被爆建物 旧陸軍被服支廠 広島市南区
戦前、軍服などの製造に使われていた
広島市南区出汐の「旧陸軍被服支廠」
2019年12月広島県は、被爆建物の1つ、
「旧陸軍被服支廠(ひふくししょう)」所有する
3棟のうち1棟のみを保存し、2棟を解体する方針案を
明らかにしました。
記憶に残しておきたいので全景を歩いて撮影しました。
Hiroshima buildings that survived atomic bomb to be demolished.
The Japanese city of Hiroshima plans to knock down two buildings that survived the 1945 atomic bomb - but some locals want them preserved as landmarks.
BBCのニュースでも取り上げられていました。
よろしければちゃんねる登録もお願いしますm(__)m
Al Zelver's Interview
Al Zelver served as a Japanese language officer in the U.S. Army during World War II. He spent a year in Japan after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In this interview, Zelver talks about becoming a Japanese language officer, his time in the China-Burma-India Theater during the war, and seeing the ruins of Hiroshima shortly after the Japanese surrender. Zelver ruminates on the decision to drop the bombs and on the surrender itself. He recalls his time in Japan both immediately after the surrender and years later when he returned to Hiroshima to speak with the Hiroshima Peace Foundation. He reflects on the atomic bombings and nuclear proliferation today, and describes a conversation with Manhattan Project scientist Felix Bloch.
For the full transcript, please visit:
Gembaku no ko (Children of Hiroshima) 1952 director Kaneto Shindo, ENG SUB
subtitles: English, French, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Turkish
Travels in Japan (Part Two) [Shibuya]
Some more traveling in Japan. Enjoy! (Note: I let YouTube automatically edit my video early, which caused the moving brackets. It's currently reverting right now. And is hopefully fixed by the time you read this.)
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Shibuya was historically the site of a castle in which the Shibuya family resided from the 11th century through the Edo period. Following the opening of the Yamanote Line in 1885, Shibuya began to emerge as a railway terminal for southwestern Tokyo and eventually as a major commercial and entertainment center.
The village of Shibuya was incorporated in 1889 by the merger of the villages of Kami-Shibuya, Naka-Shibuya and Shimo-Shibuya within Minami-Toshima County (Toyotama County from 1896). The village covered the territory of modern-day Shibuya Station area as well as the Hiroo, Daikanyama, Aoyama and Ebisu areas. Shibuya became a town in 1909. The town of Shibuya merged with the neighboring towns of Sendagaya (which included the modern Sendagaya, Harajuku and Jingumae areas) and Yoyohata (which included the modern Yoyogi and Hatagaya areas) to form Shibuya Ward of Tokyo City in 1932. Tokyo City became Tokyo Metropolis in 1943, and the present-day special ward was established on March 15, 1947.
The Tokyu Toyoko Line opened in 1932, making Shibuya a key terminal between Tokyo and Yokohama, and was joined by the forerunner of the Keio Inokashira Line in 1933 and the forerunner of the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line in 1938. One of the best-known stories concerning Shibuya is the story of Hachikō, a dog who waited on his late master at Shibuya Station every day from 1923 to 1935, eventually becoming a national celebrity for his loyalty. A statue of Hachikō was built adjacent to the station, and the surrounding Hachikō Square is now the most popular meeting point in the area.
During the occupation of Japan, Yoyogi Park was used as a housing compound for U.S. personnel known as Washington Heights. The U.S. military left in 1964, and much of the park was repurposed as venues for the 1964 Summer Olympics. The ward itself served as part of the athletics 50 km walk and marathon course during the 1964 games.[1]
Shibuya has achieved great popularity among young people since the early 1980s. There are several famous fashion department stores in Shibuya. Shibuya 109 is a major shopping center near Shibuya Station, particularly famous as the origin of the kogal subculture. Called Ichi-Maru-kyū, which translates as 1–0–9 in Japanese, the name is actually a pun on that of the corporation that owns it — Tōkyū (which sounds like 10–9 in Japanese; this is numerical substitution, a form of goroawase wordplay). The contemporary fashion scene in Shibuya extends northward from Shibuya Station to Harajuku, where youth culture reigns; Omotesandō, the zelkova tree- and fashion brand-lined street; and Sendagaya, Tokyo's apparel design district.
During the late 1990s, Shibuya also became known as the center of the IT industry in Japan. It was often called Bit Valley in English,[citation needed] a pun on both Bitter Valley, the literal translation of Shibuya, as well as bit, the computer term for binary digits.
In 2015 Shibuya passed a local ordinance granting same-sex couples the right to partnership certificates; this made it the first place in Japan — or anywhere in East Asia — to recognize same-sex partnerships.[2]
From Army Private to Atomic Physicist for the Manhattan Project
October 28, 2015
The Fall 2015 Presidential Lecture Series:
FROM ARMY PRIVATE TO ATOMIC PHYSICIST FOR THE MANHATTAN PROJECT”
A LECTURE BY
DR. BENJAMIN BEDERSON
U.S. Army Veteran
Experiential Atomic Physicist, the Manhattan Project
Professor Emeritus of the Department of Physics at New York University
Former Editor-in-Chief of the American Physical Society
The Manhattan Project was one of the most significant government projects in history. It was a research and development program that produced the first atomic bombs during WWII. It was led by the U.S. with the support of the United Kingdom and Canada. From 1942 to 1946, the project was under the direction of Major General Leslie Groves of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the Los Almos National Laboratory who designed the actual bombs.
The story of how I became present at one of history’s turning points can be attributed to fortuitous career choices, extraordinary army assignments and many life-changing events that were beyond my control.
Throughout my life I have always felt a deep connection with New York City, it is where I grew up, where I was educated and earned the greater part of my living, and where I raised, together with my wonderful wife, our family of four sons.
BENJAMIN BEDERSON, a native New Yorker, grew up in the Bronx and Brighton Beach, Brooklyn. He attended The City College of New York (CUNY) for two and one half years before leaving school to take a job at the Army Signal Corps as a civilian in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. From there he was drafted in 1942.
Because he had no military experience he was sent to Radio School to become a tail gunner on a B-17. Shortly thereafter, he was selected to participate in a new Army program called the Army Specialized Training Program where he took a course in electrical engineering at Ohio State University.
By chance an interviewing board came to Ohio State and his commanding officer encouraged him to apply for something called the Manhattan Project. As a U.S. Army private in his early twenties, Bederson was one of the lowest ranking soldiers assigned to the project. He was chosen for his natural talents as a budding scientist and became part of the Special Engineering Detachment and transferred once again, this time to Los Alamos. There he worked on wiring the switches for the atomic bombs and tested the switches for the bomb that would eventually be dropped on Nagasaki.
After that fateful summer of 1945, Bederson continued his research as an experimental atomic physicist, working for many years as a professor at New York University teaching a course called Physics in Society. He also served as editor-in-chief of the American Physical Society and helped usher physics journals into the electronic age.
What Happened to the Nuclear Test Sites?
Nuclear testing ended over 20 years ago but the legacy of the test areas still remains and will do for hundreds or thousands of years. 8 countries have actively tested nuclear weapons, some in their own backyard if it was big enough like the Soviet Union and the US but they also used others peoples backyards in the Pacific, the British and French did this.
But what happened to the test sites, in this video we look at the US and Soviet test programs and what became of them and the people nearby.
This video is sponsored by
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Presented by Paul Shillito
Written and researched by Paul Shillito
Images and Footage
Atomic energy Commission,
Dept of Defence,
University of California / PNAS,
Carl Willis,
atomiccleanupvets.com,
US Dept of Energy, AtomicHeritage,
Laboratory of Environmental Studies
For more info on the cleanup of the Eniwetok atoll by the US servicemen visit
NUPI report in the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: The humanitarian consequences
The periodic table at 1:42 courtesy of Todd Helmenstine, sciencenotes.org
二零三高地The Battle of Port Arthur 1980
I've studied nuclear war for 35 years -- you should be worried. | Brian Toon | TEDxMileHigh
For the first time in decades, it's hard to ignore the threat of nuclear war. But as long as you're far from the blast, you're safe, right? Wrong. In this sobering talk, atmospheric scientist Brian Toon explains how even a small nuclear war could destroy all life on earth -- and what we can do to prevent it. A professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the University of Colorado-Boulder, Brian Toon investigates the causes of the ozone hole, how volcanic eruptions alter the climate, how ancient Mars had flowing rivers, and the environmental impacts of nuclear war. He contributed to the U.N.’s Nobel Peace Prize for climate change and holds numerous scientific awards, including two NASA medals for Exceptional Scientific Achievement. He is an avid woodworker. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at
What Was Life Really Like Inside a Leper Colony
If you had leprosy you would be shunned from society and forced to live in isolation with other people who shared the disease, but what was life really like on those isolated colonies filled with people who had the serious illness, and did they ever receive proper treatment? Did the doctors visit them? In today's video we're checking out the crazy life inside a leper colony.
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7/11 in Japan is AMAZING | What to buy
If you are looking to travel cheap in Japan, save money while still eating good food... 7/11 is the place! Japanese conbini stores such as 7/11 offer much more than normal convenience stores in the states, they have a wide range of products such as shirts and a veggies. Must check out a 7/11 in Japan, trust me you can't miss them!
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❤️Welcome to my channel! In my channel I share helpful tips for families moving overseas due to the military. I also like to share my travel adventures and places to visit. One of my passions is fitness, I love to share my own journey and some helpful tips to get your fitness journey started. Subscribe to my channel to follow our journey as a young married couple traveling the world with our daughter, though our military lifestyle.
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25 Things To Do in Tokyo, Japan (Watch This Before You Go)
Get info about things to do, where to stay, and the best food to eat on your visit to Tokyo, Japan. Here's the guide:
Tokyo (東京), Japan, is one of the world's greatest cities, and there's so much to do and see when you visit. From temples and shrines, to gardens and museums, you'll never run out of attractions. Out of all the things you could do, I've chosen a top 25 list for this awesome city (and just so you know food is my first choice in Tokyo)!
1. Ameya-Yokochō (アメヤ横丁) - A giant open air market that offers clothes, cosmetics, food, and restaurants and bars.
2. Meiji Shrine (明治神宮) - This Shinto shrine, surrounded by beautiful forest, is extremely significant.
3. Ryogoku Kokugikan (両国国技館) - Even if it's not fight season, you can go to the free sumo museum and eat sumo chankonabe.
4. Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden (新宿御苑) - The garden is a beautiful attraction in Tokyo, with French gardens, Japanese gardens, and a green house.
5. Ginza (銀座) / Yurakucho (有楽町) - Ginza is a great area of town for upscale shopping and dining, while Yurakucho is famous for Izakaya bars and restaurants under the railroad track.
6. Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (東京都庁舎) - There are a lot of things to do in Tokyo where you have to pay, but here, you can go to the 45th floor for free.
7. Tsukiji Market (築地市場) - One of the most famous attractions in all of Tokyo is the Tsukiji Market (築地市場), the biggest seafood market in the world.
8. Shibuya (渋谷区) - With the busiest intersection in the world, Shibuya (渋谷区) is also home to shopping and restaurant.
9. Sumida River (隅田川) - At Tokyo's Sumida River, you can either just walk around the park and enjoy the riverside views, or you can take the Tokyo Cruise in a boat.
10. Tokyo Imperial Palace (皇居) - This is the home of the emperor of Japan. To enter the grounds, you have to make a tour booking on the official website
11. Ueno Park (上野公園), Tokyo National Museum (東京国立博物館) - Ueno Park is a huge public park in Tokyo with shrines, gardens and a number of museums.
12. Tokyo Skytree (東京スカイツリー) - They call it Tokyo's biggest attractions. It's a huge communications tower with various viewing decks and galleries.
13. Harajuku (原宿), Takeshita Street (竹下通り) - Famous for its street market and cosplay that takes place, this is a place in the city to see and be seen.
14. Senso-ji (金龍山浅草寺) - Visiting this temple is one of the top things to do in Tokyo, frequented by both tourists and religious pilgrims. It's the oldest temple in Tokyo.
15. Edo-Tokyo Museum (江戸東京博物館) - It looks a little like a UFO, but it's one of Tokyo's main museums, that aims to preserve the history of the city.
16. Fine Dining - Let's just face it, Tokyo is one of the best cities in the world for high class dining - atmosphere, presentation, food, it's all just stunning!
17. Akihabara Electric Town (秋葉原電気街) - If you love electronics and gaming, you're going to love the area of Akihabara. You'll also find those infamous maid cafes here.
18. Tokyo Stock Exchange (東京証券取引所) - Another free attraction in Tokyo is to be a guest at the stock exchange where you can see the Japanese Nikkei being traded.
19. Roppongi (六本木) - Home to the Mori Art Museum and a hotspot for nightlife in the city, Roppongi is an exciting area of town.
20. Odaiba (お台場) - This area of Tokyo is full of things to do like Legoland, and Palette Town, an indoor amusement park. It's also known as Tokyo's entertainment island.
21. Yoyogi Park (代々木公園) - Located next to Meiji Shrine, and just a short distance from Harajuku and Shinjuku, this park is popular for exercise and dance.
22. Nezu (根津), Yanaka (谷中 (台東区) - Tokyo is a truly modern city, but there are a couple places like Nezu and Yanaka that have held strong to their traditional and cultural roots.
23. Onsen (温泉) - You've got to strip down naked before you can enter a Japanese public bath.
24. Mount Takao (高尾山) - Just 50 km from central Tokyo, this mountain is popular for climbing and is a sacred religious mountains. Makes a good day trip from Tokyo.
25. Food - Finally, food is the reason I visited Japan, and I think eating is by all means one of the best things to do in Tokyo. Food is everywhere, and not only does it taste amazing, but the care that goes into Japanese cuisine is incredible.
Thank you very much for watching this video that includes some of the best things to do in Tokyo. I hope it will give you inspiration to visit and eat through this amazing city.
Tokyo travel guide for food lovers:
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United States Betrayed China Into Communism. But Why?
What surprises many Americans: the regime ruling China was largely put there by the United States.
China Betrayed Into Communism
But China's destruction came not only from communists. Fateful decisions resulted when Roosevelt met with Stalin at the Teheran Conference (late 1943) and Yalta Conference (February 1945). Stalin, though our ally against Germany during World War II, maintained a nonaggression pact with Japan. This suited Stalin, as he wished the Japanese to wear down China's Nationalist forces.
At the Teheran and Yalta wartime conferences, however, Roosevelt asked Stalin if he would break his pact with Japan and enter the Far East war. Stalin agreed, but attached conditions. He demanded that America completely equip his Far Eastern Army for the expedition, with 3,000 tanks, 5,000 planes, plus all the other munitions, food, and fuel required for a 1,250,000-man army. Roosevelt accepted this demand, and 600 shiploads of Lend-Lease material were convoyed to the USSR for the venture. Stalin's Far Eastern Army swiftly received more than twice the supplies we gave Chiang Kai-shek during four years as our ally.
General Douglas MacArthur protested after discovering that ships designated to supply his Pacific forces were being diverted to Russia. Major General Courtney Whitney wrote: One hundred of his transport ships were to be withdrawn immediately, to be used to carry munitions and supplies across the North Pacific to the Soviet forces in Vladivostok.... Later, of course, they were the basis of Soviet military support of North Korea and Red China.
But Stalin didn't just want materiel in return for entering the Asian war. He also demanded control of the Manchurian seaports of Dairen and Port Arthur — which a glance at the map shows would give him an unbreakable foothold in China — as well as joint control, with the Chinese, of Manchuria's railroads. Roosevelt made these concessions without consulting the Chinese. Thus, without authority, he ceded to Stalin another nation's sovereign territory. The president made these pledges without the knowledge or consent of Congress or the American people.
The State Department official representing the United States in drawing up the Yalta agreement was Alger Hiss — subsequently exposed as a Soviet spy. General Patrick Hurley, U.S. Ambassador to China, wrote: American diplomats surrendered the territorial integrity and the political independence of China ... and wrote the blueprint for the Communist conquest of China in secret agreement at Yalta.
The decision to invite and equip Stalin — a known aggressor — into the Far East must go down among the worst acts of U.S. foreign policy. Stalin's divisions entered China to fight the already-beaten Japanese on August 9, 1945 — five days before Japan's surrender. The atom bomb had already pounded Hiroshima.
After barely firing a shot, the Soviets received surrender of Japan's huge arsenals in Manchuria. These, with their American Lend-Lease supplies, they handed over to Mao Tse-tung's communists to overthrow the Nationalist government.
Can Body Cameras End Police Brutality?
Why Doesn't Japan Hate The US?
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It has been 70 years since the U.S. dropped a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. What was the reasoning behind this devastating act of war?
Learn More:
The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
A single atomic bomb, the first weapon of its type ever used against a target, exploded over the city of Hiroshima at 0815 on the morning of 6 August 1945.
Fact File : Hiroshima and Nagasaki
On the morning of 6 August 1945 an American B-29 bomber, the 'Enola Gay', dropped the first atomic bomb used in warfare on the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
What it would look like if the Hiroshima bomb hit your city
The bomb, code-named Little Boy, killed 66,000 people, mostly civilians, and injured at least 69,000 more, according to estimates the U.S. Army made in 1946.
The 390-Year-Old Tree That Survived the Bombing of Hiroshima
When Yamaki donated the now 390-year-old white pine bonsai tree to be part of a 53 bonsais gifted by the Nippon Bosnai Association to the United States for its bicentennial celebration in 1976, all that was really known was the tree's donor.
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X-Ray Man: A veteran of secret nuclear tests tells his story
Decades after participating in secret nuclear tests, a veteran tells his story
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In 1957, a young man named Darrell Robertson enlisted in the US Army and participated in a secret training programme in the middle of the Nevada desert. He and his fellow recruits were sworn to secrecy and, for decades, told no one of their experiences. In 1996, the US government declassified the project and Robertson was finally able to tell his story. In X-Ray Man, Robertson recalls training exercises in which the Department of Defense used him and other soldiers in nuclear tests more than a decade after the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were already well known.
Director: Kerri Yost
Producer: Kerri Yost, Jennifer Erickson
#MilitaryHistory #USArmy
10 Times the US Lost or Accidentally Dropped Nukes
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UCF: WWII HISTORY PROJECT
WWII vet remembers the surrender of Japan after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagaski.
On Deterrence
On Deterrence is a documentary that presents a contemporary dialogue involving different viewpoints about the evolution of nuclear weapon deterrence since World War II and how deterrence may evolve in the future. The intent of this film is not to advocate any one viewpoint, but to make a lasting contribution to the history of deterrence and to the long-term dialogue about the role of U.S. nuclear weapons as a deterrent.
The film features interviews from more than 30 experts, including: National Nuclear Security Administration head Gen. Frank Klotz; Ploughshares Fund president Joseph Cirincione; former U.S. senators Sam Nunn of Georgia and Jon Kyl of Arizona; Carnegie Endowment for International Peace senior associates Ashley Tellis and James Acton; former secretaries of defense James Schlesinger, Robert Gates and William Perry; former Los Alamos National Laboratory director Sig Hecker; Stanford University senior fellow Scott Sagan; and Rose Gottemoeller, former under secretary for Arms Control and International Security at the State Department.
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Could The US Citizens Fight Off The US Military?
Today we are revolting against the government, and the military has come to shut us down. Who would win in this epic face off between the United States citizens versus the United States Military. You may think you know the answer but the results would surprise you. Let's take a look in this animated video about Could The US Citizens Fight Off The US Military?
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Princes of the Yen: Central Bank Truth Documentary
“Princes of the Yen: Central Banks and the Transformation of the Economy” 『円の支配者』reveals how Japanese society was transformed to suit the agenda and desire of powerful interest groups, and how citizens were kept entirely in the dark about this.
Based on a book by Professor Richard Werner, a visiting researcher at the Bank of Japan during the 90s crash, during which the stock market dropped by 80% and house prices by up to 84%. The film uncovers the real cause of this extraordinary period in recent Japanese history.
“Because only power that is hidden is power that endures.”
A film by Michael Oswald
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“Blows open the widely held consensus that ‘independent’ central banks are a force for economic good. Josh Ryan-Collins - New Economics Foundation and co-author of “Where Does Money Come From?
A fascinating look at the need for better public understanding of just how much money can affect the world we live in.” Ben Dyson - Founder Positive Money & co-author of ‘Modernising Money’
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コハル散歩 東京港区お台場 KOHARU WALK’S SONY α6600 VLOG #12 4K
コハル散歩 VLOG #12
東京港区お台場にうちのシバ犬コハルといってきました。
長い動画ですみません(;^ω^)
お台場ビーチをSONY SEL1018の超広角10mmで(フルサイズかんさん15mm)いつものようにロウアングル撮影しましたが、なかなか面白い映像が撮れました☺ ビーチと海と空がダイナミックに撮れてるかなぁ?
ただ、コハルが若干胴長になってしまいますけど(;^ω^)
撮影機材 SONY α6600
ジンバル MOZA AirCross2
レンズ SONY 10-18mm
ピクチャープロファイル PP10