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tv   Sophie Co  RT  August 3, 2018 3:30am-4:00am EDT

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degree of seriousness some people were killed the mediately some people survived but they started developing sentiments like loss of hair internal bleeding bleeding from the gum. fever those things practically all the people who were in the city or who entered in the city to rescue the dime people what they too became contaminated so we all shared the common symptoms for some time yet i lost my hair and bleeding internal bleeding bleeding from the. diary. those things i write that someone pointed you out of the burning building and you crawled out what happened than how did you find
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your family that correct how many of them survived how did you find your family well the next day. in the morning hundreds of people thousand the people were just sitting. nearby hills and we hardly slept or we just kept watching the city burn all night and then in the morning the japanese soldier came around the with the megaphone and said is there says cannot come or is there c'est cannot come i said the here i am well your parents are here to look for you and howard surprised. i saw my parents. and i learned what happened to them my father left town early that morning on the sixth of august he was
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out. in the boat system boat. at the inland sea he loved deficient and that was his they asked and suddenly he heard something and he started the mushroom cloud rising he knew something terrible happened so he came back. my mother was doing the dishes after breath first and she too was buried under the collapse a building she has to be up as she was helped and was able to escape to the outside of the city and how they came together i don't know but they told me my married sister and the four year old child. who had been evacuated. moved out of the city
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of hiroshima in order to protect themselves from air raid but they team home the night before to visit us so they were that morning there were on their way to the hospital they are walking over the bridge the mother for your child and they have not. and. by the time i saw them that morning they were just blackened and swallow. you just couldn't recognise them they were simply blackened melted chunk of flesh. the survived about four days they kept begging for water but there was. there would no medical or
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doctors or nurses no food or we could give words some water. how many in my very close family eight of them. perished my sister in law or the high school teacher she was in the center of the city supervising several thousand about seven or eight thousand student who were mobilized to do that task for me in the city to establish the fire laying. a saw they were doing the physical labor in the evil not eight o'clock. on the sets it was so hard many
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boys just took off their shirts in just a bare skin and then detonation took place and right above them about. five six hundred meters above them and there the one who simply vaporize. or just from my school three hundred twenty one girls simply disappeared serco what where days months after the bombing like how did you survive in that burnt out city they didn't even know what had happened i mean it was the first time that something like that ever took place well i thought americans found finally caught out because they had being. every day in most of the city especially since march the first nine
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hundred forty of five so we hear osama people in the city were beginning to feel very anxious the hiroshima was supposed to be about tenth largest city in japan the time but even smaller city had been bombed you know most of the cities have been bombed how come we haven't been up top every day in every night between nine fly around but they haven't dropped any boehm little did we know that the americans had already selected the heroes as a target for the new type of bombs which they already had their american government's position has been that bombings of hiroshima and nagasaki where we needed to save american soldiers' lives from being lost in
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a potential war on the ground how do you feel when you hear that there's this exploration sound logical tear that american myth just a myth because japan had been exhausted by the time japan was finished by the time i can verify that we will practically starving at home and the soldiers at the pacific or any other battlefield they didn't have food they didn't have munitions and we will finish the war ended and the japanese who were considering. our end up. there are many historical evidence that the use of nuclear weapons was not necessary. and most of. historian a knowledge that i rad that you sat somewhere at the u.s.
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occupation forces brought you a sense of relief and liberation from the oppression of japan's militaristic government but i mean those were the people who like you were describing so vividly brought total destruction to your sit is killed hundreds of thousands of people i mean eight peoples from your immediate family died. do not connect the u.s. soldiers with the atom bomb was there any hatred a new two words to americans or you were grateful they have brought the end of the war with them adult time i would say most of the people in hiroshima who experienced the atomic bombing we were in numbed the condition the all the experiences a lot of stimuli saw massive in-group test and. that
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our psyche you would not accept that and that meant the seizure of emotion we were not despondent to all the horrible scenes in sight if we despondent normally we would not have survived. so that this i think people's emotional dis won't do many thing to what you are happening around us at the same woods not out south and the normal and paul fall you would expect you'd so you need the member of this very polling we have to take a short break right now. just a short break ok but while we're back we'll continue talking was star low here were shima bombing survivor nuclear disarmament campaign or discussing the nuclear fainter today stay with so theme.
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matts geysers financial survival guide liquid assets are those that you can convert in zigzags quite easily. to keep in mind though as a tremendous pleasure to watch record. some for something going on around.
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us indigenous people as you know we that they paid in oil quite a treat. most politicians say that only but the other thing is. out of a man just. simple green. i said i will enter it in here they will not allow and. if they will shoot me. i don't. plan on million million indeed i'm not i'm not picking on you menominee between that you could have been killed by new zealand on land that i think i'm a little bit like i mean because.
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this is. the church secret indeed just like priests accused of sexually abusing children can get away with it quite literally i like to call this the do graphic solution so what the bishop needs to do then he finds out that the priest is is a perpetrator is simply moves him to a different spot were the previous standards not the highest ranks of the catholic church conceal the accused. priests from the police and justice system do that any time so nasty i invent them into louisiana tuesdays out until now.
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where back was it circa thurlow here were shame of bombing survivor or nuclear disarmament campaign or talking about those dark days and one thousand nine hundred forty five and what should be done to never latta tragedy like this happen again. i know that they us occupational forces also impose their sort of oppression on the bombing survivors what was it like let me give you a couple of examples. united states established its decision called. at the make. a mission. and people very happy well finally we get some kind of medication some medical experts who know and what this is about would help japanese doctors
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who are at that loss but that's so purpose of a b c c wads to study the effect of radiation on hill mum bodies nothing else not the help the sick people buy d.v.d.'s. and. the survivors felt. the they were being used as a guinea pigs twice first time as a target secondly. subject for research you can imagine the. occupation forces did not want the media newspapers. and to write anything we could this is seen as disturbed one thing ages to the occupation
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forces. if the newspaper write something about the destruction and especially human suffering in another thirty that was a very that was considered to be disadvantageous this have to stop so they censored and they forced some newspaper companies to close a shop that's not the exact the democratic thing to do and this survivors. wrote that they had the correspondence and some people wrote heikal you know japanese in literary form when they have pain in their art they have to express that by writing haiku and so on they have the photographs for ailment is a medical information all the things were confiscated and thirty two
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thousand items in or there were or shipped back to the united states because the scientific. triumph of the united states by producing atomic bombs was ok in the world you can find out. but what human suffering. caused in those cities that was not to be found out. that was the reason why so i want to talk a little about the american reaction to war happened. seventy three years ago now president obama was the first american president to come to hiroshima in twenty sixteen he delivered a very emotional speech where emotional but never sat sorry for america's decision
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to drop the bomb another american public went nuts over the suggestion that he could apologize when the pundits relentlessly mocking that idea so my question is and your opinion why is it so hard for americans why why do americans are so uneasy about owning up to the hiroshima and nagasaki bombings. pulls. even today seventy. later. they must believe what they did was justifiable. to be justified. to end the war quickly and to america and.
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i think that mentality is still continues unfortunately. not thinking people i think many americans woke up it was such. a. sept the. united states. took. many americans sorry about that but as a state the other nation i guess they're too proud to apologize i know apology was a very contentious controversial issue. i feel if he offered it we should have accepted that we deserved the sept up but he chose not to and he couldn't have i suppose
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because of the political community in the states especially during the presidential election time. but it's not totally. inappropriate if he did of the apology. you know in the war everybody did a horrible thing warned against by the international law international humanitarian law germans the british the the us the japanese did kill lenin now not at that time not at all i know not a racist when most cases nations do apologize jan germans made sure they lived their life out of world war two was one big apology british people college as many times as well. and remember both germany and japan were
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tried. tribunals yes then the japanese military leaders i think six or seven of them or hung. on what happened in your room judgement so loses. the tried but the victors no matter what they have done not to be tried it's a very unfair world or. understood that even as of yet now the manner is our hiroshima and nagasaki have been kept alive thanks to people like you and governments remember those lessons as well there has not been a central combat use of a nuclear bomb sends forty five now to me it seems that humanity has learned its lesson has seen enough to not ever use nukes again do you have less face
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in humanity than i do let's say yes no i do i do have faith in the yes they are going to find me if they don't have it now they will certainly have faith in humanity this humanity must continue to live and this civilization must be preserved i think it's ridiculous some goofy people threatening each other and. written by saying their bombs are bigger than others and we have more of them imagine such childish impulsive. statements are being exchanged by those anywhere it's hard to believe those things are still happening
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but i think people. really learning and more than anything i am great for thousands of. the millions of people around the world that came to realize we just can't leave it to the government alone and n.g.o.s and one hundred twenty two nations signed at the united nations to adopt the the treaty to prohibit the nuclear weapon i have heard you in many other interests say over and over again that this anti and nuclear activism work you're doing this so that the death of your loved ones will now be in vain do you really have to make amends for what happened in forty five
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and it wasn't your fault you didn't drop the bomb. the blast is not your fault why do you feel that you are responsible in some way why do you burden yourself where that why i'm responsible for this look i experienced that witness the massive death and destruction anybody who would the conscience moral sense you can just demand silent about that or a something is wrong somebody did it somebody created such destruction. must serve this of humanity entire city just disappeared with one bomb but the. when we learn that was caused by human beings. then we have to stand up and stop that kind of behavior
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by the human being who is responsible united states with the response of all they have never said sorry about that unfortunately more importantly to make sure something like that should never happen again to any human beings to us that is a higher priority we have to stop at our cost and this is why we have been speaking out about our pain painful past experience the past seventy decades believe me it's not easy each time i talk about it my i try to embrace but still
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i don't see that it pains me but i keep doing it because there is no other way i can live this is my moral imperative. guess that would be my answer to your saying to you so much for being with us tonight i have no words actually to express my gratitude. thank you for sharing. more i reload well this is the first time i speak to russian people well i promise you we're going to have another lengthy interview in the mirror so i promise you that much of i hope so i really want the russian people to think about life and death it's the life. every citizen i'm concerned not the national security international security and
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you know all these minute thirty juggins yes it's important for us to know no such things but the most important thing is to remember your money that's the most important thing i hope your message gets across and people will hear it and understand it and take it close to heart thank you so much. for talking to circus arlo hiroshima bombing survivor and a disarmament compay in are discussing how her great experience should talf us address the nuclear danger today that's it for this edition of sophie and co i'll see you next.
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do the corporate mainstream media fuel america's cultural wars do they magnify political differences it would seem so how whilst could it be if the only topic that is discussed and argued over this donald trump are journalists infected with trump to range mincing. disinflation very little inflation for decades interest rates have gone down for thirty years markets have rallied for thirty years now the whole thing is reversing interest rates are going up so is inflation so we'll see how that plays out if wages rise faster then inflation. as such then comes to wonder if wages don't rise as fast as
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a business deal inflation then we had trouble. just through the pain city of angeles when the us military moved out the six tourists moved in. and now a whole new generation of fatherless children is growing up here. my dad and. i but the east in general right now as i know you'll. see. that isn't the first time in the t.v. crew use you to use you were known to answer is known that now and that it's who you are. that's it that you want my god. they
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want it to. take the deal of above that you can't take the birth of the girl. woman you know oh oh. oh i. think. if you. i i.
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r democracy itself is in the crosshairs threat it's not going away the russians try to hack into and steal information us national security and intelligence chief said doubling down on allegations of possible foreign interference and of those mid-term elections to congress with still providing any specific evidence. of the controversial camps to process asylum seekers. has opened the doors in germany comes off to fall between ruling coalition over it. and national geographic admits it went too far with a caption on a photo of a dying polar bear the blame climate change in london what they thought of this air .

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