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On another board I visit[qo, is a member who moved back to the states, this year, after living in Japan, for decades. His take was when it happened, due to Japanese culture, they couldn't publically say how bad it was as it isn't polite (the best way I can remember his description). Contrast that to our news, for instance "people are dying every day from doing bath salts, tune in on Thursday to see how you can stop this" (its Monday, so the new is going to let people die for a couple more days, uninformed). Ours, scare tactics.
that may very well be about Japanese culture. I'm pretty skeptical that our culture (and politics, and economics, etc.) would be setup to handle a crisis like that well either (though the particular management of any given nuclear plant may not be as incompetent as Tepco's). I find the degree to which our culture probably isn't kinda troubling.
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To the death thing, yes, that is best in another thread. Suffice to say, once accepted, and not feared, you live differently.
Not sure that's possible. Maybe I accept the psychologists critique, that everyone is plenty prone to self-delusion at all the times, one probably scarcely knows oneself even if one tries, if I think I'm better at something psychologically than the mass of humanity, there's a good chance I'm not (better at a particular skill now that I may very well be! But I'm talking purely psychology). So one may say they have no fear of death and perhaps feel differently when faced directly with it (a least if it comes "prematurely", the really old do seem to in many cases to some degree let go of life). But I just didn't want the thread to turn into a discussion of my psychology and what my fears and weakness may be, because that form of psychological warfare has been used before to try to win political threads (though not by you, but certain trollish types) and it's really not that interesting compared to actual topic discussion.