| | | <<Could someone want a significant part of the world to be pissed off at Japan, on the cheap?>>
seems to work quite well judging by the almost instant reactions across media in some nations - search under "anne frank japan" by evil google
it seems that the act has gone nation-wide in the land of the rising sun "At least 265 books have been vandalised at 31 municipal libraries in Japan's capital since the end of January.
Read more: dailymail.co.uk "
… yes, and abe-san is doing an excellent job of such, first angering the near neighbors, and soon enough, peeving far neighbors, and he must not be interrupted.
simply put, as and when one wishes to deny sordid history, one must deny it all
am guessing that the fiction of russian-japan @ peace shall result in not very many islands handed over by russia to japan (like -0-), or japanese money for siberia (~ -0-), because putin does not seem the type to hand over stuff, and japan money for siberia would merely result in less expensive raw material for china
am figuring koreas would ante up the wagers as the koreans typically do. god bless them both
am counting on japan to say no to usa as they always wished for. go on, just say it
am reckoning the europeans to stay out so as to watch what happens to the troop counts on their frontier and hoping for their best
am doubtful the 50+% japanese electorates do the needful task because that is not how the system works
china? preparing for the near-inevitable is inevitable, just build more and more defensive rockets, bigger, faster and more accurate, so that what happened once shall never again, as ~50% of active ingredient japan is just tokyo; and then just wait, for earthquakes, tsunamis, radiation plumes, and the gentle process of ever inexorable aging. history shall not repeat exactly because there be no distracting civil war this time around. the gentle passage of time is a wonderful thing.
but first, who can know, maybe olympic boycott?
for the cia-enabled yakuza-powered japanese political elite w/ deep legacy is just carrying on the work they were once interrupted, is all |
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