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Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/19/2015 1:08 PM

When Japan had their Tsunami, all of their top nuclear workers at the plant took batteries from their cars to run the plant as a temporary measure.

(We are told).

Common sense comes in here....

Why didn't they just get Honda to get a few generators?

They do make them there right?

I KNOW OUR NATION IS SUFFERING ON THE WORLD SCALE OF EDUCATION BUT TO THINK WE WOULD BUY THAT LINE?

So here is the theory,...

We all know that when you add electricity to quartz, that it makes the quartz vibrate.

The Chinese were spotted that day with the largest battle vessel in the world, outside of China, (first time ever), and in Japan's fishing area near the epicenter of the quake.

(Most of this has been removed from the web).

There was a vortex in the water next to the ship, which was quickly explained away as being caused by ionic flyer tests of new planes being used by the Chinese, but no flyers in sight..

If an ion beam was focused on the crust, (containing quartz), then enough power would cause a lot of chaos, thus causing a break, 200 miles from the fault line which has scientists puzzled, they say...

So if China caused the quake, it would be a black eye back at Japan. A country that has kicked China's butt since the dawn.

Then China gets boost to top of food chain economically and Japan left to rot.

Japanese culture makes it impossible for the Japanese to accept help in a defeat.

The word surrender didn't exist in their language until WW2!

Anyway to save face and heal like the warriors that the Japanese are, I believe they talked with our president and told him they wanted no help.

I just have to wonder how many people are trying to figure these engineering problems that would have been averted if commons sense would have been applied and the truth known.

Sound far fetched? Check Tesla's experiment with power transfer that shook an entire town. He didn't have a nuclear powered ship backing him either!

The real gentleman was Henry Kravis of KKR , (the man wrote the book the presidents used to coin phrase "bootstrap economics"), in aiding the Japanese by buying a plant that was destroyed, that made a solar chip that made solar more efficient.

Henry promised to get their hundreds of workers back to work, then after purchase, shut the plant down. (Henry's interest is oil!)

Low blow! Overlooking a need of hundreds just for profit? Does the 111th or so richest man on earth really need the money? Spiteful and Greedy.

China has its own problem now anyway. No women since they set their girl babies to the curb to die, leaving the men with men to date.

Is there a way to block an ion beam, I guess is where I am going with this?

Also. aren't there any international laws governing what or how much of world interest a man can own?

Cisco, the internet security for all nations is owned by KKR as well as a lot of the social services, that by the by are not government, like child protective services, (worldwide), adoptions, Homeland security, (I believe), and around 280 major companies.

He gave 50 million to Bush's re-election campaign but did the same for all other parties, (worldwide).

I thought there was a cap on donations to elections?

Anyway the ion beam thing is bugging me.

Help would be appreciated if you know anything about blocking a beam.

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#1

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a theory based on culture.

12/19/2015 1:30 PM

I think you are having delusions.

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#2

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/19/2015 4:36 PM

Take two Ex-Lax and come back tomorrow.

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#4
In reply to #2

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/19/2015 5:03 PM

Bad idea. He took some yesterday, and we see/smell the results today.

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#3

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/19/2015 4:40 PM

How far can an ion beam penetrate into salt water? Not very far, I think.

Ion beam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Water equivalent thickness values of materials used in ...

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#5

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/19/2015 10:00 PM

switch to decaf for a week and spit out the lead paint chips

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#6

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/20/2015 12:41 AM

Dude, you are totally whacked....

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#7

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/20/2015 1:03 PM

Common Sense would dictate that you do not place all your redundant back-up systems below grade in a Tsunami Zone, No Matter How High You Build Your Sea Wall. That's where Japan made their mistake.

Just think how much energy they could have captured if they had wave energy converter farm in place.

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Anonymous Poster #2
#8

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/20/2015 3:02 PM

It is not recommendable to use a joint when preparing a text for CR4.

Sleep for a couple of days and come again with a clear mind.

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#9

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/21/2015 8:27 AM

And we wonder how people become radicalized?

Mix a little bit of common knowledge with a carefully crafted bunch of story telling and you get serious propaganda. Knowing the difference between propaganda and truth requires a lot more reading than just the conspiracy web sites. Some people get a thrill out of making up this stuff just to watch people flip out. Others recruit suicidal people to their cause this way.

If there is something you don't know, then the correct descriptor is "ignorance" which is not an insult, it just means you don't know.

If there is something that you know but you ignore the facts, then the correct descriptor is "stupid" which is still not an insult, unless you chose to take it as such.

If there is something that you suspect is too fantastic, then the correct descriptor is "critical" and even if it turns out to be true, at least it is not the first or second descriptor mentioned above.

If there is a theory with proofs that can be used to test the theory, the correct descriptor is "science".

If there is a faith based theory with no proofs that can be tested, the correct descriptor is "religion" and it is strictly a choice. It might also be called folklore or fairy tales, but it all amounts to the same thing. It comes closer to the first descriptor than the one above this.

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#10
In reply to #9

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/21/2015 8:55 AM

But remember, we don't know what we don't know.

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#11
In reply to #10

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/21/2015 10:07 AM

That is the pleasant part of ignorance !

If we do not know what we do not know we can believe we know all !

This is the way many behave, everywhere, even here.

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#12
In reply to #11

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/22/2015 2:00 PM

OUCH!

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#13
In reply to #11

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/22/2015 2:38 PM

Maybe some.

Even I know that I don't know it all.

I do know how to find answers and information.

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#14
In reply to #13

Re: Japan's Tsunami and a Theory Based on Culture

12/23/2015 6:53 AM

My guide line was, is and will be :

"The more you know the more you know that you know nothing".

This leads to respect for other knowledge.

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