[Masatoshi Takeshita] Speech by A Nine-Year-Old Boy Holding The Key (2/2)

I think that in a few days Serena-san will post the visions she had on her blog.  A nine-year-old boy in this photo appears in her vision.


Masatoshi Takeshita

Normal 0 10 pt 0 2 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE $([{£¥‘“〈《「『【〔$([{「£¥ !%),.:;?]}¢°’”‰′″℃、。々〉》」』】〕゛゜ゝゞ・ヽヾ!%),.:;?]}。」、・゙゚¢
English translation of an excerpt of a Japanese article: Ryusaku Tanaka Journal – August 31, 2012 –

Today, on the last day of summer vacation, as usual sidewalks in front of the prime minister’s official residence and the Diet Building were filled with citizens who share a sense of crisis over nuclear power plants.  They got together because the Noda administration and the largest opposition party LDP use every possible means to pass through the Diet the draft for personnel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission though the Diet has been immobile due to a censure motion against the prime minister.

Many participants desperately try to “stop operating nuclear power plants by all means” for children.


The Contrast between the Diet Building and an elementary school pupil calling for anti-nukes seems to show the unusual situation into which this country has plunged.
Photoed by Suwa

It is a nine-year-old boy in the third grade of an elementary school in Mitaka City that gives a dignified speech, which outshines that of an adult, on the stage in front of the Diet Building.

Prime Minister Noda and the government don’t know how much many people suffer from radiation.  This kind of thing is unthinkable.  It is a crime to dump nuclear garbage in rich nature.   Living creatures become stars after death.  It is a crime to kill them before becoming stars.  Everybody, please promise! We should not stop the protest movement until all nuclear power plants disappear.

The boy just talked very naturally the workings of all living creatures.  However, I felt deeply shamed as if I were a hen given advice by a chicken.  I wonder what the people of Nuclear Power Village who have lost human hearts would think of if they listen to this speech.





The conch shell horn blower is a man living in Ota Ward, Tokyo, who is a company executive in his sixties.   He says with his eyes raised, “This is the battle of the public against the government which has restarted nuclear power plants.”   He says that he has three grandchildren and has started taking lessons of the conch shell horn to challenge the government to a battle. He powerfully says “I’ll do everything to stop operating nuclear power plants for our grandchildren!”

“We should not leave behind dangerous nuclear power plants to our children and grandchildren.”   I feel that Friday gatherings have returned to the original intention now.   Slogans “Protect children” have been heard remarkably a lot.

A man in his fifties, a teacher, rushed to the gathering by airplane from Wakayama.   “When I was a child, I asked adults ‘Why didn’t you try to stop the war?’   I have come here because I don’t want to be asked by children “Why were you unable to stop operating nuclear power plants?’” he says.

(Commented by Ryusaku Tanaka and Kyo Suwa)

[Oh, Alas!] Cold Fusion Power Generator Shows Up


As was expected, cold fusion is the truth.  I knew for the first time about electro conversion at room temperature through Louis Kervan’s study.  According to him, plants do electro conversion at room temperature.  I remember that thirty years ago I read about it in a book by Mr. Joichi Sakurazawa (English name: George Osawa).

Masatoshi Takeshita


English translation of a Japanese article: Blog “Oh, Alas!” – August 11, 2012 –

Cold Fusion Power Generator Shows Up

I think it is good for such technology to overtly come out.
For the source of information on this, check out the following website: newspresso.gulli.com/2859-die-kalte-fusion-der-heilige-gral-der-energiegewinnung-ist-realitaet-09-08-2012

-- quote (machine translated) --
The Cold Fusion: The holy grail of energy production is a reality

The Italian physicist Andrea Rossi put the middle of last year, a device from the public, with the help of cold fusion steam generated and should come under the name E-Cat on the market. The environmentally friendly method is based on the conversion of hydrogen to nickel and copper. The resulting heat is used to evaporate water and to drive a turbine which then generates electricity. Many media had ridiculed the physicist recently still, when he presented his invention. Now, NASA has made its views public, and confirmed that the procedure works by Rossi. Since its publication, the efficiency can be further optimized. A previously unknown buyer Rossi meanwhile also found. Rossi currently has patent protection in Italy, but still no international patent. Such an innovation could solve our energy problems in the long term but also the energy and oil companies be a thorn in the eye.



By the way, a worldwide pioneer of cold fusion is Osaka University Emeritus Professor Arata.



Prof. Arata conducted an open experiment in Osaka University in May, 2008.
A lot of journalists visited the University to get information on the experiment with three TV cameras brought in.  However, the media deliberately ignored this invention of the century and never covered nor broadcasted it.  Subsequently, any sponsors who proposed to cooperate with him to do research did not appear.  Since then, his research has remained to be accomplished.  And the Patent Agency turns down the patent application of the invention by reason of “impossibility of such technology.”

Why is this technology ignored?  It is because there are people who want to maintain the situation “where humanity depends on oil and natural gas.”  Japan’s government, bureaucracy and mass media are manipulated in accordance with their intention.

Researchers who make a study of cold fusion are globally ousted and strong pressure is put on them not to do their study.
However, the news on power generator has been released.  It shows such pressure has been smaller.  It is good news.

I want to see young researchers succeed in his study.
It would be good news to Japan with no resources.

Well, let’s explain cold fusion:


(1)   D + D = He(=helium) + energy                            D ; deuterium

(2)   Deuterium exists in seawater at a fixed ratio.  Considering the volume of seawater, we can say an unlimited amount of deutrium exists.

(3)   Nuclear fusion emits no radiation and is safe.

Helium is never produced in nature, but produced only by nuclear fusion.
Helium now existing on the earth is said to have been produced at the time of creation of the universe.
Thus, generation of helium is proof of occurrence of nuclear fusion.

[Ryusaku Tanaka] Question about “Personnel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission” Freezes Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Diet Members in Discussion Forum with Metropolitan Coalition Against Nukes


Information from Mr. Takeshita posted on his blog – August 1, 2012 –

English translation of an excerpt from a Japanese article: Ryusaku Tanaka Journal – August 1, 2012 –



Mr. Taichi Hirano, who called the public to join “Twitter demonstration,” base of Coalition Against Nukes, forces DPJ Diet members, antinuke proponents of “all talk and no action” to reveal their political stance.

At the House of Representatives Members’  Hall on 31st evening   
Photo by Tanaka


“This discussion forum has been made possible by the gathering consisting of tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people.  This kind of gathering is the first one in the modern history of Japan.  This is the first time (Diet members) have met people who represent not organizations but the public.”  Moderator Mr. Eiji Koguma, Keio University Professor and historian, appropriately said at the opening remarks of the forum.

Members of “Metropolitan Coalition Against Nukes,” the organizer of the discussion forum, and Diet members exchanged opinions on nuclear power plant policy in the Diet on 31st.  A total of 11 politicians participated in the forum: DPL members chanting antinuke slogan just for election campaign and bipartisan members of “Zero Nuke Society,” who have worked for denuclearization.  Eleven people from the Metropolitan Coalition Against Nukes (Coalition Against Nukes) joined the forum.




Appeal by citizens does not seem to get through to DPJ members.
Photo by Tanaka


Former Prime Minister Naoto Kan “gave an explanation” about how the key person, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda understood the situation.  According to the former prime minister, he let the current prime minister know over the phone the holding of this forum to exchange opinions.

 “Does Mr. Noda know that the public’s anger is directed toward him?”
“What?  Things are going that way?”

Members of Coalition Against Nukes have devoted themselves to denuclearization at the cost of their work.  They could not suppress their anger with easygoing attitude of DPJ administration.

Mr. Taichi Hirano, member of Coalition Against Nukes, hit the Diet members with an uppercut.  “Do you agree or disagree with the personnel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission?  Please give an answer, one by one!”

The DPJ members froze for a second.  The moderator tried to dissuade him from demanding them to answer it.  There was a band of hecklers, yelling “Why can’t you answer it?” “Unless answered, secret agreement by DPJ won’t be disclosed!”

The DPJ members reluctantly answered as if boosted up by the yelling.  Four of six adeptly dodged his question, saying “I’d like to answer after considering the debate within the party.”  Only two answered “I can’t agree.”  This is the actual state of the ruling party.  It is natural that operation of nuclear power plants has been restarted.

(Writers: Ryusaku Tanaka & Kyou Suwa)

[Shukan Asahi] Work Site in Nuclear Power Plant Drives Utility Workers Almost Crazy Cold Water Available to TEPCO Employees Alone


Information from Mr. Takeshita posted on his blog – July 29, 2012 –

English translation of an excerpt from a Japanese article: 2ch Ekusawarosu (Source: Shukan Asahi) – July 26, 2012 –

[Shukan Asahi]  Work Site in Nuclear Power Plant Makes Utility Workers Crazy
Cold Water Available to TEPCO Employees Alone

Mr. Shun Kirishima, a journalist working as utility worker in Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, never masks his anger, saying “Act of TEPCO is applicable to murder.”


Early in July, a large-size refrigerator was carried into the important quake-proof building (called hereafter quake-proof building) of Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant.

A large volume of plastic bottled water is cooled in the refrigerator.  TEPCO employees were able to drink it at any time.  Looking at them, I felt myself feeling to get angry.  There is no refrigerator on the 1st floor where we utility workers are stationed, and we all drink lukewarm water.  Around this time, we sweat abnormally a lot from working in the plant.  However, only TEPCO employees who hardly appear in work site can drink cold water.  It is wrong.”  (Commented by a utility worker who witnessed the refrigerator carried into)

Some readers might think “They don’t need to get angry over trifles such as whether water is cold or not.”  However, summer is here and utility workers have to combat different enemy than radioactive materials.  It is heat stroke or dehydration.  When it is 30°C outside, utility workers’ sensory temperature reaches 50°C.

The outside work site has almost no shady area.  When I go to the outside work site, sweat streams down the body and the shield of my full-face mask is soaked with sweat.  Already I have a narrow view of things.  Additionally it is hard to see things around me.  With a raincoat on, unbearable volume of sweat starts to accumulate inside the mask.  High temperature and humidity drive me almost crazy

Why do TEPCO employees alone drink cold water and do utility workers drink lukewarm water?  They don’t think such situation is wrong.  It shows well TEPCO corporate character.

Shukan Asahi – August 3rd issue

[Ryusaku Tanaka] Yomiuri Goes All Out for Personnel of “Nuclear Regulatory Commission”

“Let’s all support Mr. Ryusaku Tanaka.”
Masatoshi Takeshita

* Mr. Ryusaku Tanaka is a freelance journalist.  He needs financial support to continue his news gathering activities. 

English translation of a Japanese article: Ryusaku Tanaka Journal – July 25, 2012

Yomiuri Goes All Out for Personnel of “Nuclear Regulatory Commission”



On 20th morning in front of the prime minister’s official residence, a meeting to protest against restarting nuclear power plants was held.  Some media reported the personnel of Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
= In front of the prime minister’s official residence on 20th evening.  Photo by Suwa =



We have never seen such personnel that show sheer contempt for the people of Japan.  I wonder what the lesson of the Fukushima nuclear power plant accident was.  Mr. Shunichi Tanaka, the former chairman of the Atomic Energy Society of Japan, reportedly has been unofficially appointed as the first chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission slated to be established in September.

The government was going to propose the personnel to the Diet on 20th.  However, this information was leaked to some media (Yomiuri and Nikkei) and the LDP responded strongly against them.  For this reason, proposal of the personnel is behind the schedule.  Yomiuri and Nikkei reported the personnel in the morning edition on 20th and other newspapers followed suit in the evening edition.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is located superior to the Nuclear Regulatory Agency with sole responsibility for public administration on nuclear regulation, which has been decentralized among the Cabinet Office (Nuclear Safety Commission), the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry (Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency) and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports and Technology (Radiation Monitoring Department).  The chairman of the Commission with the greatest authority, therefore, will exert considerable influence over restarting of nuclear power plants that electric power companies are planning for.

Of all others, Mr. Tanaka, who played a central role in promotion for nuclear power generation, was unofficially appointed as the chairman.  He held “secret meetings” with electric power companies and served as the acting chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission with which a criminal complaint has been filed.  Mr. Tanaka, as chairman of the Compensation for Nuclear Damage Review Board, also repeated remarks favorable to TEPCO.  He is notorious for his remark “It is not necessary to decontaminate the areas exposed to less than 20 mSv of radiation.”  His position is equivalent to village mayor of so-called Nuclear Power Village.

Don’t underestimate him.  Even if a change of power should occur in the next general election, we cannot do anything.  Being an independent commission, we cannot have a say in the Commission during his five-year term of office.  The Nuclear Power Village will desperately make the government approve the personnel.  Yomiuri Shimbun splashed a story “Hurry to decide the personnel!” in the editorial.  The fact speaks for itself.

(Photo)
Objection to the personnel of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Made
at an emergency press conference
= in the House of Representatives Hall on 24th   Photo by Tanaka =


On 24th, residents of Fukushima Prefecture, scholars and environmental groups held an emergency press conference to object to the insane personnel of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the Diet.  Mass media, which helped the Nuclear Power Village manipulate public opinion, was there not to gather information for writing articles but to inspect the “degree of revulsion” against the personnel.

With knowledge of it, participants thoroughly condemned the personnel which shamelessly ignore public opinion. 

“We can say that this is the same personnel by which a leader of a motorcycle gang is appointed as the chief of motorcycle gang crackdown headquarters,” Prof. Toshiro Kojima of Aoyama Gakuin University, who engages in relief of pollution victims, made an extreme remark.

Ms. Sachiko Sato, the representative of “Fukushima Network to Protect Children from Radiation,” represented the indignation of local people and said, “Shunichi Yamashita, vice president of Fukushima Medical University, was appointed as a radiation advisor of Fukushima Prefecture before we knew it,  This personnel is the same.  The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is the Nuclear Energy Promotion Commission.”

Mayor Katsutaka Idokawa, Futaba Town, appropriately pointed out.  “What should we learn from the Fukushima disaster?  What should we appeal for?  Without carefully reconsidering it, democracy of Japan will disappear.”

A numerous number of people moved to western Japan to avoid radiation contamination.  People who still continue to stay in the Tokyo metropolitan area are frightened by health damage to their children and themselves.  It is hard to say how much compensation money will swell up.  For the time being, however, it will be shouldered by the government.  Resources are our taxpayers’ money.

Unless we objected to the personnel of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in a loud voice, we would be slavers of electric power companies for the rest of our life.


“Ryusaku Tanaka Journal” is sustained by readers’ support.  Thank you for your assistance and cooperation.


Movie(English): [Kyosuke Yamashina] Takashi Uesugi Enters Evacuation Zone Indignant Monologue and Subtraction

If you have little spare time, I recommend you to watch the video at least for the last one minute or so from four min. (04:00).
Masatoshi Takeshita

English translation of an excerpt from a Japanese article: Kyosuke Yamashina’s blog “Musou Roukan” - July 15, 2012 - 


Indignant Monologue and Subtraction

I wonder whether we should listen to his provocative comment he made in the midst of dose measurement or we should be surprised at the subtraction done at the end.

Our homeland has become so much polluted!



<U3W.JP> Takashi Uesugi Enters Evacuation Zone.



[Mainichi Shimbun] Demonstration in Front of Prime Minister’s Official Residence Prime Minister Can’t Go Out On Friday Night

Now we see the great effect of demonstration.
Masatoshi Takeshita


English translation of a Japanese article: BIGLOBE News – July 13, 2012 - (Source: Mainichi Shimbun)

Demonstration against Nuclear Power Plant Restart Prime Minister Can’t Go Out On Friday Night ….
 In Front of Prime Minister’s Official Residence Every Friday


Demonstration to oppose the restart of Kansai Electric Power Co.’s No. 3 & No. 4 reactors at Ohi nuclear power plant, Fukui Pref. has been expanding, which perplexes the Prime Minister’s Office.  Prime Minister Noda has been all out to calm down the situation by “trying to listen to various opinions.”  He tries not to set a schedule for going out of the official resident on Friday night.  He is forced to wait and see now.

On his way home from the prime minister’s office to the official residence adjacent to the office before 8 p.m. on 13th, the prime minister was asked by reporters “The demonstration is expanding, and are you thinking about taking any action?’   He replied “I would like to take various opinions seriously.”

Hearing many participants shouting “opposition to the restart,” on June 29th he made a slip of the tongue, saying “They are making lots of noise.”  This provoked a backlash among the participants.  Panicked by the reaction, the prime minister, in the House of Representatives Budget Committee on 10th, gave an excuse “I’m sorry, but I have no idea of where and in what form I used the word ‘noise.’”  However, he said he has no intention to have second thought of restart itself.

Since June 26 when he decided to restart the Ohi nuclear power plant, he has been virtually bound hand and foot on Friday night, feeling constrained by the protests.  He leaves the prime minister’s office directly for the official residence.  Those around the prime are fretting about this situation: “He can get out of the back gate.  But as a demonstration is staged in front of the main gate, the prime minister cannot furtively go out drinking.”

A demonstration was staged in front of the prime minister’s office on the 13th night too.  Demonstrators shouted “No nuclear power plant restart!”   Since this day, the Metropolitan Police Department has built iron fences and confined demonstration only to sidewalks.  There was no big confusion.

(Reported by Naoki Oida and Shunsuke Kotari)

Denuclearization Advocator Candidate Makes Great Strides in Yamaguchi Gubernatorial Election (Mr. Tetsuya Iida)

* Information from Mr. Takeshita posted on his blog – July 3, 2012



English translation of a Japanese article from Gendai Net – July 2, 2012 –

Denuclearization Advocator Candidate Makes Great Strides in Yamaguchi Gubernatorial Election 

Tide Has Completely Changed!
Wide Range of Support from Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Japanese Communist Party (JCP)

We see an unexpected development in the Yamaguchi Gubernatorial Election (to be announced on 12th and to be held on 29th).  As the seats in the Yamaguchi prefectural assembly are almost occupied by LDP, at first Mr. Shigetaro Yamamoto, 63, supported by LDP and New Komeito was considered a sure winner in the election.  However, the future is uncertain now.  Mr. Tetsuya Iida, director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policy (nonprofit organization), announced to run for the election on 22nd last month and has rapidly gained support.

Needless to say, Mr. Iida is the most well-known person among intellectuals promoting denuclearization.  Coincidently, Kansai Electric Power Co. (KEPCO) restarted the No. 3 reactor at Ohi Nuclear Power Plant on 1st this month.  Last weekend 150,000 people marched to call for denuclearization in front of the prime minister’s official residence.  This momentum is spreading to Yamaguchi Prefecture, too.

On 1st Mr. Iida set up his campaign office in Yamaguchi City.  He has held mini meetings at various places in the city with thirty to fifty participants in each meeting.  There were 150 participants in the meeting in Ube City.
“Volunteers supporting the election campaign are women and young people, who are all beyond the framework of a network of organizations, communities, blood relations, or political parties.  This kind of volunteer network movement is rapidly spreading within the prefecture and there are requests for leaflets or flyers for the election campaign everywhere in various cities.”
(Mr. Hajime Yokota, a journalist who has covered the election campaign)

An expert on election campaign estimates the number of possible votes for Mr. Iida as follows:

“Mr. Iida worked as a brain for Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto.  He was in charge of energy issues and logically pointed out the “lie” of power shortages predicted by KEPCO, which aimed to restart the Ohi nuclear power plant.  Since then he has been known better.   Based on this accomplishment, he is expected to get the “fundamental votes” of “Osaka Restoration Group” and furthermore, he is sure to win the votes from advocates of denuclearization, the Social Democratic Party and Japanese Communist Party.  As Mr. Iida has posted a series of articles on energy issues on the Seikyo Shimbun, he will be able to make some inroads into New Komeito votes.  As the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)’s Yamaguchi Prefecture chapter announced an open policy vote, he is expected to collect half of the votes.  There are many people, even LDP supporters, who show some understanding over Mr. Iida’s proposal for “employment creation by expanding sustainable energy use.” 

Residents of the prefecture pay yearly 100 billion yen of energy cost.  Most of it is used in payment for imported energy.  With a conversion into natural energy use, money will be pumped into the local community.  This is one of the policies Mr. Iida proposes.

In addition, the rival candidate Shigetaro Yamamoto is badly reputed for his arrogance.  If a political change should occur in Yamaguchi, it will spread across the country.


NY Times reported the demonstration as “Largest Protest in front of Prime Minister’s Official Residence since the 1960s”


NHK reported that there was a demonstration.  The coverage, however, was a mere formality.  No information on the scale of the demonstration and public anger is available on the NHK news.  There is no other way to say that NHK really plays dirty.
Masatoshi Takeshita


* Information from Mr. Takeshita posted on his blog – June 30, 2012


English translation of a Japanese article from “Monju Bosatsu” blog – June 30, 2012 

NY Times Reports Meeting to Protest against Restart of Ohi Power Station as Largest Protest in front of Prime Minister’s Official Residence since the 1960s

Photo from NY Times

On Friday last week 45,000 people got together for a demonstration, but NHK reported nothing special.
Organizers say that 200,000 people joined in this meeting to protest against the restarting of Ohi power station.
I guess that even NHK was not able to continue ignoring this size of demonstration.  However, other Japanese media had not changed a bit.
They never covered such a big scale of demonstration.
Instead they reported that the sister of Mr. Taro Yamamoto, an icon of no-nuke movement, had been arrested on suspicion of violating the Cannabis Control Law (possessing cannabis).
This has demonstrated anew how terribly rotten Japanese mass media is.

Photo from NY Times
In Tokyo, Thousands Protest the Restarting of a Nuclear Power Plant (NY Times)

Reprinted from NY Times

TOKYO ― Shouting antinuclear slogans and beating drums, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered in front of the prime minister’s residence on Friday, in the largest display yet of public anger at the government’s decision to restart a nuclear power plant.

The crowd, including women with small children and men in suits coming from work, chanted “No more Fukushimas!” as it filled the broad boulevards near the residence and the national Parliament building, which were cordoned off by the police.

Estimates of the crowd’s size varied widely, with organizers claiming 150,000 participants, while the police put the number at 17,000. Local media estimated the crowd at between 20,000 and 45,000, which they described as the largest protest in central Tokyo since the 1960s.

Protests of any size are rare in Japan, which has long been politically apathetic. However, there has been growing discontent among many Japanese who feel that Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda ignored public concerns about safety this month when he ordered the restarting of the Ohi power station in western Japan.

Ohi was the first plant to go back online since last year’s accident in Fukushima led to the idling of all of Japan’s 50 operational nuclear reactors, which supplied a third of the nation’s electricity. Three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant melted down after a huge earthquake and tsunami knocked out crucial cooling systems.

Mr. Noda said he ordered the restarting of two of Ohi’s reactors to avoid power shortages that could cause blackouts during the sweltering summer and also cripple industry. However, political analysts have warned of a public backlash after opinion polls showed that two-thirds of Japanese opposed the restart, with many saying that the government had failed to persuade them that the plant had been made safe.

On Friday, many of the protesters complained that Mr. Noda was trying to take Japan back to its political business-as-usual of powerful bureaucrats and industry executives making decisions behind closed doors. Some described their outrage over the restart decision as a moment of political awakening, saying they were taking to the streets for the first time.

“Japanese have not spoken out against the national government,” said Yoko Kajiyama, a 29-year-old homemaker who carried her 1-year-old son. “Now, we have to speak out, or the government will endanger us all.”

“To restart the nuclear plant without ensuring its safety is crazy,” said Naomi Yamazaki, 37, another homemaker and first-time demonstrator. “I know we need these plants for power and jobs, but I don’t trust the authorities now to protect us.”

Organizers said a such mistrust has led to a quick growth in the size of the protests, which have been held every week since late March. The protests began with a few hundred participants, but rose into the thousands after Mr. Noda’s restart decision, said one organizer, Misao Redwolf, a illustrator based here in Tokyo.

Tetsunari Iida, director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies, an energy policy group based in Tokyo, said the protests reflected wider discontent toward the government, which many say failed to protect public health after the accident, and then rushed to get the country’s reactors back online.

“There is anger and a loss of confidence in the government,” Mr. Iida said. “This is an irreversible change, and I expect this type of movement to continue.”

For his part, the prime minister seemed unfazed by the protests. “They’re making lots of noise,” Mr. Noda remarked to reporters as he left his office for his private quarters.

While noisy, the protesters on Friday demonstrated Japan’s penchant for being well organized and fastidiously polite. In many places, they kept passages clear for pedestrians and stood in neat lines along sidewalks. When the protest ended at 8 p.m., organizers quickly dispersed participants using megaphones, with hardly a scrap of garbage left behind.

Hiroko Tabuchi contributed reporting.

The Most Peaceful and Biggest Demonstration in the World (in Japan, Tokyo – June 29, 2012)


* Information posted by Unity Design – June 30, 2012

English translation of a Japanese article from Mr. Naoto Amaki’ s blog – June 30, 2012

The Most Peaceful and Biggest Demonstration in the World

Naoto Amaki

I joined in a demonstration around the prime minister’s official residence to protest the restart of the nuclear power plant operation.

First, I was surprised at the number of participants.  That many protesters got together in the demonstration around the prime minister’s official residence for the first time since the struggle over the U.S.-Japan Security Pack.

Moreover, participants will increase from now on.  This is literally the first movement in Japanese history.

Secondly, I hear this demonstration was completely different from any conventional one whose participants are mobilized by political parties or labor unions.

I say “I hear.”  This is because I don’t know the difference between the two.

However, a certain leftist party member demonstrator said that he hardly found regular demonstrators and the participants were not organized crowd.

What he says is true because he is a regular demonstrator.

Thirdly, this demonstration was the one in which strangers got together with one purpose.

Chants of anti-nuke sometimes intermitted.  In the interval there were public speeches with a microphone.

Most of the speeches were given by politicians.

Each of them started his speech with the political party he belongs to and his name.

However, such self-promotion seemed to throw a wet blanket on the demonstration led by ordinary citizens.

It does not matter what your social standing is or where you come from.  Only the protest against the use of nuclear power and the restart of nuclear power plant operations is a matter of importance.

It is the most important that an overwhelming number of unknown people voice their anger to the Noda administration that plans to restart the nuclear power plant operation, and they encompass the prime minister’s official residence.

Only those who join in the demonstration and voice an objection are not clever but it is important to take action in the hope that the voice will change the politics.

Incidentally, I saw so many beautiful women, young and old, standing out in the demonstration.


It does demonstrate that doing right makes a person beautiful, I think.


Lastly, I have realized that this is the most beautiful demonstration in the world.


It does not mean the demonstration took place quietly.


The crowd angrily shouted the slogan of anti-nuke.


Normally, no doubt such a large scale demonstration is likely to bring about violence between the demonstrator and the police.


However, the demonstrators acted in an orderly manner as instructed by the police.  Policemen with microphones informed the demonstrators to keep on walking not to cause traffic jams.  The organizers of the demonstration called for the demonstrators on obeying the instruction of the police, and the demonstrators followed them.


I am sure there is not such a peaceful demonstration in any other country than Japan.

And yet, the demand of demonstrators is so radical.  They call for the Noda administration to step down.

Can a demonstration without leader, a demonstration not led by specific political party or organization can move the politics?

I was wondering about it while putting myself in the demonstration.

What will happen if this demonstration never stops as long as the DPJ led by Noda tries to restart the operation?


What will happen if the number of demonstrators increases week by week and has reached one million?


If so, as is to be expected, the government cannot force the nuclear power plant operation to be restarted.


Even if politics cannot stop the government from restarting the nuclear power plant operation, a demonstration will be expanded in the form of peace movement unless the public allows the restart and the government stops the demonstration.


The government cannot help but follow their voice.


This is the very example that a peaceful demonstration can change the government politics.


An unprecedented peaceful and biggest demonstration will correct the mistake the government made.


To become a central player in this remarkable accomplishment, let’s join in this historical demonstration once at least!


If this kind of demonstration takes place one after another, with whatever slogan may be: consumption tax increase or Osprey deployment, no doubt Japan will change!


I left with a sense of satisfaction because I found hope in the demonstration.