Politics.be Registreren kan je hier.
Problemen met registreren of reageren op de berichten?
Een verloren wachtwoord?
Gelieve een mail te zenden naar [email protected] met vermelding van je gebruikersnaam.

Ga terug   Politics.be > Algemeen > Buitenland
Registreer FAQForumreglement Ledenlijst

Buitenland Internationale onderwerpen, de politiek van de Europese lidstaten, over de werking van Europa, Europese instellingen, ... politieke en maatschappelijke discussies.

Antwoord
 
Discussietools
Oud 8 juli 2022, 16:08   #21
Zipper
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Zipper's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 28 maart 2009
Berichten: 56.637
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Pandareus Bekijk bericht
Onvoorstelbaar... Het draadje is al open van deze ochtend 5 uur en nu nog steeds stelde er geen enkele Blokker de traditionele vragen :

-is het ne 'niefanier' ?
-is het een 'verwarde jongere' ?
-welk kleurtje had hij ?
-riep hij Alahu Akbar ?

Allee jongens, weer jullie eens wat zeg !
Japan is zo goed als "islam-vrij"
__________________






Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Another Jack Bekijk bericht
Voor mijn part wordt Brussel en omstreken voor 90% islamitisch!

Laatst gewijzigd door Zipper : 8 juli 2022 om 16:09.
Zipper is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 16:25   #22
Weyland
Eur. Commissievoorzitter
 
Geregistreerd: 15 mei 2011
Berichten: 9.907
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door patrickve Bekijk bericht
Voila, de rede is aan het terugkomen
Dat die op de voorgrond wederkeert zoals in 1789-'99, misschien komt dat nog terug.

Laatst gewijzigd door Weyland : 8 juli 2022 om 16:26.
Weyland is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 17:07   #23
Dadeemelee
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Dadeemelee's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 13 mei 2015
Locatie: Vlaams-Brabant
Berichten: 76.114
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Jay-P. Bekijk bericht
https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/bu...n-8796771.html

De polarisatie binnen alle maatschappijen is verworden tot een puur maatschappelijk probleem.

"Japan is a country with some of the strictest gun laws among leading economies and shootings are rare."
Don't blame just the guns, blame the users.
Het is ook zeer uitzonderlijk voor Japan, dat is één van de veiligste landen ter wereld. De bewaking daar ook is heel minimaal en zijn ‘wapen’ was een soort van homemade musket. Hij stond ook vlak naast Abe, anders had hij hem nooit geraakt met dat ding.

__________________
https://forum.politics.be/showpost.p...&postcount=322
‘…De blauwe Minister van Justitie plaste tegen een politiecombi…’

Laatst gewijzigd door Dadeemelee : 8 juli 2022 om 17:08.
Dadeemelee is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 17:08   #24
Vette Pois(s)on
Perm. Vertegenwoordiger VN
 
Vette Pois(s)on's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 27 november 2007
Berichten: 13.767
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Blue Sky Bekijk bericht
Zo lost men meningsverschillen vandaag de dag op. Men knalt gewoon "het meningsverschil" af.

Mensen hebben geen tijd meer om in eindeloze discussies verzeild te geraken.
vuur liefde af
__________________
Vette Pois(s)on is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 18:05   #25
gunter5148
Perm. Vertegenwoordiger VN
 
gunter5148's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 14 juli 2020
Berichten: 10.503
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Vette Pois(s)on Bekijk bericht
vuur liefde af
Liliane?
__________________
Niemand is mijn koning en niemand is mijn slaaf
gunter5148 is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 21:46   #26
Waterglas
Partijlid
 
Waterglas's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 28 maart 2016
Berichten: 288
Standaard

Citaat:
Police said the suspect had confessed and had a grudge against what was described as a “specific organisation” he believed Abe was a part of.
Citaat:
De man die voormalig premier Abe van Japan doodschoot, had het volgens de politie gemunt op een 'religieuze organisatie waar hij van dacht dat Abe eraan verbonden was'.
Waterglas is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 8 juli 2022, 22:05   #27
Libro
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Libro's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 19 mei 2007
Berichten: 46.490
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Jay-P. Bekijk bericht
https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/bu...n-8796771.html

De polarisatie binnen alle maatschappijen is verworden tot een puur maatschappelijk probleem.

"Japan is a country with some of the strictest gun laws among leading economies and shootings are rare."
Don't blame just the guns, blame the users.
Ex-marinier die zelf een wapen in mekaar knutselde en tot op enkele meters kon naderen.
__________________
Het volk begrijpen plaveit de weg naar leiderschap begrijpen (oude stelregel van het geslacht Atreides)
Disce Quasi Semper Victurus, Vive Quasi Cras Moriturus
I saw that I could put an end to your outrages by pronouncing a single word in my mind. I pronounced it. The word was ‘No.’
Support the country you live in or live in the country you support.
Libro is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 9 juli 2022, 02:36   #28
Waterglas
Partijlid
 
Waterglas's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 28 maart 2016
Berichten: 288
Standaard

De politie wil niet zeggen over welke organisatie het ging, maar men gokt (op twitter) dat de schutter Abe ervan verdacht lid te zijn van de Unification Church (de Moonsekte)
Waterglas is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 9 juli 2022, 03:15   #29
Jay-P.
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Jay-P.'s schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 17 april 2014
Berichten: 22.691
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Libro Bekijk bericht
Ex-marinier die zelf een wapen in mekaar knutselde en tot op enkele meters kon naderen.
Ziet er in ieder geval ongezond uit, en voor een zwaar kaliber, evt. type Brenneke patroon. (al zouden die slugs een veel bloediger resultaat hebben voor hoofd/nek.)


Citaat:
Los daarvan staat wat mij betreft het hele gepreek van wapenbezit en reglementering rond verkoop. Is voor een verschillend topic, maar het punt is ondubbelzinnig:
Niet vuurwapens maar mensen zijn de verantwoordelijken voor 't gebruik. Simpelweg verbieden is geen zaligmakende oplossing. Goed reglementeren helpt, zonder finale garanties.
__________________
...que quand les soirs d'orage des chinois cultivés me demandent d'où je suis,
je réponds fatigué et les larmes aux dents: "Ik ben van Luxembourg".
Jay-P. is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 9 juli 2022, 08:25   #30
Bach
Perm. Vertegenwoordiger VN
 
Bach's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 26 september 2017
Berichten: 16.762
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Waterglas Bekijk bericht
De politie wil niet zeggen over welke organisatie het ging, maar men gokt (op twitter) dat de schutter Abe ervan verdacht lid te zijn van de Unification Church (de Moonsekte)
In 2017 verscheen dit artikel in de Britse pers

Citaat:
The Religious Cult Secretly Running Japan
Caveat Emperor
Jake Adelstein
Mari Yamamoto
Updated Apr. 13, 2017 3:25PM ET
Published Jul. 10, 2016 12:15AM ET
Photo Illustration by Kelly Caminero/ The Daily Beast

TOKYO — In the Land of the Rising Sun, a conservative Shinto cult dating back to the 1970s, which includes Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and many of his cabinet among its adherents, finally has been dragged out of the shadows.

The group is called Nippon Kaigi (Japan Conference) and is ostensibly run by Tadae Takubo, a former journalist turned political scientist. It only has 38,000 members, but like many an exclusive club, or sect, it wields tremendous political influence.
Advertisement

Broadly speaking, Shinto is a polytheistic and animist religion native to Japan. The state-sponsored Shintoism promulgated here before and during World War II also elevated the Emperor to the status of a God and insisted that the Japanese were a divine race—the Yamato; with all other races considered inferior.

Nippon Kaigi originally began in the early 1970s from a liberal Shinto group known as Seicho No Ie. In 1974, a splinter section of the group joined forces with Nippon o Mamoru Kai, a State-Shinto revival organization that espoused patriotism and a return to imperial worship. The group in its current state was officially formed in May of 1997, when Nippon o Mamoru Kai and a group of right-leaning intellectuals joined forces.

The current cult’s goals: gut Japan’s post-war pacifist constitution, end sexual equality, get rid of foreigners, void pesky “human rights” laws, and return Japan to its Imperial Glory.

With Japan’s parliamentary elections to be held on July 10, the cult may now have its chance to dominate policity completely. If the ruling coalition wins enough seats, the door will open to amending Japan’s modern democratic constitution, something that has remained sacred and inviolate since 1947.
Advertisement

Indeed, for Japan, these elections may be a constitutional Brexit—deciding whether this country moves forward as a democracy or literally takes a step back to the Meiji era that ended more than a century ago. Then, the Emperor was supreme and freedom of expression was subservient to the interests of the state.

The influence of Nippon Kaigi may be hard for an American to understand on a gut level. But try this: Imagine if “future World President” Donald Trump belonged to a right-wing evangelical group, let’s call it “USA Conference,” that advocated a return to monarchy, the expulsion of immigrants, the revoking of equal rights for women, restrictions on freedom of speech—and most of his pre-selected political appointees were from the same group.

Sounds incredible… In any case, this would worry people.

That is the American equivalent of what has already taken place in Japan with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his cabinet.
Advertisement

Abe, a third-generation politician, is the grandson of Nobusuke Kishi, who was Japan's minister of munitions during WWII and arrested as a war criminal in 1945 before becoming prime minister in the 1950s.

Abe is a staunch nationalist and historical revisionist, who also served as prime minister, from 2006 until 2007, before resigning abruptly mid-term. His ties to the Nippon Kaigi organization go back to the ’90s.

In line with fellow members of his imperial and imperialist cult, Abe has said the revision of the constitution is his lifetime goal. In an interview in Nikkei Asian Review, published in February 2014, Abe stated, “My party, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), has been advocating amending our constitution since its founding almost 60 years ago.”

So, now, Abe and his party, at least the extremist factions, are at last coming very close to that goal.
Advertisement

Japan’s Parliament, also known as the Diet, is composed of an upper and lower house. Article 96 of the constitution stipulates that amendments can be made to the constitution if approved by super majority of two-thirds of both houses of the Diet, and by simple majority in a referendum.

At present, the LDP and its coalition partners only have a two-thirds majority in the Lower House and a simple majority in the Upper House. They hope to have the needed two-thirds majority in the Upper House after Sunday’s elections.

The Asahi Shimbun and the independent press in Japan have called this year’s campaign “The Hidden Agenda Elections.” Local media have reported that the LDP and partner political parties have made sure their candidates avoid mentioning constitutional revision in their stump speeches.

The ruling coalition is toeing the party line that: “It’s all about Abenomics.”
Advertisement

And those are?

Abenomics is the economic policy Prime Minister Abe promised to put into action in 2012. It is based upon "three arrows" of fiscal stimulus, monetary easing and structural reforms. It was supposed to revitalize Japan’s long stagnant economy. The third “arrow” has yet to be fired and on June 20, this year, the International Money Fund essentially declared it a failure and suggested Japan raise wages.

The ruling party wants to focus all talk on the economy and the hope that Abenomics eventually will work, while the opposition parties, united by The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), are cooperating to field single candidates in areas of Japan where they have a good chance of winning—all under the banner of blocking constitutional revision.

DPJ leader Katsuya Okada has warned, “Under the Abe administration basic human rights such as freedom of speech and the public’s right to free access to information (about their government) have been threatened… the pacifism of the constitution will be destroyed.”
Advertisement

The LDP’s internal crackdown on mention of constitutional revision is savvy, notes Koichi Nakano, a professor and expert on Japanese politics at Sophia University. “Abenomics was simply a way of repackaging Abe’s nationalism as something sexy so he could return to power,” says Nakano. He notes public opinion is opposed by a large margin to the revision of the constitution.

“Abe is using the same tactics he did in two previous elections since 2012 to emphasize that the vote is about the economy and then proceed to do what he intended to do once the election is over. He did this with the passing of the State Secrets Laws and then with the strongly opposed Security Laws last year after the December 2014 snap elections. Perhaps he is getting advice from his deputy prime minister, who once remarked that the LDP should learn from the Nazis about how to quietly change the constitution.”

The LDP’s proposed constitution, which has been strongly influenced by Nippon Kaigi alumni, according to reports by the Asahi Shimbun and other media, would scrap Article 9, which forbids Japan from engaging in warfare as a means of settling international disputes. It would also severely curtail freedom of speech, taking away the right to speak out on issues “if it is against the public interest.”

Presumably, the government would decide what is “the public interest.”
Advertisement

It eliminates the words “basic human rights” from key sections, as constitutional experts have noted.

The LDP argues that revision is necessary for a modern Japan to deal with the threat of China and break free “of the post-war regime.”

The ideology behind Prime Minister Abe and his cabinet had received only modest scrutiny from Japan’s mainstream media until this May. All that changed with the publication of the surprise best seller, Nippon Kaigi No Kenkyu (Research into Japan Conference) by former white-collar worker turned journalist, Tamotsu Sugano, on April 30.

Japan’s leading constitutional expert, Setsu Kobayashi, who is also a former member of Nippon Kaigi, says of the group, “They have trouble accepting the reality that Japan lost the war” and that they wish to restore the Meiji era constitution.
Advertisement

Some members are descendants of the people who started the war, he notes.

Kobayashi is so vexed with his former brethren, that in May he created a new political party to promote and protect constitutional rights called, somewhat amusingly, Kokumin Ikari-no Koe aka The Angry Voice of the People. For Nippon Kaigi, he is a traitor and a nightmare. For Prime Minister Abe, he is an angry loud-mouthed headache.

And Abe is having other headaches before the election. Seicho No Ie, the spiritual forebear of Nippon Kaigi, has turned its back on the LDP and the ruling coalition as well—its first overt political action in decades.

The organization told the Weekly Post last month, “The Abe government thinks lightly of the constitution and we are opposed to their attempts to change Article 9 (the peace clause). In addition, we feel distrust in their failure to uphold policy determined by law.”
Advertisement

Despite Nippon Kaigi’s small numbers overall, half of the Abe Cabinet belongs to the Nippon Kaigi National Lawmakers Friendship Association, the group’s political offshoot. Prime Minister Abe himself is the special advisor.

Former Defense Minister Yuriko Koike, who is running for Governor of Tokyo, is another prominent member.

Sankei Shimbun and others have reported that Nippon Kaigi even tried to pressure the publisher, Fusosha, into dropping the book on April 28. The protest letter sent to the publisher was surprisingly under the name of the group’s secretary general, Yuzo Kabushima, not the name of the Chairman Tadae Takubo.

Kabushima is a staunch Emperor worshipper and was a key member of Seicho No Ie’s student movement. Sugano argues in his book that Kabushima is the person really running the organization.
Advertisement

Despite the threatening tone of the letter, the publisher didn’t budge. Originally, only 8,000 copies of the book were printed. It’s now on it’s fourth printing with over 126,000 copies sold. Five other books have now been printed on the group; magazines are running front-page stories about them.

Suddenly, Nippon Kaigi is very visible.

Sugano is surprised and relieved to see Nippon Kaigi and its influence on national policy finally getting attention. He himself is a political conservative who graduated from the University of Texas with a degree in political science before returning to Japan over a decade ago.

While he was living in Texas, where he picked up a bit of an accent, he noticed how the Christian evangelical movement exerted political influence and sees some parallels in their methods and those of Nippon Kaigi.
Advertisement

Sugano was still a white collar worker aka “salary-man” when he first became aware of the existence of Nippon Kaigi. Back in 2008, Sugano recalls the shift he felt in the atmosphere on the streets. “Crazy people were starting to speak out,” he says. Protests lead by groups, such as the anti-foreigner hate speech group Zaitokukai were more noticeable. He saw an ugly escalation of their activities with each passing day.

He found these hate speech movements troubling and started to infiltrate their protests, documenting the events in photos and recordings. In order to understand the motives of members and supporters, he started to dig into the conservative publications often referenced in their online comments.

The contributors that wrote for these publications puzzled him. Many were established in their field, journalists and academics, all contributing on topics unrelated to their expertise. This peculiar pattern helped him connect the dots: they all seemed to be members of one group. That realization led him down the rabbit hole, where he found the revisionist wonderland that is Nippon Kaigi.

Nippon Kaigi, he found, used neto-uyo (cyber right wingers who troll anyone on the internet they feel writes negatively of Japan), intellectuals, politicians, and closet sympathizers in mainstream media to exert considerable influence on policy and public opinion.
Advertisement

That included getting the Japanese government to reinstitute the Imperial Calendar, which was banished by the U.S. occupation government. It’s 2016 in the West, but under the Imperial Calendar, based on the reign of the Emperor, it is year 28 of the Heisei era. The system is so confusing that many reporters in Japan carry a handy chart to translate the Imperial Calendar dates into Western time.

Sugano also credits Nippon Kaigi with politically resurrecting Prime Minister Abe, whose political career was considered dead after his abrupt resignation as prime minister in 2007.

He also believes their goal may be to alter radically the parts of the constitution which define marriage and the rights of wives, thus, “rolling back sexual equality and making Japan a country pleasant for cranky old men, like themselves.”

The Daily Beast contacted Nippon Kaigi via email, fax, and by telephone and asked for clarification of what has been written about the group and their objections to Sugano’s book but did not receive a reply
Advertisement

While several recently published books and articles paint a picture of a masterful Machiavellian organization that has skirted the law to avoid having to register as a political group, Sugano believes they are primarily reactionary with no clear idea what they want to do once their goals are achieved.

“They have worked steadily and stealthily with local politicians and political lobbies to oppose things like gender equality, recognition of war crimes and the comfort women [sex slaves during WWII], women using their maiden names after marriage etc. It’s anti-this and anti-that but has no vision of the future.”

Other researchers have taken notice of the group’s anti-gender equality stance, but point out that Prime Minister Abe appears to be sincere about promoting women in the workplace and that the group also has female lawmakers in its ranks.

Sugano isn’t surprised. “Prime Minister Abe talks a lot about womenomics (the empowerment of women in the business world) but it’s all talk. It’s like a Texas racist saying, ‘I have a black friend so I’m not racist.’ The fact that there are female politicians supported by the group is the same logic. There are always some minorities in a minority that consider discrimination to be acceptable. Or these women find the support of the group advantageous to themselves—if not for women in general.”
Advertisement

Professor Jeff Kingston, a historian of modern Japan, has pointed out that while Abe says all the right things, he has quietly reduced his original professed goal of promoting women in management from 30 percent to 15 percent, and in reality his meager actions are “a nod to patriarchal realities that exposes Abe’s version of womenomics as a sham”.

Sugano insists the “patriarchal realities” of Japan are one reason behind Japan’s media self-censorship under the Abe administration and why they long avoided touching upon Nippon Kaigi.

He argues the mainstream Japanese media are run by misogynistic old men whose world views align with Nippon Kaigi’s sexist ideals, and since they agree with their principles, they have seen no need to report on the organization.

“It is not self censorship. It’s more like silent collusion,” he said.
Advertisement

Nippon Kaigi’s dismissive attitude towards women and children also explains its evident opposition to The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).

Hideaki Kase, a prominent member of Nippon Kaigi and prolific revisionist writer, is also listed as Chairman of Japan’s Corporal Punishment Association—which advocates judicious beating of children as a means of educating them and making them strong.

If you ask Sugano why these elections are important, he will tell you why in his Kansai-accented Texas drawl:

“The LDP, Abe, and Nippon Kaigi have essentially the same agenda. The frightening thing about this election is that they have never been closer to achieving their dreams—amending the constitution to return Japan to a militaristic feudal society where women, children, youngsters and foreigners, including the Japanese-Koreans, have no basic human rights. They will only have one right: the right to shut up.”
.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-re...-running-japan

Laatst gewijzigd door Bach : 9 juli 2022 om 08:30.
Bach is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 00:13   #31
Universalia
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Universalia's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 29 december 2012
Locatie: Nieverans Les Bains
Berichten: 45.302
Standaard

Ik vraag mij af waar de security op dat ogenblik was?

Als zo een 'hogergeplaatst' persoon een toespraak doet loopt het meestal vol security in leuke maatpakjes met diplomatenkoffertje in de hand.

Dat koffertje is een 'kogelvrij' schild als men dat open gooit bij dat soort van situaties.
__________________
Ik citeer Confucius: Als straffen niet op de juiste wijze worden opgelegd, weten de mensen niet waar ze aan toe zijn.
Ook citeer ik A. Einstein met graagte: Bidden verandert de wereld niet, maar bidden verandert de mens en de mens verandert de wereld.

Laatst gewijzigd door Universalia : 10 juli 2022 om 00:14.
Universalia is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 08:01   #32
kelt
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Geregistreerd: 29 juli 2004
Berichten: 35.517
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Universalia Bekijk bericht
Ik vraag mij af waar de security op dat ogenblik was?

Als zo een 'hogergeplaatst' persoon een toespraak doet loopt het meestal vol security in leuke maatpakjes met diplomatenkoffertje in de hand.

Dat koffertje is een 'kogelvrij' schild als men dat open gooit bij dat soort van situaties.
Een echte samourai heeft dat mietjesgedoe voor niks nodig en accepteert de risico's
kelt is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 08:12   #33
quercus
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
quercus's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 4 maart 2009
Locatie: De Verenigde Nederlanden
Berichten: 43.073
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door gunter5148 Bekijk bericht
Was het niet de bedoeling dat we lantaarnpalen gingen gebruiken?

Abe was de beste leerling in de klas, die mee ervoor gezorgd heeft dat de Japanse bevolking zichzelf aan het uitroeien is.

https://www.populationpyramid.net/japan/2020/

pas een zeer interessant essay erover gelezen. Zal eens zoeken of ik het terugvind.
Nogal getuigend van een flinke dosis vooringenomenheid om dergelijk demografisch verschijnsel op het conto van één politicus te schrijven.
__________________
Weet nu dan dat uw stem door niemand wordt aanhoord
Zolang gij stamelend bidt of bedelt bij de poort.
quercus is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 10:12   #34
dalibor
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
dalibor's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 9 mei 2014
Berichten: 23.492
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door SDX Bekijk bericht
Neeneenee. Japan is sowieso niefanier.

Ik pleit voor strengere wapenwetten.

Hmmm oh wacht...
Ja, ook dat argument is geweldig.

Er vallen in Japan ruwweg 200 keer minder doden door vuurwapens dan in de VS.

Als het dan toch eens gebeurt is dat niet bepaald een zinnig argument om het vrij bezit van vuurwapens te wettigen. Jij bent iets te verstandig om dat soort NRA-onzin echt te geloven.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/co...ths-by-country
__________________
Think I forgot
how to be happy.
Something I'm not
but something I can be.
Something I wait for.
Something I'm made for.
dalibor is nu online   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 10:29   #35
Gipsy
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Geregistreerd: 26 november 2013
Berichten: 20.603
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Bach Bekijk bericht
In 2017 verscheen dit artikel in de Britse pers
1) Compleet nutteloos dit soort lange bijdragen of artikels te plaatsen. NIEMAND leest dit.

2)The Daily beast is geen Britse pers maar New Yorkse pers.

3)De betrouwbaarheid van The Daily Beast is zeer laag, eerder propaganda met weinig fact onderzoek of bronnen.
Gipsy is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 10 juli 2022, 12:07   #36
SDX
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
SDX's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 17 oktober 2008
Locatie: Thuis
Berichten: 25.740
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door dalibor Bekijk bericht
Ja, ook dat argument is geweldig.

Er vallen in Japan ruwweg 200 keer minder doden door vuurwapens dan in de VS.

Als het dan toch eens gebeurt is dat niet bepaald een zinnig argument om het vrij bezit van vuurwapens te wettigen. Jij bent iets te verstandig om dat soort NRA-onzin echt te geloven.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/co...ths-by-country
Ik acht jou verstandig genoeg om te weten dat, hoe streng je wapenwetgeving ook moge zijn, 'n crimineel, indien hij er 1 wil, er tòch aan kan geraken, zelfs al moet hij 't zelf ineen frutselen.

Criminelen houden zich nu eenmaal niet aan wetten.


En jawel hoor, ik huldig 't NRA principe; "Only Thing That Stops A Bad Guy With A Gun Is A Good Guy With A Gun''.

Laatst gewijzigd door SDX : 10 juli 2022 om 12:11.
SDX is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 11 juli 2022, 07:35   #37
Bach
Perm. Vertegenwoordiger VN
 
Bach's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 26 september 2017
Berichten: 16.762
Standaard

De interessante vraag is steeds "Wie wint er bij?"

Citaat:
JAPAN'S ELECTION: A WIN FOR REARMAMENT

For Chinese and other Asians outside Japan, the key issue in that country's just-finished parliamentary poll was whether forces in favor of constitutional revision could gain a two-thirds majority in the upper house.

If they did, the revisionists would have such a "supermajority" in both chambers. That would allow them to hold a national referendum, in which a simple majority would enable a rewrite of the "pacifist" charter, coauthored with the Americans in 1947. The revisionists' chief target is the part that renounces war as an instrument of policy and places restrictions on Japan's armed forces.

That had been a lifelong ambition of LDP stalwart Shinzo Abe. His sudden assassination likely helped the pro-revisers at the polls. They got their coveted supermajority.

PM Kishida and the LDP emerged with a stronger mandate. The question now is how quickly they might move towards constitutional revision, given the current pressures, not least from the US, to beef up the military and counter "the China threat."

With the world in substantial turmoil, the last thing Asia needs is a further rise in geopolitical and military tensions.

From the article below:

"Pro-constitutional revision forces grabbed more than 170 seats in the House of Councilors, crossing the 166 threshold needed to aim for a first-ever amendment of the 1947 Constitution. The ruling bloc already had a two-thirds majority in the Lower House...

" 'I am determined to achieve results as part of my ‘new capitalism’ economic model, which is aimed primarily at revitalizing the economy,' Kishida said. 'At the same time, I will take a step-by-step approach to continuing our work on diplomacy, security and constitutional revision'...

"For the LDP,?*the focus on defense and diplomacy?*appears to have played well with voters, who have so far largely shown support for Kishida’s tough stance against Russia."
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/0…


...degenen die de constitutie van Japan willen herzien om remilitarizatie mogelijk te maken. Werd Abe 'geofferd'? zou men zich dus ook kunnen af vragen. Werd er een sleeper cell geactiveerd?
Bach is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 11 juli 2022, 07:37   #38
Skobelev
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Skobelev's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 14 maart 2013
Locatie: Kinshasa aan de Dender
Berichten: 40.698
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door maddox Bekijk bericht
De neergeschotene was een politicus?

Zonde van de kogel.
Als politiekers krijgen wat ze verdienen....
__________________
Hope is nothing more than a postponed disappointment
Skobelev is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 11 juli 2022, 11:15   #39
maddox
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
maddox's schermafbeelding
 
Geregistreerd: 25 september 2002
Locatie: vilvoorde
Berichten: 69.990
Stuur een bericht via MSN naar maddox
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Skobelev Bekijk bericht
Als politiekers krijgen wat ze verdienen....
Dan is een kogel te duur en te genadevol.
__________________
De meeste mensen gaan naar het werk om geld te krijgen, niet om het te verdienen.
maddox is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Oud 11 juli 2022, 11:31   #40
Gipsy
Secretaris-Generaal VN
 
Geregistreerd: 26 november 2013
Berichten: 20.603
Standaard

Citaat:
Oorspronkelijk geplaatst door Skobelev Bekijk bericht
Als politiekers krijgen wat ze verdienen....
De man verdiende dit niet. Geen enkele politieker tenzij een moordenaar en tiran verdient dit.
Gipsy is offline   Met citaat antwoorden
Antwoord



Regels voor berichten
Je mag niet nieuwe discussies starten
Je mag niet reageren op berichten
Je mag niet bijlagen versturen
Je mag niet jouw berichten bewerken

vB-code is Aan
Smileys zijn Aan
[IMG]-code is Aan
HTML-code is Uit
Forumnavigatie


Alle tijden zijn GMT +1. Het is nu 19:56.


Forumsoftware: vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content copyright ©2002 - 2020, Politics.be