n\nAll of the costs for putting on 
 the Olympics come largely from public money with the exception of $5.6 
 billion from a privately financed local operating budget. About 60 percent 
 of the income in this budget--$3.3 billion--comes from payments from 68 
 domestic sponsors.\n\nOrganizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto acknowledged 
 last month for the first time that some sponsors have backed out in the 
 midst of a slumping economy, the pandemic, and uncertainty around the 
 Olympics really happening.\n\n“I can’t say that all contracts have been 
 renewed,” he said.\n\nAny shortfall in this privately funded operating 
 budget will have to be made up from somewhere else. The document handed out 
 last month by organizers showed them considering “measures to increase” 
 donations to make up for lost income.\n\nTo keep sponsors on board, the IOC 
 and local organizers have talked confidently in the last several months 
 about the Olympics opening as planned on July 23, 2021.\n\nYoshiro Mori, 
 the president of the organizing committee, acknowledged last month that 
 some were hoping for more cuts, while others will be satisfied with the 
 modest savings.\n\n“It’s like a glass half-filled, or half empty,” he 
 said. “We wanted to save, but there were so many things that have already 
 been determined.”\n\nOrganizers have said it won’t be until the end of 
 the year, or early in 2021, when detailed steps will be announced about how 
 to hold the Olympics in the midst of a pandemic. This will include 
 decisions about attendance by local fans, non-Japanese fans, and rules 
 under which athletes will enter Japan, vaccines, quarantines, and so 
 forth.\n\nJapan has reported about 1,600 deaths from COVID-19 and has had 
 strict entry rules in place for citizens from 159 countries.\n\n\n-- 
 \n\nTritium is what makes nuclear reactors so dangerous, not only in 
 Fukushima but also in S. 
 Korea\nhttp://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_editorial/967441.html\nPosted 
 on : Oct.27,2020 17:19 KST Modified on : Oct.27,2020 17:19 KST	\nFacebook 
 페이스북\nTwitter 트위터\nprint 프린트\nLarger font size 
 글씨크기 크게\nSmaller font size 글씨크기 작게\nIt’s foolish 
 to view Japanese reactors in terms of safety and Korean reactors in terms 
 of economic viability\n\nImage provided by Jaewoogy.com \nTritium, or 
 hydrogen-3, is identified by the scientific symbol 3H or T. As an isotype 
 of hydrogen, the lightest of all elements, tritium contains two neutrons, 
 whereas ordinary hydrogen (known as protium, identified by the symbol H) 
 contains none. That makes tritium unstable and, as a result, 
 radioactive.\nTritium exists in the natural world, but only in negligible 
 amounts. It’s typically produced during the fission process inside 
 nuclear reactors. Tritium is part of the coolant that lowers the 
 temperature in the reactor core, which is heated by fission.\nTritium is 
 regarded as a low-risk radioactive substance, causing less harm than other 
 types of radiation. For one thing, the radiation emitted by tritium is so 
 weak that it can’t penetrate the outer layer of the skin. And even when 
 it is absorbed by the body, its biological half-life — the time required 
 for half the substance to leave the body — is only 12 days.\nBut such 
 safety observations only apply to a single dose of radiation, such as an 
 X-ray, and the actual risk depends on the intensity of exposure. That has 
 led various countries to develop strict safety standards for the substance. 
 The European Committee on Radiation Risk warns that internal radiation 
 exposure can cause mutations that could lead to cancer.\nThe contaminated 
 water at the Fukushima reactor that the Japanese government seeks to 
 release into the ocean contains tritium at levels that are 10 times higher 
 than levels permitted by the South Korean government. That has terrified 
 people not only in Japan but also in Korea.\nThe Japanese government says 
 that the contaminated water doesn’t present a problem because it will be 
 decontaminated through Tokyo Electric Power Company’s advanced liquid 
 processing system (ALPS), before release. But the tricky part about 
 releasing the contaminated water is tritium, which can’t be removed by 
 ALPS because of the strong chemical bond it forms with water.\nBut 
 Fukushima isn’t the only place affected by the risk of tritium. 
 Heavy-water reactors are cooled with heavy water (deuterium oxide, 2H2O) 
 instead of ordinary drinking water, producing a greater amount of tritium. 
 There are four heavy-water reactors at Korea’s Wolsong plant, including 
 Wolsong-1, which has been in the news recently after government auditors 
 questioned a report about its economic viability, the justification given 
 for shutting the reactor down earlier than planned.\nEven now, Wolsong-2, 
 Wolsong-3, and Wolsong-4 account for 40% of the tritium released by all of 
 Korea’s nuclear stations. Rates of thyroid cancer among women who live 
 near the Wolsong nuclear plant are 2.5 times higher than in other areas, 
 which some think is linked to tritium contamination. The question of 
 nuclear power safety affects Korea in the same way as it affects Japan. It 
 would be foolish and contradictory to view Japanese nuclear plants through 
 the lens of safety and Korean nuclear plants through the lens of economic 
 viability.\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/27/18837913.php
SUMMARY:The Olympics, Fukushima & The Madness
LOCATION:No Nukes Action hosts an international panel on the Olympics, Fukushima and 
 the Madness. The Japanese PM Suga is still saying the Olympics will go 
 ahead regardless of the Covid-19 worldwide pandemic and the continuing 
 threat of the broken and leaking nuclear plants in Fukushima.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/27/18837913.php
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