Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - If a 9.4-magnitude earthquake strikes Japan and the whole country sinks and moves, which country is it most likely to move to?

If a 9.4-magnitude earthquake strikes Japan and the whole country sinks and moves, which country is it most likely to move to?

Science and technology will be developed in the future, and the accuracy of earthquake prediction will be 100%. One day, there will be an earthquake of magnitude 9 or above in Japan in the near future. The beautiful Mount Fuji in the epicenter, the sinking probability of the four local islands 100%, will need 1 100 million lives. For global emergency response, the relocation site must be decided immediately. North Korea and the three northeastern provinces are too close to the epicenter, the mountains in Siberia are too cold, Africa is too far, the remote deserts in Australia and the coastal areas in Asia.

Alaska, 1.72 million square kilometers, equivalent to 4.5 Japan, with a population of 720,000, mainly engaged in mining, fishing, forestry and tourism. It belongs to temperate zone, with an average temperature of about 10 degrees. The climate is pleasant, similar to Japan, and not far from Japan, which is convenient for a large number of rapid immigrants.

Time is pressing, and there is no time to ask the people of Alaska to hold a referendum. The president of the United States looked dignified and pondered for a long time. He stood up and said, 1867, we bought Alaska for $7.2 million, and we have always been grateful to Russia for generously selling us this beautiful land. We love her. She once belonged to Russia, now belongs to us, and the future belongs to the whole world. Today, we will donate Alaska to Japan as generously as Russia. Japan is not only our ally, but also the lives of 1 100 million people, so this decision must be correct. Japan's powerful technology and financial resources will make Alaska a pearl of the world. Alaska residents will get the greatest protection.

The audience applauded and the large-scale immigration operation began on the same day. Ships and vehicles from all over the world flocked to Japan, racing against time, and there was no time to calculate how many people were rescued. Seven days later, an earthquake occurred in the early morning, with a magnitude of 9.4, which made Japan tremble instantly, followed by a larger main earthquake with a magnitude of 10, and Japan sank.

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