Excellent! & ( it has to be said) rather beautiful... Does the beauty of it 
detract from what is being said..personally I don't think so...


--- On Tue, 3/29/11, dave miller <[email protected]> wrote:


From: dave miller <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] designer's abject revenge (and message re posting)
To: [email protected], "NetBehaviour for networked distributed 
creativity" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, March 29, 2011, 3:29 PM


crime against humanity:
http://davemiller.org/drawings/nuclear/crime_against_humanity.png





On 29 March 2011 14:53, helen varley jamieson <[email protected]> 
wrote:


yes it would be good to see the execs in there in dirty undies lending a 
helping hand ... i wonder how much choice those workers have in their sacrifice 
... :(


On 29/03/11 3:16 PM, michael gurstein wrote: 
Along with an extension of the notion of Crimes Against Humanity there should 
also be the development of a global process for identifying and awarding 
glories to those who are heroes for humanity (and not the treacly stuff that 
comes out of various semi-popular mostly US media outlets...

And I nominate...




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(Newser) – As if risking their lives to work feverishly to avoid nuclear 
meltdown wasn't grim enough, there's no respite for the weary workers at 
Japan's hobbled Fukushima Dai-ichi plant. A Japanese nuclear official who just 
returned from five days at Fukushima paints a picture of life on the inside, 
reports the LA Times, with catnaps caught in hallways, two sparse meals a day 
(breakfast is typically crackers and vegetable juice), no running water or way 
of bathing, and no contact with family. "I don't think the workers have the 
energy they need to work under these extremely tough conditions," says the 
official. Add to that the stress of looming disaster and TEPCO's seeming 
incompetence at gauging the radiation levels to which it's exposing the 450 or 
so employees fighting to stabilize Fukushima. "These things are an indication 
that they don't have good control on radiation protection," says an expert. But 
beyond the danger, basic needs are going by
 the wayside. "Some have expressed concern about not being able to change their 
underwear," says the nuclear official.


It need hardly be noted I think, that those folks are risking (and very likely 
sacrificing) their lives for all of us as well... given what seem to be the 
evolving risks from the nuclear meltdown that the Execs are responsible (and 
should be held accountable) for...

M

-- 
____________________________________________________________

helen varley jamieson: creative catalyst       
[email protected]   
http://www.creative-catalyst.com
http://www.avatarbodycollision.org
http://www.upstage.org.nz
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