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The Latest on Okinawa and the Futenma Base

 

Hatoyama, key ministers split on Futenma

Japan’s defense and foreign ministers seemingly are in agreement that Futenma Marine Corps Air Station—or its replacement to the north—should remain on Okinawa, while the Prime Minister continues to signal there’s no rush on deciding what to do about the controversial air station.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9897

Comment: With a mayoral election looming in Nago City, where the replacement field is proposed to be built, they’re now resorting to making it look as though Governor Nakaima is waffling on the issue. It’s a political maneuver to make him look weak and nothing could be further from the truth! I agree with Mr. Okada that certain fixed wing operations could be shifted to Kadena and a smaller facility could be built to facilitate helicopter operations at Camp Schwab. Even then, this would be a short term solution and not the one size fits all that he apparently envisions.

I seriously doubt that the citizens who live in and around Kadena Air base could ever be convinced to go along with this plan. Short term in this situation would likely mean several decades! Eventually a larger, more significant, portion of U.S. military forces could be moved out of Okinawa to Guam, the Northern Marianas and even to Iwo Jima. The latter was recently thrown in as a last minute proposal. But even if such a grand long term plan were to be implemented, don’t think that all U.S. military operations will be moved completely out of Okinawa.

For the life of me, I can’t ever see Kadena Air Base closed, at least not in my lifetime, nor can I foresee training facilities like Camp’s Hansen and Schwab closed either. In regards to the latter, they would make excellent joint training facilities for U.S. and Japanese forces as well as a place to preposition material for contingency operations in the Far East theatre. As such, I can’t ever see them being closed down either.

 

Okada claims air base merger plan was his idea

Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said Thursday that the plan to integrate the functions of the U.S. Marine Corps' Futenma Air Station with U.S. Kadena Air Base was his idea.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20091030TDY01301.htm

Comment: And AlGore invented the internet! I could just have easily said that he stole my idea. I’ve written on this very subject extensively in previous posts. But for me to do so would be a lie, just as it is for Mr. Okada. I don’t know who it was who proposed this idea first but it happened many years ago. Both the U.S. Air Force and the people of Kadena town answered with an emphatic NO! Don’t expect any changes just because of Mr. Okada’s overinflated ego makes him think that because the “good-guys” like him are now in charge that he can win them over on the strength of his personality. What vanity!

Kadena plan a no-go: U.S.

WASHINGTON (Kyodo) The United States said Thursday it can't support the idea of transferring U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Okinawa to nearby U.S. Kadena Air Base due to operational difficulties.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20091031a3.html

Comment: The real reason is the Air Force doesn’t like it is because the Marine Corps will steal their girlfriends away from them! Though not ideal, the move could work as a temporary solution till either the Nago replacement facility is built or a suitable replacement facility is found outside of Okinawa. The Marines can’t perform their mission on Okinawa without helicopter capabilities in Okinawa. Guess that means they’re either moving the air base to Nago or the Marines are leaving Okinawa. Who wants to take a bet on which way that will go?

How’s that “Hope and Change” working for you Okinawa? A lot of people here thought that an Obama presidency meant the U.S. military was soon to leave Okinawa altogether. Guess again! Mr. Obama railed against the Bush Administration for a host of different reasons, but once in power, they decided to stick with many of the very policies they so vehemently opposed. More than likely, in addition to all of this talk being just that, talk! This whole thing is just about making noise to appease the locals. My bet is after all the “smoke and mirrors,” a synonym for “Hope and Change” clears, the replacement facility will be built in Nago as planned!

Japan wants a SOFA change; right to keep criminal suspects

Japan and the United States may be gearing up for another bruising battle involving changes to the Status of Forces Agreement, as the new Prime Minister thinks his government should have the right to arbitrarily demand U.S. military personnel suspected of committing crimes in local communities be handed over to Japanese police.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9891

Comment: The argument can be made that this certainly would go a long way in reducing the number of crimes committed by U.S. personnel stationed in Japan. Being non-SOFA myself and as such not afforded its extraterritorial protection, all I can say is abide by the law of the land that you’re in and more than likely you’ll have no trouble what-so-ever. That is especially true in a country like Japan that adheres to the rule of law. Lately it would seem that they adhere to it more than the U.S. does.

Sure there are concerns over questioning methods and protecting the rights of the accused. But that just strengthens my point! Don’t do the crime, if you can’t do the time. If more of these individuals who presently think that the SOFA agreement is a get-out-of-jail-free card had the fear of incarceration and jail time placed in the back of their heads that might deter some of the crime that takes place. Go ahead and put in a few safeguards for the rights of the accused, then turn the criminals over to the Japanese authorities expeditiously and watch the crime rate drop!

Quote of the Day:

“If you will not fight for right when you can easily win without blood shed; if you will not fight when your victory is sure and not too costly; you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance of survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves.”Sir Winston Churchill

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Where's My Nobel Prize???

 

Note: This is a news and opinion blog on the happenings in Okinawa Japan and the Far East. The opinions expressed here are my own. I don’t comment on every article linked here but, ask that for the sake of context please read the articles, in there entirety, first.

Okinawa in the News:

Okada acknowledges U.S. ties, but cites need for talks

TOKYO — Japan’s new foreign minister on Wednesday again stressed the need for renewed talks about a long-term plan to realign troops on Okinawa.

http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=65252

Comment: This story and one run last week give indications that the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is not only fractured but also that it’s not likely going to be all peaches and cream running a country like they thought from the outset. The DPJ has a steep learning curve to negotiate and now they’ll discover that it’s far easier to be the opposition and Monday morning quarterback than it is to lead. They can’t please everyone and most assuredly, no matter what they decide regarding the Futenma base issue, there will be some Okinawan’s who won’t like it and their opposition will be very vocal!
 

Urasoe City anxious over Camp Kinser’s 2014 return

Camp Kinser’s a quiet, idyllic logistics base in Urasoe City, and it’s on the list of six bases the U.S. military would like to return to land owners in 2014.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9840

Comment: Well if they nix the move of Marine Corps Air Station Futenma to Camp Schwab, why not move it there? They have the land and instead of filling in the bay to build runways, they just need to build a dock facility, problem solved.
 

Senior citizens getting more adept at stealing

The number of senior citizens arrested and prosecuted for stealing is up more than 10% over a year ago.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9846

Comment: I would think given the economic downturn that the number of seniors doing this because they’re hungry is higher than the 17% number given. I would venture to say that a good portion of the 70% when asked were just too proud to say they were starving! Unfortunately this is an indication of shifting values in Okinawa and not for the better. This is a culture that has always prided itself on taking care of the elderly.

There are some who will probably say that this is a result of the 60 plus years exposure to American influence and culture. But neglecting or worse yet, abandoning granddad and grandma in a nursing home is also becoming more commonplace throughout Japan. This is a sad commentary on the state of civilization as a whole. Especially when it happens in a culture that boasts of the number of and quality of life for their elderly citizens begins neglecting them.
 

Hatoyama Cabinet confirms U.S. base relocation accord must be reviewed

Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's coalition government said Friday it will stick to its initial pledge to review plans to relocate U.S. forces within Okinawa, backtracking on earlier comments.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20091010a5.html

Comment: It’s looking more and more like Japan got “Hope and Change,” the sequel! Just like all of Obama’s statements have an expiration date, so too it would seem does any statement coming from the Hatoyama cabinet.


Japan
in the News:

DPJ's budget-waste watchdog: ¥3 trillion in fat just a start

The Democratic Party of Japan will pare wherever possible wasteful government spending and also attempt to enhance the quality of the annual budget, state minister Yoshito Sengoku said Friday in an interview.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20091010a2.html

Comment: This is one of the areas in which I agree with the DPJ. There is far too much government waste. I further agree with the policy to end “amakudari.” But it’s probably pretty safe for me to say that every politician and party at every election since the dawn of democracy has vowed to end such practices. When parties in charge change, as we saw in the last election, history has shown us that what we usually end up with is a new fox running the hen house.

The DPJ is also using words like “transparency” to describe how they will govern. My sincere hope is they actually practice it. Transparency is precisely what the new American administration promised but they surely haven’t delivered on it. Nor, for that matter, have they delivered on any of the other promises they made. A recent Saturday Night Live skit addressed this rather appropriately. Is this what we have to look forward to here in Japan?

http://mashable.com/2009/10/06/snl-obama-accomplishments/


CO2 goal means building nuclear plant every year: IEA head

If Japan is to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 1990 levels by 2020 as targeted by the government, it would have to build one nuclear power plant every year, International Energy Agency Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka said Friday.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nb20091010a6.html

Comment: This is a good example of the law of unintended consequences in action. People seem to forget that all actions/decisions have consequences. Going green means going nuclear if you want to maintain your present level of comfort and lifestyle. If you forget all about the problem of what to do with nuclear waste, it’s the cleanest and most reliable source of energy anywhere. If that gives you the willies, there is always option “B” which is akin to living in third world squalor.

This whole “going green” and Japan “nuking up” issue reminded me of a man off the street interview I saw recently where some housewife up in mainland Japan said she thought that we should all switch to all electric cars because they don’t pollute! That’s the problem with the whole “Going Green” scam. It’s the old shell game. You know the one where the huckster has three shells and you have to guess which one has the pea under it. By the time most people figure out there is no pea under any of them, it’s too late.

The problem with “all electric” or even hybrid cars for that matter that people can’t see is they do pollute and in some cases, much more! First of all, the electricity from which they derive their power has to be generated at a power plant. That means coal, gas, or nuclear fuel is burned to make the electricity that is put into the car batteries. That means that electric cars are not “carbon neutral!” The second thing is the toxic chemicals that are in those car batteries are not easily disposed of after they are fully spent and can no longer maintain a proper charge.

In addition to the heavy metals and toxic materials in those batteries, let’s not forget all those lightweight composite and synthetic materials that are used to make the car lighter and more efficient. Don’t forget all of that electronic stuff like your car navigator and the onboard computers. That is made with heavy metals too. These materials are extremely difficult to dispose of and in many cases, they are likewise extremely toxic. So you just can’t bury them in the ground or burn them. Leaving them in a junkyard could result in those metals leaching into the ground and poisoning the groundwater.  

Lastly, even with an “all electric” car, you just can’t get away from petroleum products. There are plastics used throughout the vehicle for a wide variety of different parts and just in case you didn’t know, plastics are made from petroleum. You’ll also need petroleum products for the different fluids to lubricate the moving parts of your “all electric” car. Then there is the synthetic materials that make your tires last longer and don’t forget that asphalt to pave the roads and your driveway are all made from petroleum derivatives.

Thank you “Greenies,” in addition to all of the other stuff that we already had, your zealous adherence to your faith in Gaia has given us a host of new and potentially more toxic poisons to worry about! Who’s going to save us from them?


Has Ozawa's grip on DPJ power tightened?

The Democratic Party of Japan has finally revamped its internal leadership framework after arduous negotiations following its resounding victory in the Aug. 30 House of Representatives election.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20091010TDY03105.htm

Comment: I wonder what Mr. Hatoyama will think when he finds out that he’s really not running the show? I find it funny that in eight years of George W. Bush, the press made fun about what a dolt he was and how Vice President Cheney was the power behind the throne. Here we actually see it happening in Japan (and most likely in the U.S. too) and nary a peep out of the press about it. At least nothing in a negative sense!


China
, Taiwan, Korea in the News:

Japan, China, S Korea discuss North Korea's nukes

Leaders of China, Japan and South Korea began talks Saturday in Beijing amid signs that pressure on North Korea to rejoin nuclear disarmament negotiations may be yielding results.

http://www.japantoday.com/category/politics/view/japan-china-s-korea-discuss-north-korea-nukes


S. Korea, Japan say no aid until N. Korea disarms

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- The leaders of South Korea and Japan stood united Friday in saying North Korea should not be offered aid until the communist regime takes concrete steps to dismantle its nuclear weapons program.

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20091009p2g00m0dm003000c.html


Liberal Fascism in the News:

Scientist: Carbon Dioxide Doesn't Cause Global Warming

A noted geologist who coauthored the New York Times bestseller Sugar Busters has turned his attention to convincing Congress that carbon dioxide emissions are good for the Earth and don't cause global warming.

http://www.usnews.com/blogs/washington-whispers/2009/10/07/scientist-carbon-dioxide-doesnt-cause-global-warming.html

Comment: Well Duh!


Smoking ban sparks shooting threat

YOKOHAMA (Kyodo) Police have turned a case over to prosecutors on an Ehime Prefecture man who allegedly threatened to shoot Kanagawa Gov. Shigefumi Matsuzawa for setting Japan's first local ordinance that bans smoking inside public facilities.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/mail/nn20091012b4.html

Comment: The above story is just a sign that things are getting stoopid on this side of the big pond too! The anti-Smoking Nazi’s have gone global and good intentioned though some of them may be, they are reaching farther and intruding more and more into people’s private lives. What should it matter to them if someone wants to smoke or not? In reality the only one being hurt is the smoker and it’s their choice as well as their responsibility for what happens to them as a result of their behavior.

I will readily admit that threatening bodily harm to anyone, regardless of whether that person is a public official or not, is something that the authorities should take seriously. Clearly the manner in which this man expressed his displeasure was over the line. Even if he isn’t prosecuted, this is Japan and he’ll likely lose his present job as well as his ability to find a new one as a result of this. There is an old Buddhist proverb that says “the nail that sticks up will be hammered down!”

Unfortunately that principle is not always practiced in equal measure across the board. When someone on the left makes idle threats against someone from the right side of the political isle, like making a movie about the assassination of a sitting President of the United States or wishing that the wife of a Supreme Court Justice would deliberately feed high fat food to give them a heart attack, this is too often excused by the press as a bad joke regardless if the person who said it was joking or not. But when the tables are turned, they don’t seem to be able to laugh quite so hard.


Quote(s) of the Week:

“Usually this prize is given to someone after a lifetime of achievement or at least after having some tangible achievements to their name. To give some idea, Theodore Roosevelt won it for having negotiated the end to the Russo-Japanese War. I have no doubt that there are worthy individuals and organizations who have toiled for much longer and achieved much more than Obama has been able to do in the past nine months. They have rewarded words over deeds and this is a bad precedent to set.”

~~~~~ Mr. Rick Blaine – Commenting to a blog thread in our Joke of the Week below.

“DingleBarry was given the Nobel prize for his excellence in handling the Skip Gates affair. Getting the professor and the cop together for a beer was pure genius and defused a potentially explosive situation. The prize money can be used to buy more beer to settle disputes in the future. All he is saying…… is give peace a chance.”

~~~~~ Mitch - Whose comment is immediately below Mr. Blaine’s in the afore mentioned thread.

“Shaken up the lines of cleavage”?? And this is worth the Nobel Prize? Did Regan and Thatcher get it for winning the cold war and liberating most of Eastern Europe??”

“Don’t make me laugh. I read that the closing date for nominations was 1 Feb – so go figure what Obama achieved in 11 days.”

~~~~~ Flightpath – Further down the thread.

“Never in the course of human events has one man done so little to have been rewarded so much!”

~~~~~ Me!


Joke of the Week:

As usual, the real  joke of the week isn’t a joke but as always, the joke is on us!

Obama's won the Nobel Peace – WTF?!

Barack Obama has won the Nobel Peace prize and I’m still reeling at the shock. Most of us are, I should think.

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100013074/obamas-won-the-nobel-peace-wtf/


Nobel Prize Joke

There was a time when the Nobel Peace Prize meant something. It went to men and women who earned their stature with lives of courage such as Andrei Sakharov who openly opposed the oppression of the former Soviet Union and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who gave his life for the cause of equality in which he believed.

Giving the prize to Barack Hussein Obama has rendered it a joke.

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/15598


This just in:

Obama wins the Heisman Trophy after watching a college football game!

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Hatoyama's Challenges

Japan entered a new political era last week after Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) head Yukio Hatoyama took over as prime minister. The long-dominant Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is severely and possibly permanently crippled, and facing a leadership crisis.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20090924a3.html

Commentary: Excellent editorial above that takes an honest look at the challenges facing the new Hatoyama government. Mr. Morrison is absolutely correct in that the DPJ is a badly fractured party that was swept in to power by “Hope and Change,” the sequel! Already factions within the party, bolstered by the historic shift in power are flexing their muscles. The danger for them is if they overreach, they could possibly rip themselves apart and give the LDP a chance at being reborn. Look at the uproar with “Hope and Change” in the U.S.

Here on Okinawa the anti-base rhetoric is well on its way toward reaching fever pitch and will probably only grow stronger in the coming months. Within days of the election, victorious members of the DPJ, feeling their oats, practically stormed into the governor’s office and all but demanded that he sign on with them and call for the immediate halt of all U.S. base construction no later than yesterday, sooner if possible.

By that I’m not saying the anti-base movement doesn’t have legitimate beef’s against the U.S. military presence on Okinawa. They do. The problem with them is their approach which is visceral and acerbic. That is a problem with the political left worldwide. They think with their hearts and not their heads. Most are good intentioned people but we all know that the road to hell is paved with the afore mentioned intentions.

Furthermore, unlike the left whose emotionally based theology tells them that they need to destroy the political right and abolish them from the face of the earth, those on the right do not wish to destroy them. My personal thoughts are that there is a place for them in political discourse. Unfortunately that place is not in positions of leadership.

Why do I say that? Because presently their leadership across the globe is imperiling life as we know it. Discourse between the factions is no longer balanced. In the west, in the press has abandoned their constitutional duties and taken sides. As a result, society is step by step becoming less free and open. As of late, that transition has been happening at breakneck speed.

We haven’t quite reached that point in Japan but already signs are showing of a shift in that direction. The press on Okinawa is decidedly one sided when it comes to reporting on the U.S. military in Japan and revelations of Japan’s First Lady being an outright loon didn’t see the light of day until after the election.

My personal thoughts are that political discourse in the houses of government, no matter the particular topic, needs long in debate and to be slow to action. This is how we best assure the greatest good for the most people, protect the rights of the minority and prevent or at least minimize mistakes that cannot be easily undone. More importantly the press must recommit itself to fair and balanced reporting of the day’s events.

What has been happening in the U.S. regarding the speed of legislation is indeed frightening. The checks and balances installed by the founding fathers are gone as a result of the current one party dominance which is further aided by a compliant media. One great danger in democratic societies is single party dominance by those who do not have the rights of the minority in mind and the silencing of dissent. When this happens, Fascism is surely waiting in the wings for its cue to assert itself.

My sincere hope is that this doesn’t take place in Japan but I’m not silly enough to hold my breath on the matter. While they are not quite to where the U.S. and Europe are now, they are moving in that direction and they also have a history of making quantum shifts in ideology very quickly. Just remember that they made the shift from feudalism to a constitutional monarchy to fascism to democracy all within the last 150 years.
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The Summer Heat Wanes but the Rhetoric Heats Up!

 

Note: This is a news and opinion blog on the happenings in Okinawa Japan and the Far East. The opinions expressed here are my own. I don’t comment on every article linked here but, ask that for the sake of context please read the articles, in there entirety, first.

Okinawa in the News:

U.S., DPJ firm in Futenma disagreement

U.S. State and Defense Department representatives are quietly but firmly reiterating that plans for a Futenma relocation will continue as scheduled, even as Democratic Party of Japan political leaders promise to shake things up.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9767

Noise data tests conducted near Marines’ Camp Schwab

American Marine Corps helicopters conducted special flight surveys over Camp Schwab in northern Okinawa yesterday as part of a project requested by Okinawa’s governor.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9769

Okinawa to be model for DPJ changes

Okinawa has been chosen by the Democratic Party of Japan as the prefecture model for implementing changes to its financial and other systems plans in the new government.

http://www.japanupdate.com/?id=9768

Comment: I actually think that this proposal by the DPJ is one that I could actually support. For one, I believe that the local government has a better feel for where money needs to be spent than does the national government. I don’t favor bloated, ineffectual, unresponsive centrally controlled government anymore than I support centrally controlled economies and the malaise they generate. The problem will be where the money was originally supposed to be spent and how vs. who has their hands on it and what they will eventually do with it.

The governor is correct in that Okinawa is a special place as a result of the many military bases here. Projects and money that was/is earmarked for projects concerning the defense of the nation should be controlled by the national government. Given the antimilitary bent of many of the local politicians who are in positions where they might find that they might suddenly have access to funds that were originally supposed to go to national government related projects, there is the opportunity for monkey business with the people’s money.

Japan in the News:

Hatoyama firm: MSDF tour to end

Democratic Party of Japan President Yukio Hatoyama, who is expected to be voted in as prime minister next week, indicated Thursday he remains firm on his plan to end the Maritime Self-Defense Force's refueling mission in the Indian Ocean, despite Washington's calls for its continuation.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090911a2.html

Comment: This of course will not set well with the U.S. but, the current U.S. administration, other than saying "screw you" to the Okinawan's isn’t doing much to help the situation either.

China, Taiwan, Korea in the News:

China Moves to Retaliate Against U.S. Tire Tariff

China unexpectedly increased pressure Sunday on the United States in a widening trade dispute, taking the first steps toward imposing tariffs on American exports of automotive products and chicken meat in retaliation for President Obama’s decision late Friday to levy tariffs on tires from China.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/14/business/global/14trade.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper

Comment: Don’t do it! This is the first step toward repeating the mistakes of the Smoot Hawley Act of the 1930’s that deepened the Great Depression. China probably thinks that they can withstand a protectionist trade war and if they pulled the “nuclear option” of forcing the U.S. to make good on their markers, it could be the beginning of the end for civilization as we know it. I don’t know who said this but they were right when they did; “borders where goods do not pass, armies will!”

Liberal Fascism in the News:

This category is dedicated to the coverage of a host of issues that demonstrate the long armed reach of intrusive “fascist” government policies from around the globe or anything else that limits individual liberty and freedom.

Conservative Grassroots Protest Obamacare, High Taxes, and Big Government

The numbers of conservative protesters at the March on D.C. on Saturday, September 12 wasn't entirely clear. But if numbers for the inauguration were around 2 million, eyeball estimates for the crowd would have been about half that.

http://townhall.com/columnists/JillianBandes/2009/09/12/conservative_grassroots_protest_obamacare,_high_taxes,_and_big_government?page=full&comments=true

Comment: I was surprised to find that this event made the Japan morning TV news. I was in the next room checking email and enjoying my morning coffee before heading off to work so I didn’t hear what the Japanese MSM commentary regarding the event entailed. Unlike the story attached above, it probably branded the participants of the event as rouges and scalawags, which has been the American MSM template. But it’s important to note that they, the Japanese media, didn’t ignore it. That in itself is a sign that hope and change is loosing its flavor on this side of the pond too. Are Japanese voters seeing what is happening in America and as a result, getting a dose of buyer’s remorse?

It will be interesting to see what Japan’s new leadership does as a result of this. Are they seeing that “Hope and Change” isn’t all its cracked up to be, and will as a result actually decide to follow through with their economic policies as promised vice just the lip service they likely gave it during the campaign? For Japan’s sake, and for their political future, they had better be able to read the tea leaves here. If they were just following the American Demagogue Rat Party model of promise everything and deliver nothing, they could be in for a big surprise. Are protests like this in Japan’s not too distant future? It’s going to be fun to watch.

Svensmark: “global warming stopped and a cooling is beginning” – “enjoy global warming while it lasts”

Indeed, global warming stopped and a cooling is beginning. No climate model has predicted a cooling of the Earth, on the contrary. This means that projections of future climate is unpredictable, writes Henrik Svensmark.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/09/10/svensmark-global-warming-stopped-and-a-cooling-is-beginning-enjoy-global-warming-while-it-lasts/

Quote of the Week:

"My favorite poem is the one
that starts 'Thirty days hath
September' because it actually
tells you something."
~~~~Groucho Marx

Joke of the Week:

Clunkers...

-I guess I must be on the wrong page. A vehicle at 15 mpg and 12,000 miles per year uses 800 gallons a year of gasoline.
-A vehicle at 25 mpg and 12,000 miles per year uses 480 gallons a year.
-So, the average clunker transaction will reduce US gasoline consumption by 320 gallons per year.
-They claim 700,000 vehicles were traded in so that's 224 million gallons a year.
-That equates to a bit over 5 million barrels of oil or about ¼ of one day's consumption.
-At $75/bbl., 5 million barrels of oil costs about $350 million dollars.
-So, we all contributed to spending $3 billion to save $350 million.
-How good a deal was that???

Once again, the joke is on all of us! 2010 is just around the corner; this time around let’s throw all the bums out!!!!

Bonus Joke:

A man is sitting in a bar in Arizona and far from home when Barack Obama comes on TV. The man looks at the TV and says, "Obama is a horse's behind."  Out of nowhere, a local jumps up and punches him in the face, knocking the guy off his bar stool, then stomps out.

He gets back up, rubbing his cheek and orders another beer.  Shortly after, Michelle Obama appears on the TV.  He looks at the TV and says, "She’s a horse's behind too!" Out of nowhere, another local punches him in the other side of the face, knocking him off his bar stool again.

He gets back up and looks at the bartender, "I take it this is Obama country?" "Nope." replies the bartender. This is "horse country."

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Japan Post Election Special Report


Note:
I don’t provide commentary for every article linked here but ask that for the sake of context; please click on the links provided and read the articles in their entirety first.

Okinawa in the News:

When an alliance is not an alliance, a change of government throws up interesting possibilities
There has been considerable handwringing in the western press, especially among Americans, over the future of the U.S.-Japan military alliance under the new regime. Will Japan's new masters seek to undermine the security of Asian and American interests by steering a more independent course?

http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2041&Itemid=176

Comment: I found the above article to be honest and refreshing. Japan has some hard thinking to do as to how they will make the, so called, alliance work. Since 70+% of the U.S. military stationed in Japan are located on Okinawa, it’s going to make for some interesting reading over the next few months as the DPJ has its work cut out for it as now they actually have to implement policy instead of merely opposing it!

Anyone who follows this blog knows that I’ve never been a fan of the proposed new air facility at Camp Schwab to replace the one at Futenma. I would be in favor of something smaller in scale such as a large heliport with support facilities and fixed wing activities transferred to the massive U.S. Air Force base at Kadena. I’d also like to see some long term plans for a continual reduction of forces and facilities here on Okinawa.

What I am totally against is what the opposition wants. I started to say “what the opposition is planning” instead of “wants” but that would imply that they actually thought about how those actions would actually affect the local population. They, the opposition is mobilized and wired as a result of the recent change of events and will settle for nothing less than the complete withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Okinawa yesterday, sooner if they can get it.

Unfortunately what these people are proposing is nothing short of economic suicide. The local economy is teetering now and could not handle the shock of what so big and sudden a move like that would do. Though the current proposal is not ideal, it certainly was a move in the right direction. What is needed is a strategic plan for the removal of or a significant reduction of U.S. forces here over a period of years if not decades. The local economy needs time to adjust to the changes vice shock treatment as proposed by the opposition.

On the national level, Japan is now a mature nation state. If they want respect from other nations as well as from their friends, they must start to stand on their own and own up to their global responsibilities. By that I do not mean they have to rewrite their constitution in favor of one that lets them use their military aggressively. They could take the Swiss approach of arming themselves to the teeth and work through diplomacy while remaining relatively neutral in matters of conflict.

This will be a hard line to walk. The fun part will now be watching the DPJ try to walk it instead of always criticizing the opposition as they had always done in the past. Monday morning quarterbacking is easy, leadership is hard! Now we’ll see if they’re really up to it.

Japan in the News:

DPJ to create spending watchdog

Council will have power to shut down wasteful public projects

Democratic Party of Japan President Yukio Hatoyama plans to set up a powerful watchdog body to keep tabs on wasteful public works spending when he forms his government next week, party sources said Sunday.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090907a1.html

Comment: It would be nice for once to actually see a party and a politician keep this promise. This is the kind of promises we’ve all heard thousands of time before only to find out later that, in reality, it just meant a new fox was guarding the hen house. What is important for the politicians is they must follow through on such promises. What is even more important for the press, if they want to keep the people’s trust, they have to report the facts honestly.

Admittedly, there is still plenty of wasteful government spending to reign in. The DPJ must be reminded that they only got to where they are now by not being in charge and as such being seen as ineffective like the LDP. That is the luxury of being the opposition. They won’t have that luxury any more. They rode in on hope and change but as we can see from across the big pond is that hope and change isn’t selling too well right now.

Although the LDP deserves a lot of blame, one must not forget that Japan appears to be coming out of the economic doldrums rather quickly and relatively unscathed as compared to the U.S. and most of Europe. The LDP does deserve some credit for that, though it seems unlikely they will get it. The DPJ has put forth some good proposals that in previous posts even I admitted could work but, only if they really meant what they said and will actually follow through on them.

Duel of market ideologies past due in Japan's polls

The world has undergone drastic change in the first decade of the 21st century. There appears to be no end to terrorist activities and international disputes in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, suicide attacks on the United States.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20090907ts.html

Comment: How obtuse can you get! I spent two full thirds of this article wondering where in the heck the author was going. It wasn’t till the final paragraphs where I finally ferreted out that the good professor argues for Keynesian economic policies and seems to want to blame the free market for all of the world’s present woes.

While the popular theory is that Keynesian economics brought us out of the “Great Depression” of the 1930’s, new looks back on that era have shown that such economic policies instead only deepened and prolonged the misery. Brits like Tony Blair who only toyed with it rather than hopping in with both feet like his Labor Party predecessors, as well as his successor, and was able to maintain a level of prosperity. But, even he couldn’t avoid the incremental leftward political creep of labor party politics and its eventual effects on the British economy that we see today.

In Japan, former Prime Minister Koizumi and his party and coalition members were elected in a landslide because people believed in Mr. Koizumi as well as his reforms. His reforms were not about making everything fair. Anyone with half a brain knows that no amount of government intrusion can make life fair. Koizumi’s reforms were about freeing the people and business from the long arm of interventionist government so that as many as who wanted to could try their best and hopefully succeed.

In my humble opinion, Mr. Koizumi’s problems were two-fold. First, he didn’t go far enough with his reforms and second, he ran out of time. Let us not forget that when he left office, it wasn’t because he was forced out. History will show that Mr. Koizumi was one of the longest serving Prime Ministers and remained in office for as long as the law allowed him to. To the bitter end, he remained and still remains one of the most popular Japanese politicians in recent history. The truth of the matter is that Koizumi’s policies lost favor not because not because they were flawed but because his successors weren’t up to the task of seeing them through to fruition.

In the U.S. Mr. Obama, in spite of his paper thin resume, got to the highest office of the land largely because of an outgoing lame duck president and a war that were made unpopular by endless Democratic Party demagoguery and the incessant drum beat of negative press. Furthermore, the press failed to do their constitutional duty of honestly telling the general public just who candidate Obama really was. Running against the weakest possible candidate that the opposition could have possibly produced only made his task all the easier.

One must remember that Mr. Obama didn’t fully close out the deal against candidate Hillary and until the super delegates committed. Before that moment, a convention floor fight looked inevitable. Furthermore, don’t forget that Mr. McCain almost caught up to him near the end of the campaign. Had the economy not tanked when it did, we might be arguing about President McCain’s mishandling of the issues instead. Admittedly, had McCain won, we’d probably still be in deep global economic doo-doo but I doubt that we’d be talking about deficits in the trillions of dollars for the foreseeable future and hyper inflation of the currency just around the corner.

For those that want to discuss Keynesian theory vs. Austrian School of economic theory, I welcome the debate. It’s high time we really had a healthy debate about economics as well as the myth of anthropogenic global warming, whether or not universal healthcare is a basic human right and a host of other issues. There is no consensus on or anything even close to a majority supporting any of these issues as the press and the political left would like you to believe! The truth is they (the left) don’t want to debate. They earnestly think they are right and everyone else is wrong so they only want to silence dissent.

If you happen to be one of those who still think that FDR’s Keynesian economic policies lifted us out of the “Great Depression” I welcome you to follow the link provided at the end of this paragraph and then when you’ve digested that, scroll all the way down to the bottom of this page and watch the Late Dr. Milton Freedman simply destroy the feel good socialist premises of “Lefty” talk show host and mainstream media elite wannabe Phil Donohue’s questions. It’s high time for a healthy debate, I say, let it begin! http://www.mackinac.org/archives/1998/sp1998-01.pdf

Japan sticks to greenhouse gas target

Yukio Hatoyama, Japan’s prime minister-elect, vowed on Monday to go ahead with plans for an aggressive cut in greenhouse gas emissions in spite of opposition from business groups.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97701616-9ba0-11de-b214-00144feabdc0,_i_email=y.html

Comment: For all the good things they, the Democratic Party of Japan, (DPJ) talked about and promised during the campaign, this is one promise that I wish they wouldn’t keep. If enacted and aggressively pursued as they say, I’d bet the house that this will negate any positive gains made through the keeping of all the other positive economic promises. In fact, I’d still look for the Japanese economy to potentially tank as a result of this one promise! If that happens, look for a resurgence of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). I know, it’s a weird name for a conservative party but then again, this is Japan.

China, Taiwan, Korea in the News:

North Korea says in final phase of uranium enrichment

SEOUL, Sept 4, 2009 (AFP) – North Korea said Friday it has entered the final phase of uranium enrichment to make nuclear weapons and is also building more atomic bombs from spent reactor fuel rods.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090903/wl_asia_afp/nkoreanuclearweaponsun_20090903232647

Comment: They see the Obama administration as weak and they’re flexing their muscles. Look for rice shipments to North Korea to increase!

The world's largest economies have economic growth

China's government has turned around its economy far faster than most thought possible, to 7.9% in the second quarter.

http://www.examiner.com/x-20010-NY-Business-Investment-Examiner~y2009m8d29-The-economy-is-improving-quickly-than-expected-in-the-worlds-largest-economies

Comment: conspicuously absent from the list is the U.S.! How’s that “Hope and Change” working for you now! Interesting to note, all of the economies that are experiencing growth are those that until now have been moving rightward across the political spectrum toward more free and open markets. This has been especially true of China who still calls themselves communist but has evolved into a mature Fascist state. Those that are absent have been moving leftward toward command and control centrally planned economic policies. The correlation here is that rightward movement politically produces economic growth and leftward movement stifles it!

It will be interesting to watch both the Australian as well as the Japanese economies. Australia lurched leftward after the 2007 general election but only a more conservative leaning Australian Senate has put the kibosh on any uber-radical changes proposed in parliament. The growth they’ve experienced since then may be residual from its recent and more conservative past. Japan has ousted the conservative leaning “Liberal Democratic Party” (LDP) after more than 50 years in power. Only time will tell if the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) will stick with its centrist campaign promises or go forward with “Hope and Change, the Sequel!”

China alarmed by US money printing

The US Federal Reserve's policy of printing money to buy Treasury debt threatens to set off a serious decline of the dollar and compel China to redesign its foreign reserve policy, according to a top member of the Communist hierarchy.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/6146957/China-alarmed-by-US-money-printing.html

Comment: Once again if you want to hear the truth you have to abandon the U.S. Administration’s propaganda machine commonly referred to as the Mainstream Media or (MSM). This report came from the UK Telegraph and reports on this subject are conspicuously absent in the American media. Speaking specifically on economic policy, it’s a crying shame that the west has to look to the Fascist Chinese dictatorship for some common sense.

Liberal Fascism in the News:

Democrats’ despicable duplicity

Democrats insisted on changing the law in Massachusetts to require an election to fill the office of Senator John Kerry, should he be elected president in 2004. 

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/14451

Comment:According to the MSM, it’s only duplicity when the conservatives do it!

News you can’t get in America

If you want news about what is happening back in America but don’t want to put up with the allegedly objective journalism of the left leaning MSM outlets, check out this outlet for a breath of fresh air: http://canadafreepress.com/

Quote of the Week:

What a profound short little paragraph that says it all
 
"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what
they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it." ~~~~ Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931

Special Bonus:

“Washington did not use free speech to defeat the British... He just shot them. 2nd Amendment what’s not to understand?” ~~~~Anonymous,
 
Click on the link to watch the late Dr. Milton Freedman destroy lefty loon Phil donohue:
 
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If Obama Wins, What about lowly Okinawa?

If you believe what you see and hear in the mainstream media, the election in the U.S. is over and the junior senator from Illinois has won it. From what I’ve seen on television, the press in Japan is pretty much excited about the prospect. After all, this will mark the moment when the sea levels begin to fall and the planet will miraculously start to heal.

In Okinawa, home to a major contingent of U.S. military personnel and a large number of U.S. bases, the interest is also quite high. Many who I’ve engaged with on the internet forums pertaining to the subject are convinced that this means the end of the “alleged” new bases, soon the U.S. military will leave their island paradise and all lands that have been appropriated for U.S. military use will be returned.

Before anyone gets too excited, let me remind you that the world’s economy has been brought to the brink by social engineering in the U.S. Congress. By creating policies and laws that made it virtually unlawful not to loan monies to people who otherwise couldn’t qualify, the Congress of the United States along with the Carter and Clinton Administrations have brought the Capitalist system to the brink of collapse. The recent bailout attempts, in countries around the world (not just in the U.S.) have compounded the problem by putting the very foxes who threatened the chickens in charge of the coop.

Furthermore, Obama and his minions intend to raise taxes in order to pay for more social engineering, not just in America but around the world. Common sense tells you that when people have less of their own money to spend, they will do their best to hold on to what little they’ve got. This means less money circulating in the economy purchasing goods and services. This means lower profits to businesses both large and small and at a minimum, means slower if not a complete halt in job growth.

The socialist solution will be to create make work projects to expand infrastructure. Just like the “New Deal” under FDR, in the “Raw Deal” of an Obama Administration, we’ll see the economy driven more by the government instead of the free market. But government has to have money in order to create such projects. In an economic down turn such as we are on the verge of, that probably means borrowing more money. If so, where will they borrow it from?

If the government prints more, that means inflation, if they borrow more, that means more debt (either foreign, national or both) or they can tax the people even more which means even less money in the domestic economy chasing goods and services than before. If the Obama team chooses the latter, and it’s a very good bet that this option is high on their list since that is what they say they will do, the economy will be further stifled. Can you say Jimmy Carter II? Is there anyone else out there as old as me who can remember the “misery index?” Heaven help us all!

So now you’re probably asking me, what the hell does all this have to do with the situation here on Okinawa? Lots! First of all, Okinawa isn’t even on the presidential radar screen. It’s a speck on the map that is only valuable to world security as a result of its strategic location. From this location, America can quickly respond to regional threats. For the Japanese, it serves as a buffer zone to protect the nation’s southern flank. Sadly, Okinawa is for the most part an afterthought to both the American’s and the Japanese!

So when it comes to changes on Okinawa as a result of an Obama victory, here’s my predictions of the probable outcomes.

-Regarding the reduction of U.S. troops here, no change.

-Regarding the proposed closure of the Marine Air Base at Futenma and the construction of the “alleged” new base at Camp Schwab, no change.

-Any other miscellaneous issue you can think of regarding the presence of U.S. forces in Japan, no change.

In short, for the people of Okinawa, don’t get your hopes up that an Obama presidency means the answer to your prayers. Senator Obama probably doesn’t even know where Okinawa is let alone the problems you face. He will be saddled with a lagging economy caused by the very policies he and his party espouse. With a great deal of luck, he may avoid turning a major market correction from a potential recession into a major economic depression. If you were betting on an Obama presidency as being your hope for salvation, you bet on the wrong horse and you made the mistake of listening to the talking heads in the media.

There’s still hope. The division in the electorate is a whole lot closer than the Democratic Party Propaganda Ministry officials, aka the mainstream media are telling you! The heavily skewed polls being released now are beginning to tighten just as they always do. Both Gore and Kerry were up at this point in past contests.
Even with all he has going for him in this election, the Junior Senator from Illinois hasn’t closed the deal. He fizzled toward the end of the primaries against Hillary and he’s showing signs of fizzling now. This election is going to be a lot closer than the media is telling us.

Lastly, should the undesirable thing happen and enough fraudulent ACORN generated votes put him over the top. We still have the teachings of great economic scholars like Walter Williams and Thomas Sowell to learn from and take that into the 2012 elections. Remember that it took a Carter to give us a Reagan.

Speaking for myself alone, I’m going to hope for the best and prepare for the worst. Admittedly, McCain was not my choice for the party nomination. But like many of you, I’m going to hold my nose and mail in my absentee ballot today. An Obama presidency will be an abomination. Not just for the U.S. but for the world.
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