(NaturalNews) How can anon radiation give such fallacious advice and counsel? Well, that's a question more than a few Japanese must be asking themselves.If you've been following the Fukushima nuclear reactor disaster, which occurred as a result of a strike by a massive tsunami-generated wave in March 2011, you know about Dr. Shunichi Yamashita (a.k.a. Dr. 100 mSv). He was the head of the Fukushima Health Survey for a time following the accident and provided advice immediately following the disaster that was consistently incorrect.According to a recently published interview in the, one of five national daily Japanese newspapers, Yamashita demonstrated that he did not even understand the basics of the lingering disaster and that he "did nothing to seek out information so he could give informed opinions about what people should do," says an analysis of the report on the websiteOn the subject, the "EX-SKF" blog, which has been tracking the Fukushima accident and its radioactive fallout, reported:went on to say that Yamashita made the same claim to another of Japan's national dailies,, which reported his claims as expert opinion."Making matters worse, he told the staff of Fukushima Medical University this bad information that they then put into practice after March 18th. Yamashita made his case to the medical staff of the university with some of these statements," said, which then listed the statements:Later, Yamashita rejected the university's plan to hand out protective iodine to area residents, for the following reasons:And finally, there is this from an interview in June with the. In interviewing Yamashita, the paper reported:The paper quoted him as saying, "I thought, 'Oops.'"The health of a major swath of the Japanese public hung in the balance following the meltdown of three of the six reactors at the Fukushima station. And here is the resident "expert" saying "oops!"