Myanmar’s New Democratic Dictator: Aung San Suu Kyi – Election observation by Yatagarasu led to overwhelming victory of NLD with Myanmar’s coming age of Darkness

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Myanmar’s New Democratic Dictator: Aung San Suu Kyi – Election observation by Yatagarasu led to overwhelming victory of NLD with Myanmar’s coming age of Darkness
I imagine that the Myanmar’s military regime has gradually distanced itself from China mainly due to maneuvering by Japan. Seeing the blog of Yohei Sasakawa, owner of the Sasakawa Foundation, we will see his constant contact with the Myanmar’s military. I think that they were probably wined and dined, which Japan is very good at.
Although an overwhelming victory of NLD led by Aung San Suu Kyi in the election has been reported, my personal opinion is that it was fraudulent election.
It has become almost clear that the 3.11 incident was an artificially-induced earthquake caused by nuclear explosion. Those who engaged in work confessed that nuclear bombs were embedded beneath the seabed through operation by “Chikyu”, scientific drilling ship owned by JAMSTEC (Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology). In a word, the foundation owned by Yohei Sasakawa is deeply involved in the 3.11 incident.
According to the article covered in the past, the “mastermind in Japan of the 3.11 artificial earthquake is a man named “Goro Maeda.” It shows that Yatagarasu, Japan’s secret society, is involved in the 3.11 incident. Sasakawa Foundation is an organization under direct control of Yatagarasu. It is almost incredible that such criminal organization served as a fairy election observer.
The article predicts that a victory of this election will lead to Myanmar’s age of darkness. Every time I see the face of Aung San Suu Kyi or Malala Yousafzai, Nobel Peace winner, I get sick. When I see the face of those who sell not only the people but their own soul to the devil for power, I always feel uncomfortable.

November 25, 2015
Masatoshi Takeshita


Excerpt from a Japanese article: Overseas Articles Never Reported by Mass Media – November 25, 2015 –

Myanmar’s New Dictator: Aung San Suu Kyi

Source:
journal-neo.org/2015/11/21/myanmars-new-dictator-aung-san-suu-kyi/

Suu Kyi disenfranchised a million voters before elections, and has declared herself above the constitution afterwards.
The Western media is portraying Myanmar’s recent elections as historic. One commentator described Myanmar as an “exuberant nation prepared for a new era of democracy and political freedom.” But one wonders what sort of democracy and political freedom can be borne of elections in which nearly a million voters were banned from casting their ballots and with the apparent victor already declaring herself above the law.
This is in part due to the fact that Suu Kyi herself, along with the NLD she leads and a vast network of supporting “civil society” nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have all been created and sustained annually by billions of dollars worth of backing from the United States and United Kingdom for years. In exchange for this support, Suu Kyi’s long-standing proclivity toward “foreign investment” will lead to the wholesale feeding of Myanmar’s nationalized resources, industry, and infrastructure into the maw of the Wall Street corporations and institutions that have long underwritten Suu Kyi’s rise to power.
 “Democracy,” But Only When Convenient 
In reality, Suu Kyi and her NLD’s supporters helped disenfranchise nearly a million Rohingya from voting even before the elections took place.  Through widespread protests and threats of violence if their demands that the Rohingya remain stripped of their voting rights were not met, the ruling military-led government backed down from a scheme to grant the Rohingya minority long-sought after rights, including the ability to vote.
The BBC reported in their article, “Myanmar revokes Rohingya voting rights after protests,” that:
Hundreds of Buddhists took to the streets following the passage of a law that would allow temporary residents who hold “white papers” to vote. 
More than one million Rohingya live in Myanmar, but they are not regarded as citizens by the government.
The BBC fails to mention that these “Buddhists” who “took to the streets” are in fact the cornerstone of Suu Kyi’s political movement, leading every major pro-NLD protest over the years including the infamous “Saffron Revolution” in 2007.
Suu Kyi Declares Herself Above the Law 
Additionally, in the wake of Suu Kyi’s apparent victory, she has literally declared herself above Myanmar’s constitution, vowing to make all decisions regardless of who is actually made president under the law.
Suu Kyi’s disenfranchisement of the Rohingya and flagrant disregard for the rule of law demonstrates the very dictatorial traits she has long accused the ruling establishment of for decades.
  For Myanmar’s Rohingya minority, the military-led government at times formed the only protection preventing genocide at the hands of Suu Kyi’s ultra-violent saffron mobs.
With the diminished role of the military in government and Suu Kyi’s self-serving and selective adherence to the rule of law, her supporters likely anticipate a free hand in actualizing their genocidal ambitions versus not only the Rohingya, but all of their political and sociocultural enemies.


Myanmar’s Age of Disillusionment Has Begun 
Suu Kyi’s “promising victory” will inevitably deteriorate not unlike the initially promising victory of Thaksin Shinawatra in neighboring Thailand in 2001. Shinawatra’s initial tidal wave of naive support and progressive expectations yielded to a reality of unprecedented abuses of power, the privatization and selling-off to foreign corporations of Thailand’s nationalized resources and infrastructure, humiliating geopolitical concessions to the United States, and unprecedented human rights abuses including the mass murder of some 3,000 innocent people during a 90-day police crackdown in 2003.
After over a decade of clinging to power owed mainly to substantial Western support, Shinawatra and his various proxies were finally ousted from power by a military coup. Thailand’s painful but necessary decade-long national nightmare helped disillusion the majority of Thais regarding the empty promises of “globalization” and Western notions of “democracy.” Today, there stands little chance of Shinawatra or a Shinawatra-like character ever again seizing so much power in the near to intermediate future.
If and when a similar awakening occurs in Myanmar is anyone’s guess. However, the paradox of Suu Kyi’s pro-democracy facade versus her undemocratic, inhumane reality, particularly her and her supporters’ abuse of Myanmar’s Rohingya minority, has become so apparent even the West is having a difficult time glossing over it.
Increasingly frequent articles like the London Guardian’s, “Why is Aung San Suu Kyi silent on the plight of the Rohingya people?,” attempt to claim Suu Kyi’s role in what is essentially ethnically-motivated genocide is mere silence..
Suu Kyi’s trading in of her clearly disingenuous principles and the basic human rights of the Rohingya people in exchange for votes has raised concern even among some of the most indoctrinated rank and file across the West’s vast network of NGOs.
It will only become increasingly difficult to continue rationalizing Suu Kyi’s actions to fit her empty rhetoric and manufactured image.
Should the military or other opposition parties prepare themselves sufficiently, the opportunity to successfully and permanently dismantle the NLD and all its US-UK funded supporting networks, will reveal itself sooner than later.

Real progress in Myanmar will happen when the people of Myanmar themselves – all of them including ethnic minorities like the Rohingya – are able to more equitably utilize its vast natural and human resources for their own future, not that of a handful of special interests in the capital of Naypyidaw, and not that of a handful of special interests on Wall Street or in London.

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