WelshBloke
Lifer
- Jan 12, 2005
- 33,270
- 11,405
- 136
Yes, there was looting there.
Monarchy culture is easily broken down and creates chaos.
So given there was a lot less looting in NZ compared to the US ( after Katrina) what do you put that down to?
Yes, there was looting there.
Monarchy culture is easily broken down and creates chaos.
So why is the poverty gap larger in the US than in the EU?
So given there was a lot less looting in NZ compared to the US ( after Katrina) what do you put that down to?
Yea I know, lol..................
Find the threads that I called good black folks with racial names, go ahead, put up or shut the fvck up, biotch.
I don't know if that's true, but I suspect the data you're looking at doesn't factor in the true wealth of the monarchy caste in various European countries. It's very common for the governments to understate the true wealth accumulation of the royals.
The ultra rich in the US are wealthier than European Royals.
Hell, the ultra rich in the EU are richer than European royals.
Wow, you really believe that? Everything the peasants own is actually owned by the royals. The ultra rich are just borrowing it.
Because each side uses different measurements.So why is the poverty gap larger in the US than in the EU?
Yes, I believe in reality.
Yes, those are all attributes of having a personal honor code that extends to family, community, and country. Having an honor code is often thought of as antiquated to certain people and as such is laughed upon.
lmfao!!!!!!!!
COW may be P&N laughing stock but I'm sure his opinions are taken very seriously in his circles. (You know, the circles that think Obama should have bombed Big Ben because of the BP oil spill situation.)
I have no problem with that! Just like how your opinions are taken seriously in white supremacist compounds out in Idaho. (You know, the circles that believe in white-only immigration and that integration is based upon genetics.)
I have no problem with that! Just like how your opinions are taken seriously in white supremacist compounds out in Idaho. (You know, the circles that believe in white-only immigration and that integration is based upon genetics.)
I asked a friend in Tokyo about this, he's living there and training to be a chef. He said, "Looting? Hell, they're too busy trying to help each other to loot".
That about says it all, right there.
An awful realisation is setting in for those trapped in the vicinity of the crippled Fukushima nuclear complex: people are afraid to help them.
Residents describe spooky scenes of municipal cars driving down near-empty streets telling people to stay indoors, but they have seen few other signs of outside help.
Aid agencies are reluctant to get too close to the plant. Shelters set up in the greater Fukushima area for "radiation refugees" have little food, in part because nobody wants to deliver to an area that might be contaminated. And with little or no petrol available, not everyone who wants to leave can get out.
Radiation fears are mingling with a sickening sense of abandonment.
"People who don't have family nearby, who are old or sick in bed, or couldn't get petrol, they haven't been able to get away from the radiation," said Emi Shinkawa, who feels doubly vulnerable. Her house was swept away by the tsunami.
Her daughter, Tomoko Monma, knows she is lucky: At 9am on Wednesday, she piled her family into the car, thankful for her husband's foresight in setting aside enough petrol for them to make their escape.
But she is angry that people living outside the 20-kilometre evacuation zone around the nuclear plant were not given help finding public transport or the fuel to drive away in their own cars. Ms Monma, 28, lives 33 kilometres from the plant.
"We've got no help. We've got no information," she said as she cradled her two-year-old daughter on the tatami mats that had been laid out in a sports centre in Yamagata, 160 kilometres inland, which now serves as a shelter for people fleeing Fukushima.
"The government is demanding that we don't go out, but it isn't bringing us anything," Katsunobu Sakurai, the mayor of a city close to the exclusion zone, complained in an interview with the national NHK television network. "Truck drivers don’t want to enter the city. They’re afraid of being exposed to radiation ... If the government says we’re in a dangerous area, it should take more care of us!"
Foreign aid workers in the area have been assessing the radiation risks, but many chose to remain just outside the 20-kilometre zone yesterday morning.
Bull. There many problems with dealing with this disaster. The lack of honest journalism plus a ridiculously idealized image of the Japanese is what's driving statements like that.
Trapped in the radiation zone, and no help in sight
Law-breakers.I agree. I hate politically correct crap. Why don't people take things at face value. I've been jumped twice. Can someone guess what type of people jumped me?
You are really special.20km. Thats a 3 hour walk. Are people really that lazy? They can't walk 3 fucking hours to saftey?
