The Abundance of Less by Andy Couturier
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The Absurd Line

10/18/2017

 
Oizumi has a huge new piece of artwork. Here's what he said about it:

OIZUMI: I made Chernobyl and Fukushima into one object, made into something that looked like the Great Wall of China.  I wanted to make something as a memorial, a remembrance of Fukushima. 
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At first, the government said to people that they have to evacuate to 6 miles away from the plant, then they changed it to 12, and eventually to 18 miles.  (For the US Army they didn't let their soldiers go inside of  48 mile line).  There are farmers there where the 18 mile line goes right down the middle of their garden.  The government tells them that on this side of the line, they can't grow and sell vegetables, but right over here, on the other side, it's just fine.  Total irrationality.  It's like some kind of manga (comic book).
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So I wanted to memorialize this absurdist line.  I want to tell the people of the future that once there was this stupid line.  I made it in front of my house since the line is completely irrational anyway.  They could have put that line anywhere, and both sides are dangerous.  I also I wanted to make something big, something that would last.  So I made this 'objet d'art' here.  It weighs 6 or 7 tons.  It should last for a thousand years.  It's made with a rammed earth technique, and buildings in China made like with rammed earth have lasted 1000 years. 

Inside of the wall, I put a time capsule, inside a tube.  If people find it in a thousand years, they can see the names of all the famous people who said that nuclear power was just fine.  All the academics and journalists and musicians and writers and actors, all of them.  We're suing them in court, and I wanted all their names in there, so that the people of the future can know who they were.

They had the Chernobyl accident and they still didn't see and understand how dangerous it was.  They didn't stop using nuclear power.  It's really just kind of incredible.  Such a terrible thing happened, and they didn't stop.  Twenty five years after Chernobyl, and Japan-and  the rest of the world-just kept using nuclear power.  After the Russian accident, Japan said, “We are smarter, we have more information, we are more careful, we have better technology, it will be safe.”  That was all a lie.

Chernobyl was just one power plant. Fukushima was four. It probably released three, maybe four times as much radiation.  They became unable to control it. ​

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But maybe humans are just like that: they keep going all the way until there's a catastrophe.  Like in World War Two, the Germans went to Poland, and even though that was bad, they kept going, on into Russia, and just kept going.  The Japanese went to Korea and then Manchuria, and then Mongolia and Burma and on and on into New Guiney, and all the way to India.

They just can't stop, even if they're doing a bad thing.  Humans can't slowly change: they have to go all the way until there's a catastrophe.  Maybe people are just that way.  We have a saying in Japan, and it goes back a long way.   It's in a temple in Kyoto.  “I know what is enough.”   To know 'enough'.  We just don't seem to be able to know what is enough.  Human greed just keeps going and going.  ​

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    Author

    Andy Couturier spent 4 years studying sustainable living in rural Japan. There, he worked with local environmentalists and wrote for The Japan Times. Couturier has also built his own house with hand tools, and has taught intuitive writing for more than two decades. He is a student of many different Asian philosophical systems and is fluent in Japanese.

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Copyright © 2017 by Andy Couturier and Spiralglyph Media
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