I have called globalism economic
colonialism so far. Reading this
article, you will understand it very well.
Their next target is Japan and they simultaneously aim to collapse South
Korea that is almost dead in order to unite with North Korea. A fake Jewish country will be created.
Masatoshi
Takeshita
February
9, 2013
Slums of the outskirts of Paris (photo from teamliquid.net)
English translation of an excerpt from a
Japanese article: February 8, 2013 -
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Look
straight at Korea’s economy with prosperous big corporations and common people
at the brink of freezing death
Korea’s economy, which has been under the
control of IMF, globalism personified, seems to be driven into a miserable
situation, where exporting big companies taken over by international financial
mafia are prospering and common people are going to die in indignation.
In Japan true situation
of common people in Korea has never been reported. If the Abe administration should place a person
with philosophy like Mr. Heizo Takenaka in the center of policy making or appoint
him as the Governor of Bank of Japan, our country would be thrown headlong into
the rough sea of global economy and the country would get bankrupt in a short
time.
Probably only part of truth of U.S.-Korea
FTA is available to Japan. Japan has a
pressing big problem of TPP. I really
feel it important to protect the country from a trend leading to national ruin by
learning a lesson from Korea.
(I will post astonishing part of the
reality which a son of Mr. Hiroya Oki heard and saw below.)
Sorry to tell you my personal matter, but
my son, who was a struggling actor and model and in a dead end situation, went
to Seoul with an aim to be a male version of Ms. Yuko Fueki, a popular Japanese
actor in Korea. While being enrolled at
the same university where she studied, he had spent four and a half years from
the year-end of 2007 living in Korea and getting involved in “Korean dramas.” I had chatted via Skype with my son about
life in general, mainly life in Seoul twice a year. At first, I was not able to believe what he
had talked.
“Workers of Seoul City
Office are very busy removing the bodies of homeless people who are frozen to
death every morning in winter. Subway stations in Seoul are flooded with
beggars and homeless people.”
In Korea with no national health program or
social welfare system, sickness or unemployment means descent into beggars or
death. In wintertime the coldest
temperature drops to minus 20 degrees Celsius.
“In Seoul, you cannot
live in a decent house even at the cost of 100,000 yen. Unless you can post the
deposit of nearly 10 million yen, you have to live in a prefabricated house
built in the basement or on the rooftop.
A part-time worker, who has to wait his turn for
a job, is paid about 250 yen per hour.”
Probably, at the time of IMF ado real
estate in Korea was bought up by foreign capitalists and some rich people with
special privileges.
“My acquaintance who has
been working for KBS cannot buy a house.
KBS is a Korean version of NHK.
It is operated by foreign money, so Korean employees have to work at
terribly low pay.”
This is also the result of the buyout of
corporate stocks at the trough by foreign money at the time of IMF ado. This has already been reality in Japan, too,
from 2003.
“In our university, only
one of ten students can get a job after graduation. So, young people have no other choice but to
go out of the country.
Four Koreans I have made friends with here have all immigrated to Hong
Kong, Canada, Singapore and Japan.
Girls have no job but
prostitutes.”
If the number of
non-regular employees tops 50 percent, young people will start leaving the
country and perhaps national meltdown will start. This situation reminds me of the course of
events seen in Latin American countries in the latter half of 1900s, where
national wealth had completely been robbed of.
“Collapse of a nation is terrible. In the recent incident of North Korean
artillery attack on Yeonpyeongdo island,
Korean troops fired back in vain. It is
said here in Korea that soldiers with weakened morale had cold feet.”
We have to remember that with the destruction
or collapse of a nation, troops are sure to become a ragtag team of defeated
soldiers even if their mental strength is boasted of. It is impossible to wage desperate war. Every history of warfare teaches us that
people who loudly cried for war were the first to run away weak-kneed.
“In Korea, a complete
colonial country, the old have no other choice but to die without eating. In Korea there is a Korean
dried laver roll store called “Kinpap Heaven,” a counterpart of beef bowl
restaurant in Japan. The old sharing one dried laver roll among the three there is
a common scene.
Approximately 100 yen roll is shared among
the three! They seem to fill their
stomach with kimchi, Korean pickle, which they can eat as they like, and with
soup. It is
called ‘A dried laver roll’ equivalent to ‘A bowl of Japanese noodles’ among
Japanese.”
How miserable situation! However, it is likely that our country will also
be in such a situation in ten or twenty years though we think that it is
impossible. We have to watch out. Idleness is the devil’s workshop.
As for information in
Korea, it is most terrifying that such miserable state of the country has never
been reported in Japan. I guess that
probably correct information has been completely blocked and tactfully replaced
with false information.
A prime example is the coverage that Korean
business people arrogantly said that Korean technology has surpassed that of
Japan.
Korea, which has been
voraciously eaten up by vultures, has already been half-dead a little earlier. Vultures will never let their next target
Japan see its near-future self.