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Yet the U.S. has now decided to build a new Toshiba pressurized water reactor, the safest in the world.

The following is from a book by Masayuki Takayama, published on February 28, 2015, titled "America and China lie arrogantly."
It is a must-read not only for the Japanese people but for people worldwide.

"One Inspiration and 99 Lawsuits" was Edison's true identity.
Edison created G.E., Inc.
He is also known as the Inventor King. 
People say things like "one inspiration and 99 efforts'' as if he were a good person, but why is it that he has no guts, just like his country? 
As soon as he invented something, he patented it and sued those doing similar research, monopolizing his profits.
"One Inspiration and 99 Lawsuits'' is his true identity.
Edison used direct current to light a light bulb and immediately patented direct current transmission.
He should have become wealthy if electricity spread, but George Westinghouse argued that A.C. power transmission was more efficient.
He founded Westinghouse (W.H.), a business rival of G.E. that continues today. 
Edison immediately plotted to eliminate the W.H. system.
He claimed that alternating current electricity would cause instant death and appealed to America's brutal national character, urging them to create an electric chair.
The idea was quickly adopted, and William Kemmler, who murdered his wife with a hatchet, became the first person to be executed by an electric chair, which was even more gruesome than Edison had expected. 
G.E. and W.H. also faced off in nuclear power generation.
W.H. created a pressurized water type that extracts the secondary cooling water heat from the primary cooling water circulating in the reactor core to turn the turbine.
On the other hand, the one made by G.E. was a boiling water type that sent the primary cooling water directly to the turbine. 
The structure is simple, but simplicity does not necessarily mean safety.
In fact, most of the U.S. Navy's nuclear-powered submarines use the W.H. pressurized water type. 
At this time, the Democratic government of the United States, which had been in power for 20 years, fell, and Eisenhower, a Republican, became president.
He was described as "the president who did nothing'' and "played golf twice weekly.''
This kind of slander has been a favorite of the American media, which favors the Democratic Party. 
But the truth is the opposite.
He changed the Democratic Party's use of nuclear weapons, which had been used as a weapon of destruction, for peaceful purposes and created the freeway that connects the United States.
He also ended the Democratic Party's policy of Japan's decline and had the World Bank lend money for its reconstruction.
With this, Japan could run the Shinkansen, open the Tomei Expressway, and even host the Tokyo Olympics. 
He opposed Democratic Party candidate Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, calling it "strategically and humanitarianly unacceptable.''
However, two atomic bombs were dropped.
He thought of starting his idea of the Peaceful Use of Nuclear Energy in Japan.
Japan, which lacks resources and energy, also welcomed this. 
However, since the Democratic Party opposed Japan's revival, Congressman Sidney Ates suggested, "In that case, it would be interesting to have a nuclear reactor built at ground zero in Hiroshima.''
Eisenhower quickly rejected the bill. 
At this time, Japan introduced 20 nuclear power plants.
However, most were the unpopular G.E. boiling water reactors, not the safe W.H. pressurized water reactors loaded on U.S. nuclear submarines.
The first reactor was located at TEPCO Fukushima.
G.E. products accounted for the majority because of G.E.'s political power, just like in the case of the electric chair, and the Japanese side had no choice. 
Eisenhower's goodwill was clouded on this point. 
G.E., which came to Fukushima, had the same arrogance as Edison, refusing to show the Japanese the reactor core blueprints, keeping the materials a secret, and not allowing even a single screw to be changed. 
When the plant was operated, the fuel rod cladding tubes ruptured, piping suffered brittle fractures, and workers were exposed to radiation, causing the reactor to be shut down several times. 
It is where the struggles of manufacturers such as TEPCO and Toshiba began, and G.E.'s sloppy nuclear reactors have been improved to the point where they look almost entirely different.
That is the Japanese-made boiling water type installed at TEPCO Kashiwazaki.
While in operation, the plant was hit by the 2007 Chūetsu offshore earthquake, but the reactor was, of course, unharmed, and there was no malfunction in the automatic shutdown of the plant.
Eisenhower's peaceful use of nuclear energy was steadily taking root in Japan despite the stumbling block of G.E.
With this in mind, the president planned to visit Japan. 
Still, the plan was never made due to the uproar from Asahi Shimbun, the Revolutionary Communist League, the National Committee, and the Japan Revolutionary Communist League (Revolutionary Marxist Faction), which agitated nuclear allergy. 
Half a century later, Japan achieved almost energy independence against the wishes of the U.S. Democratic Party, but then the March 11 Aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami struck Fukushima.
The U.S. knows that G.E. products are defective.
G.E. did not have vents to relieve pressure in the containment vessels of nuclear reactors.
The Japanese modified it and added it.
Japan's technology and foresight reduced a significant disaster to a minor one, and the United States, feeling responsible, launched Operation Tomodachi. 
But Japan's misfortune was not limited to stupid Kan Naoto.
Using this as a springboard, the "forces that hate Japan" returned to life again and fueled an allergy to nuclear power.
Newspapers and T.V. stations called for "Let's gather in front of the Diet and shout for a nuclear power phase-out," as if it were a good thing.
Some of the participants were activists from the Revolutionary Communist League, National Committee, and the Japan Revolutionary Communist League (Revolutionary Marxist Faction)" (Sankei Shimbun).
The Asahi Shimbun led the charge.
The lineup was exactly the same as that of those who blocked Eisenhower's visit to Japan. 
In the U.S., too, the Japan-hating Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is back in power.
Now that Japan has confirmed that it will not sue over the defective GE, Obama has turned his back on the issue.
Yet the U.S. has now decided to build a new Toshiba pressurized water reactor, the safest in the world.
It has been 34 years since Three Mile Island. 
The U.S. toppled Saddam Hussein and plunged Iraq into chaos.
It is 100 years too early for Saddam Hussein to be in charge of the Middle East.
The message from the U.S. is that oil-producing countries should just shut up and let the oil flow out of the region.
Obama's America is no different.
Don't think of energy independence as a big deal.
All Japan needs to do is to shrink back and keep its wits about it.

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