"End of the day, factory whistle cries, Men walk through these gates with death in their eyes" - Bruce Springsteen, Factory1The technological issue of nuclear energy is intertwined with the exploitation of human labor in a hierarchy of interests, and how human labor is expended is an economic and moral issue. The Grand Scientific Project from the time of Francis Bacon up to the Manhattan Project of Oppenheimer and Fermi has been a dangerous gamble for humanity even though the advertised purpose is that progress is good.
"Bring us the living dead. People no one will miss." - Fukushima official's request to Yakuza2
"TEPCO's involvement with anti-social forces and their inability to filter them out of the work-place is a national security issue ... Nuclear energy shouldn't be in the hands of the yakuza. They're gamblers and an intelligent person doesn't want them to have atomic dice to play with." - Japanese Senator3
The exploitation of labor at nuclear plants depends on the tools of social engineering, of government, mass media and schools. This is the hidden and shameful side of today's materialist society and belies our complicity in a criminalized culture.
Inefficient and corrupt employment practices at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant (FNPP) are prolonging the disaster. Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) outsources 90 percent of the work to subcontractors, mainly utilizing Japan's criminal syndicates, "the Yakuza." Japan is still a middle class society and most people will not volunteer for nuclear work. Japan risks running out of workers who have not exceeded their legal radiation limits.
Considered to be "Japan's largest organized crime group" - who are on the radar of the US Treasury Dept. (another big crime group)4 - the Yakuza offer a service to society by sopping up its losers and giving them a dodgy occupation.
Journalist Jake Adelstein, an expert on the Yakuza, risked his life as a reporter on the crime beat in Japan. Not because of shoot outs or knife fights, but because he had to take up smoking cigarettes in order to fit in with police and yakuza! These short video interviews offer a useful introduction into how the Yakuza operate5,6. Tepco's relationship with the Yakuza is a cesspool of corruption from the highest to the lowest levels in its organization. "A senior National Police Agency officer, speaking on grounds of anonymity said, 'TEPCO has a history of doing business with the yakuza that is far deeper than just using their labor' " (Op. cit. "The Yakuza and the Nuclear Mafia").









