Bladestorm – The 100 Years’ War demo

The demo was released today in the Japanese Playstation Store as a free demo, which was about 1GB in size.  In this demo you are only allowed to create an edit character that can play in up to 2 missions.   This edit character can be either a male or female with a series of preset faces and voices.  For my demo, I chose to make my character to have the face that resembled David Beckham.

The first mission involves a basic tutorial where you learn to take control of an army in a battlefield.  The armies you can use are swordsmen, knights, archers, longbowmen, and pikemen.  Unlike Kessen, which was purely a strategy game, Bladestorm allows you to directly participate in combat and command your troops at the same time with orders to charge, charge up and perform a special attack.  Your troop’s ability to generate kills and combos will directly impact your ability to command certain number of troops, troop type, and reputation among the NPC characters.   At the end of the basic tutorial you are deployed to a battlefield where you must take enemy bases.

The second mission is more of the same except you can control pikemen in addition to your existing troop types.  Much of the basic strategy involves staying in a safe distance while letting your troops do all the work with the occasional command to make special attacks coming from you.

The only gripe I had with the Bladestorm demo were the inability to skip through any cut scenes and for having only 2 missions despite being a 1GB download.

Some games I look forward on the PS3 are Metal Gear Solid 4, Time Crisis 4, Dynasty Warriors: Gundam, Civilisations: Revolution, and now Bladestorm.

Japanese PM clings to power

Japanese PM clings to power
LINDA SIEG IN TOKYO

JAPAN’S prime minister, Shinzo Abe, was clinging to political power last night after his party suffered what he described as an “utter defeat” in national elections.

The 52-year-old conservative said he took responsibility for the result, which will see his ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) lose control of Japan’s upper house of parliament according to exit polls, but added that he intended to stay in his post.

Early projections indicated his party would fall far short of the 64 seats it needs to maintain a majority in the upper chamber.

The main opposition, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) was projected to win 59 of the 121 seats up for grabs in the upper house.

“The responsibility for this utter defeat rests with me,” said Mr Abe, looking weary and drawn after his first big electoral test since taking office ten months ago.

“We tried our best and felt we made some progress, so the results are disappointing.”

He acknowledged that voters “had shown their anger” and the LDP would be hard-pressed to regain public trust following a series of scandals and the loss of millions of pension records.

However, Mr Abe added: “I am determined to carry out my promises . We need to restore the people’s trust in the country and the government.

“The nation-building has just started. I must push ahead with reforms.”

The projected defeat does not immediately threaten Mr Abe’s hold on power because the LDP holds a comfortable majority in parliament’s lower chamber, which elects the prime minister and can override votes in the upper house.

However with the DPJ on track to become the biggest party in the chamber, laws will be hard to enact, threatening deadlock. But Mr Abe ruled out a snap general election.

“I am not considering dissolving the lower house,” he said.

“We need to discuss issues closely with the Democratic Party in the upper house and listen to them when necessary.”

Critics say Mr Abe is out of touch with voters having pledged to boost Japan’s security profile, rewrite its pacifist constitution and nurture patriotism in schools.

Democratic Party leader Ichiro Ozawa – a pugnacious veteran who left the LDP 14 years ago – has pledged to cut the gap between rich and poor and ensure those less well off are not neglected.

It was a remarkable turnaround for his party, which was crushed by the charismatic former LDP prime minister, Junichiro Koizumi, in a lower- house election two years ago.

“This shows the high expectations that people have for us,” Democratic Party executive Yukio Hatoyama said.

“They really didn’t trust the Abe cabinet and they want us to get rid of this stalemate.”

Analysts said Mr Abe would still face pressure to resign but added the party was short of viable successors.

“The people clearly gave Abe a thumbs-down. His credibility was completely rejected,” said Hokkaido University professor Jiro Yamaguchi.

“The real crisis for the LDP is that there is nobody who would call for Abe’s resignation and say, ‘I’ll do it’.”
IF IT’S NOT ONE THING…

SHINZO Abe’s troubles began last December when the tax commission chairman resigned amid reports he was sharing a government-subsidised flat with his mistress.

The next month, the health minister sparked fury by calling women “birth-giving machines”.

In May, the scandal-hit farm minister hanged himself, and a mix-up was revealed over data on 50 million pension premium payments, meaning some pensioners could be short-changed.

On 3 July, the defence minister quit after saying the 1945 atomic bombing of two Japanese cities by the US “couldn’t be helped”.

This article: http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=1183442007

Last updated: 29-Jul-07 00:39 BST

So good to hear the Liberal Democratic Party lost majority rule of their House of Councilors today in response largely to the loss of all pension records during his administration.  The loss of countless billions of retirement funds prompted many traditional LDP voters, the elderly, to vote for the opposition Democratic Party of Japan as punishment for their mismanagement.  There were other domestic issues involved in this loss such as Abe’s need to promote nationalism in Japan while the average Japanese simply wants domestic reforms that would restore the quality of  life that was largely lost during the “Lost Decade”.

Although Japan is still the world’s second largest economy with Germany a distant third, the country is still in dire need of reform in the areas relating to the economy.  It seems the DPJ’s platform on reducing the emerging inequality gap coupled with general disgust over Abe’s policies has finally given it a small chance to undermine the predominant rule of the LDP and possibly change Japan for the better.

Let’s all hope these results will actually force Abe to form a governing coalition with the DPJ that would force him to focus on real domestic reform and bring about real, long-overdue changes in Japanese politics.  Besides, Abe is also an asshole with his attempts to turn Japan into a better American lapdog and with his baseless denials.

Abe Shinzo simply reaped what he sowed.

Credit Meltdown leading into Bear Market

The market has gone to hell this week with this subprime and credit panic getting the better of everyone.  It will supposedly get worse next week, but I really am not too concerned with most of my funds which are there to see long-term growth and ETFs.

It’s a problem when people think the subprime is going to spill over to the entire market when the core of the issue lies largely in the housing and financial sectors.  So some private equity will not be able to easily get money to finance leveraged buyouts, then again this should make them try harder in the long-run to get funding and to reassess their interests.

The buyers will eventually return to equities after they have gotten too comfortable with banks, foreign currencies, and bonds.  The money is not being lost, it is simply being transferred into another source of investment.  Sooner or later most of my current losses will be wiped out within the next 1-2 years.

Going to the Simpsons Movie with Weihsin and Bharat made the day much more interesting.  It was a funny movie with lots of twists.  I still cant believe they showed Bart naked when he was skating, Homer giving people the middle finger, and killing Doctor Nick.  Funniest was when Ralph saw Bart naked and said, “I Like Men”.

The Simpsons Movie!

Saw The Simpsons Movie on opening night at the last showing with Weihsin and Bharat. The theatre was packed with about 18-plus years worth of fans of all ages. I can say even the casual Simpsons fans were impressed and loved the movie. There were some parts that were complete surprises to the entire audience but it was well worth it.

There will be no spoilers but I will leave it at this:

SPIDER-PIG

SPIDER-PIG

Does whatever a SPIDER-PIG does

Can he swing

From a web

No he cant

He’s a pig

LOOK OOOUUUTTT!!!!

He is a SPIDER-PIG!!

What a day in the Financial Markets!

Well Wall Street had a very interesting day with not surprising news that housing sales have declined and overrated companies not being able to receive loans to conduct new M&A activities. As a result, the retail investor has been spun into a panic causing an investor-induced correction that has spread all over the American financial markets and now to the rest of the world as I write this.

Some of the more longer-term investors see this as a golden opportunity to cherry-pick various stocks, ETFs, and mutual funds while others are simply making the panicked flight into the bond market. If the market was behaving rationally and driven by rational investors we should see the bulk of this market meltdown contained largely in the financial sector and in the housing stocks. However, we are seeing price drops across the board in organistions with low debt such as Berkshire Hathaway, profitable companies such as Toyota, companies that contain durable competitive advantages such as PepsiCo, and even companies that are far removed from the credit meltdown such as ExxonMobil.

It’s really interesting because at the end of the day, people will still need insurance, still drink Pepsi, get Priuses, and even pump for gas. It’s really interesting to see bankruptcies from a small but sizable segment of Americans who should not have received loans in the first place and weak companies who could not secure funding is causing such a global panic at this time. I understand that the Chinese markets had a similar downturn in late February because Chinese investors were overreacting to increased regulations for investing, which caused a national panic that spread to the world. We are seeing a similar effect in these coming weeks from investor induced panic.

For those who are still panicking over the subprime meltdown, I would like you to know that the problem is real. Just face it: the subprime problem will drive the real estate industry into a downtown in its economic cycle and some mortgage brokers I have spoken to advised me to prepare for the long-haul during this part of the cycle. Despite this, these brokers have taken measures to prepare for the housing slump and will be ready to receive new customers when they reach the uptrend in a few years. They say this has happened when the tech bubble burst, and especially after the anxiety from 9/11 so they are aware of how to get by this housing slump.

Many people who receive subprime loans should never received them in the first place because they are either financially irresponsible or lack the stability needed to pay off those loans. Some examples are of the borrowers’ fault lies in cases of lifestyle inflation where these borrowers would simply use their loans to purchases goods that they simply cannot afford based on their current lifestyle or in many cases simply taking out a loan they will not pay at all. It is also the fault of companies who are willing to lend money to these people are extremely high interest rates knowing these people have poor credit histories and for using sometimes misleading ads to give out loans.

The documentary “Maxed Out” explored some of their predatory practises such as tricking a retarded family into switching over to a high-interest loan or using bullying tactics to get their debtors to make small payments. Relying on such questionable individuals for annuity streams is really a weak business model if you examine the lifestyles and actual finances of these subprime borrowers. It is simply irrational to expect a borrower with a poor history of credit, and rejected by normal creditors to repay their subprime loans along with lucrative interest when these same people usually don’t have the means to do so.

So because the retail investors thinks we’re going into a new Great Depression, they begin selling every stock they have and move the cash over to bonds or banks. In turn the rest of the market overreacts and we have an investor-induced correction that see sharp declines in equities that are far removed from the subprime/credit debacle such as Coca-Cola, Gillette, Johnson & Johnson and even Honda (companies that are generally low in debt and profitable). These conditions make it ideal for the savvy investor to cherry pick some good buys.

I doubt there will be a panic on the levels of a depression seeing that there are regulations in place that would deter from such problems. We have a more interconnected world that allows for both gains and losses to be spread around. We have a Federal Reserve Chair who is a scholar of the Great Depression working to reduce inflation. Most of all, only a small segment of the American population is being extremely incompetent with credit.

The immediate scenario following today’s sharp declines are as follows:

1. We are in the process of going into a long bear market with little to no overall growth.

2. This is just an isolated incident that will gradually go away in the coming months.

3. We have an even bigger decline in the following business day as the financial contagion spreads.

Let’s just hope that it’s just scenario 1 since scenario 2 is being disproved in the foreign markets as I type this while scenario 3 means we are all royally fucked for the short-term.

布什總統越來越笨

今天,我聽到同胞說美國總統是非常變態了.

他們說:「布什很有錢,但是他是最懶的總統也不可靠」.

我想美國會越來越亂了因為布什是總統.

這個人是美國最壞的總統和人.

布什總統懷得很多美公民想倒他.

Healing Healthcare: Video Roundup

Healing Healthcare: Video Roundup
STOCK MARKET, HEALTHCARE
By CNBC.com Staff
cnbc.com
| 25 Jul 2007 | 11:28 AM ET

Healthcare reform may finally be on the way. With Democrats controlling Congress and both political parties gearing up for a presidential election, the issue is moving to the fore. What’s more, American business is also pushing the issue, with both big and small companies getting involved.Health insurance expenses are the fastest growing cost component for employers, according to a McKinsey and Company study. Since 2000, premiums have increased 87%, compared to cumulative inflation of 18%.

U.S. health care spending is projected to reach $2.9 trillion in 2009. Healthcare in the U.S. consumes far more of the nation’s GDP, for instance, than other G7 nations such as Germany, France and Canada. Yet at the same time, about 47 million Americans –roughly one out of six — are uninsured, which is priced into the system.

The bottom line is that a largely private sector-based healthcare system is not cheaper than a government funded one and it certainly is not an egalitarian one. .

In Britain, for instance, 11% of a taxpayer’s income to a certain level, goes directly to National Health System. Private plans also exist, but they’re considered supplemental.

The U.S. healthcare system is a drag on corporate profits, national competitiveness and government budgets.

Given that backdrop, there’s a growing sense that some form of universal health care system is needed, regardless of where the money comes from. Who pays is indeed another — and equally complicated — question.

Business, which supplies 60% of the nation’s healthcare, is ready to back reform efforts. No national plan has yet to emerge, but states such as Massachusetts and California are making progress.

There’s no shortage of opinions out there, either, but it’s part of a constructive dialog.

Take Robert Crandall, former chairman and CEO of AMR, the parent company of American Airlines, for example.

“I want to put everyone on Medicare,” Crandall recently told CNBC. Medicare works.”

Crandall says Medicare, the federal government’s health insurance program — which covers about 40 million Americans, most of whom are 65 years of age and older — has administrative costs that are 20% that of private health insurance.

“You save billions of dollars on administrative cost.” says Crandall. “If we fund Medicare properly, we’d have a very satisfactory system. “

CNBC undertook a five-part series, “Healing Healthcare”, to look at what business and government are doing to address the problem. Here’s a roundup of Bertha Coombs reports.

Part 1 — Health Coaching

With as much money as employers are spending in health care, some are taking a hands on approach.

UPS, for one, it trying to help employees get healthier through a “health coaching” program, which will also help lower healthcare costs. The company’s program has been underway for a year and is entirely voluntary. Two-thirds of US companies either have or plan to implement such programs.

Health coaches have access to employee health records and then target high-risk individuals, calling them directly to address health hazards and/or concerns. The goal is to get the employee on the healthy track and in turn, save the company money.

Part 2 — Healthy Dose of Venture Capital

Venture capital invested $2.8B in health care companies in the first quarter of this year – the most ever. With more and more VC money pouring into healthcare, there’s a new emphasis on cutting costs with more efficient technology.

Electronic medical records, for instance, coud play a critical role in reducing costs but it will require an enormous upfront investment. Medicare will soon offer free software to get doctors to use its electronic system.

Meanhile, one VC firm, Boston Millennia Partners, has invested in a technology that is changing the way the Leahy Clinic operates.

Watch this space in the coming days for more of Coombs reports or catch them live on CNBC’s “Power Lunch”.

Part 3– The Costco Solution

The warehouse giant may have a cure for small business.

The Washington-based company now offers small business health and dental plans in its home state as well as Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Hawaii and California.

Costco’s insurance arm says it offers competitive rates and desirable deductable levels as well as a wide selection of providers.

John Conlon, the company’s director of insurance services, says expanding the program has been hard because “each state is individually regulated.”

Find out how it made a difference at two companies — G.G. Consultants and Mattress Depot USA

Editor’s Note: Watch this space as the week progresses for more of Bertha Coombs’ reports.
© 2007 CNBC, Inc. All Rights Reserved

URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/19853280/

The American healthcare system is just a train wreck compared to its industrialised counterparts. If anyone has watched “SiCKO” they would only have a rough idea of the crap Americans have to go through just to receive treatment that would be unthinkable in most parts of the developed world. It was sad to see someone being denied life-saving treatment because they were either not affiliated with another health insurance company, or because that same company wanted to reduce expense that would come from saving their customer’s life.

It’s just sad to learn that the problem has become more painful to not just regular customers but from corporations that purchased such plans from various insurance organisations, such as Aetna, UnitedHealthCare, and Kaiser Permanente. Many of these corporations purchase such plans with the assumption it would meet their employee’s needs and that they would get a fair price out of it. However, they soon realise that they are essentially getting ripped off as many of their employees learn that their treatment or medication is conveniently denied and the countless bureaucracy that is faced to get simple procedures completed such as getting prescriptions or life-saving treatment.

It has been proven time and again by economists that the government is usually the best entity at reducing transaction costs. In this case, we can see that Medicare, an underfunded socialised health insurance plan for the poor, only spends a faction on administrative costs compared to private corporations. This programme actually does its job for the poor and indignant and proves that the United States government is actually capable of providing universal healthcare to all taxpayers if implemented. The US military is also able to receive government-funded healthcare for its service personnel. Why can’t civilians get the same?

Many critics of socialised healthcare bring up incidents of bureaucracy and taxes in countries that have it such as the UK and France. Its interesting to note that although these countries do have issues with bureaucracy and large taxes for funding such programmes, no sane person in these countries would be willing to trade their universal health care in favour of an American-based system. Besides, these discontented individuals can elect officials to reform their national insurance to suit their needs unlike Americans with private health insurance.

What is more, people in these countries are in a position to take their universal healthcare for granted to the point where they make mild complaints about waiting in line to get treated for free or having their life-saving treatments take too long while the average American is simply worried about not being able to afford deserved treatment or being denied life-saving medication/treatment at the last minute because his or her private insurance company needs to make a large profit in the coming fiscal quarter.

It’s really sad to learn in America how private corporations are implementing their own preventative medicine programmes to reduce expenses paid to their corporate health insurer. It’s even sadder to know that many countries with universal healthcare regularly perform preventative medicine to not only reduce taxpayer expenses going to public healthcare but because doctors there get paid at market value for regularly treating patients.

According to “SiCKO” many doctors working for the NHS in the UK also receive hefty bonuses from preventative medicine if they are able to improve the overall health of their regular patients. This actually forces the government to have sizable expenses in the short-term but it will reap long-term benefits seeing patients from contracting severe ailments that require expensive treatments or surgery that would result in greater medical expenses, lost productivity at work and emotional anguish.

Some American doctors I have spoken to welcome preventative medicine because it allows them to regularly meet with patients to not only help them from getting serious ailments but it also gives them a consistent stream of income from the regular visits. I mean we often go to our dealerships to get our cars serviced to prevent future and expensive problems from happening, why can’t we do the same with healthcare?

It’s even sadder to learn how many private companies are able to exploit this American healthcare debacle for their own benefit. Some companies are creating technologies that are targeted at expense control stemming for corporate bureaucracy from private health insurers while others are diversifying into private health insurance by offering their own plans, such as Costco.

In “SiCKO”, America’s healthcare system is ranked 37 according to the WHO which is just one rank above Slovenia. Ironically, Slovenia is in the process of implementing a universal healthcare system modeled on those used by other EU member-states such as France, Italy and the UK. At the rate of its economic progress, Slovenia will surpass the United States in the areas of healthcare despite being a small, former Yugoslav republic since it was also one of the countries that came out of the Balkan Wars unscathed and it was one of the first new EU members to adopt the Euro.

America is either falling behind or the world is catching up. The United States can either make the necessary reforms in healthcare to benefit their citizens and big businesses or continue to wallow in their self-absorbed jingoistic backwardness while the world moves ahead with or without them.

Top US military commander in Pacific criticizes Taiwan’s president

Top US military commander in Pacific criticizes Taiwan’s president

The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 24, 2007

WASHINGTON: The top U.S. military commander in the Pacific criticized Taiwan’s president on Tuesday for statements on the island’s independence he said were unhelpful to keeping peace in the volatile Taiwan Strait.

The comments by Adm. Timothy Keating reflect worry by officials in Washington over a plan by Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian to hold a referendum on Taiwan’s entry into the United Nations under its own name — an initiative that rival China strongly condemns.

Taiwan and China split amid civil war in 1949, and China has repeatedly threatened to attack should Taiwan formalize its de facto independence.

Keating told an audience at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank that Chen’s “rhetoric isn’t entirely helpful” and that his “statements for Taiwan independence could potentially increase Taiwan Strait tensions.”

But, Keating added, “it is a two-way street, the increased tension, and I don’t see that happening near term.”

Washington often urges Taiwan to increase its defense spending to balance a growing Chinese military, which has deployed hundreds of missiles opposite Taiwan.

Keating said Taiwan’s defense capabilities “could get better, but we’re confident that they’re appropriate.”

Although the U.S. has fewer troops in the region, because of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, Keating said he was confident the U.S. military could move a large number of forces to the area relatively quickly should conflict erupt in the Taiwan Strait.

The United States follows a “one China” policy that recognizes a single China. But Washington still encourages the sale of defensive weapons to Taiwan, and in 2002, U.S. President George W. Bush pledged to “help Taiwan defend theirself if provoked.”

It’s interesting to see Taiwan Province’s American overlords being more than happy to unload obsolete arms to the island at very bad prices while at the same time admonishing them for their pro-independence rhetoric.  If Taiwan’s American overlords don’t support their bids in the United Nations or overall bid for independence, what does that say about Taiwan’s world standing?

As I said before, Taiwan Province only has their economy going for them to keep them relevant.  That along with the regular aid money that is given out because Taiwan Province’s “allies” often blackmail the province for lost recognition to China.  In addition, it seems the Americans are more than willing to milk the province as a cash cow for their dated weapons but are more than willing to undermine the local power structures there if they are misbehaving.

George W. Bush said he will save Taiwan province should China invade, but he has done everything he can to undermine the taidu movement there.  Yet he is more than happy to sell junk weapons to the island at prices that only benefit him and his War of Terror.

Bomb by bomb, Japan sheds military restraints

Bomb by Bomb, Japan Sheds Military Restraints

NORIMITSU ONISHI

Maj. Kohichiro Hayashi’s fighter jet, an F-2, is Japan’s latest, the result of a project with the United States. (Chang W. Lee/The New York Times)

ANDERSEN AIR FORCE BASE, Guam — To take part in its annual exercises with the United States Air Force here last month, Japan practiced dropping 500-pound live bombs on Farallon de Medinilla, a tiny island in the western Pacific’s turquoise waters more than 150 miles north of here.

The pilots described dropping a live bomb for the first time — shouting “shack!” to signal a direct hit — and seeing the fireball from aloft.

“The level of tension was just different,” said Capt. Tetsuya Nagata, 35, stepping down from his cockpit onto the sunbaked tarmac.

The exercise would have been unremarkable for almost any other military, but it was highly significant for Japan, a country still restrained by a Constitution that renounces war and allows forces only for its defense. Dropping live bombs on land had long been considered too offensive, so much so that Japan does not have a single live-bombing range.

Flying directly from Japan and practicing live-bombing runs on distant foreign soil would have been regarded as unacceptably provocative because the implicit message was clear: these fighter jets could perhaps fly to North Korea and take out some targets before returning home safely.

But from here in Micronesia to Iraq, Japan’s military has been rapidly crossing out items from its list of can’t-dos. The incremental changes, especially since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, amount to the most significant transformation in Japan’s military since World War II, one that has brought it ever closer operationally to America’s military while rattling nerves throughout northeast Asia.

In a little over half a decade, Japan’s military has carried out changes considered unthinkable a few years back. In the Indian Ocean, Japanese destroyers and refueling ships are helping American and other militaries fight in Afghanistan. In Iraq, Japanese planes are transporting cargo and American troops to Baghdad from Kuwait.

Japan is acquiring weapons that blur the lines between defensive and offensive. For the Guam bombing run, Japan deployed its newest fighter jets, the F-2’s, the first developed jointly by Japan and the United States, on their maiden trip here. Unlike its older jets, the F-2’s were able to fly the 1,700 miles from northern Japan to Guam without refueling — a “straight shot,” as the Japanese said with unconcealed pride.

Japan recently indicated strongly its desire to buy the F-22 Raptor, a stealth fighter known mainly for its offensive abilities such as penetrating contested airspace and destroying enemy targets, whose export is prohibited by United States law.

At home, the Defense Agency, whose profile had been intentionally kept low, became a full ministry this year. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe used the parliamentary majority he inherited from his wildly popular predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, to ram through a law that could lead to a revision of the pacifist Constitution.

Japan’s 241,000-member military, though smaller than those of its neighbors, is considered Asia’s most sophisticated. Though flat, its $40 billion military budget has ranked among the world’s top five in recent years. Japan has also tapped nonmilitary budgets to launch spy satellites and strengthen its coast guard recently.

Japanese politicians like Mr. Abe have justified the military’s transformation by seizing on the threat from North Korea; the rise of China, whose annual military budget has been growing by double digits; and the Sept. 11 attacks — even fanning those threats, critics say. At the same time, Mr. Abe has tried to rehabilitate the reputation of Japan’s imperial forces by whitewashing their crimes, including wartime sexual slavery.

Japanese critics say the changes under way — whose details the government has tried to hide from public view, especially the missions in Iraq — have already violated the Constitution and other defense restrictions.

“The reality has already moved ahead, so they will now talk about the need to catch up and revise the Constitution,” said Yukio Hatoyama, the secretary general of the main opposition Democratic Party.

Richard J. Samuels, a Japan expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that revisionist politicians like Mr. Abe and Mr. Koizumi, once on the fringes of Japan’s political world, succeeded in grabbing the mainstream in a time of uncertainty. They shared the view “that the statute of limitations on Japan’s misbehavior during the Pacific War had expired” and that Japan, like any normal country, should have a military.

Their predecessors feared getting entangled in an American-led war. But the new leaders feared that Japan would be abandoned by the United States unless it contributed to its wars, said Mr. Samuels, whose book on Japan’s changing military, “Securing Japan,” will be published in August.

“So what do you do?” he said. “You step up. And that is consistent with what they’ve long wanted to do anyway. So there was a convergence of preferences.”

Today, Japan is America’s biggest partner in developing and financing a missile defense shield in Asia. Some Japanese ground and air force commands are also moving inside American bases in Japan so that the two forces will become, in military jargon, “interoperable.”

“I think the Japan-U.S. security relationship should be as unified as possible, and our different roles need to be made clear,” said Shigeru Ishiba, a defense chief under Mr. Koizumi and now a leader in a Liberal Democratic Party committee looking at loosening defense restrictions.

In Iraq, in accordance with a special law to aid in reconstruction, a symbolic ground force was first deployed to a relatively peaceful, noncombat area in southern Iraq to engage in relief activities. After the troops left last year, though, three Japanese planes began regularly transporting American troops and cargo from Kuwait to Baghdad.

The Japanese authorities refuse to say whether the planes have transported weapons besides those carried by soldiers. Concerned about public opposition, defense officers have spied on antiwar activists and journalists perceived as critical, the Defense Ministry acknowledged after incriminating documents were recently obtained by the Communist Party in Japan.

Mr. Hatoyama of the Democratic Party said that transporting armed American troops contravened Japan’s pacifist Constitution.

“Instead of engaging in humanitarian assistance, they are basically assisting American troops,” he said. “American troops and the Air Self-Defense Forces are working as one, just as they are training as one in Guam.”

In Parliament, Mr. Abe denied that the activities violated the Constitution, saying Japanese troops were restricted to noncombat zones and did not operate under a joint command with any other force.

Here in Guam, American and Japanese pilots simulated intercepts and air-to-air combat for two weeks. In the final days, each side took turns pummeling the tiny island with bombs.

Col. Tatsuya Arima, the commander of the Japanese squadron, said such bombing could protect Japanese grounds troops or vessels from encroaching enemies.

“Bombing does not always mean offensive weapons,” Colonel Arima said. “They can also be used for defense, which, put another way, is what we mostly train for.”

Lt. Col. Tod Fingal, the commander of the American squadron, said the exercise helped build confidence among pilots by exposing them to a new environment.

“I would equate it to an away game in sports,” Colonel Fingal said.

Japan’s military has become less shy in projecting its power away from home. Japan lacks the nuclear submarines, long-range missiles or large aircraft carriers that amount to real power projection.

But it is acquiring four Boeing 767 air tankers that will allow its planes to refuel in midair and travel farther, as well as two aircraft carriers that will transport helicopters and, with some adjustments, planes capable of taking off vertically. The United States has welcomed the changes while pressing for more.

“The restrictions that Japan has lived under, which I would say Japan has maintained on its own or imposed on itself, are quite unique,” said a Pentagon official who requested anonymity so that he could speak candidly. “The changes that you’re seeing in Japan are very unique changes in the context of those restrictions. In the context of everything else that is going on around the world, or in the context of Japan’s potential to contribute to the region and the world in security areas, the changes are fairly small.”

Small or not, they are causing anxieties in a region where distrust of Japan has deepened in direct proportion to Japanese tendencies to revise the past. South Korea reacted sharply to Japan’s desire to buy the F-22 Raptor. Also, in a recent ceremony unveiling South Korea’s first destroyer equipped with the advanced Aegis weapons system, President Roh Moo-hyun said, “Northeast Asia is still in an arms race, and we cannot just sit back and watch.”

Mr. Ishiba, the former defense chief, said the region’s distrust was softened by Japan’s alliance with the United States. But he acknowledged that Japan’s inability to come to terms with its wartime past restricted its ability to project power positively.

“Unless everyone understands why we weren’t able to avoid that war,” Mr. Ishiba said, referring to World War II, “and what Japan did to Asia, it could be dangerous if we get power-projection capability.”

There are those who actually believe that Japan does not have a standing military and mindlessly call for the abolition of Article 9 in the American-imposed, postwar Japanese Constitution. Those who believe that Japan does not have a strong, capable military of any sort is either a) retarded or b) does not live in reality.

The fact is Japan has a viable and functioning military called the “Japanese Self-Defence Force” that is only restricted from offensive capabilities due to Article 9 of the Constitution, which was put in place due to the Japanese war crimes committed during World War II. Japan has an Army called the “Ground Self-Defence Force”, a Navy called the “Maritime Self-Defence Force”, and even an Air Force called the “Air Self-Defence Force”.

Despite having a relatively small troop number compared to the Koreas and China, Japan has been well-equipped with American weaponry since 1952 and they are guaranteed protection by the Americans, who also handle Japan’s offensive capabilities, on top of their Self-Defence Forces (SDF). The Japanese air force’s F-2 is actually a Japanese variant of the American F-16 and much of their domestic weaponry is developed from liberally-provided American know-how.

So why after so many years of just maintaining a sophisticated defence forces does Japan finally decide to take measures to undermine their own Constitutional restrictions?

The answer lies largely in America’s need for additional support in their ongoing misadventures in the Middle East and with fringe politicians taking power in Japan from a country still reeling from the effects of the bubble economy. The Americans are in such a poor position with their invasion of Iraq that they are encouraging Japan to violate their own Constitution to gain additional support and to create a regional policeman in East Asia in the hopes of containing China and North Korea.

It was surprising to learn that the entire Japanese military has been effectively merged with the American military hierarchy to the point where Japanese military equipment is used to supplement America’s needs in Iraq, effectively turning the SDF into American tools. This is quite interesting seeing as how the South Koreans are aggressively working to dismantle their subordinate status under the joint-command established by the Americans during the Korean War.

Kim Jongil’s stupidity, Japan’s waning status and a resurgent China are some reasons why fringe politicians like Koizumi and Abe were able to take power. These leaders promised reforms that would restore Japan’s status close to levels experienced before the bubble economy burst, and started blaming external factors for Japan’s present-day problems. I find it disturbing that Abe has tried to downplay or deny past wrongdoing to rally national support and push forward domestic agenda; but it was more disturbing to learn that Japan has sent government spies against activists and journalists who are critical of their policies such as promoting right-wing values to the mainstream and rearming for American interests.

America’s shortsightness in pushing for Japan’s remilitarisation will only increase tensions in the region, especially with unresolved issues and revisionist attitudes slowly taking hold in Japan.

Although America will benefit from having some additional military support in its operations in the Middle East, China will respond to Japan’s moves with a more aggressive modernisation programme designed to deal with Japan in addition to America and Taiwan Province; South Korea may take more aggresive measures in their military capabilities in addition to refocusing Japan as their threat instead of the North; and North Korea will continue to have an excuse to further develop their long-rang missle programme.

In any event, Japan needs to resolve their historical baggage before remilitarisation regardless of what the Americans need.

改掉5000用詞 教科書全面去中國化

改掉5000用詞 教科書全面去中國化

更新日期:2007/07/21 04:39 記者: 韓國棟/台北報導

中小學教科書全面去中國化!國父、國畫、國字、國劇、古人、水平、中日(甲午)戰爭、兩岸、台灣地區……等詞,都被教育部列為「不適合用詞」,應當的用詞,是孫中山、中國水墨畫、中國文字、中國京劇、中國古人、水準、日治、清日戰爭、兩國、我國(或台灣)……等詞。

「民族英雄」具有爭議性

「台灣僻處我國東南海域」的課文敘述,更不行,因為這種說法是以中國大陸為核心、以台灣為邊陲,明顯貶低台灣地位。「鄭成功從荷蘭人手中收復臺灣,所以後人尊其為民族英雄。」這也不行,因為「收復」和「民族英雄」都是有爭議性的價值判斷用詞,必須修改或刪除。

教部半年前委託「台灣歷史學會」進行一項「教科書不當用詞檢核」計畫,檢核對象含括國小、國中及高中各版本教科書。這項檢核計畫日前完成,教部隨即函轉各教科書出版社「參考」。

教部強調無關意識形態

教育部國教司長潘文忠表示,中小學教科書開放民編後,用詞混淆,對中小學生造成困擾,部長杜正勝發現這項問題後,才指示委託學者專家進行檢核。幾經琢磨,教育部決定委託「台灣歷史學會」進行這項研究,因為較混淆的用詞,幾乎都是歷史造成的。他強調此舉是專業的研究,和意識形態無關,也無強制修改之意。

這份厚約三百頁的檢核報告,是教育部廢除「統編本」實施「審定本」教材以來,首度發函各教科書出版社,統一規範攸關國家認同的相關用詞。現行的中小學各版本教科書,被檢核出來的不當用詞,總計不下五千詞。

這份報告檢核檢核標準不外乎以下幾項:

第一、不客觀的歷史價值判斷,刻意褒揚或貶抑的非中性詞彙。例如「國父孫中山先生說……」,應改為「孫中山先生……」。

「全省各地」用法不標準

第二、自我矮化為地區或主體意識不清。例如,「台灣地區」、「全省各地」、「兩岸」等,都是不適合用詞。

第三、對中國的稱呼未反應歷史事實與政治現況。例如,應稱「中國」卻稱「我國」,如:「王羲之是我國著名的書法家」這段課文中的「我國」應改成「中國」。

第四、臺灣與中國大陸分屬不同政權時期的敘述,對中國的地名、歷史朝代、特定人物等,未加註國名。例如,「余光中,福建省永春縣人……」,應當改為,「余光中,原籍中國福建省永春縣……」。

第五、敘述日治時期臺灣的人、事、物,卻用大清帝國、中華民國紀年;如應把日治時代的民國廿三年,改為西元一九三五年。

「中外」遊客應說國內外

第六、對於特定詞彙的使用不夠精確。例如,指稱中國特有的文物、書畫等,卻使用「國字」、「國畫」、「國劇」、「京劇」、「古典詩詞」等詞彙。

第七、敘述時間或對象泛指中國古代或是古代之人,卻用「歷史上」、「古時候」、「古代」、「上古時代」、「老祖宗」、「古人」等詞彙,應都改為「中國古人」。

檢核報告指出,在近現代「中華民族」一詞未出現前,應用「華夏民族」;「外省人」也應改成「中國各省隨中華民國政府遷臺人士或新住民」;「國曆」應改為「陽曆」;「中外遊客」應改成「國內外遊客」。

報告檢核出來的不適合用詞中,以中國地名前未加註「我國」用詞最多,逾二千個。

In Taiwan Province, the Ministry of Education has issued 380-page compendium of 5,000 inappropriate terms to book publishers for ‘reference purposes.’ Here are some examples:

中法戰爭 Sino-Franco war -> the war between the Qing dynasty and France

日本佔據台灣 Japan occupied Taiwan -> 日本管治台灣 Japan administered Taiwan

Calendar references during Japanese rule used to be in terms of Qing Dynasty or Republic of China calendar, but they will now have to changed to either Showa (Japan) or western calendar (for example, the 20th year of the Republic of China must now be either the 5th year of Showa (Japan) or 1932).

中外遊客 tourists from inside and outside China -> 國內外遊客 tourists from inside and outside the country
國畫 national painting -> 中國山水畫 Chinese landscape painting
京劇 Beijing opera -> 中國京劇 Chinese Beijing opera
國字 national writing character -> 中國文字 Chinese writing characters
國曆 national calendar -> 陽曆 solar calendar
歷史上 in history -> 中國歷史上 in Chinese history
古人 ancient people -> 中國古人 Chinese ancient people
古代 ancient times -> 中國古代 Chinese ancient times

Those like Ma Ying-jeou who were not born in Taiwan will be hereafter referred to as 新住民 “new residents” or 中國各省隨中華民國政府遷台人士 “those people from various Chinese provinces who moved to Taiwan along with the Republic of China government.”

國父孫中山先生 nation’s founder Mr. Sun Yat-sen -> 孫中山先生 Mr. Sun Yat-sen
台灣地區 Taiwan area-> 台灣 Taiwan
海峽兩岸 the sides of the strait -> 兩國 the two countries
我國 our country -> 中國 China; if for example the reference is to Chinese history, culture or language (e.g. 王羲之是我國著名的書法家 Wang Xizhi is a famous calligrapher of our country -> 王羲之是中國著名的書法家 Wang Xizhi is a famous calligrapher of China)
中國 China -> 我國 our country; if, for example, the reference is to Taiwan history, culture or language
鄭成功從荷蘭人手中收復台灣,所以後人尊其為民族英雄 Kuxinga recovered Taiwan from the Dutch and therefore people honored him as a national hero afterwards -> 收復recovered and 民族英雄 national hero are controversial value judgments.

Yesterday, Minister of Education Tu Cheng-sheng denied at the press conference that this was about de-Sinofication of the school textbooks. He said that the list was used only as ‘reference’ by the book publishers.

However, some book publishers said that while it would appear that they have some leeway, their books were eventually have to be approved by the Ministry of Education.