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rainbow_marble
bling bling

Registered: Jul 2003
Location: København NV
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Aug-09-2005 22:00
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donnybrasco
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2004
Location: L.A.
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Actually just saw a special on this and supposedly those cites were picked specifically because they had not been bombed before, thus the true affects of the Atom Bombs could be guaged.
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Aug-11-2005 00:00
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ogvh5150
Formula 1 Addict

Registered: Aug 2003
Location: F1 2008 Red Bull Racing/BMW Sauber
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| quote: | Originally posted by Lira
If you listen to the presidential speech (you can get hold of that in any P2P program), the president says a "military base" had been bombed, not mentioning the death of civilians.
Makes you think, doesn't it? |
While Hiroshima did have a military base in the city, it was not the base that was targeted, but the center of the city.
Remembering Hiroshima & Nagasaki , by David Krieger, August 1, 2003
All major factories in Hiroshima were on the Periphery of the city--and escaped serious damage
United States Strategic Bombing Survey: 'The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki' [Chapter 4]
As the headquarters of the Second Army and of the Chugoku Regional Army, it was one of the most important military command stations in Japan, the site of one of the largest military supply depots, and the foremost military shipping point for both troops and supplies....
...On 7 August, the commander of the Second Army assumed general command of the counter measures, and all military units and facilities in the area were mobilized for relief purposes. Army buildings on the periphery of the city provided shelter and emergency hospital space, and dispersed Army supplies supplemented the slight amounts of food and clothing that had escaped destruction.
United States Strategic Bombing Survey: 'The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki' [Chapter 2]
Apparently the civilian population was targeted if the Commander of the Second Army was able to oversee relief efforts according to that report.
___________________
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Aug-11-2005 04:17
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shaolin_Z
Hei Hu Quan

Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Austin, Texas, USA: TXTA #102
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| quote: |
Hiroshima health effects linger
By Chris Hogg
BBC News, Tokyo
Imagine what it is like to know that as a child you were doused in radioactive fallout.
It fell on your clothes and on your skin. It was in the water you drank, the scraps of food you could find. It entered the fabric of the buildings you were sheltering in.
What hidden damage was done in your earliest days?
For those who were in Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 it is a fear they live with constantly.
This is not history for them. It is an everyday concern.
Keiko Ogura was a little girl living in the suburbs of Hiroshima when the bomb was dropped.
"I don't have scars," she says, "but I do have nightmares."
Like thousands of other survivors - the hibakusha , as they are known in Japan - Keiko Ogura was given regular check ups by the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission in the first few months after the bomb was dropped.
After the war, the Americans provided medical care for those affected. This also enabled scientists to study the effects of radioactive exposure on people.
"Several times the car came and took me to the research centre where they examined me," she said.
"I always had this fear. Is there anything on my body? It was a fear of the invisible. I had a little anaemia, so immediately I asked myself, is that anything to do with the bomb? And then I thought about my future, will I be able to have children normally?"
Keiko Ogura's fears are not unusual. You hear similar stories from others who were exposed to the fallout as children.
Medical study
The people who were put through the terrible events of August 1945, and their offspring, are more closely monitored than almost anyone else by doctors and scientists.
"This is the only place where we can research the effect of radiation on the human body," said Dr Saeko Fujiwara, at the Radiation Effects Research Foundation.
"We study the relation between the level of exposure and that of radiation. Ours is the only major epidemiological study that can do this. That's why we're unique," she said.
That study has helped scientists to draw up the guidelines for safe exposure to radiation that is used around the world in the nuclear industry, for example.
Charles Waldren, an American who is the foundation's chief scientist, believes that almost half a million radiation workers in the US and at least that many in Europe have benefited.
"Our research allows people to continue to work at a level of exposure which is considered safe for the general welfare," he said. "I think risk estimates from radiation used in every country in the world come from our data."
Cancer risks
But the close monitoring of Hiroshima's citizens, those who were exposed to the blast and their children and grandchildren, is not just a matter of scientific curiosity.
There is real concern about the survivors as they get older. The average age of the hibakushas is 72.
When they were exposed to the radiation, they suffered damage to their genes, with those closest to the centre of the explosion the worst affected.
In many cases their genes repaired themselves. It is possible that those repairs were imperfect, making it more likely that they will develop cancer in later life.
"Radiation induces genome damage," said Professor Kenji Kamiya, the director of the research institute for radiation, biology and medicine at Hiroshima University.
"In some people that isn't fixed correctly. So 60 years later they have problems. The highest risk for A-bomb victims developing cancer is among the youngest who were exposed to the blast. These people are now approaching an age where they would be more likely to develop a cancer anyway," he said.
Science does have some answers, but much more work is needed.
"We are trying to develop new genome technology and new methods for diagnosis and treatment," Professor Kamiya said. "Re-generative medicine offers the possibility of repairing cell damage."
The number of cancer cases among the survivors will continue to rise in the next few years, perhaps peaking in the 2020s.
"That's why we have to rush to develop new treatments for these patients," he said.
Sixty years after the bomb was dropped, science is still working hard to find ways to cope with its after-effects.
And for survivors like Keiko Ogura, that means little chance in the short-term that her anxieties will go away. |
Source: BBC News
It sickens me how some people STILL try to justify the Hiroshima Bombings. 
___________________
"The Greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge." -Stephen Hawking
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me— and there was no one left to speak out for me." -Martin Niemöller
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Aug-11-2005 17:42
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