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SUMMARY:Economic Corner 23 10/23/2025
DTSTAMP:20251023T232002Z
SEQUENCE:0
UID:562-7-c3fe8195a3dde498d013e477e2142422@aalbc.com
ORGANIZER;CN="richardmurray":noreply@aalbc.com
DESCRIPTION:\n	\n\n	My Thoughts\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	I don't know much and I a
	sked those in the Japanese internet their thoughts. But what is known... N
	ippon/Japan has a lot of issues. Japan does not need population growth ove
	rall but in sectors it does. A number of businesses in agriculture for exa
	mple\, lack a next generation. Japan like korea or Taiwan/Formosa sits in 
	the unenviable position of between the two biggest militaristic powers in 
	modern/as of this writing humanity. \nShe says she wants to increase Nipp
	ons militaristic position as well as its financial position. Well\, in wha
	t way? Everyone wants to walk the road to gold\, but do you have a map\, d
	o you have shoes\, do you have a way of finding the road or is it just wal
	king aimlessly? \nYeah\, another elected official in humanity in a govern
	ment deemed important in many sources has a president that mirrors the way
	s of Schrumpft. Yeah. This is again\, not an error\, this is a result of t
	he USA's cold war victory playing out. When the United States of America w
	on the cold war\, it didn't do what it should had and that was reorganize 
	the global order it made\, instead it maintained said order. But said orde
	r was based on having an enemy\, a militaristic + financial opponent\, the
	 soviet union. Absent an opponent calling out the lies in the usa\, having
	 a viable arms race\, why maintain a global system of dysfunctional immigr
	ation laws/dysfunctional hiring practices/dysfunctional  financial market
	s. Since the cold war ended\, the dot com industrial crash/ the real estat
	e industrial crash /the banking industry crash / the automotive industrial
	 crash/various bitcoin crashes. All this points to a financial reality. Th
	e larger canvas is financially poor or desperate and it isn't the fault of
	 so called Artificial Intelligence\, it isn't the fault of laziness\, it i
	sn't the fault of capitalism \, it is the fault of poor governance. \n\nG
	overnance matters\, it isn't economics\, it isn't finance\, but it matters
	 and it isn't about finance. One of the problems in modernity is the view 
	that money /finance controls government. No\, government controls governme
	nt. Like the congress of the USA who has ceded powers to the president of 
	the USA for over one hundred years\, the elected officials in the USA have
	 ceded governing responsibility to the fiscal entrepreneurs. The arrangeme
	nt is simple. We keep you alive and allow you to act freely and you fix yo
	ur issues. The problem is the assumption the fiscal entrepreneurs are that
	 smart or that purposed.\n\nNippon automakers literally took jobs away fro
	m their own labor market to have the right to sell cars in the USA. That i
	s why Japanese cars are made in the USA\, so they have the right to be sol
	d in the USA. That was a terrible decision.  Japan who once led the world
	 in electronics\, who supposedly had the best education system\, [Remember
	 Black folk when you were a kid of a certain age and someone chimed in abo
	ut Japanese kids?] are not leading today? Is that because the Japanese wer
	en't the smartest? Or is it because the government + business owners manag
	ement hurt them in the same way \, the USA's government plus business owne
	rs actions led to the weakening of the electronics industry of the USA com
	pared to others. \n\nHer three predecessors had a year each. That wasn't 
	an accident. Nippon has problems. They can't be willed away with a firm st
	ance. She has alot of governing to do and unlike the USA \, Japan's parlia
	mentary system means she has to get results now\, she can't give herself t
	ime to rest and plan out through a term. \n\n\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	\n\n\n\n
		URL\n\n	https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/sanae-takaichi-becomes-japan
	s-first-female-prime-minister/ar-AA1ORG86?ocid=BingNewsSerp\n\n	 \n\n\n\n
		Sanae Takaichi becomes Japan's first female prime minister\nStory by Arat
	a Yamamoto\nTOKYO — Lawmakers in Japan elected hardline conservative San
	ae Takaichi as prime minister on Tuesday\, making her the first woman in m
	odern times to lead the key U.S. ally.\n\nTakaichi\, 64\, the new leader o
	f the governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)\, was elected by lawmakers 
	in the lower house of parliament by a vote of 237-149 over her closest riv
	al\, Yoshihiko Noda\, leader of the liberal opposition Constitutional Demo
	cratic Party. She was also elected by upper house lawmakers in a second vo
	te of 125-46 after falling one vote shy of a majority in the first round.\
	n\nThough her election is a milestone in a country where women are severel
	y underrepresented in government\, Takaichi enters office with a fragile c
	oalition and facing a number of pressing challenges\, including a visit ne
	xt week by President Donald Trump.\n\nA protege of assassinated former Pri
	me Minister Shinzo Abe\, Takaichi advocates a stronger military\, tougher 
	immigration policies and the revision of Japan’s pacifist constitution. 
	She is a veteran politician who has served as minister of economic securit
	y\, internal affairs and gender equality.\n\nEarlier this month Takaichi w
	as elected leader of the LDP\, which has governed Japan almost uninterrupt
	ed since World War II\, after running unsuccessfully in 2021 and 2024. Her
	 ascension to prime minister was thrown into doubt\, however\, after a cru
	cial partner\, the centrist party Komeito\, left the LDP coalition.\n\nTo 
	ensure her victory\, the LDP signed a deal on Monday with the Osaka-based 
	Japan Innovation Party\, or Ishin\, that will pull its coalition further t
	o the right.\n\nEven with the alliance\, Takaichi faces an uphill battle i
	n parliament\, where she falls short of a majority in both houses after th
	e LDP suffered major losses in recent elections amid voter anger over part
	y corruption scandals and the rising cost of living.\n\n“She emerges fro
	m this a diminished leader from the get-go\,” said Jeff Kingston\, a pro
	fessor of Asian studies and history at Temple University’s Japan campus.
	\n\nTakaichi also faces an early test next week with the arrival of Trump\
	, who is making his first trip to Asia since returning to office. He is ex
	pected to visit Malaysia and Japan before continuing on to South Korea\, w
	hich is hosting a major summit of Asia-Pacific economies.\n\n“She does
	n’t have a whole lot of time to get ready for a slew of diplomatic activ
	ity\,” Kingston said. “But I think job one is the Japanese economy.”
	\n\nArata Yamamoto reported from Tokyo\, and Jennifer Jett from Hong Kong.
	\n\nThis article was originally published on NBCNews.com\n\n\n\n\n	\n\n\n\
	n	URL\n\n	https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/21/world/asia/sanae-takaichi-jap
	an-prime-minister.html\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Japan Has a New Leader\, and She’s
	 a Heavy Metal Drummer\nSanae Takaichi\, a fan of Iron Maiden\, had an imp
	robable rise to power. Like her mentor\, Shinzo Abe\, she is expected to l
	ead Japan to the right.\n\nBy Javier C. Hernández\nJavier C. Hernández w
	ent to Nara Prefecture to trace Sanae Takaichi’s rise to power\, intervi
	ewing classmates\, supporters and acquaintances.\n\nPublished Oct. 21\, 20
	25\nUpdated Oct. 23\, 2025\, 10:49 a.m. ET\nLeer en español\nAs a young w
	oman in the late 1970s\, Sanae Takaichi commuted six hours a day by bus an
	d train from her parents’ home in western Japan to attend university. Sh
	e was a fan of heavy metal music and Kawasaki motorcycles who yearned to m
	ove out. But her mother insisted at first that she stay home\, forbidding 
	her from living in a boardinghouse before marriage.\n\n“I dreamed of hav
	ing my own castle\,” Ms. Takaichi wrote in a 1992 memoir.\n\nOn Tuesday\
	, Ms. Takaichi won election as Japan’s prime minister\, the first woman 
	to do so in the nation’s history. It was the pinnacle of an improbable r
	ise in politics and a milestone in a country where women have long struggl
	ed for influence.\n\nMs. Takaichi\, 64\, who grew up near the ancient Japa
	nese capital of Nara\, defies easy labels. She once spoke bluntly about th
	e challenges of working in politics as a woman in Japan\, yet she is now t
	he leader of the traditionalist\, male-dominated Liberal Democratic Party.
	 She has expressed concern about Japan’s reliance on the United States\,
	 but has also said she hopes to work closely with President Trump. She is 
	an amateur drummer who idolizes bands like Iron Maiden and Deep Purple\, y
	et she also wears blue suits to pay homage to her other hero\, the former 
	British prime minister Margaret Thatcher.\n\nMs. Takaichi\, a protégée o
	f Shinzo Abe\, Japan’s longest-serving prime minister\, who was assassin
	ated in 2022\, is expected to move Japan farther to the right\, responding
	 to a recent populist wave that bears some similarities to Mr. Trump’s M
	AGA movement. She has embraced hawkish policies on China\; pushed the mess
	age that “Japan is back”\; played down Japan’s atrocities during Wor
	ld War II\; and promised to more strictly regulate immigration and tourism
	.\n\n“She wants to make Japan strong and prosperous for the people of Ja
	pan and for the world\,” said Yoshiko Sakurai\, a prominent journalist a
	nd activist who has supported Ms. Takaichi. “She is open to the outside 
	world. But she also understands that we have to be really good Japanese. W
	e have to know our own culture\, traditions\, philosophy and history.”\n
	\nMs. Takaichi will face her biggest test yet as she deals with fresh unce
	rtainty about Japan’s military and economic alliance with the United Sta
	tes. She is expected to meet next week in Tokyo with Mr. Trump\, who has r
	attled Japanese officials with tariffs and suggestions that the country sh
	ould pay more for the presence of American troops in the region.\n\nWhile 
	many Japanese politicians come from wealthy\, elite circles\, Ms. Takaichi
	 grew up in humble circumstances in Nara Prefecture\, an area teeming with
	 temples\, shrines\, dense forests and rolling green hills. Her mother wor
	ked for the police department\, and her father worked at a car parts maker
	.\n\nMotoko Shimada\, a childhood friend of Ms. Takaichi’s\, recalled he
	r pigtailed classmate sharing homemade onigiri\, or rice balls\, and rolle
	d omelets with students who had forgotten their lunchboxes on a school tri
	p.\n\n“She was very smiley and very reserved\,” Ms. Shimada said. “S
	he didn’t have this strong-woman image. But she was able to notice when 
	someone was not blending in well or struggling\, and she was able to help 
	them.”\n\nFrom a young age\, Ms. Takaichi seemed aware of the pressures 
	facing Japanese women. Her mother told her to be a “crimson rose\,” Ms
	. Takaichi recalled in a 2024 biography by Eiji Ohshita\, asking her to 
	“retain feminine grace while possessing the thorns to confront wrongdoin
	g.”\n\nHer parents pressured her to attend Kobe University\, a state sch
	ool about 50 miles northwest of her hometown\, even though she had won adm
	ission to elite private institutions in Tokyo. They felt their daughter di
	d not need a university education because she was a girl\, Ms. Takaichi ha
	s said in interviews\, and they wanted to save up to support her younger b
	rother. (Ms. Takaichi declined\, through a representative\, to be intervie
	wed for this article.)\n\nAfter graduation\, Ms. Takaichi attended the Mat
	sushita Institute of Government and Management\, a renowned training groun
	d for young politicians and business leaders. In the late 1980s\, she took
	 an interest in the United States\, Japan’s chief economic competitor at
	 the time\, securing an internship in the office of former Rep. Patricia S
	chroeder of Colorado\, a Democrat and ardent feminist.\n\nMs. Takaichi had
	 been moved by Ms. Schroeder’s tearful speech in 1987 announcing she wou
	ld not run for president. Ms. Takaichi sent Ms. Schroeder a telegram\, enc
	ouraging her to run again someday and offering her help.\n\nIn Washington\
	, Ms. Takaichi was an energetic presence\, peppering aides with questions 
	about the inner workings of Congress and American foreign policy — and d
	eveloping a love of peanut butter. There was no hint of her conservative v
	iews on defense or social issues at the time\, said Andrea Camp\, a former
	 aide to Ms. Schroeder.\n\nWhen she returned to Japan\, Ms. Takaichi worke
	d as an author and a television personality\, developing a reputation as a
	 pugnacious debater. In 1993\, she began her political career\, winning el
	ection to Parliament as an independent from Nara on a platform of politica
	l reform. Her father put his retirement savings toward her campaign.\n\nIn
	 the Diet\, Japan’s Parliament\, Ms. Takaichi soon discovered the isolat
	ion of being a woman in politics. Her male colleagues were sometimes dismi
	ssive\, she recalled\, and they often conducted business at saunas and soc
	ial clubs\, where it wasn’t feasible to meet with female lawmakers.\n\
	n“It’s really difficult for a woman to meet a man one-on-one\,” she 
	told The Associated Press in 1993. “People are watching\, and I don’t 
	want some strange scandal being invented. We can’t use the hours after 5
	 p.m.”\n\nDuring her early years in Parliament\, she forged an enduring 
	alliance with Mr. Abe\, a lawmaker from an elite family with a nationalist
	ic worldview. The two found common ground on issues like increasing milita
	ry spending and adding a more patriotic tone to history textbooks.\n\nWhen
	 Mr. Abe was elected to his first stint as prime minister in 2006\, he app
	ointed Ms. Takaichi to his cabinet\, making her one of the most visible wo
	men in Japanese politics. He reappointed her in 2012\, at the beginning of
	 his second term\, which lasted eight years. She became a fierce defender 
	of his policies\, including efforts to revise Japan’s Constitution to un
	fetter its military after decades of postwar pacifism\, and his economic p
	rogram\, which emphasized cheap cash and government stimulus efforts.\n\nM
	s. Takaichi tried to persuade Mr. Abe to run again in 2021\, but he declin
	ed. When she entered the race\, he threw his support behind her. “Ms. Ta
	kaichi is the true star of the conservatives\,” Mr. Abe said at the time
	. She lost that race and fell short in another bid in 2024.\n\nWhen Mr. Ab
	e was assassinated outside a train station in Nara\, while giving a stump 
	speech\, Ms. Takaichi was devastated. She said at the time that she had 
	“never felt so physically and mentally down.”\n\n“I have to work ver
	y hard from today\,” she wrote on social media\, “otherwise I’d have
	 to apologize to him.”\n\nPHOTO\nMs. Takaichi with Shinzo Abe\, left\, i
	n 2014. The two found common ground on issues like increasing military spe
	nding and revising Japan’s textbooks to provide a more nationalistic vie
	w of World War II.Credit...Toru Hanai/Reuters\n\nWhen Shigeru Ishiba annou
	nced in September that he would resign as prime minister\, after a series 
	of embarrassing electoral defeats for the L.D.P.\, Ms. Takaichi raised her
	 hand again to lead her party. She beat four men\, riding a wave of suppor
	t among rank-and-file party members with a message about turning people’
	s “anxieties into hope.”\n\nAs her profile has risen\, Ms. Takaichi’
	s private life has come under scrutiny. She married Taku Yamamoto\, anothe
	r L.D.P. politician\, in 2004. They divorced in 2017 — Ms. Takaichi has 
	said that the couple had heated political arguments at home — before rem
	arrying in 2021. That time\, Mr. Yamamoto took Ms. Takaichi’s surname\, 
	a rare gesture in Japan’s patriarchal culture.\n\nIn Kashihara City in N
	ara\, Ms. Takaichi’s hometown\, which has a population of about 125\,000
	\, her friends and supporters have celebrated her ascent\, praying for her
	 success at local temples and sending white orchids to her district office
	.\n\nNara has featured prominently in her political life. During the recen
	t campaign\, she accused tourists of kicking the cherished deer of Nara Pa
	rk. She drew criticism for the remark\, which some saw as xenophobic.\n\nY
	ukitoshi Arai\, Ms. Takaichi’s former hairdresser in Nara\, helped pione
	er the cropped hairstyle that she has made famous. He said he wanted her e
	yes and ears to be visible to show that she was seeing and hearing the peo
	ple she met. He said he felt that Ms. Takaichi retained the qualities of p
	eople from the Kansai region in central Japan: humor and humility. He once
	 gave her a bottle of shampoo that Ms. Thatcher was said to have liked whi
	le visiting Tokyo.\n\n“I don’t think she’s an ‘iron lady\,’” h
	e said\, referring to a nickname given by the British media to Ms. Thatche
	r. “Her vibe is that of a Kansai woman.”\n\nAfter her victory this mon
	th in the L.D.P.’s leadership election\, Mr. Arai texted his former clie
	nt to remind her to take care of herself.\n\nMs. Takaichi responded two da
	ys later. “The battle begins now\,” she wrote.\n\nKiuko Notoya contrib
	uted reporting from Nara Prefecture and Hisako Ueno from Tokyo.\n\nJavier 
	C. Hernández is the Tokyo bureau chief for The Times\, leading coverage o
	f Japan and the region. He has reported from Asia for much of the past dec
	ade\, previously serving as China correspondent in Beijing.\n\nA version o
	f this article appears in print on Oct. 22\, 2025\, Section A\, Page 4 of 
	the New York edition with the headline: Takaichi Presents New Package for 
	Familiar Hard-Right Conservatism. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subsc
	ribe\n\n\n\n\n	I ask people in Japan what do they think\n\n	https://ameblo
	.jp/rmhearth/entry-12940637395.html\n\n\n\n	Prior Edition\n\n	https://aalb
	c.com/tc/events/event/553-economic-corner-22-10222025/\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	
	NOTE: she is the first prime minister of nippon to not come from a dynasty
	\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Economic Corner 23\n\n\n\n	Sanae Takaichi becomes Nipp
	ons first female prime minister Oct 21st 2025\n\n\n\n	POST URL\n\n\n\n	htt
	ps://aalbc.com/tc/topic/11978-economiccorner023/\n\n\n\n	PRIOR EDITION\n\n
	\n\n	https://aalbc.com/tc/events/event/553-economic-corner-22-10222025/\n\
	n\n\n	NEXT EDITION\n\n\n\n	https://aalbc.com/tc/events/event/563-economic-
	corner-24/\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	COMMENTARIES\n\n\n\n	COMMENTS\n\n\n\n	 \n\n
	\n\n	@ProfD\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  On 10/24/2025 at 1:19 AM\, ProfD said
	:\n\n\n\n	Considering the US/Japan relationship\, I'd imagine PM Takaichi 
	will work within joint interestsnof both countries.  \n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n
		there is a very old saying which I find always holds up true\, no one can
	 serve two masters. \n\n\n\n	What historical evidence do you have/suggest
	 of any country that is subservient to another\, like Nippon to the USA\, 
	having a leader who served successfully the interest of the subservient co
	untry + the master country?\n\n\n\n	Posted Monday at 04:18 AM\n\n\n\n	@Pr
	ofD\n\n\n\n	I can't recall any moment in my life where any one voted for a
	n elected official and they got what they wanted... in my eyes\, they get 
	what they settle for\, that isn't what you want. \n\n\n\n	Posted Monday 
	at 01:38 PM\n\n\n\n	@ProfD \n\n\n\n	in the usa the voters\, black nonblac
	k or other\,  have never demanded anything. the system doesn't allow for 
	voters to demand anything. The parliamentary system allows voters to deman
	d\, because the vote isn't the be all end all. In a parliamentary system\,
	 majorities are made by various voting blocks through parties of governanc
	e\, and the second something goes against a voting block\, they leave the 
	majority\, and if large enough\, that will force a revoting. The USA syste
	m is built on faith\, not demand. The voters are placing someone based on 
	faith in the usa. thus why so few across the board in the usa vote. which 
	elected officials in the usa warrants faith in their actions? oddly enough
	\, the schrumpt people will say schrumpt and I argue\, letting honesty ove
	rcome my negative bias to him\, the argument can be made. \n\n\n\n	Obama 
	+ Biden both as presidents arguably had more willing to put faith in them 
	but didn't reward anyone's faith \, thus schrumpft came after both. \n\n\
	n\n	Locally\, this is the problem with NYC. It has had from Koch to MAmdan
	i\, eight terms of elephant mayors \, four terms of donkey mayors. Elephan
	t mayors focus on specific groups\, catering to the wealthy harder. Donkey
	s try to cater to the larger masses. But the problem is\, providing for th
	e larger masses is hard. NYC has been mismanaged for a very long time\, so
	 the damage is not little and doing for all is... not a little task\, thus
	 every single donkey mayor when they leave office is under a sorrow\, why?
	 cause the people who voted for them are never satisfied\, cause the faith
	 is never rewarded. the elephant mayors\, focus on the rich \, upper and l
	ower rich\, who are all colors/genders/religions/et cetera in nyc . the ma
	sses know this and absent alternative\, don't vote. None of the above\, it
	 is a real thing. I can tell you value voting very highly\, but the system
	 in the usa isn't built for voting to have value and the proof is in recen
	t history as much as the past. from sea to shining sea. The reason Schrump
	t took over the republican party wasn't because of black people. it was wh
	ite elected officials failings. \n\n\n\n	And while money does aid elected
	 officials getting elected\, look at all the nepotisms in the usa governme
	nt today. Many of these people come from money\, the issue is their qualit
	y as people. They aren't really in government to government\, they are in 
	it\, because it is one of the best labor markets in the usa today. Far saf
	er than fiscal firms. You can be a senator for life\, and all you have to 
	do\, is talk and play the media game well every four years. That is the us
	a system. I Don't know what country you seem to think the usa is. \n\n\n\
	n	 \n\n\n\n	the marches in the 1960s wasn't from the act of voting\, that
	 was called advocacy \, that isnt' the same thing. \n\n\n\n	How can you v
	ote your interest when your interest can't be guaranteed in the usa system
	 through voting?\n\n\n\n	And yes\, fiscal operators strong enough influenc
	e\, but that is a very expensive game. The two major parties work in the b
	illions. \n\n\n\n	Posted 15 hours ago\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	@ProfD\n\n\n\
	n	  On 10/27/2025 at 4:55 PM\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	If voters formed bl
	ocks\, they could make demands of politicians. The system is good at keepi
	ng it from happening.\n\n\n\n	Voting blocks have never demanded anything i
	n the usa\, that is a myth/lie. Voting blocks rarely exist as well \,the u
	se of voting blocks as some grand strategy is a myth/lie. \n\n\n\n	Now if
	 I am wrong give me an example in usa history?\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  On 1
	0/27/2025 at 4:55 PM\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	What gave you that impression
	?\n\n\n\n	because of your choice of words or usage of voting as an action\
	n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  On 10/27/2025 at 4:55 PM\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	PO
	TUS OJ built his MAGA following by promising he would do certain things...
	primarily make America hyper-white nationalist.\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Of cour
	se\, white folks in the opposition party benefit too. That's why they don'
	t really do anything to stop POTUS OJ. \n\n\n\n	I remember exactly what s
	chrumpft did to build his following and none of it was specific promises o
	r claiming to make the usa hyper white nationalist. \n\n\n\n	His built hi
	s movement by blindsiding the party of abraham lincoln POAL\, and in the p
	rimary did two things: \n\n\n\n	1) called everyone else in government \, 
	POAL or party of andrew jackson POAJ  a liar\, which is a functional trut
	h. for decades both POAL+ POAJ members from federal to city council lie\, 
	he called them all out. They both do nothing and blame the complexities of
	 government or each other which is a lie\, government is not complex and t
	he two parties as many have said did have a symbiotic relationship pre sch
	rumpft. \n\n\n\n	2) he said he would shake things up. He never promised a
	nything specific  and when he faced hillary clinton he continued the same
	 strategy against the POAL field in the POAL primary. He called her a liar
	 based on her record or the record of the POAJ and said the same old same 
	old\, will lead to the same place\, which is historically true in the past
	 sixty years in the usa from the time of schrumpfts first election. I don'
	t think schrumpft has ever done anything to make the USA hyper white natio
	nalist. I Live in NYC it isn't hyper white nationalist. It is a city poorl
	y run\, which has a city council mostly made of women i think ... and soon
	 to have another first time category of mayor in mamdani. When he campaign
	ed against harris\, it was the same thing\, harris is incompetent and do y
	ou want to go back to the old stuff \, and he won handily. \n\n\n\n	But r
	emember was it Schrumpft who led the harlem empowerment zone that didn't e
	mpower at all the majoirty populace in harlem at that time\, black people?
	 no it was the clintons /charlie rangel/inez dickens/and a bunch of other 
	black elected officials to harlem. Was it schrumpft who was the attorney g
	eneral of california and aided in putting black men in prison with negativ
	e uneven policies\, no it was kamala harris.  Was it schrumpts who used t
	rillions of dollars for making computer chips in new york state as the cen
	ter of a plan to supposedly help all of the usa\, no it was biden. Was it 
	schrumpt who forgave the entire begging banking industry included goldman 
	sachs whose supposed to be such a brainiac financial firm with an welfare 
	check absent demands? no that was Bush jr +Obama. \n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Wel
	l in the schrumpf era\, what I have noticed isn't people benefitting stayi
	ng in government it is people leaving\, between the POAL+ POAJ I argue the
	 exodus from people representing both parties is the only constant. The ha
	wks+ fiscal conservatives+ religious folk+ libertarians+reform party in th
	e POAL are gone\, they have been replaced by schumpfts folk. while the rep
	resentatives of the POAJ in the bureaurcracy have made e huge exodus from 
	USAID to the CDC to many other places where the POAJ has expanded the bure
	aucracy with their people. \n\n\n\n	  On 10/27/2025 at 4:55 PM\, Prof
	D said:\n\n\n\n	Sure. FBA/ADOS want full access to their birth-rights.\n\
	n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	I am fortunate enough to have talked to various black peo
	ple in the community older than me\, who were actually there\, they never 
	said what you said. I have never heard any of them speak of birth rights. 
	many of them are dead\, but none spoke of birth rights. They spoke of righ
	ts. The language they used suggest to me it was less an statian/american t
	hing than a human thing. \n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  On 10/27/2025 at 4:55 P
	M\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	Black folks have accesss to billions collectivel
	y. You know the rest.\n\n\n\n	yeah I do\, i also know that no populace in 
	the usa\, including the white jew has ever pooled their money like that\, 
	so I ponder why the black populace in the usa should be the first? \n\n\n
	\n	 \n\n\n\n	Posted just now\n\n\n\n	@ProfD\n\n\n\n	  5 hours ago\, 
	ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	There's a huge number of poor people in the USA. If t
	hey formed a block and made demands\, I believe it would be effective.\n\n
	\n\n	It would be effective in getting someone elected\, 100% \, but it wou
	ld not be effective in demanding anything once their elected. That is the 
	issue. Remember\, George Washington\, white man\, first president\, owner 
	of blacks\, a majority of whites\, poor or rich\, wanted him to be king. H
	e could had\, but he chose to term limit himself. he did that\, it wasn't 
	the voting blocks desire\, and that sets the tone in the usa ever after\, 
	once elected you are free to do what you want. Which means you are free to
	 listen to others\, you are free to work for the voting base that got you 
	elected.... but\, you are also free to listen to no one\, you are also fre
	e to work against the voting base that got you elected  COUGH BLACK ELECT
	ED REPRESENTATIVES \n\n\n\n	  5 hours ago\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	OK. I
	've never specifcally typed that voting accomplishes anything. \n\n\n\n	e
	ven point\, I made myself an ass\n\n\n\n	  5 hours ago\, ProfD said:\n
	\n\n\n	From MAGA (hyper-white nationalism) to deporting illegal immigrants
	 to reducing federal government to fighting crime were promises made.\n\n\
	n\n	Yes\, in the course of things he did BUT the base wasn't those things.
	 That is my point.  Schrumpt didn't start with those things. He used Rush
	 Limbaughs podcast/radio method. LEt the audience tell you want to rant. 
	\n\n\n\n	Schrumpft started with only two things: everyone in government is
	 a liar\, and I will shake things up. \n\n\n\n	Then \,as the supporters s
	howed thier old great granfathers confederacy flag he added\, white nation
	alism\, as they got on twitter about speaking spanish\, got to rid of the 
	immigrants\, and defunding the government had many supporters in various f
	ields of his early supports. He is resounding\, and I am not suggesting he
	 didn't make promises\, but that wasn't how he started this thing\n\n\n\n	
	I Argue Schrumpft is mimicking\, even in hand gestures\, william shatner f
	rom the intruder. The difference is\, schrumpft\, has modern telecommunica
	tions as well as a legacy of failure from the elephants or donkeys to make
	 it easier. In the 1950s 1960s many whites in rural areas still believed t
	he elected officials would do for them\, but by 2025\,  many of those sa
	me whites don't feel the people in government have done for them or their 
	parents or grandparents. Which is hnest. WHite people in the countryside h
	ave been begging for a return to the farms\, a strengthening of manufactur
	ing before either of us was born\, did it happen? Now I comprehend all the
	 stated reasons but again\, that doesn't deny it didn't happen but was con
	tinually promised. SO this meant while shatner's character falls\, Schrump
	ts had and has it very easy. but like shatner all he is doing is resoundin
	g. That is the key to the strategy from getting elected to podcast\, just 
	resonate the anger of the people absent doing anything about it or having 
	any sort of plan or solution. the rest does itself. the peoples anger only
	 grows and other people who refute the anger\, don't have solutions but cr
	eate a cyclical banter complaining about other complaining. \n\n\n\n	http
	s://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Intruder_(1962_film)\n\n\n\n	\n		\n	\n\n\n\n
		 \n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  5 hours ago\, ProfD said:
	\n\n\n\n	The MAGA movement is code for it.\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	  5 hours 
	ago\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	Here's a newsflash for you...NYC does not repr
	esent the pulse of the USA.\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	The Big Apple likes to beli
	eve it's a big deal...it's not.\n\n\n\n	your not comprehending my point. Y
	our correct\, The USA is way bigger than NYC\, your correct... but the USA
	 is way bigger than MAGA too. \n\n\n\n	Schrumpft isn't making the usa hyp
	er white nationalist\, hyper white nationalist merely exist in the usa\, i
	t isn't the same thing. \n\n\n\n	And what does this culminate tooo\,... r
	egionalisty. My point for mentioning NYC is regionality\, not some sort of
	 centrism. The USA has many regions\, a country of three hundred million p
	lus people has many regions. MAGA isn't strong or noticeable everywhere\, 
	maybe where you are\, even enough\, but not everywhere.\n\n\n\n	  5 hour
	s ago\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	Semantics. FBA/ADOS folks want their birth-r
	ights.\n\n\n\n	by semantics are you suggesting an implication not verbally
	 stated by many black people older than you are I?  well... I am not tryi
	ng to change your mind to anything\, I admit that again cause I see in our
	 dialogs I border on prosyletization. But I can't suggest what people don'
	t say. I have never been a fan of the suggestion of overuse of coded langu
	age. And maybe I don't comprehend what you mean by birth rights\, but for 
	me\, it is just rights. \n\n\n\n	  5 hours ago\, ProfD said:\n\n\n\n	
	I know Jews received a windfall of money post-holocaust. Israel receives a
	 chunky allowance from the USA every year too.\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Still\, 
	research how much Jews own and the amount of wealth it has generated.\n\
	n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	Jews aren't going broke through gross consumerism. Their 
	churches are not raising billions of dollars just to enrich the pastors an
	d his flunkies.\n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	FBA/ADOS should pool their money becaus
	e whenever white folks decide to pull the rug from underneath paying for t
	heir labor...many of our people will be worse off.\n\n\n\n	Expand  \n\n\n
	\n	I also know that white jews are a very tiny populace of the white popul
	ace in the usa\, I also know that all the tiny populaces in the usa's vari
	ous demographics are more financially successful than the largers. \n\n\n
	\n	white jews are more financially successful than the white italisn or wh
	ite germans/poor white trash or white irish. But white jews are also far s
	maller.\n\n\n\n	I know that black ethiopians are more financially successf
	ul than black DOSers but again\, far smaller populace. \n\n\n\n	I know th
	at white japanese are more financially successful than white chinese\, but
	 again\, far smaller populace. \n\n\n\n	all larger populaces in any demog
	raphic in the usa are financially negative compared to a smaller populace 
	in that same demographic. \n\n\n\n	 \n\n\n\n	White people have already p
	ulled the rug for paying for white labor\, that is how schrumpft won... yo
	u keep suggesting a secret alliance among whites that doesn't exist in mod
	ernity. The reason being is the unity of the past among whites relied on b
	locking access to wealth. But BLack DOSers while sacrificing alot of our c
	ommunities or lives or goals or dreams using nonviolence to integrate to w
	hites\, with the help of the soviet union calling the usa out and gaining 
	international traction\, successfully got whites in the usa to share wealt
	h and once that happened\, white power as it was had problems. which has l
	ed to today. White people in all white towns all over the usa have only kn
	own white power and fear integration with the nonwhite\, fear sharing of w
	ealth with the nonwhite\, fear fiscal competition with the non white all b
	ecause they comprehend correclty\, that all of said fears will lead to gre
	ater chances of fiscal poverty. Black people\, especially DOSers are used 
	to fiscal poverty ala from its ultimate form being enslaved\, we don't get
	 scared at the same rates being fiscally poor like whites. Schrumpft uses 
	this. And that is how the pro anti jewish battle in the white populace in 
	the usa has grown. The judeochristian union started in the 1960s based on 
	the idea of a pan white identity in the usa\, which suit\, white women/whi
	te latinos like blanco puerto ricans/white asians like han chinese who all
	 used the 1960s to grow their wealth in the white mold  BUT\, it also mea
	nt non white financial growth and then the corporations \, many with wealt
	hy white jews in administration started moving jobs outside the usa\, and 
	the rest is history. \n\n
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