●ft.com Gideon Rachman The World Davos leaders: Shinzo Abe on WW1 parallels, economics and women at work http://blogs.ft.com/the-world/author/gideonrachman/ January 22, 2014 2:39 pm
Here at Davos, I’ve just had the opportunity to moderate a discussion between the Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and a group of international journalists. I asked Mr Abe whether a war between China and Japan was “conceivable”. Interestingly, he did not take the chance to say that any such conflict was out of the question. In fact, Mr Abe explicitly compared the tensions between China and Japan now to the rivalry between Britain and Germany in the years before the first world war, remarking that it was a “similar situation”. The comparison, he explained, lies in the fact that Britain and Germany – like China and Japan – had a strong trading relationship. But in 1914, this had not prevented strategic tensions leading to the outbreak of conflict. Naturally enough, Mr Abe also made it clear that he would regard any “inadvertent” conflict as a disaster – and he repeated his call for the opening of a military-to-military communication channel between China and Japan. Read more
●BBC News Japanese PM Shinzo Abe urges Asia military restraint http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-25851960 22 January 2014 Last updated at 19:40 GMT
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has told an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos that "military expansion" must be restrained in Asia. "The dividend of growth in Asia must not be wasted on military expansion," Mr Abe said. His comments are thought to refer to China, which is involved in territorial disputes with its neighbours. Speaking earlier, he compared relations with China to those between the UK and Germany on the eve of World War One. "Japan has sworn an oath never again to wage a war. We will continue to be wishing for the world to be at peace," Mr Abe said in his speech, according to Reuters. "If peace and stability were shaken in Asia, the knock-on effect for the entire world would be enormous," he added. In an earlier briefing to journalists, Mr Abe said that like Britain and Germany in 1914, Japan and China were inter-dependent economies, trading partners with huge mutual interests. But he added that he saw the 10% per annum increase in China's defence budget as a provocation. Asked by the BBC whether he had a plan to reduce tensions, Mr Abe said this would not happen while China pursued its military build-up. China recently established an Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ) that covers East China Sea islands claimed and controlled by Japan, and a rock claimed by South Korea. The zone covers islands called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China that both sides claim, as does Taiwan. The announcement of the ADIZ last year sparked concern across the region. China said that aircraft flying through the zone must follow its rules, including filing flight plans. The US, Japan and South Korea have rejected China's zone, and flown undeclared military aircraft through it. The US has called the move a unilateral attempt to change the status quo in the region. "We must lay down rules that promote actions based on the international law of the sea," Mr Abe said on Wednesday. Sino-Japanese relations have also been strained by Mr Abe's visit to the Yasukuni shrine that honours Japan's war dead, including some convicted war criminals. The visit was condemned by South Korea and China. Mr Abe defended the visit, telling his audience in Davos it was "natural" but that he no intention whatsoever to hurt the feelings of people in China and those in Korea".
(転載ここまで)
●Reuters Japan-China tensions take centre-stage with Abe in Davos By Steve Adler and Paul Taylor http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/01/22/uk-davos-japan-idUKBREA0L1NG20140122 DAVOS, Switzerland Wed Jan 22, 2014 7:25pm GMT
(Reuters) - Tensions between Tokyo and Beijing took centre-stage at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday as Japan's prime minister called for military restraint in Asia and a senior Chinese academic branded him a troublemaker. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe defended his visit to a controversial shrine to Japan's war dead, which outraged China and South Korea, and took a veiled swipe at China's military buildup in his speech to global business leaders. Sino-Japanese ties, long coloured by what Beijing considers Tokyo's failure to atone for its occupation of parts of China before and during World War Two, have deteriorated in the past two years over a territorial dispute, Abe's visit to a shrine that critics say glorifies Japan's wartime past and a new Chinese air-defence zone. Asia's two biggest powers each accuse the other of bellicosity. Strategic experts in Davos said their tensions posed the biggest risk of conflict around the world in 2014, along with hostility between Iran and Saudi Arabia. "We must ... restrain military expansion in Asia, which could otherwise go unchecked," Abe, the first Japanese leader to give the keynote address, said in a speech dominated by a defence of expansionary economic policies dubbed Abenomics. "The dividend of growth must not be wasted on military expansion," he said. "We must use it to invest in innovation and human capital, which will further boost growth in the region." Abe is pursuing a more assertive military and national security policy, such as moving towards approving the use of force to help allies under attack and calling for debate on revising Japan's pacifist post-war constitution. His government has ended years of declines in defence spending and plans modest increases in coming years. At the same time, Tokyo has criticised China's decades of hefty rises in military spending and implicitly accused Beijing of a lack of transparency in its defence budgets. "Military budgets should be made completely transparent and there should be public disclosure in a form that can be verified," Abe said, following his government's custom of not naming China in such references. He also called for resolving disputes through "dialogue and the rule of law, and not through force and coercion", a formula Japan has used to criticise China's actions including its abrupt declaration in November of an "air defence identification zone" overlapping the disputed East China Sea islets controlled by Japan. Abe said the Yasukuni Shrine honours the dead of World War One and the 1868 Meiji war, not just war criminals or others who died in World War Two, and it also contains a memorial to all the victims of war regardless of nationality. Previous prime ministers had gone to the shrine, he said, noting he had made a commitment on his visit to ensure that Japan never again became involved in a war. "TROUBLEMAKER" His stance draw sharp criticism from Chinese academic Wu Xinbo, speaking on another Davos panel, who branded the Japanese leader a "troublemaker" and equated him with North Korea's unpredictable leadership. Wu, whose views usually reflect those of the Chinese leadership, said trust between the two countries was very low, chiefly because of Abe's visit to the Yasukuni Shrine, which had fanned public hostility in China. While neither China, Japan nor the United States had an interest in war, relations were set to remain very tense, he said, adding that Beijing and Tokyo should develop a crisis communication mechanism. "Political relations between our two countries will remain very cool, even frozen for the remaining years of Abe in Japan," said Wu, professor of international studies at Fudan University in China. China demands that all aircraft flying through the zone identify themselves to Chinese authorities. Japan has urged China to rescind the decision, and its military and civilian aircraft have defied the requirements, flying through the zone without notifying China. Japan's treaty ally, the United States, refuses to recognise the zone and has sent military aircraft through it. Abe also reiterated his plans to revive growth in the world's third-biggest economy, increase the participation of women in society and review the portfolio of Japan's $1.2 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund. Asked by WEF president Klaus Schwab whether Japan's issuance of even more government debt to fund the stimulus programme might not break the country, Abe said it was only by reviving growth that Tokyo could increase tax revenue to pay down the debt. John Chipman, chief executive of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said the best prospect for avoiding an escalation of disputes between the two Asian powers lay in quiet military-to-military discussions to seek confidence building measures. Both Abe and Wu called for Japan and China to develop crisis communications mechanisms. (Additional reporting by Elaine Lies in Tokyo and Lisa Jucca in Davos; Writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Anna Willard)
●BBC News Robert Peston Business editor More from Robert Davos: What Abe said http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-25847276 22 January 2014 Last updated at 16:15 GMT
So here I am, again, on the top of a Swiss mountain, surrounded by the world's wealthiest and most powerful. And, as per normal, I am suffering from mild altitude sickness. Here is a typical (and true) conversation with a random stranger sitting in the partners' lounge of the Davos congress centre. "Where are you from? Your badge says India." "Well, I sit on the board of a big Indian institution, but I am a former minister of a Eurasian state, and I now have US citizenship, but I manage my money from a family office in London." Yikes. I didn't ask the size of the fortune, but the phrase "family office" speaks to non-trivial sums: the turmoil and wealth-creating opportunities of the globalised world, since the collapse of communism, captured in a social introduction. And before you ask, I inserted the catch-all "Eurasian" to protect the anonymity of said member of the global plutocracy (them is the rules of the World Economic Forum). As for the rest of my day so far, I have nattered to a FTSE 100 chairman, two FTSE 100 chief executives, two heads of big City institutions, a Middle Eastern philanthropist, a hedge-fund superstar and a government head. And all meetings were serendipitous. So, amidst the hand-wringing about what they all see as the UK's growing isolation from the EU (Davos person is genetically pro-European) and bullishness about the UK's economic recovery, in just four hours I have gathered enough story leads to keep me occupied for some time. For a journalist of my eccentric interests, Davos is like being let loose in the sweetshop. More impact What is on the minds of these eminences? Well, the most interesting conversation so far was an (unusual) on-the-record briefing for a few hacks by Japan's Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe. Why was this gripping (and a bit scary)? Well, he volunteered that Japan's current bad relations with China are redolent of the relationship between Britain and Germany 100 years ago, or shortly before World War 1. Which is the sort of thing you would expect clever-clogs commentators to say (in fact they do say this), but it has more impact (ahem) when said by Japan's leader. And, indeed, he elaborated. He recognises that - just like Britain and Germany in 1914 - Japan and China are inter-dependent economies, trading partners with huge mutual interests. Peace would therefore be the bulwark of their prosperity and that of the region. But he was explicit that he saw the 10% per annum increase in China's defence budget as a provocation. As for his controversial visit to the Yasukuni shrine, there was explanation, but no hint of regret or apology. Mr Abe simply insisted that China was wrong to see him as honouring a small number of "war criminals". Instead, he was paying respect to the "souls" of millions of other genuine Japanese war heroes. And, by the way, Japan's title to the Senkaku Islands, which China disputes, is unimpeachable (or so Mr Abe said). Given that Mr Abe says he wants peace with China and fears there could be "accidents" that shatter it, I asked him if he had a road map or plan to de-escalate the tension Not while China pursues its military build-up, he said. Which left me with a hollow feeling that is somewhat characteristic of encounters in this rarefied place.
■A New Vision from a New Japan, World Economic Forum 2014 Annual Meeting, Speech by Prime Minister Abe Wednesday, January 22, 2014 Congress Centre, Davos, SwitzerlandAt the opening plenary,
http://www.kantei.go.jp/foreign/96_abe/statement/201401/22speech_e.html - Japan was at dusk? - Thank you, Professor Schwab for your kind introduction. Mr President, it's an honour to speak after you. Now, I don't know who coined it, but they call my economic policy "Abenomics." Well, I hesitate to go on calling my own name but let me use it anyway. So, Abenomics has three arrows. The first is a bold monetary policy. The second is about flexible fiscal policy. And the third arrow will continue sparking private investment. Japan's economy is just about to break free from chronic deflation. This spring, wages will increase. Higher wages, long overdue, will lead to greater consumption. Our fiscal situation has also made steady improvement. Japan is now getting on track for fiscal consolidation. Pundits used to say that Japan was at dusk, or the land of the setting sun. They said that for a country as mature as Japan, growth would be impossible. These arguments were made to sound almost legitimate. You can see what Japan's psyche was like before I took office as Prime Minister. Hardly can you hear any such voices now. Our growth rate has changed dramatically, from negative growth to positive. In six years' time, the Olympics and the Paralympics will come to Tokyo. People are now more vibrant and upbeat. It is not twilight, but a new dawn that is breaking over Japan. - Such a thing is impossible in Japan? - May I tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that late last year, we decided to go on major reforms. I have broken through the notion that certain reforms could never be carried out. We will completely liberalize Japan's electricity market. By the time the Olympians compete in Tokyo in 2020, Japan's electricity market will also be completely competitive, for both power generation and retail, with power generation split off from power transmission. In Japan, people have long said that such a thing is just impossible. We will also foster medical care as an industry. Japan is on the leading edge in regenerative medicine. We will make it possible to generate cells at private-sector factories. In Japan, people have long said that such a thing is just impossible. We are also doing away with the "rice production adjustment" system. This system has been in place for more than 40 years. Private companies will be able to engage in farming without barriers and grow the crops they want, without artificial control over supply and demand. In Japan, people have long said that such a thing is just impossible. And yet, last autumn, we actually decided to make all these changes. In addition, yesterday morning, I gave additional instructions to reform the Japanese system, because we also need large-scale health care companies in the form of holding companies, much like the Mayo Clinic. I have maintained that I am willing to act like a drill bit; strong enough to break through the solid rock of vested interests. Soon, our deregulation package will be set in motion. Designated areas, on my own watch, will cut through red tape. There, over the next two years, no vested interests will remain immune from my drill. In cities hoping to join the world-class, limits on floor area ratios will become a thing of the past. The sky will be the limit. We will soon see high-quality housing, or business complexes, and zero-emissions towns appearing, one after another. The Trans Pacific Partnership, or TPP, will remain a central pillar of my economic policies. We will push ahead the Japan-EU Economic Partnership Agreement. Those will surely make Japan's economy even more deeply integrated into global flows of knowledge, trade and investment. Companies and people from abroad will find Japan among the most business-friendly places in the world. Japan's public fund management will also change a great deal. Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund now holds about 1.2 trillion US dollars. We will press ahead with forward-looking reforms, including a review of that portfolio. The GPIF will contribute to investments leading to growth. We must also make the tax system for companies internationally competitive. We will reduce the corporate tax rate by 2.4% from April this year. We will also encourage companies to use the cash they have gathered towards capital investment, R&D, and raises in workers' salaries. To do this, we will put tax incentives into place in a way completely different from before. This year, we will set about further reform on corporate tax. - Rebooting the entire country - We will reform the labour market that ties workers to old industries. New industries require innovative and creative human resources. We will re-direct our subsidies so that workers without meaningful work in old industries can move to new industries that require good human resources. Japan is becoming a super-aging society, even as the number of children is falling. You might find yourself asking, "In such a country, where will you find those innovative and creative human resources?" Ariana Huffington once said that if Lehman Brothers had been "Lehman Brothers and Sisters", the firm would have survived. Japan's corporate culture, by contrast, is still one of pinstripes and button-downs. After all the female labour force in Japan is the most under-utilized resource. Japan must become a place where women shine. By 2020 we will make 30% of leading positions to be occupied by women. In order to have a large number of women become leading players in the market we will need a diverse working environment. Support from foreign workers will also be needed for help with the housework, care for the elderly, and the like. Japan's GDP could grow by 16% more, if women participated in labour as much as men. That is what Hillary Clinton told me. I was greatly encouraged. Another thing that will be needed is a major impetus for change, aimed at corporate boards. We will soon put forward changes in the corporate law to the upcoming parliamentary session. Under these changes, external directors will increase. Next month, we will also draw up a stewardship code. It will make it easier for institutional investors to have a greater role in corporate governance. All of these combined, I am sure we can double our inward direct investment by 2020. All this would reboot the entire country. Japan's economic landscape will change dramatically. - Tsunami, and the survivors' stiff upper lips - On March 11, 2011, the north-eastern part of Japan was hit by the triple disaster of the earthquake, tsunami and the nuclear power plant failure. Three years will soon have passed. The love and compassion we were given from the world touched us deeply. The recovery is far from over. I am the one most responsible for the future of the survivors. Yet, it was these very survivors, who helped each other, with stiff upper lips, trying to overcome so many hardships. Their spirit of perseverance moved people all over the world. - Proactive contribution to peace - It is with that same spirit of mutual assistance that Japan is now set to turn into a nation that will contribute even more positively toward world peace. In Cambodia, the hospital Japan built for mothers and new-born babies helped reduce the country's infant mortality rate. In the Philippines, after the devastating typhoon, the relief effort by Japan's Self-Defence Forces was movingly welcomed. Based in Djibouti, our service men and women are still on high alert against piracy, protecting ships from around the world. In our age, no single nation can preserve peace by itself. None of us alone can solve the challenges the world faces without helping each other. A new Japan is now waving a banner for proactive contribution to peace. I want you to know you can count on us. - Securing Asian seas in peace - Asia has become a growth centre for the world. Japan is surrounded by neighbours with unlimited possibilities, such as China, South Korea, the ASEAN nations, India and Russia, and, across the Pacific, the TPP partner countries. In this region, which will be the engine driving the world economy forward, I am always contemplating just how we can achieve peace and prosperity, and make them ever-lasting. The foundation for prosperity comes down to freedom of movement for people and goods. On the sea lanes, in air space, and recently, in outer space and cyber space, freedom of movement must remain secure. The only way to fully keep these indispensable public goods safe and peaceful is to rigorously maintain the rule of law. It is for that purpose that fundamental values like freedom, human rights and democracy must be assured. There is no alternative. If peace and stability were shaken in Asia, the knock-on effect for the entire world would be enormous. The dividend of growth in Asia must not be wasted on military expansion. We must use it to invest in innovation and human capital, which will further boost growth in the region. Trust, not tension is crucial for peace and prosperity in Asia, and in the rest of the world. This can only be achieved through dialogue and the rule of law, and not through force or coercion. Now, in order to turn Asia into a region of trust and order, and not one of force and coercion, I would like, in conclusion, to make an appeal to Asia and the world. We must, ladies and gentlemen, restrain military expansion in Asia, which could otherwise go unchecked. Military budgets should be made completely transparent and there should be public disclosure in a form that can be verified. We should create a mechanism for crisis management as well as a communication channel between our armed forces. We must lay down rules that promote actions based on the international law of the sea. Only then, I believe, can we achieve growth and prosperity in Asia, where all of us can realise our great potential. Japan has sworn an oath never again to wage a war. We have never stopped and will continue to be wishing for the world to be at peace. It is my fervent hope that, through Abenomics, we can create a vibrant Japan that can bring about peace and prosperity in the region, and in the world. Thank you very much. END
「体育座り」やめました、集中力落ち腰痛原因の声も…専門家「他の座り方検討すべきだ」 : 読売新聞オンライン (yomiuri.co.jp)
というkuronekoコロナ禍続く中でマスクをはずさせようとしたり5類扱いしようとしたりする狂気に抗う (2023年1月25日の記録) #自民党に殺される5類引き下げ5月3日からやることに勝手に決められましたね。
かなりの人が動くことは確かです。
「閣議決定サイコパスですか」、「分科会から異議が唱えられたのを無視しているから科アンドリュー・バルトフェルド三浦清志・三浦瑠麗夫妻の太陽光発電事業投資疑惑について (メモ)テレビは三浦瑠麗を使い続けるのか。 テレビが,今までどうり三浦瑠麗を使い続けるのかどうかが問題ですね。何を言っているのかさっぱり分からない右翼女子を重宝して使ってきたテレビ局が悪い。
三浦瑠麗Takeshiひろゆき(西村博之)氏がもてはやされる限り、日本社会には改善も発展も進歩もないと考える理由ひろゆき氏がもてはやされている日本ひろゆき氏といえば数々の反動的な書き込み、問題発言で有名です。
最近でも過った国策と闘っている辺野古の新基地建設反対運動を揶揄したりとその反動ぶりにはただただ閉閉口世界平和統一家庭連合(旧統一教会)との密接な関係を指摘され説明を求められて、短い密室懇談会ですませようという自民党出身の細田博之衆院議長。旧統一教会と密接過ぎることの間接的な告白と解釈する。細田派→安倍晋三派戦前レジームの日本軍国主義者「安倍晋三」が所属していた自民党細田派は自民党最右派、筋金入りの大日本帝国主義者の集まりでした。
細田衆議院議長はそのボスだった人で閉口ひろゆき(西村博之)氏がもてはやされる限り、日本社会には改善も発展も進歩もないと考える理由No titleひろゆきの言ってること自体に「それって、アンタの勝手な感想ですよね。」と言ってやりたい。れいんぼーひろゆき(西村博之)氏がもてはやされる限り、日本社会には改善も発展も進歩もないと考える理由No title次から次へと問題発言を繰り返しているひろゆきですが、とりわけに深刻なのは子どもの間で妙な人気があることです。「それってあなたの感想ですよね」が小学生の間の流行語クテシフォン韓国文化を楽しむかどうかにかかわらず、日本国と日本人と毎日新聞記者大貫智子氏は加害の歴史に向き合うべきである。 @mainichi No title加害の事実を直視せずに目を瞑っていれば、その事実は、いずれなかったことになるというのを狙っているのでしょうね。
北海道では、朝鮮人労働者が厳しい労働に耐えられずれいんぼーニュージーランドによる過去の差別行為についてのジャシンダ・アーダーン首相による謝罪は、過去の蛮行への国家・団体としての謝罪としてすごい。アーダーン首相の辞任は残念。 アーダーン首相は近く辞任するとのこと。幼い子を育てながら激務の首相をこなすのは難しいのでしょう。残念ですが。Takeshi韓国文化を楽しむかどうかにかかわらず、日本国と日本人と毎日新聞記者大貫智子氏は加害の歴史に向き合うべきである。 @mainichi No title おぞましい事に今回の毎日新聞の大貫記者のような立場が、今「リベラル」と称されているメディアの到達点です。日本の加害責任に向き合う姿勢は、もはや読売、産経だろうクテシフォン行政が国民を脅す道具と化したマイナンバーカード。岡山県備前市によるマイナカード取得強制という憲法違反の暴政に強く抗議する。 #マイナンバーカードの義務化に反対します #マイナンバーカード強制反対No title 違憲違法の行為を平然とやって顧みない岡山県備前市の態度は、立憲民主国家にあるまじきものと言うほかありません。こんな行いを許して、それでもまだ「任意」というのでクテシフォン行政が国民を脅す道具と化したマイナンバーカード。岡山県備前市によるマイナカード取得強制という憲法違反の暴政に強く抗議する。 #マイナンバーカードの義務化に反対します #マイナンバーカード強制反対私も署名しました。 私のところに二度、マイナンバーカードを取得するよう催促が来ました。紙の保険証だと受診料を高くするなど、取得していない人への差別が予定されています。この備前市のTakeshi北朝鮮は私たちの鏡ではないかと考えた。北朝鮮,韓国ともに今年2023年は建国75周年 1948年8月15日,李承晩を大統領にあおぐ大韓民国が成立しました。同年9月8日に最高人民会議において憲法が採択され,翌9日に朝鮮民主主義人民共和国が正式に成立しましたTakeshi死刑FAQ (適宜更新)加賀乙彦さん亡くなる。 作家の加賀乙彦(本名:小木貞孝)さんが老衰にために亡くなりました。ご冥福をお祈りしたいと思います。小説「宣告」は死刑というものを深く考えさせてくれました。「あTakeshi立憲民主党は暴走する自民党政治に付き従う維新に引っ張られるのではなくて、ブレーキ役としての立憲野党側に残るべき。 @izmkenta >ネトウヨのGENさん立憲民主党が維新や自民党に接近することで親自民党票を回収したいと考えていたとしても、無理ではないでしょうか。
仮に少しの票を自民党支持層から得たとしても、立憲野村野瀬 玲奈立憲民主党は暴走する自民党政治に付き従う維新に引っ張られるのではなくて、ブレーキ役としての立憲野党側に残るべき。 @izmkenta 立憲としては維新に流れた反自民票を回収したいんじゃないでしょうか
維新側に接近したために離れる票があったとしても、それらは社民党や共産党で回収できる事なので皮算ネトウヨのGENニュージーランドによる過去の差別行為についてのジャシンダ・アーダーン首相による謝罪は、過去の蛮行への国家・団体としての謝罪としてすごい。過去の主な謝罪例 周恩来首相が初めてハノイを訪問したとき,まっさきにチュン・チャク,チュン・ニ姉妹の墓を訪れ,多くのヴェトナム人が見守るなか,2000年前の中国軍の侵攻により悲劇的Takeshi成田悠輔をマスメディアに出すな #マスメディアへの不満 #マスメディアへの不信スペルミスを訂正します。Assiatant Professor of Economicsはスペルミスで,正しくはAssistant Professor of Economicsでした。お詫びして訂正します。Takeshi成田悠輔をマスメディアに出すな #マスメディアへの不満 #マスメディアへの不信成田悠輔の職名について 私は成田悠輔のことを書き込んだとき,彼の職名を助教としました。ところが多くの人が助教授と書いているようです。イエール大学のホームページで成田悠輔のページを見るTakeshi放射性物質汚染水の海洋放出に反対地球環境の悪化に抗議自民党政府は福島第一原発の汚染水を2023年の春か夏に海洋に放出することを決めたとのことです。地元の漁業関係者,多くの日本国民,世界の人々の反対にもかかわらず強行しTakeshi自民党政権の日本で高くなるばかりの国民負担率(、そして、削減され続ける社会保障サービス、増大する不透明な不適切支出・利権中抜き支出) #自民党に投票するからこうなる最近の物価高に思う。最近の物価高,例えば厳冬期なのに電気代の高騰に頭を痛めている人が多いと思います。私自身,電気使用量を減らしたのに徴収される電気料が増えて驚いたものです。直近の例Takeshiコロナ感染者数が増え続け、一日あたり死者数も500人超えの日本。コロナ禍への危機感が足りない。心配しかない。(2023年1月12日の記録)猛威を振るうコロナ第8波日本ではコロナ第8波が猛威を振るいこのところ日本は世界で1番感染者数の多い国になっています。
また感染者総数も尹錫悦保守反動政権の失政で感染を拡大させた韓国を抜い閉口世界平和統一家庭連合(旧統一教会)の支援も受けて当選した自民党・井上義行参議院議員の朝日新聞 @asahi 上での単独インタビューに呆れた。井上氏の発言そのものと、朝日新聞の一方的垂れ流し報道の両方に。 #マスメディアへの不満最低の暴論「甘ったれるな」という言葉は恵まれた境遇にいる人が不遇な境遇にいる人に対して向ける暴論であることが多々あります。
旧統一教会の支援も受けて当選した井上義行参議院閉口死刑FAQ (適宜更新)山上徹也容疑者の起訴に思う。 安倍晋三狙撃の山上徹也容疑者が長期間の鑑定留置を終えて殺人罪で起訴されました。裁判員裁判で裁かれることになります。母親が統一教会の熱心な信者であり,そのためにTakeshi死刑FAQ (適宜更新)第8回死刑廃止大会2022年11月15日から18日までベルリンにおいて死刑廃止世界大会が開催され,アムネスティ・インターナショナル・ジャパンの国際協議委員会委員が出席しました。今回は128ヶTakeshi死刑FAQ (適宜更新)イランで死刑執行が続く。2023年1月6日,イランは反政府デモに関連してモハマド・マフディ・カラミさんとサイード・モハマド・ホセイニさんの死刑を執行しました。抗議運動に関する死刑は4例目になTakeshi「家族が大切だ」という自民党の多くの議員が、多くの家族を地獄に落とした #世界平和統一家庭連合 ( #統一教会 )を「支援」する背徳高齢者の集団自殺を提起した大学助教 高齢者は金食い虫で生産性がないから、姥捨山伝説のように処理すべきだという暴言・妄言を吐くヤツが出てくるのではないかと思っていたら,やはり出てきました。
イエTakeshi国旗、国歌、国家意識(「愛国心」)を考えるリンク集 (適宜更新)日本語で定着している外国語 国粋主義者は,日本は日本独自の文化で成り立っていると思いがちです。食品や衣服だけでなく,言葉でも外国語由来のものはたくさんあります。
・雨合羽などというときTakeshi「靖国神社思想の本音」 (メモ)朝鮮人特攻隊員 靖国神社に合祀されている朝鮮半島出身の軍人・軍属は合祀者名簿上で
21,000人以上いると言われ,本人や遺族の意思にかかわらず英霊として合祀されています。ここには特Takeshi国連・自由権規約委員会による第5回日本政府報告書審査 (碧猫さん、Stiffmuscleさん、非国民通信さんの記事から)国連自由権規約委員会による第8回目の日本審査アムネスティ・ニュースレターvol.503からの一部抜粋です。
日本は1979年に自由権規約(市民的及び政治的権利に関する国際規約を批准しました。つまりこの規約を守るとTakeshi