Showing posts with label Fukushima Diary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fukushima Diary. Show all posts

Thursday, January 10, 2013

1.11 SF Rally Friday 3pm at Japanese Consulate – Be There to Oppose LDP/Abe Plan for New Nuclear Plants




No Nukes Action Committee will have a rally and speak-out Friday January 11, 2013 at the Japanese Consulate, 50 Fremont Street, San Francisco, at 3 pm, to protest Japan’s LDP/Abe government’s push for the building of more nuclear plants, and the government & industry media campaign that Fukushima can be “decontaminated” and Japan can “overcome” nuclear radiation.


1.11.2013 Rally Friday 3pm at Japanese Consulate – Be There to Oppose LDP/Abe Plan for New Nuclear Plants • No Nukes Action Committee

Thursday, December 13, 2012

3.11-12 The Medical and Ecological Consequences of Fukushima: A Symposium | Coalition Against Nukes



This two-day symposium – the first independent conference on this subject and a project of The Helen Caldicott Foundation – will be held at the New York Academy of Medicine on March 11 and 12, 2013, to coincide with the second anniversary of the nuclear melt-down at the Fukushima Daiichi reactors.
Scientists, physicians, engineers, political leaders, and policy makers will present and discuss the preliminary data thus far amassed on the bio-medical and ecological consequences of the disaster both for Japan and, potentially, the rest of the world.
In the year-and-a-half since the disaster, reports have slowly emerged about the health and environmental effects — from increased incidences of thyroid abnormalities in Japanese children to deformities in the insect, bird, and butterfly populations around Fukushima to increased levels of cesium present in tuna caught off the coast of California. It is clear that much research by the world’s scientists still needs to be done, work which will take years, if not decades, to complete as the effects of radiation exposure on human –as well as flora and fauna –populations make themselves manifest. It is equally clear that an open forum such as this symposium will play an influential role in pointing the way forward in the evaluation of both the immediate and on-going effects of the melt-down.
It will play a vital role in educating the media and stimulating debate among policy makers and government leaders in the world community on whether nuclear power can continue to be considered a viable means of energy production given the global public health implications of its use and the consequences that ensue when catastrophic incidents such as Fukushima occur.


Symposium: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of Fukushima, March 11-12, 2013

Nuclear Free Planet

Thursday, November 1, 2012

11.1-8 Anti-Nuclear Events in San Diego


Anti-Nuclear Events in San Diego

November 1-8 


-- From The Peace Resource Center of San Diego
:: http://www.prcsd.org/ 

Thursday, November 1, "No Nukes Night: Poets Against Nuclear Power: An evening of poetry against nuclear energy and for green energy," 7:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., Space Bar Internet Cafe, 7454 University Ave., La Mesa, CA 91942. Bring your poems, come and hear poems! Calling all Southern California poets to write a poem and attend or send a poem to jimpoet@hotmail.com. The best 50 poems will be accepted for the anthology, "No Nukes: Poets Against Nuclear Power." Info (619)461-7100

Friday, November 2, 6;30-9 p.m. "Film: Knocking on the Devil’s Door." Sierra Club Monthly Film Series, Sierra Club Chapter Office, 8304 Clairemont Mesa Blvd, San Diego, CA 92111. Free! Representatives from the Peace Resource Center of San Diego and the Shut San Onofre Campaign will be present to answer questions. “Knocking on the Devil’s Door: Our Deadly Nuclear Legacy” triailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5Qq-0tZWpo

Saturday, November 3, 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Come hear Japanese guest, Fukushima Blogger, Iori Mochizuki speak about Mutation, Plant situation, Global consequences at the Peace Resource Center, 3850 Westgate Place, SD, CA 92105. Free! Mochizuki, a resident of Yokohama (~165 miles from Fukushima), writes the Fukushima Diary blog to share on-the-ground information of what's happening to the people of Japan since Fukushima. After March 11, 2011, he became frustrated with the lack of reliable information from official Japanese channels and began posting stories he discovered on Facebook sites. Harassed and threatened by Japanese officials, facing repeated online DDOS attacks and sickened by radiation (diarrhea, headache, coughing, nasal congestion, fatigue, pain behind his eyes), Mochizuki left Japan in December, 2011. Since then, he has traveled extensively and been hosted by his blog's followers in France, Spain, Netherlands, Romania, Austria and Tunisia. He currently lives in US. Fukushima Diary continues to be read by approximately 10,000 people a day. Read "Fukushima Diary:" http://fukushima-diary.com/category/dnews/

Saturday, November 3, 6:30 p.m., "The Land of Hope," Asian Film Festival, 7510 Hazard Center Drive, San Diego, CA 92108. A new (2012) art, drama about a nuclear accident in Japan; sound familiar? General Admission $11.50. More info and buy tickets here: http://festival.sdaff.org/2012/films/land-of-hope/

Wednesday, November 7, 4 p.m.: "Nuclear Nation," a free showing by the Asian Film Festival, UltraStar Mission Valley, 7510 Hazard Center Drive, San Diego, CA 92108. Don't miss this new documentary about Fukushima and Japan. The Peace Resource Center of San Diego is one of the co-presenters and we have reserved 10 tickets for the film; if you'd like to be part of our party, contact carolj@prcsd.org Read about film here:http://festival.sdaff.org/2012/films/nuclear-nation/

Thursday, November 8, 7 p.m.: "The Land of Hope," Asian Film Festival, 7510 Hazard Center Drive, San Diego, CA 92108. A new (2012) art, drama about a nuclear accident in Japan; sound familiar? General Admission $11.50. More info and buy tickets here: http://festival.sdaff.org/2012/films/land-of-hope/


The Peace Resource Center of San Diego


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