Thursday, August 05, 2010

"ye fools, be ye of an understanding heart"



(Tokyo, a mecca for Chinese, Koreans, and Taiwanese)




Hottest Day and Days for Japan


Victims and their families of the Hiroshima or Nagasaki nuclear bomb attack say, "No more Hiroshima! No more Nagasaki!"

It implies that if the Japanese people had been informed of the American technological level that actually enabled development of atomic bombs, they would not have supported the Imperial government venturing into the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941.

But, more importantly, Hiroshima and Nagasaki victims must have seen power of the anti-God and the God, in whatever implication.

This scale of victimization can be only matched by Auschwitz.

All the Judaists in the world had better visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki, since Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Auschwitz belong to the domain of the anti-God and the God.

"No more Hiroshima! No more Nagasaki! No more Pearl Harbor! No more Auschwitz! No more Crucifixion!"



SECTION I: Empire under the Great Depression

It is Korekiyo Takahashi that saved the Empire of Japan from the Great Depression that had started in the U.S. in 1929.

Probably, Mr. Barnanke of FRB must have studied some on the state of the Empire of Japan recovering so fast while the U.S. and the U.K. were in the middle of recession in early 1930's.

Inflation Adjusted-Economic Growth Rate of Japan
1927....3.4%
1928....6.5%
1929....0.5%
1930....1.1%
1931....0.4%
1932....4.4%
1933....11.4%
1934....8.7%



Takahashi as minister of finance took anti-deflation measures very quickly.

Takahashi carried out devaluation of yen, resulted in 40% depreciation of yen.

Takahashi took aggressive fiscal policy, issuing government bonds in a large quantity.

Takahashi had the Bank of Japan take up these government bonds, suppressing a rise of interest.

A rise of prices of goods was also controlled between 3% to 4% after BOJ started to buy the government bonds in 1932.

An amount of outstanding BOJ notes increased by 40%, but industrial output grew 2.3 times.

Five years before John Maynard Keynes launched his theory, Korekiyo Takahashi practiced actually contents of the theory of Keynes.

(http://www.adpweb.com/eco/eco287.html)

(Hitler adopted Keynes' theory, but Takahashi had given hints to Keynes.)


So, the Japanese Government today must follow this great precedence:
1. Lower an exchange rate of yen by 40%.

2. Issue government notes in a large quantity to exchange them with BOJ notes so as to increase circulation of yen notes by 40%.

3. Control the consumer price index around 3.5% and promote industrial activities by 150%.

Of course you need another Korekiyo Takahashi but neither Keynes nor Hitler, in order to realize this revolutionary change.

If Japan address this challenge with a new theory, Japan will lead the 21st century in terms of economy and economics.



SECTION II: This Evening's Miracle

Mt. Fuji, 100 km far, is not yet smoking!



In the summer, it is not so easy to have climate condition suitable for 60-miles distant observation to the west over cities and towns with millions of population.


In addition, a military plane was flying high in the sky (click on the picture for magnification).

And, the line of woods at the edge of paddy fields is actually a bank of the holy Arakawa River flowing to the left-hand side toward the Tokyo Bay 41 km far.




SECTION III: Takahashi Korekiyo & the Rothschilds

Korekiyo Takahashi (family name: Takahashi) sold Japanese government bonds to the Rothschilds family and other Judaists to raise funds for the war between the Empire of Japan and the Russian Empire (1904-1905).

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Takahashi Korekiyo, the Rothschilds and the Russo-Japanese War, 1904–1907

Economic historians know Takahashi Korekiyo (1854–1936) best for his countercyclical monetary and fiscal policies during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Takahashi, who served as governor of the central bank, prime minister and seven times as finance minister between 1913 and his assassination in 1936, devalued the yen, lowered interest rates, increased the money supply, and began substantial deficit financing in 1931–1932, five years before John Maynard Keynes published his seminal General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. Takahashi’s policies were so successful in engineering Japan’s economic recovery that one of his biographers, Goto Shinichi, has dubbed him 'Japan’s Keynes'.
...
And finally on 1 March, Lord Rothschild reports that 'Mr. Takahashi as usual behaved admirably; naturally the objections he raised at first were fully justified'. On 7 March he continues that ‘The Japanese are a remarkable nation, they have proven themselves on land and sea and their financial representative Mr. Takahashi deserves the highest praise for having placed the finance of the country on so firm and stable a basis’, and on 8 March, that 'all preparations are made for the Japanese Loan and the prospectuses will be issued this afternoon and judging from appearances I expect the loan to be a great success'.
...
On 7 May, Lord Rothschild wrote to Paris that, 'We can heartily congratulate you upon the expected satisfactory conclusion of a Franco-Japanese arrangement. We have always had great faith in Japan, faith in their military and naval prowess which the late war amply justified, faith in the resources of their country and still greater faith in the wisdom of the Japanese rulers …' Although Lord Rothschild and Alfred had met Takahashi when he first arrived in London in the spring of 1904, the 'always' had not begun until November 1905, that is, after the peace, when the risk of lending to Japan had been greatly reduced.



http://www.rothschildarchive.org/ib/articles/AR2006Japan.pdf

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Korekiyo Takahashi was once a poor samurai boy sent to America for study. But, he was fell in a trap to be sold as a slave boy in a "white" man's farmer. Later, he successfully got freedom and came back to Japan when the samurai era had just gone.

Takahashi one time taught English in a school in Tokyo. One of his students was notable literary man Shiki Masaoka. As the greatest author in Japan Soseki Natsume was Masaoka's close friend, it was very interesting that Soseki later suffered in London during his stay for study, while Korekiyo enjoyed social relationships with the Rothschild and even the British Royal family. (Takahashi even sent two dogs to Queen of the England, namely the wife of the then British King.)

Anyway, the two greatest men, Takahashi and Natsume, in the modern history of Japan were somewhat linked, though they lived in very different domains.

When the Empire of Japan lost both Takahshi and Natsume without authentic successors, it was faced with a critical moment of WWII.

If you have not fully studied Korekiyo Takahashi and Soseki Natsume, you cannot be regraded as an expert in Japan, though you might be regarded so in New York or London, since Rothschild learnt Japan through Takahashi.

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


In large-scale confirmation efforts by public offices all over Japan, scores of old people aged 100 or more are found to be missing, though there are more than 40,000 old people aged 100 or more in Japan.

An old woman aged 104 has been confirmed alive in her home with her family in northern Japan. As she has not received nursing care, only a face-to-face check can prove officially her living.

Before I die, I really wish that non-money economy would be realized.

Jesus Christ said that the Kingdom of God cannot be pointed here or there.





(http://www.fukuchan.ac/music/j-folk0/konyawaodorou.html

Long, long, long, longing for dancing on the shore under the starry night,
since I'll be dancing all night long.)




Pro 8:4 Unto you, O men, I call; and my voice is to the sons of man.

Pro 8:5 O ye simple, understand wisdom: and, ye fools, be ye of an understanding heart.

Pro 8:6 Hear; for I will speak of excellent things; and the opening of my lips shall be right things.