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Message Subject The Future of your country?..ask and I will tell you,...
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
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Gaia Man wrote already on:

6/27/2005
4:17 am EDT
Still waiting on Japan, Gaia-man. It must be significant for you to hesitate like this. Can we have a hint?

---------------------------------------------

Dear Soul,

In my earlier postings I wrote that some things are not pretty to see. I do not like to spread fear. But for Japan, I do not see any good.
Different Earthquakes. A MAJOR ONE IN TOKYO!.
A wall of water will come from East China Sea. It will suprise the Okinawa Islands and travel and hit Fukuoka. Thousands will be affected by it. The Claw and fire of the Red Dragon will reach Japan in The Great War.

Then on the next question:
Thanks Gaia-man. Any time frame for Japan upheavals?

Gaia Man:

Dear Soul,

You will see the beginning in 2005.


And now just in :

Strong earthquake shakes Tokyo
2 hours, 6 minutes ago
TOKYO (AFP) - A strong earthquake registering 6.0 on the Richter scale shook Tokyo and its vicinity, lightly injuring 18 people, swaying buildings in the heart of the capital and disrupting transport.

The earthquake hit upper five on the Japanese scale, making it the most powerful to rattle the tremor-prone metropolis since February 1992.
Public broadcaster NHK said some 18 people in Tokyo and three neighboring prefectures were injured in the earthquake which sent objects flying off store shelves and books falling off cases.
The earthquake struck at around 4:35 pm (0735 GMT) with its focus located in the Boso peninsula in the northwestern part of Chiba prefecture just outside of the capital at a depth of 73 kilometers (45 miles) underground.
The government set up a taskforce at the prime minister´s office to assess the situation.
The government has no reports of death or missing people, said Yoshitaka Murata, the head of the National Public Safety Commission and state minister in charge of disaster prevention.
The meteorological agency called for continued caution but said there was little fear of aftershocks larger than the initial quake.
"The northwestern part of Chiba has been the scene of (major tremors) every 10-20 years, as we saw a quake of 6.0 there in 1980," said Sumio Yoshikawa, who heads the quake prediction division of the agency.
"We must brace ourselves for an aftershock as strong as four" on the Japanese scale for the next several days, he told reporters.
The quake hit the upper five on the Japanese seismic scale that goes up to seven. An upper five intensity means people cannot walk around and television sets can tip over.
A tremor of four awakens sleeping people.
The Japanese scale measures how much places were shaken on the surface while the Richter scale measures the energy of the quake itself.
"The deeper the epicenter is, the lighter the tremor on the surface is. The epicenter of today´s quake was deep, but the tremor was big," a meteorological official said.
Sirens were wailing in the streets of Tokyo and elevators came to a halt in tall buildings, a standard safety function in the Japanese capital.
Five people sustained minor injuries as they went shopping in Saitama prefecture adjoining Tokyo, reports said.
Among the other injuries, a woman in Chiba fell at a supermarket and two other people were hurt in Kanagawa prefecture south of Tokyo, NHK said.
A three-meter (10 foot) tall steel tower fell onto the roof of a house but nobody was injured.
The metropolitan fire department said there were two minor fires in Tokyo.


Train platforms were swarmed by passengers, many of them on their way home from Tokyo Disneyland in Chiba.
Narita airport, the main international gateway to Japan, closed its runways to check any damage but re-opened them shortly afterwards.
Shinkansen bullet train services were also resumed although metropolitan subways and other train services remained halted.
The meteorological agency said there was no tsunami threat.
Japan is home to 20 percent of the world´s major earthquakes and is always bracing for the dreaded "Big One" predicted to hit in the future.
The day´s quake came hours after thousands of volunteers and rescue workers took part in one of Japan´s largest-ever tsunami drills, anxious to prevent a repeat of the devastation seen in last year´s Indian Ocean catastrophe



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