CIA strategy meeting on Japan: Far East Station Chief: How can we get the Japanese people to want to change their constitution and allow us to re-arm Japan so we can get that war against China going?
Rookie: That's hard, they love their peace constitution. No army allowed.
Agent Feldman: Why don't we leak information on how we funded the LDP all those postwar years and get the mockingbirds to debate how it's a US-written constitution?
Chief: Ok let's do that, but let's hope they won't pick up that we even founded the LDP itself and funded the Yakuza.
Between 2017-2019, China sent 2 million Muslims (including half a million children) to internment camps, where they were forced to drink alcohol and eat pork to ‘deprogram’ from Islam.
China officially considers Islam a mental illness.
Why does no one call China Islamophobic?
A foreign national in his 70s is now demanding Japanese public assistance.
He knew about Japan’s pension system for years, but chose not to pay into it.
He also made almost no effort to learn the Japanese language.
Now that he is old, he expects Japanese taxpayers — who have paid into the system their entire working lives — to support him.
This is not an isolated case.
It is becoming a pattern.
Japanese people work hard, pay high taxes and pension premiums for decades, all to protect our own elderly and build a stable society.
Yet some foreigners come here, enjoy the benefits of living in Japan, deliberately avoid their obligations, and then demand support when it suits them.
We have every right to ask:
Why should Japanese people have to shoulder the burden of those who refused to contribute?
Japan must put Japanese citizens and their future first.
Francia acaba de cambiar la historia de la medicina.
Han presentado un corazón artificial que late para siempre.
Sin donante. Sin lista de espera.
Y casi nadie habla de esto.🧵
Did you guys know there is a biker gang called rescue ink that breaks up dogfighting rings, confronts animal abusers, confiscates neglected animals and investigates
stolen animals
Those people demanding trash cans at shrines in Kyoto...
If you’re going to act that entitled, start by spending a decent amount of money here before you open your mouth.
Besides, we locals don't need them. If you want a trash can, the burden is on you to make it happen. That is the basic principle. If you want one, you should be the one paying for the bin and the collection fees—straight out of your own pocket.
If people from another country did the exact same thing in your homeland, you’d be saying the same damn thing to them, wouldn't you?