This is a new holiday in Russia.
It's purpose is to put the weak sister of the US/South Korea/Japan Pacific Military Alliance on notice.
Russia was already Japan's food supply before Japan started dumping Fukushima Nuclear Waste into the Pacific
๐ท๐บ ๐ฏ๐ต Today Russia is celebrating Victory Day over militaristic Japan ๐ท๐บ ๐
Tens of Thousands in Seoul: 'Stop the Dumping of Radioactive Wastewater'
'It is time for the international community to step in and call out this clear breach of the international law'
South Koreans have continued a weekend rally against Japan's dumping of #Fukushima nuclear plant's contaminated radioactive wastewater.
The protesters, including fishermen, activists and politicians, shouted slogans such as "Immediately stop the marine dumping of radioactive wastewater"
You know why so many people are concerned about the Fukushima radioactive wastewater release and how it could affect seafood, despite governments claiming it's all perfectly safe?
Why??? Because since the dawn of the nuclear industry, governments have routinely minimized and outright lied about risks to people from nuclear operations and waste. Governments in the East. Governments in the West. Russia. USA. Everywhere.
It's their own fault that so many people don't trust them about this now, and with damned good reason.
@lauren Japan isn't at fault. They bowed politely for the failure of the back up power, the failure of the sea wall, and the failure of the reactors to be cooling downed. They bowed politely for the release of the water in the sea, because its clean! Cleaner than drinking water!
Japanese managers get a lot of abuse from people, but they are doing what they do best, which is being Japanese
The Casio F-91W, the watch I wear, has transcended capitalism. It exists unchanged despite "better" watches flooding the market. Watches with "designer" faces. Radio time keeping. Fitness. Telephones. Steps. The F-91W exists despite capitalism. Somehow, by accident, capitalism created the good enough product and never changed it. You can't buy a Nokia 3310 now, or an iPod wheel.
But you can buy an F-91W. And it doesn't sell your data.
On solid advice from @QueenOfCoffee I went to a nearby east Asian grocery store to find some potato starch and was successful. But it's from the Netherlands. Logically.