文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

This arrogance is unbelievable to the Japanese. It is truly a shameless brain structure.

2024年08月06日 11時53分15秒 | 全般

Now, the Asahi Shimbun is running a series of special features titled "Marginal Nippon."
January 21, 2013
The Asahi Shimbun is currently running a series of special features titled "Marginal Nippon."
For the past 20 years, the editorialists of the Japanese mass media, as well as the University of Tokyo professor and his friends, the thieving barons, who are probably their coaxers, have not only failed to harshly criticize the realities of China and South Korea as pointed out here but have not even taken any countermeasures against them.
It should be said that the University of Tokyo professors and their friends, the robber barons, have not allowed Japan to take any countermeasures.
All they have done is to advocate the arbitrary opening up of regulations.
The best example of these thieving barons' arrogance and arbitrary attitude was their performance to facilitate the refinancing of the huge debts of their own companies.
Suddenly, he referred to solar power generation as the world's savior and made demands to the current administration that were the opposite of open regulation, completely ignoring economic logic.
In this case, the dying administration and the politicians, Japanese or Korean, who made up the government approved the purchase of solar power at the world's most expensive price of 42 yen.
After 3.11, he suddenly drove to Fukushima, even though no one had asked him to do so. 
He even brought a Geiger counter in his car.
He even had the whole story published in a weekly magazine.
Before he did this, he had decided to invest in a renewable energy company, which he had been ordered to wait to announce for a while.
The stupidity and ugliness of the politicians who he beguiled were genuinely shameful.
The thief baron in Seoul, where he presided over the Green Congress, made a series of comments that underscored the lousiness of these politicians.
"Korean nuclear power plants are good. Japan's nuclear power plants are harmful."
The lameness of his words, too, should be called the lameness of a man with the mental age of a 12-year-old.
It is appropriate for him to set up a karaoke room in the president's office and let visitors sing their favorite songs to him.
He said, "Korea has no earthquakes, so you should promote nuclear power plants as much as possible....
He probably doesn't know that if you dig 1,000 meters deep enough, you can find a hot spring no matter where you are in the world.
Why?
He used Fukushima for his convenience, as is his habit.
The media, egged on by him, has begun to bash the power companies.
The South Koreans, seizing the moment, quickly set up a government-affiliated office in Tokyo.
They began furiously soliciting nuclear power plant engineers from TEPCO for employment.
China followed suit.
By now, we should know how many piratical acts this thief baron has committed.
It is no exaggeration to say that the professor above and the robber baron are the two champions who brought about Japan's "lost 20 years."
They worked to shrink Japan, to weaken Japan, and to do so.
And so, the Japanese mass media, which has continued to act as pseudo-moralists, as if it were moralism to put on a friendly face, has inflicted a total of 900 trillion yen in damage on the nation.
His success in obtaining the 42-yen buyout mentioned above assured the government of absolute profits in his new field of renewable energy.
It is the height of arrogance.
For his benefit, he has no regard for the nation's existence or its fate.
It is the unique philosophy of a country with a "Yangban tradition" that has disappeared from world history for 1,000 years.
At that time, I wrote further.
If he could sell the products of domestic solar panel makers, he would not buy domestic products because he would not be able to afford the price of the solar panels.
He has fooled politicians into ignoring economic principles regarding the purchase price, but he should stick to economic principles when it comes to the equipment he buys.
What he would buy would be Chinese or Korean products.
What thick-skinnedness and rhetoric will he use here?
For the sake of East Asian prosperity, etc., he will say.
It is not that Korea or China will buy them for ¥42.00 at all.
I was proven correct when it was recently reported that the U.S. Congress had questioned his decision to buy Sprint Nextel.
The problem was his use of Chinese Huawei products in his telecommunications equipment.
The reason was apparent.
He had played tricks on the then-Japanese administration and forced the country to buy them at the highest price in the world, a price that defied economic principles.
But he has no intention of buying products from domestic manufacturers.
This arrogance is unbelievable to the Japanese.
It is truly a shameless brain structure.
To be continued.


2024/7/30 in Onomichi


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