Tuesday, March 15, 2011

The Lesson

Hope for the best, be prepared for the worst. Don't loot and steal.

It is hard for people to ignore the obvious contrasts in light of Japan's behavior during one of the most powerful natural disasters and the resulting emergency with the power plants. It's remarkable how fond most Americans are of the Japanese. I think it is that they earned respect over time. And, contrary to high profile charlatans, when it comes down to it, we tend to place character above race more than most societies.

I have a friend whose father survived the Bataan death March, and I think they do not hold it against the people as a group. My friend swears by Honda. That is all he's driven for the last 20 years or so. And I only hear him sing the country's praises. Typical American. Many in the world would have generations of a blood feud going after what his father endured.

I hope nothing more happens there, and that the attempts to make political issues regarding energy and else out of this event simply fall flat.

3 comments:

  1. My thoughts turn to the horrific disasters there and the people...the people. I wonder too, that the trust the world has for Japan and it's people has something to do with the idea imbedded in the Ninth Article of no war in the Japanese constitution (oh how I wish we had such an article in our constitution.) And for all that was imposed on them after WWII they grew as trustworthy - learning to live and thrive.

    I'm with you on this, may the media lose the "spin". May the political/"green" issues be properly reviewed. Somethings cannot be regulated - like earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, tornadoes, flood etc etc...

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  2. I think that Japan will be the "Standard" for how people recover from a massive disaster.

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  3. the Japanese stay calm.... the rest of us panic! We could really learn a lot from the Japanese....

    My heart aches for them! As if the earthquake and tsunamie weren't enough... now the nuc desaster keeps them from being able to clean up and search the remnants of their towns.

    P.S. my dad was also in the Pacific war. He was on one of the Philippine Islands, Mindinao, helping the Filipinos, I believe around the time of the death march. He never talked about it much.....

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