2011年8月31日 水曜日
今朝は何度か電話連絡あり!!
珍しいこと!!
ビジネスのことで難なくこなせる!!
しかし
寝具を干し
洗濯していて
無理な姿勢になったのか
ぎっくり腰気味に腰痛さんが発症!!!
折角のお休み日なのに!!
それでも2時間ほど安静にしていたらOK
とはいっても
ヤンキース:レッドソックス@FenwayParkをLiveでみながら!!
大リーグ特にこの2チームの首位争い 重量感ありも繊細!!
TV放送の画像も美事
日本はますます斜陽化するTV野球放送とプロ野球
長嶋や王や田淵といった
古くは金田や山内や稲尾や杉浦といって大物さんが
スターさんがいなくなってしまった!!
もう大リーグに属してやった方が世界戦略としてはあたるかもって思いました。
でないとジリ貧です。
出足遅れたが
11時にPhoの店へ!!
従業員も仕事が一段落か遅い朝食中
Welldoneの牛肉Phoをマスター:PhoBoChin&TraDaって注文
最近TraDaはお金をとらないでサービス
といっても1000ドン4円ですが!!気持ちの問題です。いいです。
お手伝いの小学生がいろいろ単語を教えてくれる。
とうとう適任者がいない中から54歳の野田新首相が誕生
彼しかいないのだから
もう託すしかない!!!!
自分が年をとって思うのかもしれないが
なんとなく小粒で頼りないが!!!!!!
Nytimesはどのように報道しているか見ていたら
日本の評論家たちと変わらぬ紹介!!!
文末にコピペしておきます。
珍しく我がベトナム娘の次女
ChauがFacebookに
早い返事!!
ーーーーーーーーーーー
Huỳnh Ngọc Châu
お父さん、お元気ですか。
先々週、姉妹3人でアオザイファッションショーに出演しましたよ~
ーーーーーーーーーーー
我が娘は
Kyoto Prefecture Honorable Ambassador 京都府名誉友好大使です。
小生など迎賓館に入ったことがないが
ベトナムから政府関連お偉方が来ると案内役&通訳でご相伴までも!!
左から長女Tran、3女、次女Chauです。
ついでに彼女からのメッセージもコピペします。
本日も大冒険
寝具干したままでV-CaFeにいます。
それではコピペ第1第2です。
感謝の夕べ2011-ベトナムの風を感じて
8月17日、18日の二日間連続で国立京都国際会館(Kyoto Internation Conference Center)にて「感謝の夕べ2011」が開催されました。毎年イベントのテーマが異なりますが、今年2011年は「ベトナムの風を感じて」というテーマでした。日越友好関係の40周年に向かって日本とベトナムとのこれまでの友好をお祝いし、現在および今後の両者の発展とより深まる友好関係を望む意味で、今年のテーマはベトナムになったということだそうです。
2日間を亘って行われた本イベントは千人以上の来場者を集めました。ベトナム伝統楽器であるトルンの演奏やアオザイ民族衣装ファッションショーの観賞の他、ベトナム料理を楽しめるコーナー、ベトナムに関する情報や雑貨などを手に入れるコーナーも設けられました。各日の一番最後に花火も打ち上げられ、花火のテーマである「日本がんばろう!!!」という花火からできた文字の出現は来場者の心を掴みました。
この度、アオザイファッションショーに出演することをきっかけで、私は自慢のベトナム女性伝統衣装を紹介することもできれば、楽しく交流することもできて良かったです。またこれからもこのような意味深い交流の場が増えてくることを望んでいます。
Finance Minister Is Chosen as Japan’s Next Leader
TOKYO — Japan’s governing party elected Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda on Monday to become the next prime minister, choosing a relative political unknown to lead this shaken nation’s recovery from the tsunami and nuclear accident in March and to revive its moribund economy.
It was a surprise victory for Mr. Noda, who had been seen as running a distant third before the internal vote by the Democratic Party. During the campaign, Mr. Noda presented himself as a pro-business fiscal conservative who could rein in Japan’s ballooning national debt while also taming the soaring yen and battling deflation.
However, political analysts said his victory was as much about seeking a fresh start for the Democratic Party, which has floundered since taking power in a historic election two years ago. The choice of Mr. Noda, who has no large power base within the party and is not one of the Democrats’ founding members, appeared to signal an effort to move beyond deep divisions that have undermined the party.
Analysts said that he may represent the last chance for the unpopular Democrats, who seemed to have lost their way under the indecisive leadership of Naoto Kan and his predecessor, Yukio Hatoyama. Mr. Noda was seen as having an opportunity to heal a deep division in the party over its scandal-tainted kingpin, Ichiro Ozawa, because he was neither a supporter nor a sharp critic of Mr. Ozawa.
Mr. Noda will take over the daunting tasks of leading Japan’s recovery from the deadly earthquake and the cleanup of radiation from the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, while also overcoming the challenges of two decades of economic stagnation, an aging population and the rise of neighboring China.
Mr. Kan failed to galvanize Japan after the disaster in March or point a new direction for this seemingly rudderless nation. It remained unclear whether the relatively inexperienced Mr. Noda, who has held only one cabinet-level position but is seen as quietly competent, will fare any better in ending Japan’s drift.
“Can we do what is best for Japan, protect the livelihood of the Japanese people, revive the Japanese economy?” Mr. Noda, 54, asked in a speech. “This is what we are being called on to do.”
Mr. Noda defeated the trade minister, Banri Kaieda, by 215 to 177 votes in a runoff election on Monday, after a first ballot failed to produce a clear victor from a field of five candidates. Mr. Noda will be formally elected prime minister by the full Parliament as early as Tuesday; the Democrats control the more powerful lower house.
Political analysts are divided on Mr. Noda’s chances of overcoming the political paralysis in Japan, which has gone through six prime ministers in five years. They said that while the choice of the relatively youthful Mr. Noda represents a much-needed changing of the guard in the governing party, he will face the same fiscal constraints and resistance to change that had stymied his predecessors.
“Mr. Noda’s biggest battle will be overcoming the vested interests that have made it so hard to bring change in Japan,” said Norihiko Narita, a political scientist and president of Surugadai University outside Tokyo. “It will be extremely difficult for him to fare any better than those who came before him, to say the least.”
One of his biggest challenges will be a divided Parliament, where opposition parties like the Liberal Democrats have used control of the upper house to block the Democrats, in hopes of forcing an early general election. During the campaign, Mr. Noda signaled a greater willingness to compromise with the opposition than did the other candidates, or Mr. Kan.
He also appears to mark a departure from Mr. Kan on the crucial question of the future of nuclear energy.
While Mr. Kan called for ending what he called Japan’s dependence on nuclear power, Mr. Noda has followed the business community in saying that the nation needs nuclear power to prevent electricity shortages that could further cripple the economy.
In foreign affairs, he has said he will maintain close ties with Washington and support an existing deal to keep the Futenma air base on Okinawa.
However, he is a social conservative who, analysts warn, might provoke neighbors like China with comments like one he recently made, saying that Japan’s wartime leaders were not war criminals.
During the brief campaign, Mr. Noda tried to set himself apart by displaying a sense of humor in an otherwise drab race, comparing himself to a loach, a less than attractive fish that scours the mud for food.
“I will stink of mud and work until I sweat on behalf of the people,” he said.
Whether his self-depreciating style will charm voters remains to be seen. Analysts said his lack of recognition could work in his favor by not building up expectations in the beginning that he cannot fulfill.
“He won’t start with strong approval ratings, which will put less pressure on him to deliver right away,” said Hirotada Asakawa, an independent political analyst.
“Let us end the politics of resentment,” Mr. Noda said. “Let’s make a more stable and reliable political leadership.”
A version of this article appeared in print on August 30, 2011, on page A10 of the New York edition with the headline: Japanese Finance Minister Chosen by Party as Next Premier.
1回目の休憩
午前11時52分
この下のクリックお願いします!!!
↓↓↓↓↓
にほんブログ村