Tag Japan

Give Me A Break

The Japanese LOOOOOOVE Kit Kats. But the Japanese also have some very different ideas about what makes a great candy bar. Weird Asia News has put together this infographic listing all the various flavors of Kit Kat available in Japan. According to them, there are 87 varieties available, and the flavors range from apple and bubblegum (made with blue chocolate) to mashed soy bean and grilled corn.

Some of them sound pretty good to me, like maple syrup and salted caramel, but I’m not so sure about cucumber or edamame.

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Cuteness Optional

If you liked the post about the cute Boxie and Tweenbot robots the other day, you might get a kick out of this story about a Stupid And Useless Robot competition that was held a couple of years ago. The Japanese electronic toy company Maywa Denki sponsors an annual competition to see who can come up with the stupidest and least useful robots (or at least they used to…from their website it doesn’t look like they’ve had one in a few years). The linked Weird Asia News article includes a video from 2008 showing some of the entries in that year’s contest. Some of them, like the cat-licking robot are pretty funny.

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Fukushima Eight Months Later

On Monday, Alan Taylor at The Atlantic’s “In Focus” featured some photos from National Geographic photographer David Guttenfelder taken inside the exclusion zone around the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan. Guttenfelder had been part of a group that was allowed in back in June to document the devastation and returned in November to take additional photos. Above is a photo of Reactor Number 4 at the power plant, one of the buildings that exploded when its reactor overheated. You can see additional photos and read about Guttenfelder’s visits at National Geographic’s website.

Relatedly: researchers now think that the tidal wave that wiped out Fukushima was a double tsunami, never before observed, but theorized by scientists for some years.

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Just A Little Fucking Ray Of Sunshine

This time it will kill us all, FOR SURE! We promise!

Recently, Asia Times ran this story recapping and analyzing what actually happened at Fukushima during the minutes of the March earthquake that led to the even greater disaster as the tsunami hit. The entire Fukushima site was in trouble with safety inspectors for years, coming to a head in 2002, but problems persisted for years afterward. Even without the one-two punch of the natural disasters, it seems likely from this story that a serious accident at Fukushima was merely a matter of time. Also, if you missed it last week, the IEEE has republished blog posts made by an anonymous cleanup worker who operates a robot in the facility to remove materials where the radiation is too high for humans. The posts, which were extremely critical of TEPCO management of the cleanup operations, were deleted from their original website after drawing attention, but the IEEE recovered the posts and republished them to much attention. Last week, Naoto Kan, the prime minister of Japan, resigned because of criticism of the government’s handling of the crisis.

If you get your news from the American news media, you probably didn’t hear this tidbit: the U.S. government has negotiated an agreement to leave up to 25,000 troops in Afghanistan until 2024. You hear a lot about the troops coming home in 2014, but not so much about the “special advisors” staying for at least another full decade in the single biggest waste of money and materiel in the history of humankind. That, of course, presumes that we haven’t completely bankrupted ourselves before then.

PZ Meyers had this story about a “pastor” who thinks it would be great if there could be a national registry of all of us atheists just like they have for “convicted sex offenders, ex-convicts, terrorist cells…” and other undesirables. It would be for “information purposes”:

Now , many (especially the atheists ) , may ask “Why do this , what’s the purpose ?” Duhhh , Mr. Atheist , for the same purpose many States put the names and photos of convicted sex offenders and other ex-felons on the I-Net – to INFORM the public ! I mean , in the City of Miramar , Florida , where I live , the population is approx. 109,000 . My family and I would sure like to know how many of those 109,000 are ADMITTED atheists ! Perhaps we may actually know some . In which case we could begin to witness to them and warn them of the dangers of atheism . Or perhaps they are radical atheists , whose hearts are as hard as Pharaoh’s , in that case , if they are business owners , we would encourage all our Christian friends , as well as the various churches and their congregations NOT to patronize them as we would only be “feeding” Satan .

Gee, wouldn’t it just be easier if we all wore a patch or something?

Former BBC producer Jo Glanville has written an in-depth piece for the London Review of Books chronicling the battle over the future of one of the (if not THE) pre-eminent broadcasting institutions, the BBC World Service. While the mission of the World Service unquestionably needs to be re-evaluated in the era of the Internet, British domestic politics may have more to do with its fate than the information age.

Anything else I can help you feel bad about today? I’ve got plenty of links.

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I Think I Know How This Movie Ends

This can’t be good: millions of jellyfish have found their way into nuclear reactors in Japan and Israel. That linked article is a little light on the factual information in favor of a bunch of photos of jellies, none of which actually have anything to do with the story, but, hey, jellyfish.

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Warning Unheeded

By this point, you probably figure you’ve seen all the video of the tsunami that devastated Northern Japan in March, but this video was shot by someone trapped inside a car as the tsunami swept away his town. It’s quite a bit different than many of the videos you’ve already seen, and simply the scariest of any I’ve seen.

The web magazine GOOD says that there are markers in coastal areas of Japan that mark the high-water spots of tsunamis going back to the 15th century. Some villages heeded the warnings of the stones and built on higher ground, but the videos tell the tale of many others that did not. The GOOD story links to a Canadian Post article which is no longer online, but there was a similar NY Times story from the same time period that goes into more detail.

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Thinking The Unthinkable

The headlines today include the extremely distressing news that officials in Japan have raised the severity level of the situation at the Fukushima nuclear plant to 7, which is the highest level on the scale. Despite American media reports that say this makes Fukushima “as bad as Chernobyl”, other outlets are quick to add that the radiation levels at Fukushima are only one-tenth those that were measured at Chernobyl. However, there are some apples-to-oranges comparison problems involved, and some measures in the Fukushima area do, in fact, exceed measures from Pripyat. This BBC analyst tries to sort out the differences between the incidents and put the current crisis into proper perspective.

To help Americans grasp the context of the impact of the disaster, the German newspaper Die Zeit has put together an interactive map using Google Maps that shows the location of every operating nuclear power plant in the United States and allows users to map the extent of potential evacuation zones surrounding those plants similar to the one currently in place in Japan. The maps also show the size of the affected population of individual potential evacuation zones. Here’s a screenshot of the four nuclear plants in and around Massachusetts (one each in MA, NH, VT, and CT) with 19-mile evacuation zones:

(Slightly larger version here)

I highlighted the area around the Seabrook nuclear plant, which is the closest to me, and you can see that a 19-mile evacuation zone would affect over half a million people, ranging from Cape Ann and Lawrence in Massachusetts all the way to Durham and Dover, New Hampshire.

Time Magazine has this slideshow of pictures taken by photographer Athit Perawongmetha, who voluntarily went into the exclusion zone around Fukushima to document the situation. They are scenes of life instantly and probably permanently disrupted by the series of events of the last month — earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear accident.

Here, the body of a person killed by the tsunami lies in the open, still unrecovered by the authorities.

Many pets were, by necessity, abandoned and many will probably be left to die, despite efforts from animal rescue groups.

A school gymnasium being used as an evacuation center for earthquake/tsunami victims sits suddenly abandoned as people were forced to leave due to the radiation.

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Required Reading

In case you haven’t seen this elsewhere yet: This chart is only one part of a full-page infographic from the author of the webcomic XKCD, Randall Munroe, illustrating the relative doses of radiation that people receive in various situations ranging from background radiation in the atmosphere to the fatal exposures received by the workers at Chernobyl. This portion of the infographic relates to those miniscule exposures, and I have highlighted for you the anticipated exposure that people in Japan are expected to receive on a daily basis due to the ongoing incident at the Fukushima nuclear plant. Looking at the whole infographic puts the exposure into context: it is about a third as much as the daily exposure people receive just from ordinary background radiation.

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Infographic Of The Day

NOAA has released this map showing the tsunami wave heights across the Pacific Ocean today in the wake of the M8.9 earthquake in Japan:

(Click here for the full-sized version of this map)

As you can see the highest waves are predicted south and east of Hawaii, extending all the way to the coast of Chile. The waves that hit Hawaii a couple of hours ago only reached 3-4 feet, and apparently have caused no serious damage. Compare that to the reported 33-foot height of the main tsunami that struck Japan.

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Eel-ectric

Ooh, I hate it when this happens! Watch as an alligator makes a strategic mistake when he chomps down on an electric eel (which is apparently chomping on a furry woodland critter at the same time):

Meanwhile, in Japan…an aquarium in a city south of Tokyo uses their electric eel to power the lights on their Christmas tree:

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