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Re: Genetic Effects of Radiation
- To: "radsafe%romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu"<radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu>
- Subject: Re: Genetic Effects of Radiation
- From: "J. Wes Mouser" <wes.mouser@srs.gov>
- Date: Wed, 02 Aug 1995 08:39:00 -0400 (EDT)
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- Posting-Date: Wed, 02 Aug 1995 08:48:00 -0400 (EDT)
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Tosh Ushino (ushinot@songs.sce.com) eloquently wrote:
[snip, see below]
"I've already wasted lot of your time. If anyone wants to ask me specific
questions, please contact me privately."
Reading this didn't waste any of my time. It was one of the more informative
things I've read on this topic.
Wester
wes.mouser@srs.gov
Standard Disclaimers
"I had to do a lot of soul-searching before I decided to respond to
Susan. My father is one of the Hiroshima "hibakusha." He was a cadet
in Imperial Navy Officer School (like Annapolis). He was lucky he did
not receive disfiguring injury. His friend standing next to him
facing toward the blast was not so lucky. My father is not a
registered survivor, not because he feared discrimination, but because
he did not want to be a statistic and be "pestered" by researchers....
he wanted anonymity. When he married my mother, everyone know he was
in Hiroshima.
The National Geographic article intimated that private investigators were
hired solely to findout if the prospective bride or groom was hibakusha.
This is not true. It was a common practice then to hire a private
investigator to check the background and the family of future in-laws,
not just because of the bomb. This practice continues to some extent
today, particularly in well-to-do families. What bothered my maternal
grandfather most was not that my father was hibakusha, but that my
mother's family was samurai class and my father's family was peasant
class. Today, my 73 year old father is very healthy for man of his age,
and my brothers and I are normal (some of my friends and coworkers may
beg to differ on this point).
I'm certain that lot of survivors, particularly those with disfiguring
injuries, had a hard time finding a mate, if at all. But my impression
and my wife's recollection (my wife is from Hiroshima) was that
eventually most of them had been able to get married and raise a family.
I've been asked if my father is opposed to my chosen career. The
answer is not at all. In war, people, combatants and civilians alike,
die horrible death. Such is the nature of war. In his view, the fact
that nuclear weapon was used does not make it more or less humane.
I've already wasted lot of your time. If anyone wants to ask me specific
questions, please contact me privately."