It is a must-read not only for all Japanese citizens but also for people all over the world.
In particular, those who make a living from and subscribe to the Asahi Shimbun, a foolish newspaper found nowhere else in the developed world, which not only takes pleasure in disgracing its own country to the world but will do any fabrication to do so.
It is primarily the so-called scholars who have been telling us to learn from Germany.
Those who make a living from the South German newspaper have been writing anti-Japanese articles using this newspaper's anti-Japanese articles.
It is the people who subscribe to this newspaper.
And make a living from the T.V. station that airs the story of the Nanking Massacre fabricated by John Rabe as an annual event at the end of every year.
As a result, about half of the German people have an anti-Japanese ideology.
It is a must-read for those in the U.S. who call themselves scholars, such as Alexis Dudden, a Korean agent.
It is without exaggeration to say that it is the best book in the world.
The emphasis in the text, except for the headline, is mine.
Renho snickers at the Japanese people's concern for the next 200 years
There was a nightmare time a few years ago when the Democratic Party of Japan came to power.
At that time, Renho sorted out, or cut off as useless; the super levees plan to prepare for a once-in-200-year flood.
The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism (MLIT) planned to build about 900 kilometers of levees along the coast of Tokyo Bay and other areas.
Shintaro Ishihara, surprised by this truncation, called for a reconsideration, but Renho laughed at his nerves for worrying about the next 200 years.
Because the people of China, the home of her heart, never think of civil engineering and flood control as something that will not help their stomachs.
The Japanese government's Yang-Di built a canal connecting the Yangtze River and the Yellow River.
He was not a native of China and is conferred posthumously as "the greatest tyrant in China" instead of being honored for his outstanding achievement.
She was familiar with such a country, so super levees were out of the question for her.
Edward Morse and Swiss Minister Emme Ampère, who visited Japan during the Meiji era, recorded with amazement the number of disasters in Japan: earthquakes, eruptions, floods, and typhoons.
Needless to say by them, in the past year (2014-2015), 56 people died in the eruption of Mt. Ontake, 74 people killed in the Debris Flow in Hiroshima, Owakudani erupted, there was a direct earthquake in Tokyo Bay, Aso erupted after Sakurajima, and now the Kinugawa River has collapsed.
Ampere is more surprised at how many Japanese people respond to such disasters, sometimes with a smile, without being overwhelmed by sadness.
Ampere is also amazed at the impermanence of innocent children, who sometimes accept family members' unexpected death.
It is because education begins with "Iroha-Uta," a poem about impermanence.
I want to ask Renho if the super levees were not the ultimate ideal of the Japanese people who have lived through such disasters.
I would also like to ask one more question.
The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), while laughing about the next 200 years, stopped the nuclear power plants based on a fault line that moves once every 100,000 years.
What kind of reasoning do you have for that?
