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  1. #31
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
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    Quote Originally Posted by smilingcat View Post
    It isn't a matte of bravery or not. The workers who are the walking dead know that they will die soon maybe a month, two... maybe a year from now...

    They may have volunteered.

    They may have been asked. If you were asked to do this job, you can not turn it down from cultural standpoint. To refuse, implies you are selfish and self centered and not thinking for the good of all. Your honor is tarnished and so is your family.

    My heart goes out to the walking dead. They are doing this to save their loved ones, their neighbor, their way of life. If I lived in Japan and if my expertise was in nuclear power, I would seriously consider volunteering. I don't have kids, Only family I have is my elderly mother, my sister and her three children and I'm already in my 50's. I've had a good life. This is the strength of the Japanese culture.

    smilingcat
    I think this attitude of what some, (stress some) Japanese might do to volunteer for something deadly as self-sacrifice, is something to me personally, what distinguishes "traditional" Chinese cultural thinking from Japanese. I mean there is a Japanese word for this.

    It's very sad, smiling cat.

    I'm sorry, after losing 2 family members to suicide for completely different reasons, this form of self-sacrifice is not something I agree. The mothers in their anguished grief for the kamikaze son-pilots who died in WWII... by willingly gunning and running their planes into enemy planes or into the ground at instant death.

    I guess it's no different from serving in war willingly. Though the difference is that the latter is always the possiblity you will kill /maim civilians not the "enemy" army/navy member on the other side. Dousing a nuclear blown out plant, you're not intentionally hurting anyone,...just yourself....
    Last edited by shootingstar; 03-18-2011 at 04:52 PM.
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

 

 

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