Wednesday, April 14, 2010

"light is sprung up"

(A Japanese standard sakura road...)




Happy Talk?

Prime Minister of Japan Mr. Yukio Hatoyama and President Mr. Barack Obama talked for 10 minutes at the dinner table on the international conference on nuclear arsenal control against AlQaeda.

P.M. Mr. Hatoyama did not look unsatisfactory after the dinner, though he could not invite the next conference to Tokyo, for the venue in 2012 was fixed in South Korea.

As for nuclear bombs, if AlQaeda should obtain it, where would they use it? Dubai, Israel, New York, or Mecca? Yet, no poor terrorists can get it; and rich terrorists often depend on Dubai, Wall Street, and Saudi Arabia.

So, President Mr. Obama had better advise Israelis to leave Palestine for America.

(In Japanese, we say that what has happened twice can happen again for the third time. After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, why not Tel Aviv?)


SECTION I: Who Put a Cameraman Down

A large-scale demonstration already continued for months in Bangkok.

Anything terrible could happen, experts all thought, in the city where the prime minister and a rival ex-prime minister were vying and mobilizing thousands and more policemen/troops and protesters, respectively.

So, a news agency would send a team of well trained cameramen and reporters to Bangkok from its office in Singapore or Hong Kong, in addition to hiring local reporters and cameramen.

The team would work as a team, covering one another, since Bangkok was now so dangerous.

But, a certain news agency sent one Japanese cameraman from its Tokyo office, who moved alone on the street of Bangkok among Thai armed troops and active demonstrators without an interpreter or other local helpers while carrying a big video camera on his shoulder. In fact, he was unfortunately hit to death by an unidentified sniper whose one shot accurately pierced the left chest of the Japanese just apparently looking like a foreign media staff member among red-shirt Thais.

A video footage he left in his camera showed how he walked around among soldiers and demonstrators. The Japanese cameraman should have felt danger that he might been hit or attacked. But, such caution and fear cannot be found in the footage he took on the street where hundreds of armed troops were trying to crush thousands of violent demonstrators.

The Japanese cameramen looked like having not been trained on how to see danger and how to behave in such danger.

The responsibility is on the news agency who sent a Japanese cameraman from Tokyo who looked not so well trained as a war cameraman, had him work alone in the turmoil of Bangkok, but did not tell him not to get involved in a violent clash.

Apparently something is wrong about the international news agency, since it is a Rothschild company where some ancestor of Princess Diana was associated.

(Most probably, management in the Tokyo office, mostly consisting of Anglo Saxons, was too busy having a fun in Tokyo to consider the matter seriously and show full respect to the Japanese cameraman. Now, they are trying to hide their grave mistake and sin by advertising the dead cameraman as a hero all over the world, since it is a global company...Do not be fooled!!)


SECTION II: American Woman in Nanjing in 1939

There was an American woman who visited Nanjing, China, in 1939.

She however died peacefully in 2007 in America leaving a legacy of an expert in Japan after WWII.

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Originally published June 6, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified June 6, 2007 at 2:02 AM

Eleanor Hadley spent her life standing up to oppression, dies at 90

Eleanor Hadley rarely talked of her experiences as a young American woman tasked with democratizing the economy of post-World War II Japan...

By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter

Ms. Hadley attended Mills College in Oakland, Calif., and was selected for a student fellowship at Tokyo Imperial University, said her nephew, Robert Hadley, of Normandy Park. From 1938 to 1940, she traveled extensively in Japan and China, becoming one of the first Westerners to visit Nanjing after the Japanese military massacred 150,000 to 300,000 Chinese in that city.

"She went to Japan a pacifist but came back from the whole experience with an understanding that there are times you have to stand up to horrible regimes," her nephew said.

She returned to the U.S. to pursue her doctorate in economics at Harvard-Radcliffe University but was recruited in 1943 by the U.S. State Department to work as a research economist focusing on Japan.

At the end of the war, Ms. Hadley — then 31 — was asked to join Gen. Douglas MacArthur's staff in Tokyo, where she worked to help break the zaibatsu, the powerful industrial and financial combines that dominated Japan's economy...


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003736138_hadleyobit06m.html?referrer=newsvine
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Her book was translated into Japanese, presenting precious reports on Japan and China before and after WWII.

(http://www.bk1.jp/product/02456095 )

Yet, it is very noteworthy that a young American woman could peacefully travel alone from Tokyo to Nanjing under the authority of the Empire of Japan one and a half year after the 1937 War having expanded so swiftly from Shanghai to Nanjing beyond the foresight of Chiang Kaishek and his generals.

The truth of this great war was yet to be addressed, though the 1932 Shanghai War was triggered by Chinese non-regular 30,000 troops who invaded and attacked the international business community and Concessions in Shanghai virtually under protection of the Imperial Navy of Japan. This war drawn not only Chinese regular army divisions but also two aircraft carriers of the Imperial Navy whose attack planes bombed some districts occupied by Chinese non-regular troops as the first of aircraft engagement in real war in history.

Indeed, we must not be fooled.

Yet, she wrote that what surprised her so much while looking out of the window of a train during her journey from Shanghai to Nanjing was Chinese graves, consisting of a mound and white paper slips, segueing all through the railroad path for 300 km or 170 miles between the two great cities on the Chang Jiang River.

But, what actually happened in the war? Why would not the Japanese Army hide and seal the city of the so-called massacre (like German Nazis)? What is good for the Imperial Army in killing so many citizens? Where had the Chinese leaders and their million troops gone who had been expected to protect 300,000 citizens in Nanjing?

Truly, the 1937 War should be addressed even to know the truth of the 1941 Pearl Harbor Attack, the 1963 JFK Assassination, and the 2001-9/11 Terror.

*** *** *** ***

Families restrict your act.

Neighbours restrict your act.

Friends restrict your act.

Enemies restrict your act.

The police restrict your act.

Laws, regulations, and rules restrict your act.

Ethics restrict your act.

Religion restricts your act.

And, history restricts your act, since it is the God.



(http://www.just-oldies.com/1974/jet.htm

Now, I have finished my work, Jet!!)



Mat 4:13 And leaving Nazareth, he came and dwelt in Capernaum, which is upon the sea coast, in the borders of Zabulon and Nephthalim:

Mat 4:14 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying,

Mat 4:15 The land of Zabulon, and the land of Nephthalim, by the way of the sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles;

Mat 4:16 The people which sat in darkness saw great light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death light is sprung up.