Asia heart of world,Afghanistan heart of Asia,Hazarajat heart of Afghanistan,Bamyan Heart of All Hazaras in world,these boys are belongs to Bamyan.look at there friendship they don’t think about bout there Poverty.they need your help.
Photo and caption by Jamail Haider.
On February 28, 2011 Polish and American Soldiers with TF White Eagle in Ghazni Province Afghanistan hand out blankets, coats and school supplies in a small village near Ghazni City. Two days later the villagers burned the items in a protest against Coalition Forces. (US Army photo and caption by Ryan Perez.)
Radiation leaks from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant
will force people in Iitatemura to abandon satoyama–natural woodlands near human communities. Residents of Nagadoro district in southern Iitatemura have been devoted to preserving the picturesque satoyama woodlands. A gentle stream burbles through the landscape, where residents grow vegetables.Hatsuo Sugishita, 61, who left his company to operate a stone processing and sales business in the town after he inherited a plot of land there, has cherished the satoyama with his wife, Takiko.
“We haven’t decided anything–where we’ll go or how to earn a living. If nobody lives in the satoyama, this place will soon be ruined. Even if we can come back, the satoyama can’t be returned to its original state,” Sugishita said. “I want people in the Kanto region who received the benefits of the nuclear power plant to understand our feelings.”
I assume that these children are refugees, because you almost never see such an incoherent mix of costumes anywhere except the camps. Are they really orphans? What can I tell you? They’re dirty, they’re alone, and they look like orphans to me.
This photo shows up on three or four websites devoted to Parwan Province, and a couple of them are infested with malware. On the others there’s only the same bizarre caption: “Beautiful Parwan Province.”
An official at Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, admitted Wednesday that fuel of the plant’s No. 1 reactor could be melting.
Describing the possible meltdown, Matsumoto said it can be compared to a state in which molten fuel accumulates like lava.
So what happens if that red-hot nuclear lava melts through the bottom of the containment vessel?
Nobody knows.
And meanwhile, what’s happening at Reactor No. 2?
The core at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear reactor has melted through the reactor pressure vessel, Democratic Congressman Edward Markey told a hearing on the nuclear disaster on Wednesday.
“I have been informed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that the core of Unit Two has gotten so hot that part of it has probably melted through the reactor pressure vessel,” said Markey, a prominent nuclear critic in the House of Representatives.
The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency has reported to a Cabinet Office safety panel that nuclear fuel pellets in the Nos. 1 to 3 reactors at the quake-hit Fukushima power station are believed to have partially melted.
And at No. 4?
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Fukushima No. 4
100 tons of plutonium are stored in that beautiful facility!
An Afghan girl looks on as members of the Iowa National Guard’s 734th Agribusiness Development Team repair the irrigation system at the Chowkay Demonstration Farm in Afghanistan’s Kunar Province on Jan. 2. Members of the ADT also prepared the farm’s greenhouse for vegetable planting during their mission. (U.S. Air Force photo by Capt. Peter Shinn) (Released).

Photocredit: Farzana Wahidy
The basic problem was revealed by the NRC’s (Reactor Safety Team), which drafted a report that combined the collective assessment of nuclear physicists and engineers around the world. Contrary to the rosy press releases by the utility, this report revealed the true depth of the nuclear accident.
When emissions of toxic misinformation at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Reactor #3 exceeded 100,000 times the normal corporate background, X-ray diagrams of the site revealed a previously unsuspected source.
About a year after Jacob Freeze won the Nobel Prize for Photography, he consented to an interview with Robert W. Fuller.
Bob: How did you spend the prize money, Jakie?
Jakie: I lost the check.
Bob: Did you turn the ceremony into some kind of bizarro street-theatre, like the rest of your life?
Jakie: I forgot to show up.
Bob: When did you first decide what you wanted to do and be?
Jakie: When I saw a photo of Raphael’s St. George in a book of myths and legends that my grandmother Mary Whitaker was reading to me. I was three years old.
Bob: Then you wanted to be a visual artist like Raphael?
Jakie: No.
Bob: Did you want to be a hero and saint, like St. George?
Jakie: No. I wanted to be the horse.
HARHARHARHAR!!!













