tv [untitled] November 9, 2010 6:30pm-7:00pm EST
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to long with international organizations tries to give effect to pave the charms of a better life. as the headlines now with fears of a nuclear proliferation is still a reality today children and grandchildren of those living in hiroshima and nagasaki when the u.s. dropped atomic bombs at the end the world war two are striving to keep the memory of the horror alive so that history is not repeated part of one of our special report is coming your way shortly. you. know. the nuclear age is sixty years old. and as far as peace is concerned soon the last atomic bomb survivors will be gone. perhaps in less than twenty assume t.t.'s said that at its end i would like to pass on my grandmother still raise it
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to the younger generations or focus tonight my dream is to not let it die. how great is the threat of nuclear war today. nuclear weapons have become the currency of power. how do you explain that the five permanent members of the security council they are the ones who have the nuclear weapons. over the five most powerful states in the world. united states russia britain france china. so all india looks at just says that they're going to get into a nuclear club and pakistan israel is in there and so this constitutes a volcano of nuclear weapons i could erupt at any time. we thought the threat had disappeared but we were around. during the cold war we were a war each about the mutually assured destruction so-called not between russia and states that fear is gone however we are not all to the danger zones at all there
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are still some twenty seven thousand nuclear warheads of which twelve thousand generate our operative active. we shouldn't forget the rush him and that is that. there's a new restaurant that democracies with nuclear weapons five. weapons that were used as far as i go were not used fired. what is the legacy of that weapon what does it hold in store for us. except he was two years old when she was exposed to the bone when she was twelve she developed like a man and she hoped that if she made one thousand paper cranes she would be killed . here i'm
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a soldier after her death scream became disabled. i thought the cold war was over and the nuclear threat a thing of the past it's not a nightmare is alive and well with the help of the military strategies of the nuclear powers are the one hundred forty three thousand dead and he does she need to be slowly remembered as the triumph of the u.s. over japan. from hiroshima to the pacific islands where nuclear testing took place the decisions made by american strategists are taking a heavy toll on another generation mikey is a third generation he. her grandmother survived the radiation but he doesn't want the bomb to ever be used again. but i also discovered how alone much he wants
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because even here people don't care enough about this old weapon other than to be the highlight of the museum. talking to my friends about my activism. and they don't care about such serious matters sort of thing and i. only the people who was then understand what happened under the mushroom cloud today it's not all it is very difficult in these peaceful time to make young people understand how tragic it was maggie is the youngest died at the heat of peace memorial museum but she goes further than providing information her goal is to provoke fear and dread. that children have never experienced an atomic bomb that's why i use simple language while trying to make an impact on a family it's amazing but some us and it will. please let's look over here
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involve that turned ball see the airplane. in that airplane when they were carrying the bomb into that airplane. is about do you know what time it was. unable. it was a to fifteen. minute i was in my house in front of the altar i had been used to be crowded out and was reading yet why i had just opened it and i filled the bluish white light coming in from the garden you want a hole in the boy and on. it
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was complete darkness and i couldn't move i was burry down under the house eventually i managed to get out by walking barefoot across a wooden board people were completely blackened and had burnt cumin others were torn apart or on one of them women were walking naked in the streets covering themselves with their hands ashamed. that was the ball the time when everybody finished breakfast the heat was so intense that flash mile to it and blackened just like when you burn toast it was like that. but it was it definitely disfigured corpses were naked except for the watches as you do.
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as it were the most of this was all that was left to identify the bodies my skin rotted and to pass. on to destructive many to me could tea from herbs i drank his tea every day for the rest of the year since we didn't have medicine and what we had to use natural cures these are all children they were all bad food. these policemen was trying to help but he was also a victim they didn't really have any medication so they use things like tamper or oil to try to hew go to feel that they were that it was a living hell of a leg hell on earth and they. were that's great that you brought your children here and if you didn't this is not a fun place to be but thank you thank you very much it's good morning and you see some blackened lunch boxes in another building please take your time to look at
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them. lloyd i can remember well it is freely difficult i don't want to remember. lucky's fight to convey the dreadful images runs counter to the priorities of our country actually japan looks for ways to rewrite its history re how many picture the victims and the fixed groups but. that can make you say as you please to. die. to vet young people who know. so the fact is fading away. japan has tendency on. umbrella of the u.s. and its security policy their own g.p.s. it's a necessary evil nuclear weapon in
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a society deep. hole explanation of not. easy united states. has been introduced to this country as well that other make one means precipitated the end of the second world war and it saved a lot of people. i remember here was shame as one great eggs old patient i was delighted that i had been fighting the japanese for four years i was the pearl harbor on a destroyer the morning bear tired but as time went on and with the knowledge that we could have won the war with the use of that bomb i was in began to regret that hiroshima nagasaki there are targets cities at the mc one they were kept intact because they wanted to know exactly how the effect
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wants to be. why their prime we used the bomb we. almost all. mayan the who area. would have had to capitulate in a few months. three days after he lost it was not a sock it seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing gave money to the opportunity to meet with for me from that a second the student had just returned from the united states and i took an american history classes and restarted the use of their tommy bomb literature rock art ought to be all that it was a tiff and i got to have aspects of dropping atomic bombs in japan and let's think
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about underscores what they saw or thought i was quite shocked by that question i realize that ended tell people about the consequences of that told me while my growing up body. my grandmother never told me anything i only heard the whole story quite recently i have to read and to my second year of university. i thought this could be the only time i hear it but i remember it made me very happy because well you know along with a are. did effect just wrong really didn't pass it was just the two of us i was always around as i grew up but i discovered that shearer was a grandmother i didn't know. it even with him with my grandma has always leaves with a feeling of guilt. but she has never shown any anger looking towards the united states. when you and bill of other people
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destroy the. if her economic goal was the fire it was such a devastating experience. and destroys the will of the people. he said before i became a volunteer to be a guy i had to the speaker study group and all the experiences. ha ha ha my mother never talked about it because she felt gail to us that she survived how mother and sister were crying for help. and yes at the time we were all looking for her. she tried to fix her mother tonight how moderate couldn't it is meant to blot all over her but is it.
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my mistake i was at school playing marbles when suddenly it becomes dawn flash man and however i didn't see the flash of light one of the farmhouses was burning and i was very scared to see that you that's where my memory of the horrors stops is actual play time is. what the snow my mother couldn't express herself normally of us so my father was here or in a psychiatric hospital i couldn't see her very own the doctors didn't link her condition to there told me. they thought my mother was dead my mother had become insane. that she was put away in a place like
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a brazen see her there made me is so sad oh that's ok. yes if the bomb was the only thing in your mind you will go insane. eat up when i get a bit more i don't know how to nourish to talk about it but i must. say that cannot speak. it my daughter is a french woman. evolving on my daughter's child. kitty the second child she got me to fall out with what it was he was born with six fingers. in it was this my fault. it's that i was exposed to the bond. with iraqi and i saw my grandchild covered in blood in his hands for the first time. this i saw the flash of the atomic bomb.
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yes he won't. my oldest son had a problem with evolve in the hearts and so that. some of they had surgery and they found out that because it was genetic i blame myself if this is in the now more than. four i was not afraid also i don't think is that the bullet would lead from one generation to the next one. when the young people are worried they can turn to the radiation effects research foundation established by american scientists after the bombs drop the institute gathers statistical studies on the victims that he. can. see john on my greta.
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he books on what's on the bottom two of her children died of cancer here is there a link. we have been doing research based on statistical models since one thousand forty eight but we have not found any link to it so we decided to study the d.n.a. of night. i'm a stand generation. until now i hadn't really lena freight but i've heard that my generation has more problems than the second generation that i know. i know. how the disease is caused by the genetic mutations are such a tragedy. what are you sure you want to know. we also have newer information it's not really well understood a lot of the experimental what are called trans genetic type of effects that could
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not necessarily appear in the children of people exposed to radiation but maybe you can skip generations. until the results of the american japanese foundation's d.n.a. studies are known the younger generation is left wondering and given the social stigma attached to the radiation this doubt protects much and all the children of the. victims. my husband was upset and that his daughter was labeled to he baku showing the press that this that this branded him to meet that when he proposed to me the fact that i was he really bothered him. i was worried about what would happen to our children
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about time it was considered a transmittable disease so i didn't know what would happen but. i thought well what if it happens it happens that. my love was stronger than my fear you know what i still worry that my wife and daughter will be affected by the moment it. and all my mother in law feels responsible and she suffers the most discussed. i was born and raised immature shima outsiders always emphasize that i am from hiroshima hiroshima hiroshima i don't enjoy that very much. does not me being from hiroshima do i feel you motivated to make a contribution. i know it has been so since university as learned a lot about conflicts in the world. to the real is it himself always the children.
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this is the land in general and. the nuclear powers are perfectly aware that their bombs are ten twenty one hundred. but with an down cynicism the military are searching for more flexible uses. there are discussions about the development of nuclear weapons of smaller caliber or of the capacity to penetrate the earth deeper american plans to develop what we call bunker buster weapons that we say will not spread radioactivity actually in such weapons only get a short distance under the earth which stir up more radioactive debris and again in the case of. that type of radioactive fallout was limited because it was an air burst weapon that's not the same as how the all of your you're building materials themselves contaminated by the force of the explosion. now we've moved in the
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second nuclear age. we have moved into an era when nuclear weapons are threatened for war fighting purposes if you simply have weapons that are stretched huge bombs well that's more for the town but if you have smaller weapons that might be a temptation to use them to smoke out taliban's or what have you. while the super powers plan their next nuclear armageddon the families of pinochet might lanterns there is a surreal feeling. symbols and words are all that the japanese passports have to confront the threat and these are loaded with the memory of having once been the bad guys and young people in japan except a few months of us sucky. we should. all get about eight. we should go for what. we know. how to get. something done in many countries then does it mean we should be quiet yet.
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that's why we can't. being quiet and to announce. to higher on thousand japanese politicians nation two years ago that perhaps it's time for japan to consider the possibility of being nuclear the police. on rocket technology we have abundant with pony abundant plutonium. it's hard to tell all the general public will react when the government decides to go nuclear. my supposition this if. south korea and north
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korea get the united and they will have nuclear weapons overnight japanese public opinion will change. your focus and you cleared to terence's a fact sakit about it said insane to think that we have found no other way to live in peace is one of liking a name for japan acquires this bomb this means that for less than a few ashima and nagasaki has been lost. second mouthful the twenty first century would be the center of china this prediction scares many japanese and makes them think that it's stronger with american states now he does she my is not an end
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it's a scream heralding a new chapter in human history the nuclear age stimulated by the scope of the devastation the united states launches its pursuit of the absolute weapon it's aleck's the pacific ocean for its laboratory but this laboratory is inhabited. imagine if. it was done. and i. went and job a bomb that is one point six equivalent of your shoe my shot every day for twelve years i would they still want that. i mean they they just sit. but they have the fight. evelyn lives in honolulu where she attends college like other inhabitants of the marshall islands an archipelago lost in the middle of the pacific ocean she lives in exile force away by the fallout of nuclear testing fifty years later her island
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is still contaminated and the united states are not really taking full responsibility of what they did. there's a saying all. we're going to give you one would think and it is just icing seem fair to me. they rob them off the island and the island the marshal on is. where you're like god intended you to be. my job is to. finish school and my people. the economy every country depends on american aid and the balance dialog between the islanders and the almighty america tears the young woman apart how do you obtain justice from the united states when you are marshallese maybe with the memory the only weapon evelyn inherited the reason that americans are giving us money because of us of whitefish i was just to
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go and make sure that their story was and they still remember it so one suffer more from the bomb. without a conference on you because the title was think a set of the bomb did a presentation. and they were all shot because they were like. what. mean there was there was a bomb in the washington. and the even bigger than the one in the regime. and i'm like yeah like where is the marsh i. need to learn the martial allen was. to know why this that or not. exceeds. actually. from there.
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all cs top stories u.s. politicians are accused of scaremongering over russia and china to divert attention from the problems the globe some player ramping down the chinese coast in the say among white politicians bush targets america's biggest creditor could still get laid but. also keeping out of the public eye since leaving the white house george w. bush writes back to you but he's not all this before the president has no regrets
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about invading iraq despite no weapons of mass destruction. and says not surprising or were necessary to protect american lives. not that barrett to be easy these are refuses to pull down its west bank separation wall saying it's not the security it's supposed to receive many palestinians say how it instils up one side like conditions making the future use of the land as an israeli companies organize toys to needle visitors at battle like. covering standards in high finance it's the kinds of reports and today max keiser and stacy herbert discuss why the world's top economists think white collar criminals prng financial recovery and how britain became shameless with a third of adults surveyed bad not embarrassed by the prospect of bankruptcy.
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