Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant officials have good news.
Reactor 5 coolant pump is now working.
Reactor 6 now has one the reactor’s back up generator working.
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant officials have good news.
Reactor 5 coolant pump is now working.
Reactor 6 now has one the reactor’s back up generator working.
Japan government officials announced that efforts will be made to get stranded patients out of hospitals in the evacuation zone, as well as other people who did not have a way to self evacuate (remember Hurricane Katrina?).
Local city governments are now joining together to help each other, now that it has become clear the national government is not prepared to help them.
Just like people in the United States are justified in questioning their government’s ability to help after a natural disaster (Hurricane Katrina), the Japanese have every justification to lose faith in their government.
I’ve said this before, it is clear that the most prepared nation in the world was NOT prepared.
Officials say the water trucks sprayed about 60 tons of water, so far, on reactor 3 at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
That isn’t going to be enough: Each spent fuel pool can hold up to 2000 tons of water, so you can see it’s going to take a lot of water (there are 6 reactors and several spent fuel pools).
Another problem is that even if they get outside power hooked to the plant, most of the power panels, and cooling pumps, have been destroyed by the tsunami. So they are now working to fix that problem as well.
NHK reporting that a convoy of concrete trucks are being prepared to head to the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Concrete was used by the Soviets during the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.
NHK has been reporting that banks around Japan are limiting ATM withdrawals.
Many Japanese are angry because they are having a hard time getting access to their money, in order to buy necessities.
Banks say their clients can still walk in, during limited hours, to make larger withdrawals. The banks are blaming the disaster situation, including power outages, for the reason for limiting access to ATMs.
Just one more reason to keep your money under the mattress.
A hospital in Minami-Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, inside the zone where people have been instructed to stay indoors, more than half the hospital’s staff have evacuated. But, about 170 inpatients are still at the hospital.
“We’re reaching the limits of our ability to provide treatment,” hospital director Yukio Kanazawa said. Only a small number of hospital staff stayed behind to care for the patients.
Ohmachi Hospital staff is now less than 40%. The hospital is rationing meals for patients, two meals a day.
Doctors who normally work at Tono Hospital, cannot get there because of a fuel shortage.
Ninohe Hospital has run out of supplies, including heating fuel. “It’s as if some enemy is starving us out,” a hospital official said.
Kunihiro Mashiko, chief of the emergency treatment center of Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital says “Lives that were saved once may be lost because of the shortage of both doctors and medicine.”
At Ishinomaki Hospital, tap water, electricity and gas have been cut off. Requests for help with about 120 inpatients were declined.
A Fidelity Investments survey shows that 4 out of 10 rich people, with an average wealth of $3.5 million, say it’s not enough. Maybe they’re right. Most of those surveyed are thinking about being able to retire. They say $7.5 million in assets is required to retire comfortably.
Is this proof of how bad our economy is?
If the rich are saying you need at least $7.5 million to retire, then the rest of us are truly in trouble. In fact why bother continuing to play the rat race game? Why bother with the keeping up with the Joneses game? Why bother throwing a good portion of your income at a 401k retirement plan? It’s clear that the overwhelming majority of U.S. citizens, even those pumping money into retirement schemes, are never going to hit the magic $7.5 million mark that 42% of rich people say is needed just to retire.
I’m not even Middle Class. My income has steadily been going down since January 2000. Now, my before tax deductions income is less than $20,000 per year. I know people worse off than that.
Is this proof of how bad our economy is? If it is, the rest of us are f**ked!
Fidelity Investments surveys a thousand of some of its richest clients, to find out how they feel about their wealth. The survey involves clients with an average of $3.5 million in investment assets.
For 2010, 42% said they do not feel rich. In 2009 it was 46% that did not feel rich. That’s about 4 out of 10 rich people who think they are still poor.
How much would they need to feel rich? According to the survey, $7.5 million.
Fidelity Investments also said 55% of the wealth in the United States is held by only 5% of the people. This backs up what the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) said in one of their recently released surveys.
Sounds like some of the rich are suffering from some kind of personality, or obsessive compulsive, disorder. Perhaps some kind of factitious disorder. But what about the rest of us? After all we’re letting them run our economy, and in effect our lives.
252 aftershocks of magnitude 5 or greater have so far hit Japan, after the devastating 9.0 quake on March 11.
This is a record for Japan.
The 9.0 quake/tsunami has officials in North and South Korea concerned over possible eruption of the Baekdu volcano in North Korea.
The last time it erupted was in 1903.
The increase seismic activity in the area, including volcanic activity in Japan and Eastern Russia, has Korean officials worried so much that it has become part of their unification discussions. However, both sides are downplaying it.
Korea is directly due west of the Japanese state of Honshu.