Is Japan a free country? Not so much.

This is what happens when corporations rule the world. This is how the nuclear community keeps us safe. Gag rules and shoving radiation down our throats.

Japan has passed a law that will enable the police and contractors to monitor internet activity without restriction to "cleanse" the Internet of any "bad" Fukushima radiation news.
http://www.examiner.com/civil-rights-in-jersey-city/japan-passes-law-to-...

Japan's nuclear emergency director tells citizens they have no right to live a radiation free healthy life while refusing to test children's urine and answer why Fukushima radiation standard differs from the rest of Japan.
http://www.examiner.com/civil-rights-in-jersey-city/japan-says-citizens-...

If you thought school kids picking tea was bad...

Japan schools forced students to clean radioactive dirt from swimming pools in locations designated as hot spots with radiation levels 4 times Chernobyl evacuation limits.
http://www.examiner.com/civil-rights-in-jersey-city/japan-forced-school-...

So, here's how they plan to get rid of their sludge...Mmmmm, Yummy fresh veggies!

After discovering over 1,500 tons of radioactive sludge with levels of radiation above temporary burial limits Japan is now considering using the radioactive sewage as soil for gardening.
http://www.examiner.com/civil-rights-in-jersey-city/japan-to-use-1-500-t...

early training

I guess they are still training kamikazes. A little mercury laden whale meat for breakfast and the kids are ready to go!

Japan: an industrialized feudal society, now radioactive.

Hi

Read that post and nowhere does it mention soil being used for gardening I thought that sounded crazy.Alexander higgins is not impressing me not good journalism.

You missed the paragraph

You missed the paragraph that said " The Mainichi Daily News reported today Japan's health ministry is now considering reprocessing the sludge that is over the limit to use as soil for gardening."

Read it again.

Thanks

I did Alexanders post has live links and I checked all of them in that paragraph no help it takes me to the nhk story not the manachi story he references . if you read that on a news site show me a link thanks..

Link Seems Higgins quting was correct

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20110729p2a00m0na016000c.html

"A total of 54,613 tons of untested sludge remains in the 14 prefectures. Problems have emerged over how to treat the sludge and where to keep it.

Police officers in protective suits search for missing people in Minami Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan, Wednesday, April 13, 2011. The city is inside the evacuation zone within 20 kilometers (12.5 miles) radius from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant damaged by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)
Health ministry officials say that final disposal sites have often been reluctant to accept sludge contaminated with radioactive materials, and many sewage facility operators have stored the sludge on their premises. Tokyo has already buried all 6,912 tons in landfill areas, but many local bodies are struggling to find storage sites.

The health ministry will cooperate with the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism and consider reprocessing the sludge as soil for gardening."