心のハンドル操作方法 幸せに生きるための教習所

旧精神科医療は思想警察なのか?

The Reischauer Affair allowed allowed the Japanese Red Cross Society to make huge profits.

2024年08月22日 | Japanese Psychiatry hospital(日本の精神科医療)

Blood transfusions are a common practice in surgery and emergency care.

In the past, Utsumi Satoshi and Funase Shunsuke published a book called "The Darkness of Blood" in which they argued that blood transfusions are dangerous.

I also used to think that blood transfusions were bad, but when my father's condition suddenly worsened, he was anemic and received a component transfusion of red blood cells (MAP), which dramatically improved his condition.

Since then, my father has had no immune abnormalities and is living a healthy life.

In this way, blood transfusions have been established as a treatment method, and "human blood" has an aspect of being a "medicine" that is traded at high prices.

In fact, looking at the history of blood transfusions, the Japan Blood Bank was established in Osaka in 1950.

The founding members were all people connected to Unit 731, and Naito Ryoichi was a former military doctor and army surgeon (Lieutenant Colonel) and one of the right-hand men of Lieutenant General Ishii Shiro, who was in charge of Unit 731 of the former Japanese military.

In addition, Kitano Masatsugu, who became an advisor, was once the head of Unit 731, and Niki Hideo, a director, was a former head of the Niki squad of Unit 731 and the publisher of the right-wing political magazine "Seikai Jeep."

Kobe Bank, the predecessor of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, invested in the people connected to Unit 731.

Although it is associated with selling blood, there is also the aspect that pharmaceutical companies were collecting blood to make blood products.

However, there was a view that disliked this, and blood containing the hepatitis virus was commonly called "yellow blood."

It was the "Reischauer Incident," in which Ambassador Reischauer was stabbed, that led to the ban of blood selling and the Japanese Red Cross Society's sole focus on blood donation.

In 1963, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare put forward a "Proposal for the Transfer of the Mentally Disabled to the Community," which was scheduled to put an end to the boom in psychiatric hospitals.

However, in 1964, a 19-year-old boy sneaked into the US Embassy and stabbed the US ambassador to Japan, Reischauer, in the thigh with a kitchen knife, which caused a setback in support for the transition of mentally disabled people to the community.

It is said that this boy had also sneaked into the US Embassy many times.

The embassy is heavily guarded by riot police units, making it impossible for ordinary people to enter.

The more we look into the Reischauer incident, the more suspicious it becomes.

Let's take a look at an overview of the incident.

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・Ambassador Reischauer Stabbing Incident, 1964

https://www.cool-susan.com/2015/10/22/%E3%83%A9%E3%82%A4%E3%82%B7%E3%83%A3%E3%83%AF%E3%83%BC%E5%A4%A7%E4%BD%BF%E5%88%BA%E5%82%B7%E4%BA%8B%E4%BB%B6/

Around noon on March 24, 1964, U.S. Ambassador to Japan Edwin Reischauer (53) was about to enter his car at the back entrance of the embassy in Akasaka, Tokyo when he was attacked by a boy who looked like a factory worker and stabbed in the right thigh with a 16-centimeter knife. The boy was restrained by the secretary and the Marines at the scene, and handed over to the Akasaka Police Officer who rushed to the scene. This murder was the first attack on a foreign dignitary since the war.

The secretary administered first aid with a necktie to stop the bleeding, and the boy was immediately taken to Toranomon Kyosai Hospital. The stab wound in his thigh was 2.8 cm long and 10 cm deep, and he lost more than 3000 cc of blood, so a 1000 cc blood transfusion was administered. The surgery by the Toranomon Kyosai Hospital doctors and the Yokosuka US Military Hospital doctors lasted four hours.

Despite this sudden turn of events, Ambassador Reischauer remained calm. On the way to the operating room, he was calm enough to give the "OK" sign with his thumb and index finger to his wife, who had rushed over. The day after the surgery, he made everyone laugh by saying, "I was born in Japan, but I don't have Japanese blood. I received a large transfusion of Japanese blood, and now I'm a brother of real Japanese people." "Please do not let this small incident damage the friendly relations between Japan and the United States," he repeated many times. These words of comfort to the Japanese people made them feel even closer to Ambassador Reischauer.

The fact that the American ambassador to Japan was attacked inside the embassy, ​​which is an extraterritorial institution, drew attention to the way in which the scandal was handled. The Japanese government attached great importance to the incident, and Prime Minister Ikeda Hayato expressed regret to President Johnson of the United States, National Public Safety Commission Chairman Hayakawa Takashi resigned in responsibility, and the Emperor, Empress, and Crown Prince and Princess sent gifts of condolence.

The perpetrator was a mentally handicapped boy (19) living in Numazu City, Shizuoka Prefecture. The boy had suffered from schizophrenia since high school and had been receiving treatment at a hospital in Numazu. The crime was determined to have been due to a mental disorder and not ideological background.

The boy confessed, "I wanted to attack the ambassador to stir up public interest," but the details of his motive were incoherent. The boy had previously broken into the US Embassy twice, and had been questioned by police on suspicion of arson at the US Embassy before the incident. He was not indicted because he was in a state of insanity at the time of the crime, and was treated in a psychiatric hospital, but he committed suicide seven years after the incident.

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・(End of excerpt)

Reischauer lost 3.0 liters of blood just from being stabbed in the thigh.

In fact, this is the amount of blood loss that would cause death from shock.

"The circulating blood volume of an adult is 7% of body weight, so a 70kg person has about 5L of blood. It also shows the absolute amount of blood loss in a 70kg person. In particular, in an emergency situation, the classification of shock based on the absolute amount of blood loss in a 70kg person is memorized and classified into three categories: mild, moderate, and severe.

Bleeding of 20% or less out of 5 liters, that is, less than 1 liter, is considered mild bleeding.

Bleeding of 20-30% or less, 1-1.5 liters of blood, is considered moderate bleeding, and more than 1.5 liters is considered severe bleeding and shock occurs.

Reischauer lost 3 liters of blood, so he should have died.

He then received a 1 liter blood transfusion and contracted hepatitis from the transfusion.

"He was attacked by a Japanese person in the embassy, ​​and as a result of surgery he needed a blood transfusion, and as a result of using blood from a blood selling business he contracted hepatitis."

Then, the Japanese government will apologize to the United States for two reasons.

① The US ambassador to Japan was stabbed inside the embassy.

② After the stabbing, he was infected with the hepatitis virus by using Japanese blood for transfusion.

It should have developed into an international issue, but Japan was not punished.

Instead, the government implemented a countermeasure plan to ban the blood selling business, which poses the risk of hepatitis infection, and have the Japanese Red Cross test blood for transfusions.

Incidentally, the wife of this ambassador to Japan, Reischauer, is Haru Matsukata, the daughter of Matsukata Masayoshi, and is a relative of the imperial family.

These two people conspired to ban the blood selling business and create a system that allows blood for transfusions to be procured for almost nothing, which is the outcome of the Reischauer incident.

When the Japanese Red Cross Society makes a profit, the imperial family also profits.

In fact, the blood selling business was only banned, and blood was actually sold until 1990.

The end of blood selling in Japan

After 1964, blood selling decreased rapidly, and in 1968 the production of blood for transfusions derived from sold blood ceased. Since the blood deposit system of private blood banks continued, it was not until 1974 that the system was abolished and blood for transfusions was completely switched to blood from donated blood.

On the other hand, for plasma fraction preparations, pharmaceutical companies continued to collect plasma for a fee until the transition to donated blood in 1990, so blood selling essentially continued after 1974. Midori Jushi, which was the last to collect plasma for a fee, ended its collection on July 27, 1990, and Nippon Pharmaceutical ended its collection on September 21 of the same year.

It says.

The drug-induced AIDS incident put an end to Midori Jushi, and blood-related businesses were solely managed by the Japanese Red Cross Society.

It would seem that they were colluding with the US ambassador to enrich the Imperial family by purchasing these items for next to nothing and reselling them at high prices, just like the mask resellers that arose during the COVID-19 pandemic.

I would like to touch on the fact-finding survey conducted on the implementation of the Mental Hygiene Act in 1963.

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・Changes in mental health and welfare from the legal perspective

-Exploring the background to the establishment of the Mental Health and Welfare Law Takehiko Yoshikawa

In 1963, almost ten years after the first survey, the second national mental health survey was conducted. This survey, which expanded the survey areas from the first survey, was designed to withstand epidemiological examination, but the survey results estimated the number of mentally disturbed people nationwide to be 1.24 million, of which 570,000 were mentally ill, 400,000 were mentally retarded, and 270,000 were other, and it was publicized that 280,000 of these people required hospitalization. It is extremely regrettable that only this part of the second survey has been taken up.

The second survey collected various information regarding the independence of the mentally disabled, and if this information had been fully utilized, the mental health and welfare administration related to the rehabilitation of the mentally disabled would have made considerable progress. However, the Reischauer incident that occurred in 1964 (Showa 39) was a setback for the treatment of the mentally disabled, which had been moving towards rehabilitation. The movement towards rehabilitation of the mentally disabled was lumped together under the label "mentally ill patients left alone," and calls were made for strengthening inpatient treatment for the mentally disabled.

In this context, the Mental Health Law was amended in 1965 (Showa 40).

In order to pave the way for home treatment instead of inpatient treatment as planned, this amendment established the following:

Public payment system for outpatient medical expenses (Article 32),

Public health center consultations and visits and mental health counselors (currently mental health counselors),

Establishment of psychiatric doctors on commission (Articles 42 and 43),

Establishment of prefectural mental health centers (currently mental health centers) and handling of complex and difficult consultations and guidance (Article 7), but at the same time, the reporting system was strengthened.

In addition, The National Institute of Mental Health established the Social Rehabilitation Department in the same year, and a system was established to continue the day care research that had been conducted up until then.

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・(End of reprint)

In the end, despite the movement to revise the Mental Hygiene Law, the law was reversed due to the Reischauer Affair, which was orchestrated by the Imperial Family to control the blood monopoly.

The 1965 revision of the Mental Hygiene Law resulted in a mysterious amendment that seemed to have been stuck in the back of one's mind.

It was Ambassador Reischauer to Japan, the Japanese Red Cross Society, and the Imperial Family who delayed support for the transition of mentally disabled people to the community for their own selfish gain.

Incidentally, Reischauer's father, Rev. Karl Reischauer, is the person who founded Tokyo Woman's Christian University with Nitobe Inazo.

Nitobe Inazo was the person who popularized Esperanto in Japan.

The Reischauer Affair is being highlighted as a psychiatric medical incident in order to cover up the evil of concentrating the blood monopoly in the hands of the Imperial Family.

Bad people do their bad deeds in small spaces.


『ライシャワー事件とは精神衛生法を改悪しただけでなく、売血制度を献血制度に変えて、日本赤十字社がぼろ儲けできるシステムを隠蔽したものである。』より引用 https://blog.goo.ne.jp/ikemenmassan/e/d2edbe0cedf0c699bcdcb6c21b71a983

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