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Posts Tagged ‘irony’

Nuclear Irony

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

The catastrophic earthquake/ tsunami disaster in Japan is an event full of tragic ironies.

*A wall of water washes away cities causing a humanitarian crisis due to a lack of clean drinking water.

*Nuclear power plants built to supply electricity, failed, and continue to fail, in part because of a lack of electricity to power pumps designed to circulate cooling water.

*And finally, a nation that suffered the first nuclear devastation by a weapon of war at the hands of a foreign government, now faces nuclear devastation from peaceful splitting of atoms by their own government.

Of all these I find the third one the saddest of all. It is strangely and somewhat morbidly fascinating that in an era where neo-cons prate about the dangers of “loose nukes” in the hands of terrorists, the major nuclear catastrophe of the day has resulted not from the actions of any militant fundamentalist sect, but instead from the splitting of atoms for “peaceful purposes.”

In many ways, we have become our own worst enemy. Who needs Al Qaeda when humans design and build nuclear power plants with the potential to melt down showering the populous with deadly radiation?

Of course I’m aware there is a difference between a willful act of terror and natural catastrophes like earthquakes and tsunamis. But as bad as the “natural” component of the disaster in Japan is, it is the human caused aspect that could ultimately prove the most devastating. The tens of thousands of deaths from the quake and tidal wave could well be dwarfed by double or triple that amount of deaths and cancer cases resulting from radiation escaping from the Fukashima reactors.

The point I’m trying to make is: what good does it do to protect the populous from the dangers of terrorists if we can’t protect citizens from the dangers we have created with our own technology?

Some might point out that unlike Chernobyl and the recent gulf oil spill, the failure of the nuclear power plants in Japan was caused by a natural disaster, not by man. However, it is counterproductive to let humans off the hook for their role in all of these catastrophes. Mother Nature and the planet may have caused the recent earthquake and ensuing tsunami. But in all three events – Chernobyl, the gulf oil spill, and the Japan reactor malfunction, it was humans who proved unable to rein in the dangers of the technology which they had created.

No doubt there are nuclear power supporters who will try to spin the melt down at Fukushima as a fluke, a perfect storm of events that led to a once-off failure. However, the mere fact that the mishap occurred at all is indictment enough. That we put our faith in a technology with even the potential for such a catastrophic loss of life is proof of man’s hubris.

The Japan reactor had been operating, presumably uneventfully, for forty years prior to this incident. There wasn’t anything different about the design of the plant, no change in the maintenance schedule or operating routine that led to the catastrophe. It could have happened – indeed could still happen – to any of the Japanese reactors situated along the coast within range of an earthquake caused tsunami.

The unalterable fact remains that despite assurances by governments around the world, generating electricity though nuclear fission is an extremely dangerous business. A hydroelectric dam might burst sending a wall of water through a town. A coal fired power plant could explode causing residents that live nearby to run for cover. But none of these technologies has the capability of wreaking the kind of catastrophic, sustained, and wide spread damage that nuclear power does.

Even more chilling, the reactors in Japan are virtually identical in design to scores of reactors currently operating around the world, including several in this country. Watching the daily drama unfolding of hydrogen gas explosions, exposed fuel rods and escaping radiation and imagining the same thing happening to other nuclear power plants and we are now faced with a scenario where quite possibly we have reached the point in our evolution where even the peaceful application of our technology will result in our own demise.

A species that evolves to the point where it causes its own extinction?

That is, perhaps the cruelest irony of all.

Tags: earthquake, irony, Japan, nuclear, power, Thomas Vincent, tragedy, tsunami, Vincent
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

The Irony of Hubris

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The blogosphere has been lit up recently by accusations of rape/molestation against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. (A Google search of “Wikileaks Rape” turned up 11 million hits.)

Several writers, including Assange himself, have derided the whole thing as a clumsy “dirty tricks” smear campaign orchestrated by the C.I.A. and the Pentagon.

I disagree… at least about the clumsy part.

If the C.I.A./Pentagon did have anything to do with the accusations leveled against Assange the plot shows a remarkable degree of elegance and subtlety. Either that or they got real lucky.

Consider, for example, the ironies of the situation:

1) Assange, a secretive man, finds himself embroiled in a tawdry and very public sex scandal that if even partly true completely dismantles his carefully cultivated a image as a man of mystery.

2) Wikileaks, a crusading whistle blower organization famous for leaking some 95,000 secret and embarrassing documents finds itself embarrassed when its founder finds details of his private sex life “leaked” to the press by an as yet unnamed whistle blower.

3) Assange, who came to Sweden seeking a safe haven for Wikileaks under their liberal whistle blower protection laws, find himself a victim of those same laws that protect the anonymity of his accusers.

I am in no way supporting or condemning Assange in all of this. I find the question of whether Julian Assange is guilty or innocent of the charges leveled at him largely irrelevant. Nether do I find the narrative that the C.I.A./ Pentagon was involved in a honey trap plot particularly compelling by itself.

I do find it fascinating that people in the news – mostly men it must be noted – persist in looking like deer in the headlights when they find details of their personal lives splashed across the tabloids. Elliot Spitzer, Mark Sanford, Larry Craig, and yes, even Bill Clinton. What sort of hubris runs through the veins of public officials who think that they alone will be exempt from sex scandals. Assange himself has intimated that he received warnings from Australian security agents that he could find himself the target of some form of dirty tricks smear campaign. And yet apparently he had “consensual” sex with at least one of the women named in the suit. What was he thinking? That he was some kind of super spook, that no aspect of his private life (like any his sexual activity) would ever wind up being made public? Did he think he was invincible?

The lessons of Spitzer, Sanford, Craig, and Clinton seem obvious to me. If you are a public personality, especially one who delights in “crushing bastards,” and you’ve been warned that those same bastards are out to entrap and smear you, don’t act so surprised and “disturbed” when your private sex life winds up on the front page.

For me, the ultimate irony of the Assange imbroglio is that the Wikileaks founder has made headlines by raising institutional information transparency to almost Holy Grail status, while at the same time insisting on maintaining a cult of personal privacy.

I hate to be the one to break it to him but life just doesn’t work that way.

Anyone who generates as much media buzz over their cause as Assange can’t expect to maintain a total “cone of silence” around their personal life. Anyone who acts as a front man for a crusade against government secrecy has to assume that anything he does in private won’t remain private for long. Whether he was the victim of dirty tricks or whether he simply got his comeuppance for acting like a dick in bed matters not one whit. By clinging to a fantasy image of an international man of mystery, one who is above the slings and arrows of tabloid journalism, Assange is guilty at the very least of extreme naivité. If he is the victim of a smear campaign, by his own hubris he made it awfully easy for his enemies.

Ultimately, the only thing the Assange scandal proves is that while he may be a successful blogger and hacker and exposer of secrets, as a super spy, I’m afraid he’s looking more and more like a total amateur.

Tags: Assange, C.I.A., dirty tricks, government, honey trap, hubris, irony, Pentagon, rape, scandal, sex, spy, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, wikileaks
Posted in Daily Doubt, Ethics, Politics, media, warfare | No Comments »

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