It’s been a week since I came to Arad in Romania. I finally got - TopicsExpress



          

It’s been a week since I came to Arad in Romania. I finally got my apartment. It’s actually a house with the shared yard. The rent is 130 €/month, so your donation will never be wasted on luxury. It was built 140 years ago, nobody has entered the second floor. However, it has glass fiber so Fukushima Diary will be updated literally as fast as before or even faster. and the neighbors are all lovely. It’s actually quite close to the center of the town. I planned to move to the remote village but didn’t have enough time to research because the owner of this current apartment found a buyer. He needs to sell it as soon as possible, I didn’t want to be his burden. After all, I think I found the best apartment / house. I will use this place as a base to continue researching. After the latter half of next week, I will go back to Bucharest again to find the place for Fukushima Diary corporation’s headquarters. The company needs the proper headquarters from this winter. It takes 13 hours to go to Bucharest so I want to make it as efficient as possible. Everyone tells me why I don’t live in Bucharest. The reason why I stick to living in the remote place is there is a hope there. I’m already starting two kinds of research in Arad, one is for wine industry, and the other one is for real estate. Some of the readers think about the generations of grandchildren and even further. They are thinking they want to leave something to inherit after moving. One of the options is the wine industry. There are actually some abandoned wine farms here. Now I’m thinking about how to make time and budget to spend on the research. Also, the real estate is really cheap here compared to Japan or other European nations. Some Japanese people are thinking of having an “emergency shelter” or the place for early retirement. I receive requests about the research a couple of times a day. I need to decide if I start researching after being paid or before being paid, or even without being paid. Maybe it’s too late. However, if someone lives one second longer by leaving the contaminated area one second sooner, I’m rewarded for all the things to do about Fukushima Diary. From looking at the latest thyroid test result, there seems to be least hope. Government and medical institutes are starting to protect themselves from the potential lawsuits. International politics look like they are controlled only by peer pressure. I hope Fukushima Diary to become the pilot flame one day so it flares up when everyone finally notices what is going on. This is the goal of Fukushima Diary.
Posted on: Sat, 15 Jun 2013 19:06:14 +0000

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