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Why We Dumped President Fujimori 

The following is from Masayuki Takayama's book "America and China Lie Selfimportantly" published on 2/15/2015.
This paper also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.

A long time ago, an elderly female professor of the Royal Ballet School of Monaco, highly respected by prima ballerinas worldwide, visited Japan.
At that time, she spoke about the significance of an artist's existence.
She said, "Artists are important because they are the only ones who can shed light on hidden, concealed truths and express them."
No one would dispute her words.
It is no exaggeration to say that Masayuki Takayama is not only the one and only journalist in the postwar world but also the one and only artist in the postwar world.
On the other hand, Ōe, I don't want to speak ill of the deceased, but (to follow Masayuki Takayama's example below), Murakami and many others who call themselves writers or think of themselves as artists are not even worthy of the name of artists.
They have only expressed the lies the Asahi Shimbun and others created rather than shedding light on hidden truths and telling them.
Their existence is not limited to Japan but is the same in other countries worldwide.
In other words, there are only a few true artists.
This paper is another excellent proof that I am right when I say that no one in the world today deserves the Nobel Prize in Literature more than Masayuki Takayama.
It is a must-read not only for the people of Japan but for people all over the world.

Why We Dumped President Fujimori 
If asked to name ten great Japanese politicians, Shigeru Yoshida would be first on the list. 
The U.S. crushed Japan with its stingy ideas.
The Koreans, who had not yet learned to be human, jumped and started the war. 
The U.S. asked Japan to take care of it, but Yoshida ignored the request.
Thirty-six thousand Americans died, but did the U.S. learn anything? 
I would also like to include former Peruvian President Alberto Sujimori in the list of great politicians. 
Peru had negative economic growth, inflation of 7,600%, a tax capture rate of 4%, and the murderous, winner-take-all leftist guerrillas, Senderol Minoso, running rampant in the streets. 
The Congress, which should have denounced this anomaly, did nothing.
Yet when he retired from Congress, he would receive a pension of $5,000 a month until he died. 
Fujimori deposed Sendero Luminoso in his second year in office, and in a "presidential coup," he abolished the Senate, reduced the number of seats in the Chamber of Deputies from 180 to 120, and stopped the legislators' pensions. 
He also reorganized the non-working civil servants.
Ministry of Education officials were reduced from 3,500 to 700, and schools were built one per week with the money saved.
The school enrollment rate became one of the highest in South America. 
A property tax was introduced for the first time in South America, and women replaced all customs officials.
Bribes were no longer effective, and customs warehouses soon overflowed with seized contraband.
Peru's finances became a surplus as early as his first term, and inflation fell to single digits. 
Although Fujimori is now a political prisoner in Peru, his politics are highly regarded for their Japanese-like meticulousness, rationality, and decisiveness. 
In this respect, many politicians in his home country, Japan, are not laughing at Peru. 
Tetsuhisa Matsuzaki of the former Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), for example, grabbed a self-defense official by the chest and flaunted his "I am a member of the Diet" air.
Kazuyoshi Nagashima also brought his boat to the beach in Hayama and did as he pleased.
Kenji Kobayashi of the Aichi 7th Constituency was caught doing methamphetamine.
Ai Aoki, Yumiko Himei, and Mieko Tanaka, all members of the Ozawa Girls, caused a stir when they mistook their activities in the Diet for adultery. 
Even in the House of Councilors, the seat of common sense, Tomiko Okazaki went to South Korea with her councilor's badge on and participated in a protest rally against the Asahi Shimbun's fabrication of a military comfort woman. 
For some reason, they are all members of the Democratic Party of Japan, but these people who have nothing to do with the cause of politics could wear the badges of Diet members because the gate to the Diet is too broad.
Any dregs could become a member of parliament if they had money.
When the courts ruled that the disparity in the number of votes was unconstitutional, the LDP got away with a slight trick of reducing the number of votes by 0 to 5 for the time being. 
What would happen if Fujimori were in charge?
He would say that the upper house should have 94 members, two from each of the 47 prefectures, just like the U.S. Senate. 
The House of Representatives could be reduced to 200 members, based on the 435 members in the U.S. House of Representatives, which has a population of 300 million.
If the House of Representatives is made this narrow, there will be no place for the princesses, jabbering senators, and women who look like Korean spineless men.
The forgotten word "elected officials" will indeed be revived. 
Incidentally, none of the Diet members moved for Fujimori's release because they were so narrow-minded that they did not want a coup d'etat to cut his membership in the Diet to happen in Japan.

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