Fury in Japan
If you think the reactors are glowing hot and about to blow, wait until you see the parents.
Japanese society may well be transformed by fallout, both radiological and political, from the multiple disasters centered upon the dying Fukushima nuclear powerplant.
For two months, the children at the Soramame Children’s House, a day care center about 37 miles from the stricken plant, spent their days indoors, windows sealed shut to keep out radiation, their favorite buckets and spades contaminated and strictly off limits.
But when the local authorities made no effort to decontaminate the area, caregivers took matters into their own hands. On the advice of local environmental groups — they said local officials had none to give — a group of parents and teachers donned makeshift protective … Continue reading