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hiroshima nagasaki there are these bomb. kept intact because they wanted to know exactly how the effect would still be. by their prime we you know we cut off almost all. the wire in the area. now because the charley in a few months. three days after hiroshima it was not a second seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing gave me the opportunity to meet with tony fernandes actually the student had just returned from the united states and i took an american history classes and restarted the use of their torment bomb literature arts art what brought them was that if i and i got aspects of drop in atomic bombs in japan and let's think about and discuss these or. i was quite shocked by this but i realise that then they did tell people of all the consequences all they told me why am i crying out. my grenada never told me anything i only heard the whole story quite recently or perhaps read and heard my second year of university. early that i thought this could be the only time i hear it but i remember it's made
hiroshima nagasaki there are these bomb. kept intact because they wanted to know exactly how the effect would still be. by their prime we you know we cut off almost all. the wire in the area. now because the charley in a few months. three days after hiroshima it was not a second seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing gave me the opportunity to meet with tony fernandes actually the student had just returned from the united states and i took an american history classes and...
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hiroshima i don't enjoy that very much. does not agree with being friends here ashima i can you motivated to make a contribution. i know it has been so since university i learned a lot about conflicts in the world. to the really easy times are always the children of the we model of the city limits 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. and there are discussions about the development of nuclear weapons of smaller caliber or of the capacity to penetrate deeper american plants to develop what we call weapons that we say will not spread radioactivity actually in such weapons only get a short distance on the earth which stir up more radioactive debris and again in the case of hiroshima that type of radioactive fallout was limited because of this an air burst weapon that's not the same as how the all of your church your building materials themselves and around the world by the force of the expl
hiroshima i don't enjoy that very much. does not agree with being friends here ashima i can you motivated to make a contribution. i know it has been so since university i learned a lot about conflicts in the world. to the really easy times are always the children of the we model of the city limits 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. and there are...
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hiroshima i don't enjoy that very much. does not mean been for syria she must have been you mentally to to make a contribution. i know it isn't and so since university i learned a lot about conflicts in the world. to the really easy terms have always the children. those in the city lands in general. 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 on capacity to penetrate iran's deeper american plans to develop what we call weapons that we say will not spread radioactivity if actually such weapons only get a short distance under the earth and store of more radioactive debris and again in the case of hiroshima that type of radioactive fallout was limited because of a severe burst weapon that's not the same as how did all of your church or building materials themselves contaminate of the force of the explosion now we've moved in the
hiroshima i don't enjoy that very much. does not mean been for syria she must have been you mentally to to make a contribution. i know it isn't and so since university i learned a lot about conflicts in the world. to the really easy terms have always the children. those in the city lands in general. 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...
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three days after hiroshima it was not a stock it seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing gave me the opportunity to meet with me from madison actually the student had just returned from the united states. and i took an american history class and we started we used over to only one bomb and the teacher asked what you are the most that if and i got to have aspects of drop in atomic bombs in japan and let's think about it on this cost basis or. i was quite shocked by that question i realize but then they did tell people about their consequences or they told me i am going out early. my grandmother never told me anything i only heard the whole story quite recently all right after it entered my second year of university but. i thought this could be the only time i hear it and i remember it's made me very happy. for you know along with her what did i share to strongly in the past it was just the two of us i was always around her as i grew up but it discovering that she or was a grandmother i didn't know. it only things my grandma has only
three days after hiroshima it was not a stock it seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing gave me the opportunity to meet with me from madison actually the student had just returned from the united states. and i took an american history class and we started we used over to only one bomb and the teacher asked what you are the most that if and i got to have aspects of drop in atomic bombs in japan and let's think about it on this cost basis or. i was quite shocked by that...
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three days after hiroshima it was not as much seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing of matthew the opportunity to meet with tony fernandes actually the student had just returned from the united states. and i took an american history class and we started to use all the tonic gome literature rock art ought to go there was a tiff and then i'd have aspects drop an atomic bombs in japan let's think about and discuss this or. i was quite shocked by that question i realize but then it'd tell people about the consequences of that olmec why am i crying out. my grandmother never told me anything i only heard the whole story quite recently all right after it entered my second year of university. really i thought this could be the only time i hear it and i remember it's made me very happy go well you know along with her. did a share of just wrongly in the past it was just the two of us i was always around her as a group but it discovered that she or was a grandmother i didn't know. it to them with my grandma has always lead to get a feelin
three days after hiroshima it was not as much seventy five thousand. the annual commemoration of the bombing of matthew the opportunity to meet with tony fernandes actually the student had just returned from the united states. and i took an american history class and we started to use all the tonic gome literature rock art ought to go there was a tiff and then i'd have aspects drop an atomic bombs in japan let's think about and discuss this or. i was quite shocked by that question i realize but...
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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 but 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 because even here people don't care enough about this old weapon other than to be the highlight of the museum. day my lawyer talking to my friends about my activism. and they don't care about such serious matters sort of china. only the people who then understand what happens under the mushroom cloud today it's not so it is very difficult in these peaceful time to make young people understand how tragic it was that he is the youngest guy to be heat ocean at peace memorial museum but she goes further than providing information or goes to provoke fear and dread it ok i want that children have never experienced an atomic bomb and that's why i use simple language while trying to make an impact on a family that's in a city or need it anymore. please let's look ove
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 but 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 because even here people don't care enough about this old weapon other than to be the highlight of the museum. day my lawyer talking to my friends about my activism....
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i'm next a look at whether the world has learned any lessons from the bombings of hiroshima and nagasaki. material a tactical module in the american military base by the slums became an enemy attack the ground zero wrong not contaminated and deserted. the marshall islands are scattered for hours southwest of honolulu it is nowhere from north america's closest but a paradise if one intends to test atomic bombs. all . all right james tell us that the united states government now wants to turn this right this stuff it's the worst and are suffering good form and. one of them up we don't want you to be not. ready with. everything being and god have just begun. over the years of testing thirty three of the sixty seven devices that were tested here were bigger than the largest one ever tested in the eighteen of them were what are called megaton level devices in other words a thousand kilometer including the bravo test and one nine hundred fifty four fifteen may get some chest thousand times more powerful and explosive yield than the hiroshima bomb. it was a normal yoshino but there are no and.
i'm next a look at whether the world has learned any lessons from the bombings of hiroshima and nagasaki. material a tactical module in the american military base by the slums became an enemy attack the ground zero wrong not contaminated and deserted. the marshall islands are scattered for hours southwest of honolulu it is nowhere from north america's closest but a paradise if one intends to test atomic bombs. all . all right james tell us that the united states government now wants to turn...
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May 28, 2011
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there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what happened at buchenwald at auschwitz and the frustration that we could not have done something sooner. to be talking about the bottom rung of evil, when you talked about what was going on at auschwitz, using human skin as lampshades, biological experiments, just massive murder and genocide. on one hand, we felt so good, we won, we beat germany and japan. to realize that humanity to be so ghastly and evil, just how we dicked the nazi regime was, as i say, if you ever visit those cans, you recognize that it teaches you -- those camps, you recognize that it teaches you just how e
there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what...
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hundred fifty four fifteen megaton chest thousand times more powerful and explosive yield than the hiroshima bomb. in one a normal yoshi moment in or know what happened. in makes me angry then when you know what is your all night long what it is you. did. march first one hundred fifty four the islanders are amazed to see the sun rising in the west but the star is a thermonuclear bravo irradiates the sky other wind blows towards the atoll a front. with every member on. yes i think some media and. later a three day anybody who is sleeping. right writes completely who and my. mind that light skin color and balance we've seen that they goes down from the sky now around the crown. legace sent our latest son. and then the unit there is strong and blue eyes everywhere and the crown was moved to say. we were students came. back they. had to id so we hide for several years and when we came back we simply don't know why things covered before in. the hour has now what it has now for me it. turned out to be a lot more powerful than expected. they didn't bother to move the bronco let people because they
hundred fifty four fifteen megaton chest thousand times more powerful and explosive yield than the hiroshima bomb. in one a normal yoshi moment in or know what happened. in makes me angry then when you know what is your all night long what it is you. did. march first one hundred fifty four the islanders are amazed to see the sun rising in the west but the star is a thermonuclear bravo irradiates the sky other wind blows towards the atoll a front. with every member on. yes i think some media...
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but beyond maki or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong clap. the a at. home ok. in indonesia ologies available in the growing giotto shirts a media photo the ritz carlton hotel the hotel room hotel new millennium hotel in china you can see all the t.v. and censored film accounts pro-social much common ground with the hotel mccown's of emission marco resort hotel room for sort of the sochi olympics. time local time when results might come heavily closer to home a calm riviera hotel in the coming central hotel mccown. twenty years ago in the largest country in. the subsequences of.
but beyond maki or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong clap. the a at. home ok. in indonesia ologies available in the growing giotto shirts a media photo the ritz carlton hotel the hotel room hotel new millennium hotel in china you can see all the t.v. and censored film accounts pro-social much common ground with the hotel mccown's of emission marco resort hotel room for sort of the sochi olympics. time local time when results might come heavily closer to...
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but beyond mucky or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong crap. the the end. of the home game. was. home. twenty years ago in the largest country in the. two cases of. what had been each. took each began a journey. where did it take them. fifty . five. in some pieces but is available in greenwich old europe.
but beyond mucky or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong crap. the the end. of the home game. was. home. twenty years ago in the largest country in the. two cases of. what had been each. took each began a journey. where did it take them. fifty . five. in some pieces but is available in greenwich old europe.
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but beyond maki or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong. fished for. a few fish fish fish fish. wealthy british style. that's not the type of. markets why not. come to. find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike skies or for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune in to cause a report on our key question is that so much of an oldish musician the person on the mark when the killing of osama bin ladin when he's changed us president for off obama says justice has been done and that the world is better and a safer place. download the official anti allegations your i phone no i pod touch from the i choose out still.
but beyond maki or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong. fished for. a few fish fish fish fish. wealthy british style. that's not the type of. markets why not. come to. find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike skies or for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune in to cause a report on our key question is that so much of an oldish musician the person on the mark when the killing of osama bin ladin when he's...
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but beyond mucky or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong crap. the. ai. home ec. was. home. download the official tea african nation your i phone or i pods.
but beyond mucky or evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong crap. the. ai. home ec. was. home. download the official tea african nation your i phone or i pods.
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May 27, 2011
05/11
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there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't.otly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what happened at buchenwald at auschwitz and the frustration that we could not have done something sooner. to be talking about the bottom rung of evil, when you talked about what was going on at auschwitz, using human skin as lampshades, biological experiments, just massive murder and genocide. on one hand, we felt so good, we won, we beat germany and japan. to realize that humanity to be so ghastly and evil, just how we dicked the nazi regime was, as i say, if you ever visit those cans, you recognize that it teaches you -- those camps, you recognize that it teaches you just how essential t
there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't.otly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what happened at...
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May 24, 2011
05/11
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the suit was filed with the hiroshima district court monday by plaintiffs including 11 survivors from taiwan, a family of a taiwanese victim and a chinese citizen. the plaintiffs are seeking about $15,000 per person in damages, saying they were unfairly denied access to japan's health care program for atomic bomb survivors bausurvivor s buzz they did not live in the country. in 2007 the supreme court ruled the government's policy toward survivors living outside japan was incorrect and compensation must be paid. the government agreed to compensate about 2,800 survivors in 7 countries including south korea and brazil under court mediated settlements. a court proposed deal is also suspected for the latest case. >>> in the united states, more than 40 tornadoes have torn through seven midwestern states sunday. 89 people are dead after a wave of tornadoes battered the state of missouri. one powerful tornado cut a path nearly ten kilometers long through the city of joplin, missouri, on sunday night. it leveled homes, overturned trucks and knocked down trees. local authorities on monday said
the suit was filed with the hiroshima district court monday by plaintiffs including 11 survivors from taiwan, a family of a taiwanese victim and a chinese citizen. the plaintiffs are seeking about $15,000 per person in damages, saying they were unfairly denied access to japan's health care program for atomic bomb survivors bausurvivor s buzz they did not live in the country. in 2007 the supreme court ruled the government's policy toward survivors living outside japan was incorrect and...
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May 28, 2011
05/11
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there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what happened at buchenwald at auschwitz and the frustration that we could not have done something sooner. to be talking about the bottom rung of evil, when you talked about what was going on at auschwitz, using human skin as lampshades, biological experiments, just massive murder and genocide. on o hand, we felt so good, we won, we beat germany an japan. to realize that humanity to be so ghastly and evil, just how we dicked the nazi regime was, as i say, if you ever visit those cans, you recognize that it teaches you -- those camps, you recognize that it teaches you just how esse
there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what...
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May 27, 2011
05/11
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there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what happened at buchenwald at auschwitz and the frustration that we could not have done something sooner. to be talking about the bottom rung of evil, when you talked about what was going on at auschwitz, using human skin as lampshades, biological experiments, just massive murder and genocide. on one hand, we felt so good, we won, we beat germany and japan. to realize that humanity to be so ghastly and evil, just how we dicked the nazi regime was, as i say, if you ever visit those cans, you recognize that it teaches you -- those camps, you recognize that it teaches you just how e
there are some people who say that hiroshima was okay but nagasaki wasn't. this is hotly debated, as well it should be. keep in mind, though, the only time the united states had a monopoly on nuclear weapons, any country who had a monopoly, the west 45 -- the u.s. had from 1935-1949. then at -- 1945-1949. then the soviet union added and the cold war was on full blast. host: what was the darkest part of the 1945-1949 period? guest: there are many. when the soldiers started realizing what...
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but beyond much here evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong clap. the. i am. the. the fish. fish .
but beyond much here evelyn who can say who is not living with the legacy of hiroshima or wrong clap. the. i am. the. the fish. fish .
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May 22, 2011
05/11
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. >> studies of the hiroshima bombings know that brain cancer did not show up until 40 years after the bombing owe secured. >> when you put it like that, it seems to make sense that we certainly just don't know, enough time has not passed to say anything definitive on this yet the jury seems to be clear on this. >> i don't think the jury is clear in other nations right now. i think the answer to that has to do with the old fashioned issue, isn't it? the cell phone industry has been very, very powerful and is very influential on both sides of the aisle. all of us including me don't want to give up our phones. >> over ten years, the effect of using a phone would you describe it as a cumulative problem? are you accumulating the problems in your brain? >> it is a cumulative problem. as we know it happens with many things that can cause cancer. it may not be the one exposure. we are born with repair processes. we get damage to our dna every day by breathing, sunlight and whatnot. if we eat well and exercise and don't have too much exposure, that damage gets repaired. for cell phone radiatio
. >> studies of the hiroshima bombings know that brain cancer did not show up until 40 years after the bombing owe secured. >> when you put it like that, it seems to make sense that we certainly just don't know, enough time has not passed to say anything definitive on this yet the jury seems to be clear on this. >> i don't think the jury is clear in other nations right now. i think the answer to that has to do with the old fashioned issue, isn't it? the cell phone industry has...
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has agreed to help your tepco compensate victims of a nuclear crisis professor robert jacobs from hiroshima east institute believes the rescue plan shows just how critical the situation has become. affairs are much more serious than we were told earlier mr iott has been in meltdown for a while we were not told that for a long time probably because tepco did not even realize it for a long time even though the releases of radiation certainly implied to many people and many people did say that first week at the plants were milking cows so it it definitely is a much more serious situation then we have been led to believe there is very good reason to believe that there is much more serious situation going on in reactor number two in reactor number three and also in the spent fuel pool in reactor number four i have a rule of thumb that i tend to go by which is that anything that is publicly stated is probably around ten to twenty percent of what's true so it will take us it will take us probably years to know the extent of the contamination and the extent of the fuel melting. meanwhile the casino
has agreed to help your tepco compensate victims of a nuclear crisis professor robert jacobs from hiroshima east institute believes the rescue plan shows just how critical the situation has become. affairs are much more serious than we were told earlier mr iott has been in meltdown for a while we were not told that for a long time probably because tepco did not even realize it for a long time even though the releases of radiation certainly implied to many people and many people did say that...
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operator tepco compensate the victims of the nuclear crisis however professor robert jacobs from the hiroshima peace institute believes the rescue plan shows just how critical the situation has become . the government of japan is really not in a position to take control of the plants they will have to depend on the professionals who work for tepco so they're not really able to take it over they may be able to take a decision making little timidly it still will be tempting who is on site and who is actually operating and operating the recovery and the crisis management in trying to contain the situation so it won't be the government of japan but it certainly does mean that affairs are much more serious than we were told earlier this plant has been not down for a while we were not told that a long time probably because tepco did not even realize it a long time i have a rule of thumb that i tend to go by which is that anything that is publicly stated is probably around ten to twenty percent of what's true so it will take us it will take us probably years to know the extent of the contamination an
operator tepco compensate the victims of the nuclear crisis however professor robert jacobs from the hiroshima peace institute believes the rescue plan shows just how critical the situation has become . the government of japan is really not in a position to take control of the plants they will have to depend on the professionals who work for tepco so they're not really able to take it over they may be able to take a decision making little timidly it still will be tempting who is on site and who...
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been leaking radiation into the sea for more than two months professor roger robert jacobs from the hiroshimapeace and security says we still don't know the full extent of the damage fears are much more serious than we were told earlier this plant has been known for a while we were not told that for a long time probably because tepco did not even realize it for a long time even though it leases of radiation certainly employed to many people and many people did say that first week at the plants were melting down so. it definitely is a much more serious situation then we have been will lead to believe there's very good reason to believe that there is much more serious situation going on in reactor number two in reactor number three and also in the spent fuel pool in reactor number four i have a rule of thumb that i tend to go by which is that anything that is publicly stated is probably around ten to twenty percent of what's true so it will take us it will take us probably years to know the extent and contamination and the extent if you will melting. turning now to some other stories making hea
been leaking radiation into the sea for more than two months professor roger robert jacobs from the hiroshimapeace and security says we still don't know the full extent of the damage fears are much more serious than we were told earlier this plant has been known for a while we were not told that for a long time probably because tepco did not even realize it for a long time even though it leases of radiation certainly employed to many people and many people did say that first week at the plants...
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May 28, 2011
05/11
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--on hiroshima and nagasaki. and while we made no value judgment whatsoever about whether the bomb should be dropped or not, some of the more conservative radio commentators picked it up as being that, even before it was on the air. and--and on that occasion, more than any other, i got a lot of mail saying, 'why don't you go back to canada?' but it doesn't back to canada?' but it doesn't happen very much anymore. c-span: you left school when you were 16? >> guest: i did, 17, yes. yes, sev--six--sev--16, 17. c-span: why did that happen, and would you do it again like that? >> guest: i think i was bored. i was embarrassed about--i'm still embarrassed about it, and god forbid my--i'd beat my son around the ears in the faint hope that he'll never be like his father. i think i was just bored. and now that i'm middle-aged, i--i love the process of learning more than at any time i ever have in my life. this has been a great experience in--in that respect. but i just think i was bored, and i wanted to go and see the worl
--on hiroshima and nagasaki. and while we made no value judgment whatsoever about whether the bomb should be dropped or not, some of the more conservative radio commentators picked it up as being that, even before it was on the air. and--and on that occasion, more than any other, i got a lot of mail saying, 'why don't you go back to canada?' but it doesn't back to canada?' but it doesn't happen very much anymore. c-span: you left school when you were 16? >> guest: i did, 17, yes. yes,...
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May 21, 2011
05/11
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. >> studies of the hiroshima bombing, we know that brain cancer did not show up at all as increasedil 40 years after that bombing occurred. >> when you put it like that, it seems to make sense that we certainly just don't know, enough time has not passed to be able to say anything definitive. the jury seems to be pretty clear on this. >> i don't think the jury is clear in other nations right now. i think the nature is to do with the old-fashioned issue. the cell phone industry has been very, very powerful and is very influential on both sides of the aisle. all of us, including me, don't want to give up our phones. >> over ten years, the effect of using a phone, would you describe it as a cumulative problem? are you a accumulating the problems in your brain? >> it is a cumulative problem. as we know what happens with many things that can cause cancer, it may not be the one exposure. look, we are born with repair processes. we get damage to our dna by breathing, sunlight and whatnot. if we eat well and exercise and don't get too much exposure, that damage gets repaired. for cell phone
. >> studies of the hiroshima bombing, we know that brain cancer did not show up at all as increasedil 40 years after that bombing occurred. >> when you put it like that, it seems to make sense that we certainly just don't know, enough time has not passed to be able to say anything definitive. the jury seems to be pretty clear on this. >> i don't think the jury is clear in other nations right now. i think the nature is to do with the old-fashioned issue. the cell phone...
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May 10, 2011
05/11
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KPIX
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i have received more radiation than an individual who was within two miles of the explosion of a hiroshima. record ron record an fda investigation said it was the result of improper use of the scanner. which highlights what critics call a glaring problem. while the fda oversees the manufacture of ct machines, there is absolutely no government oversight on how these machines are operated in medical facilities. >> there has been basically an un rug lated wild, wild west approach. >> reporter: attorney rick patterson represents many of the victims. >> it can kill you if it is dialed high enough. you could be dead by the time you get to the parking lot. >> reporter: but supreme cases of overradiation aren't the only issue. >> the day-to-day problem is the radiation is higher than it should be. >> reporter: ucsf radiology professor rebecca smith simon says a lack of national guidelines allows radiation doses to vary widely. sometimes exposing the patients more than needed. >> it can lead to an increased risk of cancer. but that cancer won't occur right away. it might not occur for a few years o
i have received more radiation than an individual who was within two miles of the explosion of a hiroshima. record ron record an fda investigation said it was the result of improper use of the scanner. which highlights what critics call a glaring problem. while the fda oversees the manufacture of ct machines, there is absolutely no government oversight on how these machines are operated in medical facilities. >> there has been basically an un rug lated wild, wild west approach. >>...
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May 21, 2011
05/11
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CNNW
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. >> the uranium for the hiroshima atomic bomb came from the congo.many of our electronics in the united states, you have tin and tungston sourced from the congo. so there's an enormous amount of wealth. >> and everybody has been carrying out pieces of that with them, if you're using a cell phone, because it's used to keep electronics cool, is how i understand it. >> the tin is important parts in electronics around the world, particularly in the united states. sexual violence and the conflict minerals that you just described are the issues that have brought the congo to national attention in the united states. >> it's an extraordinary book. no one knows more about the congo than you do. i really appreciate it. the book is extraordinary. thank you for being with us. >> thank you so much. >>> still ahead tonight, this week's cnn hero. a mom who created dozens of families by making adoption affordable for them. her story ahead. [ male announcer ] a moment that starts off ordinary can become romantic just like that. a spark might come from -- a touch, a g
. >> the uranium for the hiroshima atomic bomb came from the congo.many of our electronics in the united states, you have tin and tungston sourced from the congo. so there's an enormous amount of wealth. >> and everybody has been carrying out pieces of that with them, if you're using a cell phone, because it's used to keep electronics cool, is how i understand it. >> the tin is important parts in electronics around the world, particularly in the united states. sexual violence...
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May 8, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN2
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and, yes, jerusalem shaped and some powerful way in our time by auschwitz and also by hiroshima, the two brackets within which that ancient question of the relationship between violence and religion are asked not. that is the mass of the human condition. what do we do with it? jerusalem is the center of a double vision, therefore i put before you life and death. choose life. recalling the importance in this history of human choice is urgent because of human choices shaping this history in the past, they can still shake in the future. jerusalem is a city of self surpassing. god check abrahams' ninth here. religion was limited by ethics here. the one ms. of god makes every individual who participates in it sacred, which is the ground of the universal declaration of human rights. the fact that god, the god of the bible, the god of jerusalem peroni sides with the victims instead up with those who victimized is the cd of democracy. the temple is vacant. the holy of holies is vacant. this data will not be represented. it means that no one owns this god, therefore no going to work in the na
and, yes, jerusalem shaped and some powerful way in our time by auschwitz and also by hiroshima, the two brackets within which that ancient question of the relationship between violence and religion are asked not. that is the mass of the human condition. what do we do with it? jerusalem is the center of a double vision, therefore i put before you life and death. choose life. recalling the importance in this history of human choice is urgent because of human choices shaping this history in the...
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May 21, 2011
05/11
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CNNW
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. >> the uranium for the hiroshima atomic bomb came from the congo.ormous amount of wealth. >> and everybody has been carrying out pieces of that with them, if you're using a cell phone, because it's used to keep electronics cool, is now i understand it. >> the tin is important parts in electronics around the world, particularly in the united states. this is interestingly the issues that have brought the congo to national attention. >> it's an extraordinary book. no one knows more about the congo than you do. the book is extraordinary. thank you for being with us. >> thank you so much. >>> still ahead tonight, this week's cnn hero. a mom who created dozens of families by making adoption affordable for them. her story ahead. a lot of times, things are right underneath our feet, and all we need to do is change the way we're thinking about them. a couple decades ago, we didn't even realize just how much natural gas was trapped in rocks thousands of feet below us. technology has made it possible to safely unlock this cleanly burning natural gas. this depo
. >> the uranium for the hiroshima atomic bomb came from the congo.ormous amount of wealth. >> and everybody has been carrying out pieces of that with them, if you're using a cell phone, because it's used to keep electronics cool, is now i understand it. >> the tin is important parts in electronics around the world, particularly in the united states. this is interestingly the issues that have brought the congo to national attention. >> it's an extraordinary book. no one...
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May 12, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN
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four planes -- that could returned to the northeast, the mid atlantic, into a hiroshima. host: where are you going with this? caller: what did the intelligence community say about this? guest: i think al-qaeda's goal in attacking the trade center was a two-fold. they wanted to kill as many people as possible and attack the financial heart of america and cripple us financially. it did have devastating economic finances. i think that was a large part of their thinking. part of it was symbolic, but part of it was to try to kill a maximum number of people. osama bin laden had made it clear that the way he views getting our attention is to kill as many americans as possible. host: this is week coming in -- guest: well, i think the president is following through with his commitment to reduce our troops in iraq. there is some discussion within iraq about the one to request some contingent of troops to remain in iraq. hopefully, that war will come to a final conclusion at the end of the year. in afghanistan, we are set to begin drawing down our troops. i think the killing of osam
four planes -- that could returned to the northeast, the mid atlantic, into a hiroshima. host: where are you going with this? caller: what did the intelligence community say about this? guest: i think al-qaeda's goal in attacking the trade center was a two-fold. they wanted to kill as many people as possible and attack the financial heart of america and cripple us financially. it did have devastating economic finances. i think that was a large part of their thinking. part of it was symbolic,...
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May 11, 2011
05/11
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CSPAN
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it is like hiroshima. there are so many nuclear effects, birth defects have gone through the roof.st: i would disagree about the point that we refuse to turn over evidence that bin laden was responsible for 9/11 when we made the ultimatum to the taliban. that is not true. the u.s. intelligence community made available to afghan leaders at a rather compelling proof that bin laden was, in fact, responsible for 9/11. he even bragged about it in the days that followed. removing that government was entirely justifiable. i think we have made mistakes since then, but we should not beforeze for 1 minute removing the government that made it possible for osama bin laden to attack on september 11. host: rep. robert andrews represents the first district of pennsylvania. you have a lot of commuters going to philadelphia. host: what are your concerns about that? guest: would keep me up at night is the following. the death of bin laden and the capturing of all of this incredible intelligence makes it much less likely al qaeda will be able to pull off a spectacular attack on the united states. a n
it is like hiroshima. there are so many nuclear effects, birth defects have gone through the roof.st: i would disagree about the point that we refuse to turn over evidence that bin laden was responsible for 9/11 when we made the ultimatum to the taliban. that is not true. the u.s. intelligence community made available to afghan leaders at a rather compelling proof that bin laden was, in fact, responsible for 9/11. he even bragged about it in the days that followed. removing that government was...