Friday, April 1, 2011

Not April Fools'

Terry Jones: With Enough Bibles And Guns
Afghans Angry Over Florida Koran Burning Kill U.N. Staff
By ENAYAT NAJAFIZADA and ROD NORDLAND
The New York Times, April 1, 2011

MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan — Stirred up by a trio of angry mullahs, thousands of protesters overran the compound of the United Nations in Mazar-i-Sharif, killing at least 12 people, Afghan and United Nations officials said...

Friday’s episode began when three mullahs, addressing worshipers at Friday Prayers inside the Blue Mosque here, one of Afghanistan’s holiest places, urged people to take to the streets to agitate for the arrest of Terry Jones, the Florida pastor who oversaw the burning of a Koran on March 20.

I'm sure "Pastor" Jones will take personal responsibility for his actions (as all christians do) and just sit right down and write letters of condolence to the families of each of the twelve UN employees -- who would still be alive, but for Jones' ignorant, bigoted and pathetically deluded speech and behavior.

UPDATE: "Pastor" Jones says not responsible and calls for "retribution" over the murder of UN employees in Afghanistan -- how, exactly, wasn't made clear.

Mr. Jones said in an interview with Agence France-Presse on Friday that he was “devastated” by the killings of 12 people in a violent protest in Afghanistan when a mob, enraged by the burning of a Koran by Mr. Jones’s church, attacked the United Nations compound in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. “We don’t feel responsible for that,” he told the news service...

In a statement, Mr. Jones demanded that the United States and United Nations take “immediate action” against Muslim nations in retaliation for the deaths. “The time has come to hold Islam accountable” ... [h]e also called on the United Nations to act against “Muslim-dominated countries,” which he said “must alter the laws that govern their countries to allow for individual freedoms and rights, such as the right to worship, free speech and to move freely without fear of being attacked or killed.”

Some members of [Jones' church] the Dove World Outreach Center said they feared they would be attacked.

“We have a huge stack of death threats,” [a church member] said. “We take precautions. I have a handgun. A lot of us have concealed weapons permits..."


What Would You Like The Numbers To Say?

NFP (Non-Farm Payroll) Report

A friend at work once told me a story about being the third person in the room when the CEO of the corporation he worked for met with the CFO. "What about the quarterlies?" The CEO asked, referring to Quarterly financial data. "What do the numbers tell us?"

After a pause, the CFO said, "What would you like the numbers to say?"

At 5:30AM PDST today, the Bureau Of Labor Statistics reported a net increase of some 216,000 jobs last month, lowering the reported unemployment rate from approximately 9.4% to 8.8%.

I'm reposting the article below verbatim from Barry Ritholtz's The Big Picture. I don't often repost someone's writing in its entirety (the assumption being that readers are capable of following the helpful link provided so you can read on your own). However, I'm only a Dog, no one listens to me, and Herr Ritholtz says all this more succinctly than I ever could:

Contextualizing the NFP Data
By Barry Ritholtz - April 1, 2011 - 7:17AM

The U.S. Employment Situation report aka Non-Farm Payrolls may be one of the most misunderstood, over-traded datapoint that exists. I want to contextualize today’s jobs numbers for readers in a way that helps you to understand what it does — and doesn’t — actually mean.

Please bear with me as I over-simplify this for illustration purposes.

To begin with, you need to understand the size and scope on the Labor market, and what is actually being modeled. There are about 140 million Americans working full time in the country today. Another 15 million or so would like full time jobs, but don’t have one. They may be working part time or not at all.

What the monthly Employment Situation report measures — in near real time — is the net changes in that number. Take the total net number of new hires, subtract the job losses, and you get the marginal change in Employment.

Since our starting number is so big (140m+), and the monthly net changes are so small (200k), the overall change is a statistically small number. Typically, the net change is between one tenth (140k) and one quarter (350k). During the height of the 2008-09 crisis, the net change was approximately half a percent (700k).

The model that produces the monthly number is part measurement (Establishment surveys), part extrapolation (Birth Death adjustment). This is then revised, as more and better data comes in later. The model gets re-benchmarked, seasonality is adjusted for, and one-off weather or other events impact (and that impact then attenuates away) the overall NFP series.

Thus, any single 0.1% data point needs to be recognized for what it is. One data point in a longer series. This is why I continually have emphasized the importance of longer term employment trends rather than obsess over any given month.

While employment reacts to the broader economy — this is why it typically lags the economic cycle — it does contain forward looking components. This is why we always track Hours worked, Income, and Temp help. These three components tend to lead the economic cycle.

Hence, there is lots of good and valuable information contained in the monthly NFP release — it's just not what most people think it is.

~~~

This month, consensus estimates are for 190,000 net job gains. In a normal economic cycle, this would be considered a soft number, barely greater than the 150k need to stay ahead of population growth. However, in a post credit crisis economy, where GDP remains middling and job creation is not robust, this is considered a decent number. To really move the needle on Unemployment, 300-400k per month (or better) is what is required...

This is not much different from what Paul Krugman has been saying for years (yes, folks; we're going into either the third or the fourth year of this Great Recession, depending upon whether you're counting from September of 2007 or 2008): In order to erase unemployment, you must create not only jobs for those sixteen to twenty million already unemployed -- but for the approximately 300,000 new entrants in the labor force, every month.

It's also something Rithholtz doesn't delve into here -- a question of what kinds of jobs all these people find.

If a middle-level manager, a teacher, or an aircraft mechanic are re-employed... as janitors, fast-food clerks, and taxi drivers... is that really a "Recovery"?

So, 216K new jobs are nice; better than nothing, but... Feh.


Thursday, March 31, 2011

Reddy Kilowatt: Burning Down The House

From Japan's Kyodo News service:
Radiation level in seawater hits new high near Fukushima plant
TOKYO, March 31, Kyodo

In a sign that radiation is continuing to leak from the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, radioactive iodine-131 at a concentration of 4,385 times the maximum level permitted under law has been detected in seawater near the plant, according to the latest data made available Thursday morning.

Japanese authorities were also urged to consider taking action over radioactive contamination outside the 20-kilometer evacuation zone around the plant, as the International Atomic Energy Agency said readings from soil samples collected in the village of Iitate, about 40 km from the plant, exceeded its criteria for evacuation.

...the concentration level of radioactive iodine-131 in a seawater sample collected Wednesday afternoon around 330 meters south of the plant exceeded the previous high recorded the day before. In Tuesday's sample, the concentration level was 3,355 times the maximum legal limit.

The authorities denied that either situation posed an immediate threat to human health, but the government said it plans to enhance radiation data monitoring around the plant on the Pacific coast...
My favorite part is, "authorities denied that either situation posed an immediate threat to human health".

So, if 3,355 times the maximum legal limit of radioactivity isn't considered a threat to human beings, perhaps the good people in the Japanese government might explain where they draw the line? 5,000 times? 10,000 times? And what, in Japan's population, are the acceptable numbers of radiation-induced deaths, birth defects and cancers?

But, I suppose these questions are, uh, impolite.


Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Never-Ending Story

JPMorgan Loses Court Ruling Over Loan Putbacks
REUTERS - JPMorgan Chase & Co could be forced to repurchase thousands of home equity loans, after a judge ruled in favor of a bond insurer that argued it could build its case based on a sampling of loans.

The ruling against EMC Mortgage Corp, once a unit of Bear Stearns Cos, comes amid many lawsuits seeking to force banks to buy back tens of billions of dollars of mortgage and other home loans that went sour. JPMorgan bought Bear Stearns in 2008.

Syncora Guarantee Inc. now can pursue claims concerning the entire 9,871-loan pool that backed a securities issue, according to the ruling late Friday from U.S. District Judge Paul Crotty in Manhattan.

The ruling lowers the hurdle for insurers trying to prove they were deceived by banks, and increases the potential that banks could be forced to buy back more loans.
(Read the entire article here.)

At least several Trillion dollars in Mortgage-Backed Securities (aka Collateralized Debt Obligations) sold through all major Wall Street investment houses between 2008 and 2008 are backed by 'pools' of home mortgages.

The mortgages were sold by unscrupulous and greed-driven leasing companies (like Coutrywide Mortgage), who didn't care if the mortgages were based on bad information, or if the homebuyers were later screwed by resetting, adjustable rates. The idea was to produce more and more mortgages to add to the pools of new mortgages so that MBS / CDO's could be created and the mortgage companies and investments houses and banks could charge fees and get their cut.

All the MBS's and CDO's are still out there. However, no one knows what the underlying mortgages are actually worth. And, the banks holding those mortgages have avoided having to repurchase them. Cases like the one noted above may change that.

...at least, for a time. Soon, the funny little law Governor Walker in Wisconsin rammed through without any real due process will make its way to the Supreme Court. As will this case.

I predict that Little Tony Scalia, three years old, and Bobby Alito and Johnny Roberts, and Little Clarence, and Little Tony Kennedy, too (Gosh, that description is like a kind of Fascist "Our Gang" comedy film, huh?) will all vote "No!" to the right of Americans to bargain collectively. Who cares what the labor movement since 1850 was about? Corporations Are So People Too!

And in another case, they will say that "Big Banks Are People Too", and rule that they shouldn't have to pay anything at all for any thing. No, sir. And those whiny bunch of greedy people who forced poor Angelo Mozilo to give them bad home loans will just have to take their medicine and eat their pie. Every bite.

Because this is America, where Der Tea Partei says We don't like them activist judges; no, sir.

Unless...



Where I'd Rather Be


Currently about 57 F, 17:30PM. Want to see what it's like right now? Check this out -- The view is northeast, from the Historical Museum, over the Spree and the Palace Bridge, across the Museum Insel towards Alexanderplatz. The Berliner Dom on the left, Berliner Rathaus in the background, and the big white tube beyond the Dom is the base of the Fernsehturm.

Not sure what the covered construction cube in the foreground is about -- possibly the beginning of the reconstruction of the Hohenzollern palace, damaged during WW2 and later demolished, rebuilding for which was just approved by the Berlin City council last year.


Monday, March 28, 2011

Tracking The Extremely Bad Things

The New York Times online now has posted a running status page on conditions at each of the four damaged reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi TEPCO nuclear plant, where the situation continues to become worse in terms of radiation levels and contamination.

You can go to the page here.

This is a crisis in slow motion; it isn't like the earthquake and tsunami, over in a few hours, leaving devastation behind -- a bit like photographs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki which seem so eerily similar but so far away, now.

I should note that I'm not a disaster junkie; I don't perceive of this is a science-fiction situation and hang on every news report about the reactor's status. I'm interested in it because in many ways, it should not have spun as badly out of control as it has. There are reasons for that and people responsible.

It's a crisis in engineering, in global policy involving development of nuclear power in a world running out of energy, and one part of a continuing, deeply saddening human tragedy. A quarter-million people are effectively homeless in central Japan, living for the most part without complaint in makeshift shelters and with no idea what will happen to them next.

Several hundred men are trying to perform work at the Fukushima plant and exposing themselves to the kinds of hazards that only appear in our nightmares. It takes a very specific mindset, and willingness to place the good of the whole above your own safety, to do what these men are doing; giving these people a moment's thought at some point in your day wouldn't be a bad idea.



NOTE: [Not A Paid Advertisement] Today, the New York Times inaugurated its digital subscription services, offering online access packages for PC/Laptops, Tablets and Smartphones in three different combinations. Subscribers to the NYT's print version automatically receive unlimited access to the paper's online version.

You can say a lot about the Times, but there are very few newspapers left (and few news organizations, period, that aren't part of Little Rupert's bloated, distorted, fast-food media empire) with any journalistic integrity at all.

I know the NYT has occasionally made, uh, Boo-Boos (remember Little Judy Miller?) in that regard. And that the subscription business model of getting people to sign up to spend a set amount of money every month isn't as sexy and bleeding-edge as other areas in the digital Intertubeverse.

In sum, I like the Times, and am willing to put my Dog biscuits where my barking is. Take a look at what they're proposing; you want, you don't want.

Mongo Reading Paul Krugman, Or Shadow Statistics, Or 'Salon'


Saturday, March 26, 2011

No Spiritual Priorties Whatsoever

Years ago, when I was reading Doonesbury (I haven't for almost two decades, and wouldn't recommend it, now), I recall a musical question (asked during the decade of Saint Ronald The Dim) by one of its characters: What was the principal effect of our involvement in Vietnam?, and the answer was something like An abandonment of America's spiritual priorities!

Bob Herbert, columnist at the New York Times, is leaving that paper after eighteen years of reminding readers that America is also a society of the poor and nearly-poor, and are often ignored and manipulated for the benefit of others.

His last column is entitled, "Losing Our Way", and The Great Curmudgeon reminded me in a post this morning to read it:
Welcome to America in the second decade of the 21st century. An army of long-term unemployed workers is spread across the land, the human fallout from the Great Recession and long years of misguided economic policies... The few jobs now being created too often pay a pittance, not nearly enough to pry open the doors to a middle-class standard of living...

Limitless greed, unrestrained corporate power and a ferocious addiction to foreign oil have led us to an era of perpetual war and economic decline. Young people today are staring at a future in which they will be less well off than their elders...

The U.S. has not just misplaced its priorities. When the most powerful country ever to inhabit the earth finds it so easy to plunge into the horror of warfare but almost impossible to find adequate work for its people or to properly educate its young, it has lost its way entirely.
I've reached a place where I sincerely believe that the various Conservative politicians and currents in America are narcissistic, violent, even sociopathic elements in the culture which must be resisted at all costs and removed from any position of influence.

I'd like them to go elsewhere, just as they'd like to pack most of us off to camps in Siberia if it were possible. Likewise, the upper percentages of our Wealthy: They're always going to be rich; they can live wherever they want, so let them go there. Go to the south of France or Sloane Gardens or Tony little hideaways only their set know about. But get out of my country.

At the same time, I discard the axiomatic belief in the Democratic Party as the place where Hope and relief, where the embodiment of equitable policies for human beings, resides. Obama has turned out in many ways to be as poor a leader and as much a plaything of Wealth as any Republican -- certainly Nixon, Reagan, Bush Sr., or Lil' Boots -- in other words, just another corruptible pol with a wonderful public relations machine.

The leader of Obama's economic council of advisers was Larry Summers (whom I've written about before). Summers was replaced by Jeffrey Imhalt, the head of General Electric Corporation -- which pays no taxes, at all, due to "aggressive lobbying"; in fact, by their reckoning, the government owes GE money. But, the fact that Obama is asking persons of the ilk of a Summers or Imhalt to lead -- instead of Paul Volker (who was on the same council, until effectively ignored and forced out), or Nobel economists like Paul Krugmann or Joseph Stiglitz... is telling. Not that it wasn't obvious before.

We're told politics is very complicated. Look at how complex a situation Libya is! The D.C. establishment might say. It isn't that simple. We can't just do this, or that; we have allies to consider -- and there's so much intelligence we have, that we can't show you. And, the economy is so very, very complex, too. We'll fix things, but we must be careful; proceed very slowly. We understand your pain. But just trust us grownups. We haven't done so badly so far, now have we?.

I realize that Conservatives and the Wealthy "are people too" and "are Americans too", and that my demands that they go to fucking Mars (there's no air, but the first fifty billion is tax free! There! Happy now?) are only juvenile expressions of helpless anger.

However, if asked, the American Right wouldn't have any trouble removing the Left from the United States; the Right in its rhetoric and actions constantly threatens people on the Left with physical violence, even murder -- to make room for their more godly and correct ways of living.

When was the last time a "liberal" committed an act of violence against a meeting of conservatives, or targeted them in their homes, or stood outside their businesses and prayed openly for a god to strike them dead? Where are the left-wing websites spewing hate for the Right, calling their women whores and the rest dirty, ignorant rednecks? I'll answer the questions: Never and None.

I haven't stopped being a nonviolent Progressive in any way, make, shape or form. The argument I make -- and that I'm suggesting Bob Herbert might make -- is that in order to redefine what our country stands for (if, you know, you think that's important), perhaps we need to go back to first principles -- ones where race, gender; age; disability; sexual orientation; and even fucking food choice is no barrier to human rights. Where it's made clear that employment, housing, clean air and water, medical care and disability, security in older age, reflect the compact between a government and its citizens -- not a list of 'services' or 'products' to be privatized, and shoved at us like fat-meat hamburgers from a fast-food chain.
Nearly 14 million Americans are jobless and the outlook for many of them is grim. Since there is just one job available for every five individuals looking for work, four of the five are out of luck...

There is plenty of economic activity in the U.S., and plenty of wealth. But like greedy children, the folks at the top are seizing virtually all the marbles. Income and wealth inequality in the U.S. have reached stages that would make the third world blush. As the Economic Policy Institute has reported, the richest 10 percent of Americans received an unconscionable 100 percent of the average income growth in the years 2000 to 2007, the most recent extended period of economic expansion.
Perhaps we need to understand -- as anyone using common sense can -- that a multi-billion-dollar corporation is not an individual human being, and has no business being treated as such in a legal sense.

Maybe America really needs to be the place where truths are told -- not some manipulative approximation of selected facts, and not a denial or censoring of science. Where education is recognized as a process of discovery and exploration, not a process of force-feeding political and religious dogma to children through textbooks filled with distortions and obfuscations, and school boards intimidated by shrieking Teabaggers and evangelicals.

Americans behave as if [the disparity in wealth] is somehow normal or acceptable. It shouldn’t be, and didn’t used to be. Through much of the post-World War II era, income distribution was far more equitable, with the top 10 percent of families accounting for just a third of average income growth, and the bottom 90 percent receiving two-thirds. That seems like ancient history now.

The current maldistribution of wealth is also scandalous. In 2009, the richest 5 percent claimed 63.5 percent of the nation’s wealth. The overwhelming majority, the bottom 80 percent, collectively held just 12.8 percent.
Perhaps we need to be a country where the population is treated as adults, partners in an evolving democratic experiment -- not peasants to be herded into low-wage jobs, military service for endless wars; kept docile with priced just right electronic gadgetry and cable teevee; and dumped into tent cities when the Masters Of The Universe say, Oopsie! Our Bubble broke the economy, again! We made out like bandits, and so did our buddies -- But, hey; that's business!

Where there are no secret kangaroo courts and wiretapping. Where multibillionaires who break the law or create harm do go to jail -- or are treated as the IRS treats some who owe taxes: Allowing them several hundred dollars per month income, and forced them to sell everything they own but a bed, chair, refrigerator and limited kitchen utensils.

Perhaps we need to mean what we say. Perhaps we need to be a nation of equitable laws, possibly for the first time. Perhaps we need to understand that the "American Experiment" is still an evolving, ongoing one.. and that it can still fail, if it hasn't already. Perhaps it really does need to "be that simple".

But, I'm only a Dog, and no one listens to me.


Friday, March 25, 2011

Utterly, Amazingly Extremely Very Very Very Bad Things

Attack Of The Mushroom People (aka Matango), 1963

From Associated Press, this morning, Friday, March 25th:
A suspected breach in the reactor core at one unit of a stricken Fukushima nuclear plant could mean more serious radioactive contamination, Japanese officials said Friday...

Suspicions of a possible breach were raised when two workers waded into water 10,000 times more radioactive than normal and suffered skin burns when the water splashed over their protective boots, the [Japanese] Nuclear and Industry Safety Agency said.

From The New York Times online this morning (Note: This was a below-the-fold article, not a headlined story):
TOKYO — Japanese officials began quietly encouraging people to evacuate a larger swath of territory around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant on Friday, a sign that they hold little hope that the crippled facility will soon be brought under control.

The authorities said they would now assist people who want to leave the area from 12 to 19 miles outside the crippled plant and said they were now encouraging “voluntary evacuation” from the area. Those people had been advised March 15 to remain indoors, while those within a 12-mile radius of the plant had been ordered to evacuate...

...Prime Minister Naoto Kan dodged a reporter’s question about whether the government was ordering a full evacuation, saying officials were simply following the recommendation of the Japan Nuclear Safety Commission.

In the latest setback to the effort to contain the nuclear crisis, evidence emerged that the reactor vessel of the No. 3 unit may have been damaged... [raising] the possibility that radiation from the mox fuel in the reactor — a combination of uranium and plutonium — could be released.

One sign that a breach may have occurred in the reactor vessel... took place on Thursday when three workers who were trying to connect an electrical cable to a pump in a turbine building next to the reactor were injured when they stepped into water that was found to be significantly more radioactive than normal in a reactor.

Conditions At The Fukushima TEPCO Plant Create Difficulties For
Workers Attempting To Repair Damage To Reactor Cooling Systems

Typical understatement for the NYT: Any water which is ten thousand times more radioactive than ordinary H2O is hot, hot hot. And, while I'm only a Dog and not a nuclear engineer (though I may play one on television; you just don't know, do you?), water at that level of radioactivity has to be coming from the nuclear core in that reactor, meaning the actual steel containment vessel is breached.

One observation I can make based on common sense is, seawater is being pumped into the reactor vessels in all four facilities. Normally, it would be fresh water, and part of a semi-closed system where (in theory) the water would not be allowed to flow freely back into the environment.

Now, the seawater is running into cracked containment vessels and spent-fuel pools, and has been running into the ground for almost two weeks -- right into the ground water table. In Tokyo, levels of radioactivity in the city's drinking water has been reported to rise, at the same time the Japanese government asks everyone to remain calm; there is no real danger.

More understatement came in the government's reaction to news of a possible reactor core breach -- they 'suggested' that persons in a wider zone around the plant might 'voluntarily' evacuate because the nuclear facility may be able to glow in the dark at night, sufficiently to be spotted from Pluto. Might want to step back from that.

This reticence to admit to the level of danger -- whether culturally-based, influenced by Japanese national politics, or simply a refusal to accept that the situation is out of control -- has contributed and compounded on itself, enough to push the situation, day by day, into Chernobyl territory.

What will solve this crisis? Let me spell it out for you in realistic terms: Human Sacrifices. More people in Japan are going to have to die.

In order to repair damage to the four reactors, or (if that isn't feasible) remove enough nuclear material to prevent continuing fission (i.e., meltdown) of the cores in at least two reactors, and remove the spent fuel, and seal up one and perhaps two reactor buildings -- an unknown number of human beings workers will have to be exposed to high levels of radioactivity.

This will require that some of them will die, horribly, in a matter of days or weeks. For others, it will take months. The survivors will be debilitated for a time, and spend the rest of their lives wondering when their turn in the cancer barrel will come.

The longer this crisis goes on, the higher the levels of radioactivity become, the more people will die and be injured to eventually stop it. And, it doesn't even address the exposure of ordinary citizens to the increased levels of released radioactivity -- through the water table, the food chain, the very soil people live on, the air they breathe.

This is what the failure of TEPCO, and later the Japanese government, to move swiftly enough to contain the damage to the plants has brought to Japan, and, to my mind, something out of some classic 1960's science fiction film: We all know the story -- monster on a rampage; scientists try to warn government officials, who laugh and tell them they need to eat some fruit and take a vacation. Then, the monster comes, and the government issues some self-serving statement to minimize their culpability:
The sea monster approaches the city. The mayor announces "We believe there may be some slight disturbances in the ocean offshore, and so recommend that only those living in beach cabins may wish, voluntarily, to move a few blocks inland. Stories of a 'sea monster' are not accurate; it is merely a very large fish. Our scientists are working diligently to control it with repellents, and shouting recipes for Bouillabaisse at it from shore. Please remain calm; there is no real danger."
All the signs point to Bad, and getting worse. I'd suggest central Japan just go for pizza, and come back in the year 27,011, when the amount of radioactivity in the Plutonium will have been reduced. By half.

Unless, of course, that's not an option.


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Because I Can

The Truthiness Will Set You Moderately Free, Sort Of

There are a variety of theories regarding who runs the planet, and what we had better do to survive. I have my own theory of Who Runs Things.

It came about when a friend, years ago, used the phrase "Tickle Me Hellmo!" to describe the ExMass popular kid's gift of that era (Yes, it was during the reign of "Lil' Boots" Bush). Not long after, she disappeared -- and on Sesame Street, the character Elmo made a reference to my friend's name and added, "She's done! Caught up in something bad! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!"

(Well; okay: Elmo might have said a name similar to my friend's, and then added, "She's fun! Taught us not to be sad! Ha ha ha ha ha ha, etc.!" But that wouldn't be half as interesting a blog post, n'cest pas?)

Anyway, we're living in a world where the horror is just below the surface. It has it's own website. This is what it looks like -- Click To Read a larger version of The Hidden Truth; It's Easy And Fun!



Very Very Very Exceptionally Bad Things

Reported this morning by the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), via Japan's Kyodo News Service. Ahh; it's probably nothing.
URGENT: Radiation 1,600 times normal level 20 km from Fukushima plant: IAEA
VIENNA, March 22, Kyodo

Radiation 1,600 times higher than normal levels has been detected in an area about 20 kilometers from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, International Atomic Energy Agency officials said Monday.

Data collected by an IAEA team show that radiation levels of 161 microsievert per hour have been detected in the town of Namie, Fukushima Prefecture, the officials said.

The government has set an exclusion zone covering areas within a 20-km radius of the plant and has urged people within 20 to 30 km to stay indoors.