The Japanese upper house election is to be held on July 11.
The date was set when the government and DPJ decided not to extend the parliament, leading to the resignation of one of the minister from the coalition party. The coalition was based upon the promise of passing laws to possibly expand the postal bank.
The new popular prime minister Kan knows what is in favor of the public opinions and what is not. Which is important, since power screws up people's heads -- to keep it, to be protected from the harms of it, rather. He will not betray our expectations in the faces of an occasion like postal privatization. DPJ had backed the wrong people who are hugely entangled in the system of vested interests. The collapse of the coalition was expected but was after the election, not before. Whether he thinks he can ignore the entire world or not, we must keep an eye on what he does on those issues.
The politics nowadays around the globe is interconnected and none exists alone. They are intertwined, this is the whole system of it, the politics and such, and when all those factors function well into a system towards some goals, be it healthcare, welfare, justice, humanity or equality, it does miracles.
It should not be surprising, then, if the leaders of Japan and the US can get along, say, considering what they are, things would work out fine. I hear them in unison -- we can not ignore the voices of people, the same sort of people in hardship, or not. The difference is, of course, that the prime minister is unaware of how things are abroad, and in the notion of what dictatorship is, and the people are ready to kill the wrongdoers and they regularly do in places like Yemen, Indonesia, Philippines, Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, ... everywhere except in advanced countries, and they hardly ever talk of capturing them alive, claiming that they planned attacks on innocent people, a key phrase they so frequently employ.
The date was set when the government and DPJ decided not to extend the parliament, leading to the resignation of one of the minister from the coalition party. The coalition was based upon the promise of passing laws to possibly expand the postal bank.
The new popular prime minister Kan knows what is in favor of the public opinions and what is not. Which is important, since power screws up people's heads -- to keep it, to be protected from the harms of it, rather. He will not betray our expectations in the faces of an occasion like postal privatization. DPJ had backed the wrong people who are hugely entangled in the system of vested interests. The collapse of the coalition was expected but was after the election, not before. Whether he thinks he can ignore the entire world or not, we must keep an eye on what he does on those issues.
The politics nowadays around the globe is interconnected and none exists alone. They are intertwined, this is the whole system of it, the politics and such, and when all those factors function well into a system towards some goals, be it healthcare, welfare, justice, humanity or equality, it does miracles.
It should not be surprising, then, if the leaders of Japan and the US can get along, say, considering what they are, things would work out fine. I hear them in unison -- we can not ignore the voices of people, the same sort of people in hardship, or not. The difference is, of course, that the prime minister is unaware of how things are abroad, and in the notion of what dictatorship is, and the people are ready to kill the wrongdoers and they regularly do in places like Yemen, Indonesia, Philippines, Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, ... everywhere except in advanced countries, and they hardly ever talk of capturing them alive, claiming that they planned attacks on innocent people, a key phrase they so frequently employ.