Society's Child
This is the first time that the burned reactor has been exposed to the world in almost five years, after the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) went on to construct the cover in October 2011 as a temporary measure following a powerful earthquake and tsunami in March 2011.
The entire site is highly contaminated with rubble and radioactive dust. TEPCO is taking all necessary precautions to prevent any radioactive dust from escaping the contaminated area.
The utility company, according to Asahi news, hopes to dismantle the remaining 17 panels of the protective cover by the end of the year to assess the state of the reactor's interiors and to remove the 392 fuel assemblies from the spent fuel pool in addition to melted nuclear fuel.
The allegations were published on the website of the hacktivist group Fancy Bear, which described the revelations as being "just the tip of the iceberg."
The documents the group says it hacked from the World Anti-Doping Agency's (WADA) files contain information that Serena Williams, one of the world's greatest ever tennis players, was taking a number of banned substances.
Williams was allowed to take oxycodone, hydromorphone, prednisone and methylprednisolone in 2010, 2014 and 2015, despite the substances being placed on WADA's list of banned substances.
However, the documents released also showed that Williams had been given special permission to take some of the drugs. The authorization was given by Dr. Stuart Miller from the International Tennis Federation (ITF).
Serena's older sister Venus was found to have taken prednisone, prednisolone, triamcinolone and formoterol, which are also on WADA's banned list. However, she was given special dispensation to take the substances as long as she adhered to various conditions regarding the use of the drugs.
Comment: Exceptions can be made for exceptional star athletes from exceptional countries.
Just how many Russian athletes are given "special dispensation" to take banned substances? We're guessing very, very few.
Just because these athletes had a therapeutic use exemption doesn't mean that the situation isn't ridiculously hypocritical. We'd be very interested to know who the doctors were that prescribed the drugs and why the athletes needed them. Plus, the drugs themselves are banned because they enhance performance. There's no getting around that, doctor's note or no doctor's note.
See also: Cultural warfare: US attempt to ban Russia from Olympics for 'cheating' is rank hypocrisy

Malika Bayan is seen in court during a trial of hairdresser Merete Hodne who refused Malika Bayan access to her hair salon because of wearing a hijab, in Sandnes, Norway September 8, 2016.
On Monday, Jæren District Court in Rogaland county, southwest Norway, found that hairdresser Merete Hodne "deliberately discriminated" against a Muslim woman, Malika Bayan, when the latter walked into her salon wearing a hijab. The court ordered that Hodne pay Bayan 10,000 kroner ($1,200) in compensation as well as court costs of 5,000 kroner ($750).
In October 2015, 24-year-old Bayan and a friend walked into Hodne's salon in the town of Bryne, where she asked how much it would cost to dye her hair. Hodne, 47, refused and advised Bayan, an ethnic Norwegian Muslim convert, to look elsewhere as she "didn't accept"customers like her. When the case originally went to court, Hodne refused to pay the 8,000 kroner fine, claiming that seeing women in hijabs gave her anxiety.
'What can I say? I get freaked out by the hijab," the Fædrelandsvennen newspaper quoted her as saying during her testimony. "I know that not all Muslims are violent, but before one gets to know them, one can never know."
Comment: What hypocrisy! Hodne and her ilk treat Muslims like they are sub-humans and then have the gall to compare their victims to Nazis.
"Will there now be a third Islamic attempt to conquer Europe? Many Muslims think that and want that, and they say 'Europe is at the end,'" Cardinal Christoph Schönborn said, as cited by the Archdiocese of Vienna.
He was speaking during the church festival "Holy Name of Mary." The holiday commemorated the victory over the Ottoman Empire at the Battle of Vienna in 1683.
He asked God to have mercy on Europe as people of Europe "are in danger of forfeiting our Christian heritage."
After interviewing the victim of a hit-and-run incident on June 19, 2015, Officer Jonathan Thomas was returning to his patrol car when he heard a woman from another house calling for help. Andrea Ellis had cut her arm on a piece of broken glass, and her sister, Brandie Kelly, called 911 to request an ambulance. While Kelly was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, she noticed Officer Thomas outside and called out to him for medical assistance.
On November 28, 2015, a surveillance video captured off-duty police Sgt. Stephen Matakovich ordering 19-year-old Gabriel Despres to leave Heinz Field. In his arrest report, Matakovich falsely claimed that Despres adopted an "aggressive posture" and appeared ready to attack him.
But according to the video, Despres calmly stood with his arms down at his sides when Matakovich suddenly shoved the teen to the ground and began punching him in the head. Although Despres did not provoke the attack and did not appear to fight back, the off-duty cop repeatedly struck him while several other security guards watched.
Hundreds of Italians took to the streets in Naples this week to vent their anger at policies being pushed through by Renzi's government. They included changes to labor laws, education reforms, and the implementation of austerity policies. The protests were organized by several left-wing activists and teachers who said that the policies threaten to wreck the country's already weak economy.
Angry protesters tried Monday to make their way into the main opera house in Naples, Teatro di San Carlo, where Renzi was due to arrive but they were blocked by police on their way. The group turned violent hurling dustbins and throwing street benches.
In April, anti-Renzi demonstrations in Pisa resulted in several arrests and injuries.
Unlike many police dogs that specialize in identifying drugs, bombs or blood, Billie is trained to find DNA evidence used in sex cases by tracking down traces of human sperm.
His nose is so sharp he can detect as little as a milliliter of semen, which is about a third of the average ejaculation, more than a year after it was deposited indoors.
Billie can even smell eight-week-old sperm outside if it is "protected from the worst of the weather."

Thousands of Muslims pray at the recently renovated and expanded Cathedral Mosque in Moscow. Can you imagine this scene ever taking place in Washington, DC?
This was a major theme of an April 7 presentation at George Washington University's Elliott School by Bulat Akhmetkarimov, a PhD candidate at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). At the event, titled "Islam and the Dynamics of Ethno-Confessional Regimes in Russia, 1990-2012," Akhmetkarimov discussed the Russian state's attitudes toward religion and how attitudes toward Islam have evolved in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
As the largest religious minority in Russia, Muslims make up roughly 11 percent of Russia's total population. Based on statistics provided by Pew Research Center, this percentage is predicted to increase to roughly 13 percent by 2030 and nearly 17 percent percent by 2050, with about twenty million Muslims in Russia.
Comment: What a tricky piece of data for Westerners to make sense of.
Liberals hate Putin, but want to welcome Muslim refugees.
Conservatives want to like Putin, but are terrified of Muslims.
Hmmm... How do SOTT readers reconcile the two viewpoints?
Comment: One funny - and very notable - thing about russophobia in the West is that even when analysts criticize Russia they can't help but admire it. The following 'smart' article for 'smart Westerners' is a case in point...

Kazan City, capital of the Republic of Tatarstan, lies 800km east of Moscow. Over 1,000 years old, the city has been completely redeveloped (beginning in 2000, funnily enough)
Russia, more than most other countries, knows the difference between nations— ethnic, cultural, geographic bodies — and sovereign countries. The Russian Federation alone contains dozens of discrete nations: ethnic Russians, of course, but also Yakuts in the east, Chechens and Ossetians in the Caucasus, ethnic Ukrainians, Russian Jews, and a widely dispersed population of Muslim Tatars. Each nation speaks its own language, practices its own religion, and follows its unique traditions. They are citizens of, and outsiders in, a Federation dominated by ethnic Russians.
This diversity poses a major obstacle to Russian President Vladimir Putin's political agenda. Since the early 2000s, Putin's government has pushed for a strong, conservative patriotism across the Federation. Russia, as Putin sees it, is on the rise, well on its way to resuming its old status as superpower. That new power needs shoring-up at home. Slavophile clubs, nationalist militias in Russia's European enclaves, and an invigorated Orthodox Church are key buttresses in Moscow's snarling ascent.
Comment: "Snarling ascent", very clever! But is it applicable? Where are Russia's killing fields? Where are its torture chambers? Where is its global, intrusive mass surveillance system? Where are the memos and recorded phone conversations in which it dictates policy to others?
Comment: A healthy, organic, and delicious pork chop at that!
What choice meats might we find if we peeked under the social fabric of US or European society?
If Russian integration of minorities has been successful (and that during a time when religious and ethnic fracture lines are being ruthlessly ruptured all around the globe), while in Western societies Muslims (and others) are treated like dirt, what does that tell us about the nature of Western regimes vis a vis Putin's regime?












Comment: Protective wall removal...contaminated site...what if there is another tsunami in the very near future? They haven't even assessed the internal damage from 5 years ago. Send in the robots!