Monday, February 3, 2014

(OT) Strange Logic of Some "Beyond Nuclear" Supporters on Tokyo Gubernatorial Election


I have to say these must be the same people who participated in the fluffy "beyond nuclear" demonstrations (more like entertainment festivals) in Tokyo starting in the early summer of 2011, as the Fukushima I NPP nuclear accident was very, very far from being "stabilized" and reports of high levels of radiation contamination in sewer sludge and ashes from garbage incineration were beginning to pour in.

What strange logic? When some supporters of the anti-nuclear candidates start to say things like:

If the combined votes for Mr. Utsunomiya (liberal attorney) and Mr. Hosokawa (former prime minister) exceed the votes for Mr. Masuzoe (TV personality and former Minister of Health, backed by LDP/Komei), we will win!


it seems to me tantamount to either delusion or concession of defeat.

If the combined votes for the two exceed those for Masuzoe, that means it will be Masuzoe who will win, not their candidates. They must mean a "symbolic" win, not the real one.

Meanwhile, 10 or so influential "intellectuals" (文化人) - novelists, journalists - who are mostly in support of Mr. Hosokawa held a press conference yesterday urging the two anti-nuclear candidates to somehow "join efforts" to beat Mr. Masuzoe.

At this point in the election, I don't think there is any legal way for either candidates to drop out, or collaborate with the promise of a prominent position in the administration after the election.

Younger supporters of Mr. Utsunomiya have been rather busy dissing Mr. Hosokawa and Mr. Koizumi in the past few days, often bringing up the money "scandal" of Mr. Hosokawa from 20 years ago which even the very person who had instigated the "scandal" admits it was all made up.

Another "smear" point by Mr. Utsunomiya's supporters is that people in Tokyo don't care about nuclear power. All they care about is "welfare and healthcare", they say, citing the opinion polls. Their candidate does address those issues in details, they say.

What's missing in those details is how he would pay for them, but that's apparently of no concern to the supporters.

The winner of the election looks clear to me for now, unless the turnout is much, much bigger than the normal election. Even then, splitting the votes between the two supposedly anti-nuclear candidates will likely to result in the win for the LDP/Komei backed (i.e. backed by huge organized votes) candidate.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Utsunomiya could ask his supporters to vote for Hosokawa.
I understand the Utsunomiya side is unhappy because Hosokawa got on the antinuclear bandwagon at the last minute but is there is another choice?
Beppe

Anonymous said...

No, no choice. Utsunomiya and his supporters seem to think Hosokawa should concede. Delusional.

Anonymous said...

OT or not, sorry it is in French, a post by a scientific director about the irradiation effects of the chinese nuclear tests.
Use your favorite translator. It should be enough to get the point.
http://sciencepourvousetmoi.blogs.sciencesetavenir.fr/archive/2014/01/21/essais-nucleaires-chinois-les-milliers-de-morts-s-invitent-a-22311.html

Phiphi

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