tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5140376099467331532.post3995252456898206684..comments2023-11-05T01:37:40.734-07:00Comments on パーマカルチャー生活 Living Permaculture: Update on Tokyo Earthquake Living part 1Kai 海http://www.blogger.com/profile/08366070436633547721noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5140376099467331532.post-15932913511219077732011-03-17T13:53:42.091-07:002011-03-17T13:53:42.091-07:00That is just crazy, adapting in some way to the pa...That is just crazy, adapting in some way to the pace of the business life, that things must go on in a bizarre shift to incorporate fragments and mutations of the geological, and infrastructural, bleeps, to punctuate the everyday sense of the normal. Here in Austria, and France too we are sort of fixated on the latest recycling of news through the bbc or ny times or something coming through nhk by way of al jazeera or something local that puts an especially localized spin, like how it affects the nuclear industry in France or France is evacuating its citizens etc. It is all very disturbing since the first news of the problems at Fukushima, which involves so much human error whereas the other parts of the disaster easier to understand. Like Japan just moved nearly three meters. I am so mesmerized, and saddened, and some of us a bit outraged. My friends here say the Japanese are so fatalistic and accepting, but maybe I sense that in your tone too, but I am also reminded of the tough resistant anti nuclear activism in Japan. Thanks for your humorous post. I think of the earthly life in the hills and those amazing rice terraces with Cherry and peach blossoms.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05598381698195104356noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5140376099467331532.post-68847610840785487472011-03-17T13:41:43.458-07:002011-03-17T13:41:43.458-07:00This comment has been removed by the author.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05598381698195104356noreply@blogger.com