Added: 11 months ago
From: Netagu
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  • If they just start recording and then the earthquake start they are lieing some times cuz how do u may be its a real one may be just shaking the camera

  • Wouldn't a M9.0 destroy buildings?

  • @jrae50021 It would if the earthquake had been directly beneath a populated area, like the horrific Kobe earthquake. As this one happened out to sea, it was still incredibly intense but luckily Japanese engineering won the day.

    Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for victims of the tsunami. :(

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  • @Arguemento

    Depleted uranium is a radioactive element with a half-life of 4.5 billion years.

    Plutonium is 1,000 times more toxic than depleted uranium.

    Plutonium-244 has a half-life of 80 million years.

    The radiation will be there forever.

  • @Arguemento

    The worst damage is unseen.

    The Fukushima nuclear plant has been emitting radiation since March 11, 2011.

    The world and oceans have been highly contaminated with this radiation (depleted uranium and plutonium).

    When radiation mixes with rain it soaks (contaminates) the land, water and people with radiation.

    Radiation contamination from Fukushima is worldwide.

  • @hplaserjet2001 I am planning to take my daughter to Tokyo Disneyland, is it safe to visit Japan now or should way a little longer because of the radiation? Please advise. Thank you in advance.

  • @JSAUSA100

    All of Japan has been contaminated forever. All of the North Hemisphere has been soaked in radiation since March 2011. Fukushima is far worse than Chernobyl.

    Japan has been in full meltdown since March 11, 2012.

    600,000+ radioactive fuel rods (12 ft x .5 inches) were stored at Fukushima. Most of those were destroyed and went in into the atmosphere with the explosions. If you stood next to a fuel rod, you'd get a deadly dose of radiation that kills within days.

  • @JSAUSA100

    The Japanese government recently admitted it considered evacuating Tokyo, but did not because of the chaos that would have happened.

    Large sections of the ocean are dead.

    Uranium Alpha 238 is a radioactive element with a half-life of 4.5 billion years.

    Uranium Alpha 234 is a radioactive element with a half-life of 245,000 years.

    Plutonium was found at Fukushima.

    See the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility for more information.

    ccnr (dot) org/decay_U238.html#HLL

  • @JSAUSA100

    Dr Helen Caldicott, Conference on The Nuclear Danger: Nuclear War and Nuclear Power, Montreal. March 18, 2011

    Part 1: "Plutonium has a half life of 24,400 years so it lasts about a half a million years. … Plutonium, you only need 5 kilos to make a bomb and each reactor makes 500, no, 250 KG a year. It's so toxic that a microgram is carcinogenic, that's a millionth of a gram.

  • @JSAUSA100

    Part 2: Hypothetically, if you could take a pound of plutonium and distribute that in every person's lung on earth, that's enough to kill every person on earth. Each of those six reactors (Fukushima, Japan) contain more than 250 KG of plutonium." -Dr Helen Caldicott, Conference on The Nuclear Danger: Nuclear War and Nuclear Power, Montreal. March 18, 2011

  • @JSAUSA100

    Russia and China rejected shipments from Japan because of radiation contamination.

    These videos have maps of radiation emanating from Fukushima in the Pacific Ocean.

    watch?v=BJH-oYSQG0M&

    watch?v=mcdQ22wGzWY&

    This video exposes radiation contamination of food in Japan, Canada and the USA.

    watch?v=DV7Tm7Tjh9I&

    Nuclear expert Dr Helen Caldicott speaks about Fukushima and the permanent contamination of the planet.

    watch?v=q0EJkzG2mcY&

  • @JSAUSA100

    I've been to Japan three times and love the people, culture and country, but know that I can never return because of the radiation. The radiation will be there forever, it's not safe.

    Google Chernobyl babies to see photos of deformities caused by radiation. Japan will have the same deformities. Cancer rates will significantly increase worldwide because of Fukushima.

    Sorry, but it will never be safe to visit Tokyo or Japan again.

    It's not worth the risk to take your daughter.

  • @hplaserjet2001 Thank you very much, I really appreciate your feedback. She is so excited about going to Japan, but if it is going to be the matter of death and life, then I have to think it twice.

    Thank you again.

  • @JSAUSA100

    You are welcome. Sadly, Japan will never be safe to visit.

    You cannot smell, taste or see radiation. It's a silent killer that accumulates in your body for years before you get cancer. Birth defects have already begun to appear in Japan.

    Doctors in Iraq have told women to stop having babies because so many are deformed. It's rare a baby is born healthy and without deformities. The USA used depleted uranium in its bombs used in both Iraq invasions (wars). Iraq is radioactive.

  • @JSAUSA100

    See my playlist Fukushima Nuclear Meltdown to learn more about the tragedy of Fukushima and the implications for Japan and the planet.

    Rainwater absorbs radiation in the atmosphere.

    When it rains it soaks (contaminates) the land, water and people with radiation.

    The Northern Hemisphere has been continually doused (by rain) with radiation since March 11, 2012. Eventually, that radiation will also spread to the Southern Hemisphere.

  • It reminds me of the day. I was in Nakano, just a few stations away from Shinjuku. You managed back to the hotel? And safely back home after that? I feel sorry you stayed in Tokyo at this moment, but also glad to watch this movie log... Great report!

  • @jun0nsj Thank you and also for your concern! Yes i managed to use email to contact a friend and after 9 hrs we finally arrived at his house, and that sunday we came back home. Soon i plan to visit again. How were things where you were that day?

  • TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

  • thank you for sharing this with us. I was there the year before.

  • good report,with comments

  • Nice report, thank you. In the 1980's I was in the US Navy, I spent time in Shinjuku taking pictures and shopping for Canon cameras. So sad for the people of Japan. Wonderful people.

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  • I was in México City when happened the 8.1 Richter Earthquake, it felt HORRIBLE, i can´t imagine how does it feel a 9.0 Richter o.O

  • If this happened in China.....there would be lots of argument and fighting on the street, the casualty will be thousands time more than in Japan, and the local governments would take the benefit of the disaster to make big money (donations) into their pockets...Well done Japan.

  • oh how dramatic.....fuk pff

  • I was in the Christchurch 6.3 earthquake and this must have been more scarier than the one we had here. Thinking of everyone who was in the Christchurch and Japan earthquake.

  • I spent all day yesterday watching video's on the earthquake and I was glad that I had moved from Japan before then but I felt so terriable not just for my friends and family but for everyone.

  • @MiyuYoshida1 im glad you were away. I feel the same though, im back home but theres so much everyone in that area and that country is going through still. my heart goes out to everyone there.

  • How was everyone acting when they were watching the new's?

  • @MiyuYoshida1 There we lots of people staring at the screen. It was really cold outside but everyone watching hardly moved at all. it was kinda mixed some of us couldnt believe what was going on and others were shocked. Phones and all that harldy worked but there were quite a few using them trying to get through. I know watching the screen it was hard to absorb at first... Ganbatte Japan

  • lol everyone is soo calmed

  • wow thats scary!

  • Thanks for filming it!!!

  • Aweeee sorry to hear that, but let's hope and pray it will get back to normal . Hopefully <3

  • @iischay yes i agree with you lets keep it up. <3 Japan <3

  • Good thing you guys are fine :) and i saw Bruce , thats my good friend out there <3

  • @iischay thanks :) yea we managed to get home ok. its a relief! I cant wait to go back though and help. I really want to do something for them. Japan is my 2nd home :(

  • @Netagu oh, are u a japanese too? well yeah what happened is really terrible :(

  • @iischay im not japanese but i feel really really close to the japanese. ive made a lot of great friends there, thankfully they are ok. it just makes me so sad to see this happen :(

  • Thanks everyone i really appreciate it!!

  • I agree with all the rest. . . Good thing you are all alright. Happy to hear you made it home safe.

  • We are so glad all three of you are home safe! We have been so worried ever since we found out friday morning. I still can't believe you guys were there when it happened.

  • Wow can't believe you were there in that area. Man. Glad to know your all doing ok.

  • hope to see u well

  • @strickmans yea man were all good thankfully.

  • so good to see that youg guys are alright. you guys were the 1st people i thought of when it happened... I was thinking, wait! where were they staying?? I hope they are ok. phewww

  • @TheKraZyKriSSy Thanks! we felt it pretty good and even tons of aftershocks but managed to make it home now. It was pretty crazy. Thanks again!

  • omygosh very SCARY STUFF. Glad to know you 3 are alrite

  • @MrSport4life thanks man!

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