10/13/2007

Paranoid Policy

Did you read the article in Washingtonpost?

The US administration in handling North Korea has been in Paranoid Policy. They just fear they would fail in the same way as it did against Iraq. More important, they overlook the crucial difference between North Korea and Iraq, however. Iraq Helped terror groups, while North Korea has organized and surpervised terrors. Terrorists use violenct actions or military power to get what it want to get. In short, North Korea is a terrorist country.

The US made two mistakes. First, it assaulted Iraq without getting any proof that Iraq helped Al Quaeda to terror on 9/11, finding itself in impasse in Iraq. Second, it excluded violent actions as a choice in handling North Korea only because it failed in Iraq.

I learned in my highschool days one of the good points of the US was the US tried to find what it should or will do not preoccupied with any rule but centering on the right way because the matter you are facing shouldn't be identical with any of the events in the past.

Terrorists, again, use violent actions or weapons to get what they want to get. I don't understand why the US could exclude the choice in handling terrorists as well as take away the name of North Korea on the terrorist group list. I have to say the US is not on the right way.

9/10/2007

The Best Intentions

The words in Jurassic Park III reminded me of what was stated in his books by Theodor W. Adorno, who admired non-coordination, or in another expression, who disliked a theorized view without any contradictions.

The words are "Some of the worst things imaginable have been done with the best intentions." It's important to build a theory with no defects, but it's arrogant to think human beings are capable of constructing that.

Anyway, it was so catchy.

8/23/2007

Righteousness

I read Bush's speech in VFW, which was criticized in Bostonglobe for his views on Vietnam War.

To me, what annoyed me most is the sentence, "They(the Japanese in WWII) killed Americans because we stood in the way of their attempt to force their ideology on others."

The sentence expresses what Matthew Arnold called Hebrewism, based on the words in the Hebrews, "Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see(11/1)."

Bush, you should know that there can be differences between what you think right and what we think right. Japanese do not think our grandfathers were thoroughly correct, while they reject the Americans was perfectly right.

8/09/2007

Democracy and education

What is democracy? I have been thinkig about this since I read a post in Aljazeera English, which emphasizes violent actions have been done by those thinking and stating democracy is the most important.

Democracy is a system selected by the people to govern a community in which they live based on the religion, philosophy, environment, and history proper to the community, so first of all, democracy cannot be given by any other force living outside the community.

Of course, dictatorship should be criticized but it must be taken away by the people. This statement is not mine but Edward E. Said's.

I'm beginning to think he was right, while I found I hadn't given enough thought to what democracy is.

But if this is true how should I react to dictatorships, like Saddam Husayn or Kim Jon Il?

When US was preparing for the war with Iraq, Said was afraid what would happen after the war: chaos.

He didn't live long enough to see the result but he was right. Before, Churchill called democracy was the least good system of government. When it is thought to be bad, the people are not wise enough to judge, so Said was also right in saying intellectuals play important roles in establishing good democracies in communities.

Intellectuals need to let people know what will happen after each of the opinions on the table is selected, so they must not belong to any other factions. But as discussing with a friend of mine in university, recently intellectuals work on their majors in universities but do not work to improve societies or to let people know what they should know. Rather, looks like they work to keep the present framework of society unchanged.

I must confess till now I didn't know how important education is....

8/07/2007

Big Sigh

On August 6 sixty two years ago, a nuclear bomb was exploded in Hiroshima to kill 140,000 persons including civilians. Whether the decision was right or not has been one of the controbersial topics in Japan.

According to the Gallup Poll 2005, fifty-seven percent of the Americans approved dropping an Atomic bomb on Hiroshima mainly because it reduced the number of the possible persons who would die in the war. Forty one percent of the Americans thought it was useful even for lessing the number of the possible Japanese who would die because they must have fought to their death.


But what if they were going to surrender and the American leaders knew it?

Secretery of War Henry Stimson (July 16th, 1945) and the President Truman knew it. Below is the diary of Truman of the United States of America (July 18th 1945).

Ate breakfast with nephew Harry, a sergeant in the Field Artillery. He is a good soldier and a nice boy. They took him off Queen Elizabeth at Glasco and flew him here. Sending him home Friday. Went to lunch with P.M., at 1:30 walked around to British Hqrs. Met at the gate by Mr. Churchill. Guard of honor drawn up. Fine body of men Scottish Guards. Band played Star Spangled Banner. Inspected Guard and went in for lunch. P.M. and I ate alone. Discussed Manhattan (it is a success). Decided to tell Stalin about it. Stalin had told P.M. of telegram from Jap Emperor asking for peace. Stalin also read his answer to me. It was satisfactory. Believe Japs will fold up before Russia comes in.

The Japanese leaders had tried to asked Russia to settle the war since the spring, so they needed to find a good time when Japan should surrender.

Do you think it necessary to use atomic bombs on Hiroshima in the way effective enough to succeed in surprise-attack(it is discovered that Enola Gay, the combat plane loading the atomic bomb, pretended to go away from Hiroshima to let Hiroshima lift the warning)?

But many of the Japanese know Japan's flying corps did surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, which triggered the war between Japan and USA, though Japan didn't plan doing that (the diplomats didn't submit that by the date), so some of them conclude they're not qualified to blame USA either.

However, I was stunned to read the article in Bostonglobe, shown below:

Relations between the two countries have long been contentious and mutually distrustful. From Pyongyang's perspective, Japan's military alliance with the United States and its history of harsh colonial rule have remained impediments to normal relations. From Tokyo's perspective, North Korea's brazen abduction of Japanese nationals during the late 1970s and early 1980s, its repressive authoritarianism, and its flagrant militarism make North Korea a repellent neighbor.

According to this article, a feud has been established between Japan and North Korea for the reasons above.

But I doubt that Pyongyang has the view. It just tried to unite two Koreas into one by any means necessary(one of the examples). In doing that, N. Korea abducted some of the foreigners including Japanese to make them help N. Korea, and began to be criticized by Japan.

You know, N. Korea had to do those secretly and has to hide Kim Jong Il was involved in those terrors, so it needs to build the feud for the alleged reasons, one of which should be Japanese alliance with USA, which is also useful for legitimating its nuclear programme.

I love and read Bostonglobe, a liberal newspaper in US, but liberals often blame countries which seemed to be allied with American conservatives. I completely agree with Norman Mailer saying in Big Empty,

Where is the good American who does not nod his or her head in blank despair at his or her desire to believe --- even a little of what they rush to tell us all the time?

Do not allow N. Korea and some faction to deceive you.

Related article: NO POLICE.

8/02/2007

I'm the person

I love this joke:

A: "I'm sorry--- I quite forgot your party the other evening!"
B: "Oh, weren't you there?"

I'm always the type of person who are treated in this way (TEAR).

7/29/2007

No Justice 2

In Aljazeera English, you can read views on the Koreans abducted by the Taliban.

I don’t think the Taliban can justify what they are doing because they are doing that to Koreans. Can the Taliban admit Koreans do the same thing to Muslims living in other areas because they are categorized into Islamite? A Japanese young man was also killed there. He was blamed for taking a trip there though he was warned not to go there. I should admit he made a mistake but the persons who killed the Japanese must be charged more bitterly with their killing him.

7/28/2007

No Police 2

Last week, six party talks adjourned to require North Korea and the neighbours to meet the requirements. NK will get so much oil and dismantle nuclear program in return, while Japan is required to show less hostility toward NK on abduction issue, and the US take the name of NK out of the list of goverments supporting terrorists, according to Washingtonpost. The neighbours gave a villain what it wanted because the villain threatened them with nuclear programme. Even in the international situation in which diverse values go, do you think the neighbors made a right decision?

Related article: No Police

6/06/2007

Layman's Question

My favorite Japanese artist, Okamoto Taro, frequently said, "Be a layman." I guess he meant by this phrase that you should have a direct view into objects, letting nothing intervening between the objects and you. Probably, we have some assumptions on which our social lives go easily, but they sometimes prevent you from seeing the truths and making good decisions.

For example, when old persons insist that they need enough money to let them live peacefully, they seem to forget that theri request would impose big burden on their children and being destined to pass away soon. They are the members of the community, so they need to find a fair way to distribute money and foodstuff to the members of the community.

This came to me when Okamoto told me a story about a system adopted by Eskimoans as to how to reduce the number of the older persons in the society. They, turning some age, are required to throw themselves into the sea. If one of them has not drown to death, his grandaughter who was cherished by her grandfather will put his head under the water, saying "Thank you and good-bye."

I don't mean older persons should be useless. An extreme view may let us see problems in perspective, consequently to let you know your life depends upon the society in which you're living. No one knows the meaning and significance of life. Without knowing this, how can you choose your own way to live and spend your time living in this world. This awareness, I believe, will lead us to live less greedily and arrogantly.

"Be a layman" is one of my favorite words. I'm professional, so I need to keep this in my mind, like other professionals in power.

6/05/2007

Sentenced to Freedom

In a sense, philosophy tells you that you cannot have an objective view on anything you think existing in the world. In short, you have a very limited view of the world in which you are living now.

In this limited view, some of you, including me, should try to find a better way to spend your time in this world. This type of persons are categorized into existentialists by Heidegger.


As an existentialist, I have found Sartre's existentialism and Buddhistic philosophy, but they just tell you "you're sentenced into freedom," "you have no doctrine to cling to in living in the world but to think, more exactly, to struggle.

Recently, I've found myself in impasse. I know this is common, and I need to do what I should do.

6/03/2007

Barbarians

Japan Argues to Hunt Minke Whales (washingtonpost)
Moratorium on Commercial Whaling Upheld (washingtonpost)

This news has reminded me of the words of Claude Levi-Strauss about "barbarian." The persons called "barbarians," he said, should refer to the ones who do not accept anything they are not familiar with. Before, Japanese found it strange that some westerners eat cattle, but have accepted them as food. You know, what you should live on depends upon its geographical environment. Japan has been an isolated island country where they have found foodstuff peculiar to the island. It seems to me that anti-whaling factions have something hidden against Japan in their minds. Let me call them barbarians.

If you have questions as to the status quo of whales, go to the website.

5/08/2007

Siva's View 5: Kamakura

The Kamakura period (1192-1333) is important in Japanese history for two remarkable facts: the establishment of the government by the pioneer peasants and the emergence of religious sects for them. These two were the first in the world then.

As doctuments shows, in the Nara and Heian periods, you haven't found any trace of the peasants living and contributing to the governmetal system. They are thought to have been like slaves; I mean, they were allotted land and forced to grow crops for aristocracy.

In the second half of Heian period, some of the slaves ran away and pioneered into the Kanto area, called Bando then; there, they needed to protect their own land and lordship, so they began to carry arms with them. They are thought to have been the first Samurai (Japanese warrior).

A problem emerged then. The aristocrats in Kyoto, the former capital of Japan, tried to get them under their control, so they needed to protect their own land, followed by a war between Bando and Kyoto. The Bando won.

The leader of the peasants in Bando, Minamoto Yoritomo, took the soverinity from Mikado, the former name of Tenno or Emperor in Japanese (the word, emperor, cannot regarded as the exact word to translate "Mikado" into English; I will explain later) and opened the new government in Kamakura, the beginning of the Kamakura period, which you can call the second stage in Japanese history, the feudal system.

Through these events, the Bando peasants began to think about their own life. Every individual dies, but they try to survive. This contradictory movements in which persons are always must have been gazed at by them, and they needed to get a new kind of philosophy to see the world.

Then several Buddhistic sects were born, of which the two extreme sects were Jo-do Shinshu and Zen in the sense the former tells you to know your ignorance and impotence to upgrade you to a person with wisdom while the latter convinces you that your exaltation is the only way to give you the wisdom.

5/03/2007

Constitution

Since May 3rd, 1947, Japan has had the current constitution, which might change to activate the Japan Army under the present Prime Minister regime. Recently, there has been talk about whether it should be revised. Most crucial in the talk seems to be the ninth article: Japan does not have any force effective to handle international conflicts.

The problem is on how to intepret the international conflicts, or, more directly, if the purpose of self-defense will be categorized into international conflict. This is a gray zone susceptible to some interpretations. This room was the cause of our WWII, concluded by some of us. The room gives persons in power the choice to interpret and lets them run.

It is nonsense to try to choose one of the two views: the first that war or violence cannot work as a way to solve conflicts among nations but to conclude and the second we need to have the capacity to protect our country and the world peace from countries that will try to handle matters with power. Because both of them are right. History tells us wars have killed guilty and innocent persons indiscriminately and good and righteous persons are not always superior to evil persons in power.

The two views can remain intact in the current ninth article; therefore, I conclude we should not change the constitution. The problem is not the constitution but how we can use it, so we must be deliberate when electing the representatives among whom the prime minister will be selected. More important, any person, however diligent and deliberate they are, can make mistakes in many cases, so you have to realize each of you should be responsible for the decision our leader you have elected has made.

4/22/2007

Easier Solution

I don't want to conclude the shootings in Virginia Tech must have been attributed to just abnormality in the person because discontent should lead to such abrupt massacre in some cases. I think we must recognize the current society has been incomplete, and such awareness may bring something to prevent another tragedy from assaulting us not you. I haven't organized my thought, but I'm sure it should be the first step into a possible better reformation of some part in the society.

3/15/2007

Stookey Songs for the Abuductee

Here, you can listen to the song for Yokota Megumi, abducted by North Korean agents, composed by Paul Stookey.

Related article: No Justice

3/08/2007

NO COMFORT?

Did you read the articles in NY Times, L.A. Times, and Bostonglobe about the sex slaves?

I was disappointed to read them because the writers seem to have written them before seeing the issue in perspective.

According to me, Japan will appologize and accept the call (though it apoligized more than once) if it is based on fair judgment and investigation into the truth, in correct judicial proceedings. But I don't think it is fair to charge a suspected person with the alleged atrocity its accusers describe.

More important, it doesn't matter if the Korean's explanation is true or not. What matters most should be found in "Agreement on the Settlement of Problem concerning Property and Claims and the Economic Cooperation between the Japan and Republic of Korea."

South Korea, in normalizing relationship with Japan after the World War II, stated that it would take care of all of the Korean individuals who were victimized by the Japan Army, taking 300 million dollars and more from Japan, as the compensation. Sadly, the Korean government spent all the money for developing the country, without gaining permission from the nation.

2/14/2007

No Police

I'm stunned that Six Party Talk has ended in that way. What a deal is it that Norht Korea would be offered much oil while letting them know and permitting IAEA to inspect the institutions where nuclear weapons are said to have been produced! Neither justice nor cause-and-effect coherence can be found there. North Korea would not lose anything while the other countries would pay.

What they are saying is Japan needs to have nuclear weapons to claim the abductees should be returned to their home country. And I will tell China and South Korea that they haven't been qualified to blame Japan for what it did because they have allowed North Korea to do the same evil things as the alleged atrocities Japan did against them during the first half of the 20th century. Evil is evil. In their countries, can they tell their children the resolution can be called fair?

North Korea, I'm adamant, must be a regular rogue toward civilians. The world has no police to arrest villains. The US may have failed in Iraq but should not have learned how he made the mistake. In both cases, no justification in cutting deals has been made. North Korea is one of those countries like Russia, as described in "Potemkin Justice"(Washingtonpost), though it's much poor in power and quality.

P.S. A Good Deal with North Korea (Boston Blobe), Nuclear Bargaining and U.S. Flexibility Credited in Nuclear Deal With N. Korea (Washingtonpost), Pact With North Korea Draws Fire From a Wide Range of Critics in U.S. (New York Times).