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In my ignorance before this I always thought that where I lived I would be safe, we are about half to three quaters a mile from the beach, and in the '58 floods even tho the water could be seen from my parents house it didn't actually come that far, plus I'm on a bit of a hill...Cut to the reports of this tsunami and the terrifying fact that it travelled at least 10 km inland, and the sobering thought that within seconds of a wave like that hitting my beach, we would be gone.When you think to yourself, 10 km from my house takes me to................. THAT is when you finally realise just how huge this wave really was.
There is going to be a charity conert for the Japanese Tsunami appealup to now Katrina and the waves, Beach Boys and Wet wet wet have agreed to perform
Quote from: \"jucyberry\" post=146715In my ignorance before this I always thought that where I lived I would be safe, we are about half to three quaters a mile from the beach, and in the '58 floods even tho the water could be seen from my parents house it didn't actually come that far, plus I'm on a bit of a hill...Cut to the reports of this tsunami and the terrifying fact that it travelled at least 10 km inland, and the sobering thought that within seconds of a wave like that hitting my beach, we would be gone.When you think to yourself, 10 km from my house takes me to................. THAT is when you finally realise just how huge this wave really was.You want to hope that you don`t get a repeat of this thenBritains Biggest Earthquake
Billy, following on you post on a serious theme, the Japanese will be fine and will no doubt re-build in a manner designed to combat any increased threats to their structures. The vast majority of their economy recovery following the second world war can be attributed to a gentleman called William Edwards Deming. He was sent to Japan by Eissenhower at the end of the war, and he told them that if they would embrace the principles that he taught them, they would have the rest of the developed world screaming for protection within 5 years. The rest as they say is history, no one takes the piss out of Japanese quality now as they did when me and thee were kids eh? Being in the industry that you are, can I recommend a book for your reading list. If you can get a copy of \"Out of the Crisis\" by William Edwards Deming Cambridge Press 1986 it will change your thought processes no doubt, it certainly did do mine!!!!
Quote from: \"Bristol Red Rover Jnr.\" post=146693Quote from: \"Viking Don\" post=146639If you want to feel a bit less sympathetic I'd suggest watching a film called 'The Cove'.At least Taiji will have been hit by the wave and hopefully wiped out the bas**rds that made their living there, they had it coming!Brilliant film, pretty depressing though. Everytime i see pictures of people swimming with captive dolphins I think how traumatised they must be. Also amazing to know that dolphins can commit suicide.Heres a picture to make you feel less sorry some of the people who have been killed:And the film: http://www.megavideo.com/?v=BD9DT9KLYeah, all them kids what have been washed away deserved it, karma eh?If only tsunami's could distinguish between people and dolphin murderers.
Quote from: \"Viking Don\" post=146639If you want to feel a bit less sympathetic I'd suggest watching a film called 'The Cove'.At least Taiji will have been hit by the wave and hopefully wiped out the bas**rds that made their living there, they had it coming!Brilliant film, pretty depressing though. Everytime i see pictures of people swimming with captive dolphins I think how traumatised they must be. Also amazing to know that dolphins can commit suicide.Heres a picture to make you feel less sorry some of the people who have been killed:And the film: http://www.megavideo.com/?v=BD9DT9KL
If you want to feel a bit less sympathetic I'd suggest watching a film called 'The Cove'.At least Taiji will have been hit by the wave and hopefully wiped out the bas**rds that made their living there, they had it coming!
LMAO! Dolphin murderers?? What about the evil Cod murderers? or Chicken killers? You've been listening to that green wellied brigade who'd have you believe dolphins are as inteligent as us. People deserved to die because they killed a fish? (I know) Next you'll be saying animal rights activists are right trying to murder scientists who use animals for research in an attempt to save humans.
There were, at the very least, half a dozen viable ways that alternative and substantial power sources could have been developeed in the 70's and 80's. Geothermal inclines in the oceans, burning (and using as fertiliser the more compost like stuff) all our rubbish to creat heat to drive turbines, nuclear fusion (the funds allocated to that were and are plain shameful), satellite generators using the suns rays and beaming power down to Earth (that one's relatively easy I understand), one about using the sea as a source of some special atom thing and then doing summat dead clever with it, there's plenty more. But mankind and more particularly, his vested interests, killed every single one. So now we have no choice but to use fission - which is downright scary stuff.We failed to face up to the challenge. Have you ever thought, the last 3 to 4 decades could easily have seen the peak of human development and achievement? With resources dwindling, humanity procreating, poisions slowly accumulating, vegetation (and therefore oxygen) plainly disappearing at a staggering rate, sea levels rising, weather becoming ever more crop unfriendly, the tundra already melting and so letting off more methane than even we could ever produce - and now cannot stop even if we tried. The pressure is mounting. It's an easy argument to make that humanity is about to pass beyond its best years of achieving anything.BobG
Quote from: \"BobG\" post=146835There were, at the very least, half a dozen viable ways that alternative and substantial power sources could have been developeed in the 70's and 80's. Geothermal inclines in the oceans, burning (and using as fertiliser the more compost like stuff) all our rubbish to creat heat to drive turbines, nuclear fusion (the funds allocated to that were and are plain shameful), satellite generators using the suns rays and beaming power down to Earth (that one's relatively easy I understand), one about using the sea as a source of some special atom thing and then doing summat dead clever with it, there's plenty more. But mankind and more particularly, his vested interests, killed every single one. So now we have no choice but to use fission - which is downright scary stuff.We failed to face up to the challenge. Have you ever thought, the last 3 to 4 decades could easily have seen the peak of human development and achievement? With resources dwindling, humanity procreating, poisions slowly accumulating, vegetation (and therefore oxygen) plainly disappearing at a staggering rate, sea levels rising, weather becoming ever more crop unfriendly, the tundra already melting and so letting off more methane than even we could ever produce - and now cannot stop even if we tried. The pressure is mounting. It's an easy argument to make that humanity is about to pass beyond its best years of achieving anything.BobGI've got a book for you Bob.Why the West Rules (For Now...) By Ian Morris. He's a Brit, from Stoke, who's now a prof of Archaeology and History at Stanford.The book is breathtakingly ambitious, thoroughly researched but also, very. very readable. He set himself the target of figuring out why it is that the West (Europe/America) is currently more developed and powerful than the East (Japan and China). Which it is, unquestionably.He goes back 20,000 years and follows the ebbs and flows of civilizations on both sides of the planet, developing a scoring system for how powerful and advanced they were.For someone like me, who has a naive belief that everything will get better in the long run, it's both exhilliarating and terrifying. He describes dozens of advanced civilizations that rose and fell like waves over centuries and millenia. He shows how, after the fall of Rome, Europe didn't reach the same fell of development until the 1720. In the meantime, China had developed a civilization as powerful as Rome by 1000AD (I'd never heard of it!) which itself then collapsed and led to their own Dark Ages.But the key thing is that it gives you a feeling for just how exponential the development in the last 250 years has been. Time and agains, civilizations got to the level that we were are by the mid 1700s, then collapsed. THIS time, the West broke through, had the Industrial Revolution and as a result we came to dominate the planet. This is utterly unprecedented in human history.Morris reckons that the Romans' development (by his score) was about 40 in 100AD. We then dropped to about 20 for the next 1600 years before getting back to 40 in 1720. Now, he scores us at about 900!Think about how rapidly technological development is now. It took well over 100 years for trains to go from 10mph to 100mph. In the last 50 years, we've gone from 100mph to 250-300mph. 30 years ago, a ZX Spectrum with 16k RAM and a 3.5MHz processor was the height of accessible computing. Today, for similar money you can buy a machine with 1000 times the processor speed and 200,000 times the RAM. Think about how rapidly the internet has revolutionised communication. It took 100 years from the telephone being invented, to International Direct Dialling being common. It's only taken 15 years for mobile phones and the internet to eclipse that type of communication 1000 fold. So technology is developing capability at a rate that gets faster all the time. Think about what the technological world will look like by 2050. 2100. Never mind 2200.Think about bringing a foot soldier from Wellington's army to the present day. Try explaining to him that you could call someone on the other side of the world using a tiny machine in you hand. That you could go onto a computer (explain waht a computer is) and use a rectangle of plastic (explain to him what plastic is) to take money from your bank account (explain what a bank account is) to buy a plane ticket (explain what a plane is) to fly within 24 hours to New Zealand (explain what New Zealand is). Now think about how utterly incomprehensible the technological world of 2200 would be to US!Morris also admits that we have grave problems to get through over the next half century. But if we DO, technological development will take us to levels where today's worries are as trifling as we consider the worries of 1800 to be. Today, virtually no-one dies of smallpox, TB. Virtually no-one has leprosy, rickets, scurvy. In 100 years time, people will say the same about cancer, coronary heart disease etc. Over the next 100 years, the traditionally grindingly poor billions of China and India will attain lifestyles like ours.And technological development will sort out the problems that come with that. Global warming will be sorted. Food production will be sorted. New fuels will be sorted. All by technology. As long as we don't go all Flat Earth and start going anti-technology. That's the reaction of comfortable westerners who can afford to complain from their centrally heated homes with their well-stocked cupboards.Here endeth the rant.
Viking Don:Either Ed hadn't heard any or decided that the couple of hundred folks from Grimsby area that bothered to turn out were too close to being a town on an East Coast to risk upsetting them.My Dad was a POW in Burma in WW2 and he never talked about it - and he/we never bought electrical goods or cars labelled as made in Japan. Strangely he bought a Nissan late in his life and his reasoning was that it was assembled in Sunderland so that was OK ..... I think he'd have been OK with me having a VW though!