I'm really sorry for my previous rudeness, having the problems so close, it gets on my nerves. We want to change things, but is hard when the US supplies weapons to both sides and insist in keeping our oligarchs in place. Or best shots at democracy in 1988, 2000 and 2006 ended in failure, in 1988 and 2006 because the election had been stolen; in 2000 because the new president and his party instead of acting with responsibility strengthening the fragile mexican democracy they used their new position in power to enrich themselves. The previous regime was corrupt, but the mexican conservatives resulted corrupt and stupid beyond belief.
The best help that the USA can offer now is to let us be and let us choose freely our rulers, even if they are not 100% US friendly. A truly democratic Mexico would be a boom for US business and citizens, all our troubles come from the lack of democracy and accountability, I would love to see Mexico and the end of my life like South Korea is now, is in our best interest too to be a good, reliable ally of USA, not a backyard.
I'm perfectly aware of that documentary, a coworker's brother was unjustly jailed because he had a difference with a investor and the guy used his friends in the police and courts to jail him. He spend 18 months inside jail, but he didn't had a chance to thank his lawyer because the lawyer was murdered a few days before his liberation. We don't know if the murder was related to this case or not, but this was really shocking. Laws to the letter are good, a lawyer here will say that our laws are more sane than the US code, but the court system is simply useless, they will invent loopholes if necessary and find you guilty if they feel so. I said in a previous comment that the impunity rate here goes around 98-99%, but criminals, oligarchs and government are so intertwined that impunity is a necessity for the political system to work. We need to fix the court system, among many, many other things, but, you know what? The current state of USA reminds me of Mexico 30 years ago, but it appears that government and society there wants to be in the same place we are now. In a sick way, we are in the future.
Yes, exactly that. A political caricaturist named Patricio said that if the Police and the courts disappeared nobody would notice the difference. Almost everyone in my workplace that saw that cartoon said "it's funny because is true".
We have a stupid drunken moron for President because our oligarchs and the USA imposed him. This is documented. We held mass demonstrations far bigger than the ones in the Arab spring against him but you never saw us in CNN. Calderón, to hide his weakness, started his government with a show - I use show in the sense of spectacle- of force against the drug cartels in his birth state, Michoacán, but instead of running away the cartels held their ground. The conservative policies that protected the oligarchs and made the large corps pay ridiculously low amounts of income taxes and get large tax breaks to them ruined small family business, NAFTA ruined small farmers and the USA's collapse in 2008 stopped the flow of mexican immigrants money that kept the small towns economy working. Without the relief valve of immigration to USA, the unemployed youth turned to the illegal economy to earn a living.
We need a mexican government working for mexicans, not for the USA's and oligarchs sake, that is what we had in the last 30 years, but your politicians and our oligarchs are so dumb that they can't see the dire need for this change.
A ugly side effect of their training in psy-ops in USA. Still, since their terror as almost stopped the flow of illegal immigrants from Latin America to USA, there is a theory that the violence in Mexico is fueled by the US government to exactly achieve that.
So why are they getting their panties in a bunch over what a bunch of nerds publish about them? And kidnapping people that they believe to be part of Anon?
Given the PR that they like to generate about themselves, I'd say they are very sensitive about both details concerning their operations and their public image. Perhaps Anon can hurt them in ways that the Mexican authorities cannot. Anon doesn't give a sh*t about which politicians get taken down with the cartels, so that's one factor in their favor. Anon isn't constrained by laws the same way the police are. There are no rules of evidence, court issued warrants, civil rights, etc. that they have to concern themselves about. As long as they can keep themselves physically secure, its game on for the cyber war. Keep in mind that Mexican Anon doesn't necessarily have to be located in Mexico. Its going to be tough for the Zetas to reach out and touch someone posting from Boise, Idaho. Unfortunately, the person they have kidnapped will probably have to be written off as dead.
The other advantage that Anon has is that they can tailor their releases of info to instigate inter-cartel warfare. The Mexican police may be unwilling or unable to act. But the competition next door will be more than happy to take their enemies out.
Actually there is a very big alliance among the government and the rest of criminal gangs against the Zetas. The Zetas originally was a unit of Mexican Special Forces trained in USA that joined the Gulf Cartel to be their special assassination team. But they grow to compromise all the gunmen of the cartel and they formed their own cartel and started a war vs the Gulf Cartel and continued to fight against their arch rivals, the Sinaloa Cartel, that enjoys the tacit support of the conservative party, PAN, and maybe of the US government too. The rationale is that with only one gang in the country peace will return, but avoiding to fix the systemic problems in the country.
You can pic any issue of Proceso magazine to read about corruption in Mexico, the Anonymous list will be used or can be used to falsely flag people in the payroll of cartels. We have already big troubles with the anonymous report of innocent people as members of cartels or kidnappers, we don't need a list made by script kiddies. My grandmother was falsely accused of being a kidnapper and had her house stormed by the army, my uncle beaten and my cousin sent to the hospital. In the end, it appeared that the ones doing the tip were the actual kidnappers to make a big fuss in my grandmother's small town were she is a loved and respected citizen, the kidnappers got away. Due process exist for a very good reason, laws were not written by tree hugging hippies, they were wrote by victorious revolutionaries that put their life in the line to make a better society.
So, your bitching about anonymous, using an example that has actually nothing to do with what anonymous is doing, but with corrupt or stupid ass police officals, who decided that a "tip" they received was enough proof to terroize your family.
Sounds to me like your just angry.
You know, the police in your grandma's town probably are working with the kidnappers, and used it as an excuse to beat some sense into your family. Because by your post, you need it.
ARMY, ARMY moron. The police in the town was used to deal only with domestic violence and the occasional brawl in the bar, not to face tugs with RPG's, AK-47 and Barret guns. The next door neighbor was kidnapped 7 months ago, a honest hard working man, leader of the real main opposition party in that municipality. His family now only expect to find his body. I can't visit my sick grandmother because the road is too dangerous to do that trip, so please go and fuck yourself. You don't know nothing.
The only proof that Anonymous will show if only they show a list with names will be their word. For less than that people as died at the hands of the army, the police and criminal gangs. The problem in Mexico is systemic, we have a impunity rate in crime of 98-99%, more than half of the population below poverty line and half of the nation's wealth in the hands of less than 40 families that monopolize all the economic life in the country. For a big percentage of our population the only chance to ever improve their lives is to emigrate to the USA or join a crime cartel. The first step is to break the monopolies, end the impunity at the top and send to jail all the corrupt politicians that rule the country, but, since they are allies of the USA like that SOB of Musarraf or Pinochet is hard to make it happen, even more when the DEA and ATF send happily thousands of guns to the criminal gangs and the US DoD even more weapons to the army.
It did happen in the early days of the Mexican Revolution of 1910. The Constitution that emerged from that war was very advanced in 1917, and the revolutionary regime worked really well from the 1930's to the late 1950's but a bunch of stupid authoritarians ruined the country. The last batch of mexican presidents from 1982 to date have been far more pro USA than pro Mexico.
Aside from that, we must fix our own country, we have a lot of work to do, the problem is that the US never has seen us like a potential ally, but like a backyard full of junk. The only time this changed was at the time of president Lázaro Cardenas, and that was only because him was a reliable ally against fascism, so the country didn't got invaded when he nationalized the oil industry because that would mean to open a war front in northern America at the same time the Axis powers started to flex their muscles, in the end, Mexico provided an important support to the Allies in WWII.
Due process is a concept that comes from the times of Romans, if not earlier. The lack of it is a hallmark of tiranny. Personally, I have the uppermost contempt for the US Supreme Court because with their decision in the Citizen United case they demonstrated that they never really read a book about law or philosophy in their entire life. The great thing about the USA is that is not only a melting pot of people, but also of ideas, specially at is foundation they took many ideas from the french, the same french that US supreme court judges have never read.
You can pic any issue of Proceso magazine to read about corruption in Mexico, the Anonymous list will be used or can be used to falsely flag people in the payroll of cartels. We have already big troubles with the anonymous report of innocent people as members of cartels or kidnappers, we don't need a list made by script kiddies. My grandmother was falsely accused of being a kidnapper and had her house stormed by the army, my uncle beaten and my cousin sent to the hospital. In the end, it appeared that the ones doing the tip were the actual kidnappers to make a big fuss in my grandmother's small town were she is a loved and respected citizen, the kidnappers got away. Due process exist for a very good reason, laws were not written by tree hugging hippies, they were wrote by victorious revolutionaries that put their life in the line to make a better society.
Try keeping youtube with open access to 70 k employees and see how your internet connections crawls, moron. Maybe you missed this:
I don't like to have many sites blocked by the Bluecoat box in our network, but they do a necessary service
I work in a state owned company, and we have already a big problem trying to get inside the hard skulls of my coworkers that we must give a good service to our customers because the government wants to sell the company as low as possible to party friendly plutocrats, and treating citizens like shit is a sure way to make this act of corruption appear like a move in the best interest of everyone and lose our jobs in the process. I like to have a job, I feel proud to be a member of the company that gives the most widely available public service in Mexico and I really hate when my coworkers are not nice with customers. Our job is to provide a public service and if is necessary to have a filtered network to keep people focused on the job, so be it.
Of course not a single cent that we or they would know, but really, is not in the best interest of BlueCoat to be on the wrong side of law, for not saying of history. Risking jail only for selling a few boxes, that are not even a half of what is installed in my company is insane.
Bin Laden must be having a party in whatever place is soul is. He achieved a strategic victory beyond his wildest dreams. Not even in China they bother with this crap.
I don't like to have many sites blocked by the Bluecoat box in our network, but they do a necessary service, using Facebook and Youtube belongs to the home and your personal devices. The use or abuse of this equipment is a decision of the customers, not the company making products. Linux and a lot of GNU software can an surely have been used to enable the killing of thousands, but we will not be blaming Stallman and Torvalds for that.
Didn't Apple aimed to less of 5% of market share when they released the original iPhone? Didn't Apple stayed only one quarter on the top spot as FTA says? This is not a trend which one loses and the other wins. Both Apple and Samsung are trouncing the competition. Apple in profit and Samsung in sales. Samsung gets money anyway every time Apple sells an iPhone, they are or should be happy how things are turning now. Bad for RIM, Motorola, Nokia and Sony Ericsson.
The problem is that we have empirical evidence that making improvements to the tsunami countermeasures did work, Tokai no. 2 survived the tsunami almost unscathed because after being aware that their seawall was not high enough they improved it. Onagawa NPS despite being the one closer to the epicenter of all NPS's it did survive. Fukushima Daiichi failed not because of lack of technical competence, it failed because the incompetence of the management.
The spent fuel pool in Unit 4 was inspected with a cam and there where no evidence of damage. Also, from the analysis of the water in the pools, they found out that there was minimum or low damage in the fuel arrays in the spent fuel pool of units 2 and 4. The fire in unit 4 came from a connection to unit 3 that after blowing up made the hydrogen gas accumulate in the then still intact building of unit 4 instead of releasing it directly to the atmosphere trough the destroyed building of unit 3. In effect, the building of unit 4 became a chimney for the damaged core of unit 3. That would explain the coincidence with the spraying of water in unit 4 with the decreased amounts of radiation releases, since at the same time, the spent fuel pool of unit 3 was doused by fire trucks and helicopters, and they became able to inject more water to unit 3.
That said, is about time that the previous managers of TEPCO, at least the ones responsible from 2002 to march 2011 be facing a trial, since they already did know that Fukushima Daiichi had inadequate tsunami countermeasures and they didn't act. The station was flooded because the large equipment door in the turbine building in front of unit 4 was unable to bear the brunt of the impact of the wave hitting the power plant. If the power plant have had an improved sea way at least 10 meters high like the risk models called out, even if the tsunami on the end managed to flood the power plant, the auxiliary equipment would have survived in a condition to be repaired quickly instead of being washed away.
That's why I put the "potentially" at the beginning. TEPCO will need to explain why even if they know for so long that their countermeasures were insufficient they didn't take any action. The credibility of the company was already low with their fake safety reports, they don't need to appear even more negligent to the japanese public.
Not only that, TEPCO know at least since 2002 that they needed to improve their tsunami defenses in Fukushima Daiichi, they had 9 years to do the necessary steps. Tokai 2 still had troubles because they didn't finished their countermeasures, but at least their management shown a better understanding of what was at stake than TEPCO.
Someone want to translate the summary? Or is this to be more evidence of lousy content and even worse editting? "as learnt" really?
I am the one that submitted the story, but I found my mistake until I saw the story posted. English is my third language. I'm sorry, I will buy everyone a pack of Ned Flander's eye soap.
They are not racist, only ruthless, savage business men but if most of them were a little bit more educated, I'm sure they would think of themselves as a modern day East India Company. Since the ones that started the show of horror were trained in the USA and most weapons come from the USA too, many people here believe that they are under control of Americans too.
I'm really sorry for my previous rudeness, having the problems so close, it gets on my nerves. We want to change things, but is hard when the US supplies weapons to both sides and insist in keeping our oligarchs in place. Or best shots at democracy in 1988, 2000 and 2006 ended in failure, in 1988 and 2006 because the election had been stolen; in 2000 because the new president and his party instead of acting with responsibility strengthening the fragile mexican democracy they used their new position in power to enrich themselves. The previous regime was corrupt, but the mexican conservatives resulted corrupt and stupid beyond belief.
The best help that the USA can offer now is to let us be and let us choose freely our rulers, even if they are not 100% US friendly. A truly democratic Mexico would be a boom for US business and citizens, all our troubles come from the lack of democracy and accountability, I would love to see Mexico and the end of my life like South Korea is now, is in our best interest too to be a good, reliable ally of USA, not a backyard.
Best Regards
I'm perfectly aware of that documentary, a coworker's brother was unjustly jailed because he had a difference with a investor and the guy used his friends in the police and courts to jail him. He spend 18 months inside jail, but he didn't had a chance to thank his lawyer because the lawyer was murdered a few days before his liberation. We don't know if the murder was related to this case or not, but this was really shocking. Laws to the letter are good, a lawyer here will say that our laws are more sane than the US code, but the court system is simply useless, they will invent loopholes if necessary and find you guilty if they feel so. I said in a previous comment that the impunity rate here goes around 98-99%, but criminals, oligarchs and government are so intertwined that impunity is a necessity for the political system to work. We need to fix the court system, among many, many other things, but, you know what? The current state of USA reminds me of Mexico 30 years ago, but it appears that government and society there wants to be in the same place we are now. In a sick way, we are in the future.
Yes, exactly that. A political caricaturist named Patricio said that if the Police and the courts disappeared nobody would notice the difference. Almost everyone in my workplace that saw that cartoon said "it's funny because is true".
Fuck you.
We have a stupid drunken moron for President because our oligarchs and the USA imposed him. This is documented. We held mass demonstrations far bigger than the ones in the Arab spring against him but you never saw us in CNN. Calderón, to hide his weakness, started his government with a show - I use show in the sense of spectacle- of force against the drug cartels in his birth state, Michoacán, but instead of running away the cartels held their ground. The conservative policies that protected the oligarchs and made the large corps pay ridiculously low amounts of income taxes and get large tax breaks to them ruined small family business, NAFTA ruined small farmers and the USA's collapse in 2008 stopped the flow of mexican immigrants money that kept the small towns economy working. Without the relief valve of immigration to USA, the unemployed youth turned to the illegal economy to earn a living.
We need a mexican government working for mexicans, not for the USA's and oligarchs sake, that is what we had in the last 30 years, but your politicians and our oligarchs are so dumb that they can't see the dire need for this change.
A ugly side effect of their training in psy-ops in USA. Still, since their terror as almost stopped the flow of illegal immigrants from Latin America to USA, there is a theory that the violence in Mexico is fueled by the US government to exactly achieve that.
So why are they getting their panties in a bunch over what a bunch of nerds publish about them? And kidnapping people that they believe to be part of Anon?
Given the PR that they like to generate about themselves, I'd say they are very sensitive about both details concerning their operations and their public image. Perhaps Anon can hurt them in ways that the Mexican authorities cannot. Anon doesn't give a sh*t about which politicians get taken down with the cartels, so that's one factor in their favor. Anon isn't constrained by laws the same way the police are. There are no rules of evidence, court issued warrants, civil rights, etc. that they have to concern themselves about. As long as they can keep themselves physically secure, its game on for the cyber war. Keep in mind that Mexican Anon doesn't necessarily have to be located in Mexico. Its going to be tough for the Zetas to reach out and touch someone posting from Boise, Idaho. Unfortunately, the person they have kidnapped will probably have to be written off as dead.
The other advantage that Anon has is that they can tailor their releases of info to instigate inter-cartel warfare. The Mexican police may be unwilling or unable to act. But the competition next door will be more than happy to take their enemies out.
Actually there is a very big alliance among the government and the rest of criminal gangs against the Zetas. The Zetas originally was a unit of Mexican Special Forces trained in USA that joined the Gulf Cartel to be their special assassination team. But they grow to compromise all the gunmen of the cartel and they formed their own cartel and started a war vs the Gulf Cartel and continued to fight against their arch rivals, the Sinaloa Cartel, that enjoys the tacit support of the conservative party, PAN, and maybe of the US government too. The rationale is that with only one gang in the country peace will return, but avoiding to fix the systemic problems in the country.
You can pic any issue of Proceso magazine to read about corruption in Mexico, the Anonymous list will be used or can be used to falsely flag people in the payroll of cartels. We have already big troubles with the anonymous report of innocent people as members of cartels or kidnappers, we don't need a list made by script kiddies. My grandmother was falsely accused of being a kidnapper and had her house stormed by the army, my uncle beaten and my cousin sent to the hospital. In the end, it appeared that the ones doing the tip were the actual kidnappers to make a big fuss in my grandmother's small town were she is a loved and respected citizen, the kidnappers got away. Due process exist for a very good reason, laws were not written by tree hugging hippies, they were wrote by victorious revolutionaries that put their life in the line to make a better society.
So, your bitching about anonymous, using an example that has actually nothing to do with what anonymous is doing, but with corrupt or stupid ass police officals, who decided that a "tip" they received was enough proof to terroize your family.
Sounds to me like your just angry.
You know, the police in your grandma's town probably are working with the kidnappers, and used it as an excuse to beat some sense into your family. Because by your post, you need it.
ARMY, ARMY moron. The police in the town was used to deal only with domestic violence and the occasional brawl in the bar, not to face tugs with RPG's, AK-47 and Barret guns. The next door neighbor was kidnapped 7 months ago, a honest hard working man, leader of the real main opposition party in that municipality. His family now only expect to find his body. I can't visit my sick grandmother because the road is too dangerous to do that trip, so please go and fuck yourself. You don't know nothing.
The only proof that Anonymous will show if only they show a list with names will be their word. For less than that people as died at the hands of the army, the police and criminal gangs. The problem in Mexico is systemic, we have a impunity rate in crime of 98-99%, more than half of the population below poverty line and half of the nation's wealth in the hands of less than 40 families that monopolize all the economic life in the country. For a big percentage of our population the only chance to ever improve their lives is to emigrate to the USA or join a crime cartel. The first step is to break the monopolies, end the impunity at the top and send to jail all the corrupt politicians that rule the country, but, since they are allies of the USA like that SOB of Musarraf or Pinochet is hard to make it happen, even more when the DEA and ATF send happily thousands of guns to the criminal gangs and the US DoD even more weapons to the army.
It did happen in the early days of the Mexican Revolution of 1910. The Constitution that emerged from that war was very advanced in 1917, and the revolutionary regime worked really well from the 1930's to the late 1950's but a bunch of stupid authoritarians ruined the country. The last batch of mexican presidents from 1982 to date have been far more pro USA than pro Mexico.
Aside from that, we must fix our own country, we have a lot of work to do, the problem is that the US never has seen us like a potential ally, but like a backyard full of junk. The only time this changed was at the time of president Lázaro Cardenas, and that was only because him was a reliable ally against fascism, so the country didn't got invaded when he nationalized the oil industry because that would mean to open a war front in northern America at the same time the Axis powers started to flex their muscles, in the end, Mexico provided an important support to the Allies in WWII.
Due process is a concept that comes from the times of Romans, if not earlier. The lack of it is a hallmark of tiranny. Personally, I have the uppermost contempt for the US Supreme Court because with their decision in the Citizen United case they demonstrated that they never really read a book about law or philosophy in their entire life. The great thing about the USA is that is not only a melting pot of people, but also of ideas, specially at is foundation they took many ideas from the french, the same french that US supreme court judges have never read.
You can pic any issue of Proceso magazine to read about corruption in Mexico, the Anonymous list will be used or can be used to falsely flag people in the payroll of cartels. We have already big troubles with the anonymous report of innocent people as members of cartels or kidnappers, we don't need a list made by script kiddies. My grandmother was falsely accused of being a kidnapper and had her house stormed by the army, my uncle beaten and my cousin sent to the hospital. In the end, it appeared that the ones doing the tip were the actual kidnappers to make a big fuss in my grandmother's small town were she is a loved and respected citizen, the kidnappers got away. Due process exist for a very good reason, laws were not written by tree hugging hippies, they were wrote by victorious revolutionaries that put their life in the line to make a better society.
Try keeping youtube with open access to 70 k employees and see how your internet connections crawls, moron. Maybe you missed this:
I don't like to have many sites blocked by the Bluecoat box in our network, but they do a necessary service
I work in a state owned company, and we have already a big problem trying to get inside the hard skulls of my coworkers that we must give a good service to our customers because the government wants to sell the company as low as possible to party friendly plutocrats, and treating citizens like shit is a sure way to make this act of corruption appear like a move in the best interest of everyone and lose our jobs in the process. I like to have a job, I feel proud to be a member of the company that gives the most widely available public service in Mexico and I really hate when my coworkers are not nice with customers. Our job is to provide a public service and if is necessary to have a filtered network to keep people focused on the job, so be it.
Of course not a single cent that we or they would know, but really, is not in the best interest of BlueCoat to be on the wrong side of law, for not saying of history. Risking jail only for selling a few boxes, that are not even a half of what is installed in my company is insane.
Bin Laden must be having a party in whatever place is soul is. He achieved a strategic victory beyond his wildest dreams. Not even in China they bother with this crap.
Don't give ideas to Michael Bay.
I don't like to have many sites blocked by the Bluecoat box in our network, but they do a necessary service, using Facebook and Youtube belongs to the home and your personal devices. The use or abuse of this equipment is a decision of the customers, not the company making products. Linux and a lot of GNU software can an surely have been used to enable the killing of thousands, but we will not be blaming Stallman and Torvalds for that.
This sounds like a replay of Samsung's tablet selling several millions when what they did is to stuff the sales channel.
Didn't Apple aimed to less of 5% of market share when they released the original iPhone? Didn't Apple stayed only one quarter on the top spot as FTA says? This is not a trend which one loses and the other wins. Both Apple and Samsung are trouncing the competition. Apple in profit and Samsung in sales. Samsung gets money anyway every time Apple sells an iPhone, they are or should be happy how things are turning now. Bad for RIM, Motorola, Nokia and Sony Ericsson.
subject says it all.
The problem is that we have empirical evidence that making improvements to the tsunami countermeasures did work, Tokai no. 2 survived the tsunami almost unscathed because after being aware that their seawall was not high enough they improved it. Onagawa NPS despite being the one closer to the epicenter of all NPS's it did survive. Fukushima Daiichi failed not because of lack of technical competence, it failed because the incompetence of the management.
The spent fuel pool in Unit 4 was inspected with a cam and there where no evidence of damage. Also, from the analysis of the water in the pools, they found out that there was minimum or low damage in the fuel arrays in the spent fuel pool of units 2 and 4. The fire in unit 4 came from a connection to unit 3 that after blowing up made the hydrogen gas accumulate in the then still intact building of unit 4 instead of releasing it directly to the atmosphere trough the destroyed building of unit 3. In effect, the building of unit 4 became a chimney for the damaged core of unit 3. That would explain the coincidence with the spraying of water in unit 4 with the decreased amounts of radiation releases, since at the same time, the spent fuel pool of unit 3 was doused by fire trucks and helicopters, and they became able to inject more water to unit 3.
That said, is about time that the previous managers of TEPCO, at least the ones responsible from 2002 to march 2011 be facing a trial, since they already did know that Fukushima Daiichi had inadequate tsunami countermeasures and they didn't act. The station was flooded because the large equipment door in the turbine building in front of unit 4 was unable to bear the brunt of the impact of the wave hitting the power plant. If the power plant have had an improved sea way at least 10 meters high like the risk models called out, even if the tsunami on the end managed to flood the power plant, the auxiliary equipment would have survived in a condition to be repaired quickly instead of being washed away.
That's why I put the "potentially" at the beginning. TEPCO will need to explain why even if they know for so long that their countermeasures were insufficient they didn't take any action. The credibility of the company was already low with their fake safety reports, they don't need to appear even more negligent to the japanese public.
Not only that, TEPCO know at least since 2002 that they needed to improve their tsunami defenses in Fukushima Daiichi, they had 9 years to do the necessary steps. Tokai 2 still had troubles because they didn't finished their countermeasures, but at least their management shown a better understanding of what was at stake than TEPCO.
Someone want to translate the summary? Or is this to be more evidence of lousy content and even worse editting? "as learnt" really?
I am the one that submitted the story, but I found my mistake until I saw the story posted. English is my third language. I'm sorry, I will buy everyone a pack of Ned Flander's eye soap.
They are not racist, only ruthless, savage business men but if most of them were a little bit more educated, I'm sure they would think of themselves as a modern day East India Company. Since the ones that started the show of horror were trained in the USA and most weapons come from the USA too, many people here believe that they are under control of Americans too.