What
follows below is a bit of satire that shows a news report that the evacuees in
Fukushima could only dream of seeing for real. The truth is that most people have
too much heart to make callous dismissals of people being deprived of their homes
and livelihoods, but this is what it would look like if we could turn the
tables on the arguments that have dismissed worries about the impacts of the
Fukushima meltdowns:
Fear is the Real Enemy:
No Health Impacts Seen for Nuclear
Workers in the Phase-out of Nuclear Power
A joint research project of environmental NPOs has
just released a comprehensive study of the health impacts on nuclear workers
of recent shutdowns of aging nuclear reactors and cancellation of future
nuclear projects.
Lucille van Pelt, spokesperson for Green Peas
International, claimed that the study was the most comprehensive survey ever
done on this topic. Environmental groups have long suspected that the main
cause of health impacts was the fear and anxiety of nuclear workers felt
about the closure of nuclear power plants. “They overlook the fact that no
one has ever died because of the closure of a nuclear power plant. They have
a visceral, emotional response to the issue, which makes it impossible to
have a rational discussion about the true risks involved. I hate to say it,
but it is mostly men who are affected. I’ll be accused of maternalism, but it
is what it is.”
All of Japan’s nuclear reactors were shut down after
the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in 2011. Recently, several power plants in the
US have been shut down because of the prohibitive cost of repairs and
upgrades, or the price competition from other forms of energy. Germany made a
decision to get out of nuclear entirely, while in other parts of the world
various projects are on hold or are suffering severe cost overruns.
Ms. van Pelt added, “The results of the study suggest
we may have been far too conservative in the pace of the nuclear phase-out.
The economic impacts are likely to be minimal and temporary as we shift to
investments in renewable energy. Nuclear workers are no different than other
members of the workforce. They can adjust to new technologies and new
circumstances, if we give them sympathetic support and counseling. They talk
about the economic benefits of 100,000 jobs in their sector, but the same can
be said of gambling, drug dealing, and prostitution.”
In past studies of nuclear plant closures, some
workers were found to be suffering from mental and physical health issues
after losing their jobs. Some even faced the trauma of relocation. They blame
public opposition and the changed energy policy for their conditions, and
they say the causal relation is clear. Their ailments were extremely rare in
the past when they had their stable jobs and homes.
Ms. van Pelt responded to this criticism by saying it
was a classic case of the nocebo effect. The belief that something will cause
harm actually does cause real symptoms. “It can be extremely difficult to
untangle causes and effects in such a situation,” she says, “but it’s not
like there’s some invisible energy force attacking their bodies and causing
the ailments. It is more likely that the true cause of the suffering is the
passive dependency of nuclear workers who expect to be compensated for their
losses, or to have a job guaranteed for them. They are really suffering from
what we could call phase-outphobia.”
The research paper concludes that this condition
involves many symptoms of common psychological illnesses. While the nuclear
industry has been built by the world’s richest governments and multinational
corporations, it has been opposed by infinitely smaller non-profit
organizations supported by small donations. Nonetheless, sufferers often have
the delusion that their industry is the persecuted underdog. Once this idea
becomes rooted, they look only at information that confirms their bias. It’s
a vicious circle, according to observers of the phenomenon.
Ms. van Pelt added, “What has happened to these
people is unfortunate, but lessons have been learned. These people deserve to
have support and counseling to help them make the transition to a new life.
Before that can happen they will have to put on their big boy pants and suck
it up. The world has changed. The public no longer wants to live with the
risks of nuclear, and the market has spoken. The private financial capital
for nuclear projects just isn’t there anymore.”
The controversy continues.
|
References and inspiration for this
article:
No one
died because of the meltdowns?
“Last
week, the police in the Futaba-gun region of Fukushima, which includes the
damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station and the town of Namie, confirmed
that a handful of tsunami survivors who were trapped in the rubble probably
starved to death as rescuers fled the scene for fear of radiation. A
month passed before rescuers were able to venture back into the exclusion zone
set up in a 12-mile radius around the nuclear plant; the bodies of Mr.
Yokoyama’s parents were not discovered until the summer.”
Hiroko
Tabuchi, “An
Anniversary of ‘Heartbreaking Grief’ in Japan,” The New York Times, March 11, 2012.
“Given
the readiness in which the medical profession accepts the cytokine mediated
radiation fatigue response as being a biochemical fact, it appears extremely
cruel of world nuclear authorities, including its associated medicos (if you
can call them that) to quickly pull out their copies of DSM IV and ascribe a
mental condition to civilian victims of nuclear disaster, whereas in hospitals
around the world treating doctors are thoroughly familiar with this aspect of
the radiation response.” Paul Langley’s Nuclear History Blog, June 23, 2013.
“A
farmer who grew organic vegetables in Sukagawa, Fukushima Prefecture, hanged
himself just 13 days after the onset of the disaster at the Fukushima No. 1
nuclear power plant.”
“… official actions
largely protected the public, and most continuing fears of health risks from
radiation have little basis in fact…. Citizens of Japan are understandably
traumatized by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. But to make intelligent
decisions about radiation, it’s best to rely on facts -- and not let emotional
or illogical fears get in the way.”
Robert Peter Gale and Peter Lax. “Fukushima Radiation Proves Less
Deadly Than Feared,”
Bloomberg, March 11, 2013.
“The
primary health effect of Chernobyl has been widespread psychological distress
in liquidators (workers brought in for cleanup), evacuees, residents of
contaminated areas, and residents of adjacent non-contaminated areas. Several
psycho-neurological syndromes characterized by multiple unexplained physical
symptoms including fatigue, sleep and mood disturbances, impaired memory and
concentration, and muscle and/or joint pain have been reported in the Russian
literature. These syndromes, which resemble chronic fatigue syndrome and
fibromyalgia, are probably not due to direct effects of radiation because they
do not appear to be dose related to radiation exposure and because they occur
in areas of both high and low contamination.
Pastel, Ross H. “Radiophobia: Long-term
Psychological Consequences of Chernobyl.” Military Medicine 167, no.
2 Suppl (February 2002): 134–136.
“The
people are suffering, not only because of the earthquake and the tsunami, but
also from severe radiation anxiety, real radiophobia.”
Shunichi Yamashita,
former chief of the Fukushima Health Survey.
“Speaking
at a March 12 symposium hosted by the Defense Strategies Institute, Paul
Kudarauskas, of the EPA Consequence Management Advisory Team, said events like Fukushima
would cause a ‘fundamental shift’ to cleanup. U.S. residents are used to having
‘cleanup to perfection,’ but will have to abandon their ‘not in my backyard’
mentality in such cases, Kudarauskas said. ‘People are going to have to
put their big boy pants on and suck it up.’”
Douglas P. Guarino, “White House Supports Rollback of
Cleanup Standards for Nuclear Incidents, GSN, NTI.” NTI: Nuclear Threat Initiative. March
25, 2013.
False flags such as "psychological distress" or "fear of radiation" have been used to downplay the effects of radiation by the nuclear community for ages.
ReplyDeleteDid you know that the WHO health report on Fukushima gave out "mental health surveys" of which 92,000 out of 200,000 people answered?
Can a report be trusted that uses the false premise of "fear of radiation" in their study?
http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/78218/1/9789241505130_eng.pdf