JUST HOURS AFTER RESTART, WORLD’S LARGEST NUCLEAR PLANT HIT BY CRITICAL ALARM FAILURE
A reactor at the planet’s biggest nuclear power plant has been plunged into a sudden emergency shutdown. This isn’t a drill. A critical alarm system FAILED less than a day after the reactor was powered up for the first time in over a decade.
The Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco)—the same company that brought us the Fukushima disaster—is now in charge. They claim everything is “safe” and there are “no radiation leaks.” But we’ve heard these empty promises before. The chilling images of the Fukushima meltdown haunt us for a reason.
This is Unit No. 6 at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant. It was just restarted Wednesday after a 13-year silence following Fukushima. Now, it’s broken. The so-called “safeguards” are already malfunctioning.
Why does this keep happening? Who benefits from rushing these aging giants back online while cutting corners? The powerful push for restarts, while regular people are told to just trust the same failed managers. The silence from officials is DEAFENING.
This isn’t just a faulty alarm. It’s a flashing red warning sign for the entire country, ignored by the very people sworn to protect it.
They are gambling with your safety, and the dice are loaded.




