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ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Entries from May 1, 2012 - May 31, 2012

Tuesday
May222012

Kevin Kamps speaks with Peace Education Center, Lansing, MI

A May 2, 2012 conversation with Kevin Kamps from Beyond Nuclear, about the damage at Fukishima Daiichi.

Tuesday
May222012

A powerful message from Fukushima mother, Sachiko Sato

“Please do not repeat the tragedy of Fukushima! After Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, people used to say that such an accident would not happen in Fukushima.  But it happened. If we do not stop nuclear power, another accident will definitely happen again. And if another accident happens, children will be the first victims. My children and I are suffering. We cannot live in our house, which we love. We live everyday with fear that we may get ill one day. It is heart breaking to see children who can no longer laugh from their heart since 3.11. Do not victimize children simply because you want to generate power. For whom is economic development, if children must be its victims? Let Fukushima be the last one to suffer from such a tragedy. Aren’t children the treasure of any country? Is it not the minimum responsibility of adults to protect the children? If we cannot protect our children, there is no meaning for us adults to exist. We do not need nuclear reactors anywhere on this planet. Because everywhere on the earth, there are children living. Let us all protect the children of the world."

Sachiko was speaking through a megaphone (photo above left) to Japanese Prime Minister Noda, as well as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, both of whom had just exited their limousines a half block away, during a protest rally co-sponsored by Beyond Nuclear at the UN Plaza in New York City, September 2011. You can download the PDF of her statement - in English and the original Japanese, here.

Monday
May212012

Fourteen arrested in nonviolent direct action at Plymouth, MA nuke

The Cape Downwinders organized a nonviolent civil disobedience on May 20, 2012  to protest the continued operation of the Pilgrim nuclear generating station in Plymouth, Massachusetts,. Fourteen citizens were arrested for refusing to leave the private property of the Fukushima-design GE Mark I boiling water reactor 38 miles southeast of Boston.They were charged with a misdeameanor charge of "criminal trespass." The affinity group was delivering the group's letter to the nuclear power facility operator, Entergy.  Entergy has been the focus of nonviolent direct actions for the continued operation of the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant and massive public demonstrations around its Indian Point nuclear generating station in Buchannan, NY reactor just 25 miles north of New York City.

Monday
May212012

Beyond Nuclear board of directors member Dr. Judith Johnsrud honored by Sierra Club for lifetime of anti-nuclear leadership

Dr. Judith Johnsrud enjoying the decorative quilt presented to her in honor of her 50 years of anti-nuclear leadershipOn Friday, May 4th, at its national "No Nukes" grassroots gathering of activists from across North America, the Sierra Club honored Dr. Judith Johnsrud, a founding board of directors member of Beyond Nuclear, for her half-century of anti-nuclear activism and environmental leadership at the grassroots, national, and even international levels. Judy was honored by her life partner, Leon Glicenstein, event co-organizer Diane D'Arrigo of Nuclear Information and Resource Service, as well as the President of the Board of Directors of Sierra Club, Robin Mann. A film of Judy speaking on the hazards of radioactivity was shown, and a beautiful decorative quilt bearing the message "JUDITH: PROTECTING LIFE FOREVER" was presented to Judy (see photo, left). Members of the audience, numbering 85 activists from across the U.S. and Canada, were invited to share stories about Judy. Some of these friends and colleagues had worked with Judy for decades, but even some individuals who had not met Judy before were moved to thank her for her lifetime of work to protect the planet and all its inhabitants. At the conclusion of the ceremony, Judy said simply "I am grateful to you all," as well as saying -- with characteristic humbleness -- that she didn't deserve it (with which everyone in attendance wholeheartedly disagreed!)

At a Sierra Club sponsored workshop at the Pennsylvania Renewable Energy Festival in 2007, Judy presented a list of numerous major anti-nuclear victories which she and grassroots environmental allies have succeeded in winning over the decades (characteristically, she also included the losses suffered, including the construction and operation of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant, which led to its meltdown in 1979). Judy has also prepared a history of the Environmental Coalition on Nuclear Power, which she has led for decades, providing more details on those hard won victories and bitter defeats.

In concluding her remarkable history of ECNP, Judy wrote: "These are only some of ECNP's current activities. Although nuclear power is patently failing, and in a rational world would never have been developed, constant vigilance by citizen activists like all of you will continue to be essential far into the future.  But by far the greatest benefit from the existence of this Coalition has been the opportunity to develop deep, lasting friendships, and the privilege of meeting and working with its members, friends and colleagues -- surely high among the world's finest people." Certainly, Judy is one of the brightest lights among these "world's finest people," and the Sierra Club's No Nukes grassroots, and assembled friends and colleagues privileged to have worked with her over the past 50 years, honored her for that.

Monday
May212012

Nuclear Regulatory Coup

Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko is resigning from NRC as the nuclear industry plots a complete take over of the agency's "regulation".  Here is the Chairman's statement.   The Huffington Post got out an early account of  the success of mounting industry pressure to oust the Chairman.