Sunday, September 01, 2024

Thirteen Years After Fukushima


U.S. blood and treasure are spent propping up oil-soaked totalitarian regimes in the Middle East, but no one ever suggests that population growth is part of the problem. 

Instead, the problem is "consumption" or "the oil companies" or "the politicians," but never lack of birth control, or pro-natalist policies that subsidize large families, or runaway open-border immigration back home. 

It's a horrible bloody mess in the Middle East, but what are we to do?

In Asia, wildlife habitat is pushed to the edge but no one ever blames population growth as the core problem or suggests family planning as the solution.  

What has happened to the tiger and the panda is ascribed to "habitat loss" -- a generalized problem without a causal agent. So sad, but what can anyone do?

Thirteen years ago Japan had four failing nuclear reactors spewing radiation. We were told the causal agent was an earthquake and a tsunami.

Well yes, but why does Japan *need* nuclear energy at all?   

And the answer, of course, is the same reason we have nuclear reactors in the U.S. and France, and why we have strip mining and mountain top removal in Kentucky, Australia, and Wales, and offshore oil drilling in Louisiana and Norway, and aquatic life-killing electrical power dams on nearly every major river in the world.

We rip down the mountains and push them into creeks. We soak our fuel rods in water pools and bury our nuclear waste in mountain caves. We strike another species off the endangered list and add another to the extinction roster.

It's unfortunate, but what can we do? 

One thing we cannot do is talk about population growth.  

Al Gore made an entire movie about global warming while never once mentioning population growth.   

We have entire television channels dedicated to every obscure battle of World War II, but not once do these stations explain why Japan bombed Peal Harbor or what that had to do with the invasion of Manchuria.

And so it's Groundhog Day all over again.

Talking about population growth is too personal. We might bruise someone's feelings. We might bump into someone's life mistakes, or their religious views, or their self-centered, ego-besotted, rationalizations for procreation.  

If we talk about population growth, things might get a little uncomfortable at some point.  

So instead of having an uncomfortable conversation, we push our rubble into landfills and buy bottled water because we are worried our dumps might be leaching toxins into the groundwater.

We send our sons and daughters to die in the desert, and then we collect our dead and wounded and fly them back home to their mothers.

We clear-cut our forests in order to make the paper needed to send a million direct mail letters to people decrying the speed of species loss.

We cut down forests to make more fields to grow more food to send to countries that already have more people than they can feed from their own farms.

We kill off the large predators and raise tropical chickens and farm-raised deer for potted “shoots” because there are too many people, and too little wild land, to sustain true hunting.

We snake long plastic booms along the shore to try to contain the oil spills, and we dump chemicals into the ocean to try to disperse it even as we dream of problem-free nuclear reactors that will bring us unlimited power forever.

But we do not talk about population.  

The ironic part about the nuclear mess in Japan is that after World War II Japan slowed its population growth.  

But, of course, the country was already over-crowded, wasn't it?   

A country that had a population of 45 million in 1900 was so crowded with a population of 65 million in 1931 that it sought to invade lands beyond its borders.  

By 1985, however, Japan's population had climbed to over 125 million, and it is even larger today.

And so, in order to deal with this press of flesh, the Land of the Rising Sun is now ringed not only with earthquake-prone slip faults, but also with nuclear reactors.  

Thirteen years ago, the talk was all about nuclear engineering.... how if only the Japanese had put the generators on higher ground, or put the fuel rod containment pools further away, then everything might have been different.

Right.  

Talk about anything, but whatever you do, don't talk about why the reactors are there at all.  That conversation might get a little uncomfortable.

And, of course, it's not just about Japan, is it?    

No one in the U.S. wants to talk about why we continue to prop up Middle East dictators, or why we rip down our own mountains, or why we poison our own waters, or why we feel the need to build more nuclear reactors.  

U.S. population growth?  That's mostly fueled by immigration, and immigration is a conversation that is a little too uncomfortable for us to have right now, isn't it?

Sure, the US couldn't take care of its energy needs when we had a population of 200 million, and we are doing worse now with 320 million, and we are quickly headed to 500 million by 2050, but let's not talk about that.  

The crisis of the moment isn't here in the U.S. is it?  It’s over there in Ukraine…. Or Germany…. or Poland… or England.  

How come *those people* couldn't see the horror of Russian energy dependency?  Talk about myopic!

And what is the solution?  How are we to “free” Germany and Poland and the rest of Europe from dependency on Russian oil and natural gas?

Why, nuclear reactors, of course.  

And never mind the missiles.  

I mean, it’s not like there’s ever been a serious war in Europe, right?

Never!  Carry on.  What could go wrong? Nothing!



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