Japan's ex-PM Shinzo Abe assassinated

Not having followed the narrative, but having watched several angles of the shooting, the question I have is: How on earth was it possible for that guy to walk up onto Abe just like that, apparently already visibly and openly carrying a weapon? Where was the security? Why didn't they do their job properly? Just negligence or bad professionalism on the part of the security or is there more to it? What makes it even worse is that it looks like the perimeter around Abe was indeed secured and freed from people not associated with the security and Abe. So the guy just walks into that security zone, not even running or anything, just causally walking towards Abe and shooting once, NOTHING happens, continuing to walk towards him rather slowly, shooting twice, NOTHING happens. Abe falls down and only now anything seems to be done. If it is just negligence, it is by far the worst security job I have ever seen! Wouldn't be out of the question that this actually happened, but one would assume that if there are any people on this planet who could prevent something like that, then surely security on such a level (protecting such high profile people) should be more than able to do that, especially considering the freaking obvious and visible approach of that guy. In one video you can even see a security guy looking at "the gunman" without doing anything, shortly before he shot. Maybe the guy was known to the security, and therefore they didn't think he was a threat? A part of the security? Could that explain it? I dunno. Or did somebody let him into the security perimeter on purpose and Abe was outfitted with amateurish security?
 
So the shot makes no immediate kinetic effect on his body whatsoever? Very strange.
Gunshots don't imply much kinetic energy in the form of knocking the target over, that only happens in Hollywood. If that was the case the shooters would be flattened by the recoil. If the bullet or pellets don't strike an immediately critical area the target can still function and keep standing. I've shot plenty of large wild pigs with high powered rifles in my time, they just fall over.
 
Sorrowful indeed, that Abe got shot.

It is really hard to tell what hit him, since the supposed shotgun looks all self-made and I guess even the ammunition, powder mixture etc. must be self-made. IMO it must be something shotgun like, since for a rifle/gun, you need a special barrel with turning threads that the bullet starts to spin.
Looks like a shot gun, his looks quite sophisticated but it's easy to make a 'Slam Fire Shotgun'.

 
"Abe has met with Putin 27 times in the nearly 10 years"

With the war in Ukraine, Abe was rethinking nuclear warheads in Tokyo.

Kishida emphasized that "it is not acceptable for Japan to make a nuclear swap deal with the US as a deterrent measure in the midst of the Russian invasion of Ukraine."

Kishida's statement comes after Abe suggested that Japan "should not put a taboo on discussions about the reality we face."

The politician made the comments Sunday on a television program where the Russia-Ukraine war was being discussed, Kyodo News reported.


Spanish - El primer ministro de Japón rechaza sugerencia de buscar un acuerdo de intercambio nuclear con EEUU

I tend to think that Shinzo Abe had the interest of reaching an agreement with Putin that would consolidate Japan's defense but hand in hand with Russia and that would be to hinder the geopolitical game that the US maintains to continue increasing the historical rancorous memory since the 19th century with Japan's expansionism and its invasion of China. The US needs Japan now to distract China. Given what Cass mentioned in recent transcripts that the invasion of Taiwan is something China holds in high regard and in that case, Taiwan's best ally, would be Japan. Plus the large amount of arms sales that the US needs. According to this very interesting video, Korea was conquered by Japan and by those years also Taiwan.

Japan's constitution was drafted by the U.S., also known as the MacArthur constitution, based on pacifism and only taking defensive actions, but that has been changing because of the current landscape with what they call the threat from North Korea and China. So it is not unusual for them to pass a new "emergency" law that allows Japan to go into attack mode, because Japan is already armed. As they say in the video below, EE.UU and Europe need Japan to join the Western Aggressors club:

"Japan needs to implement a fundamental improvement of its defense capabilities" - Fumio Kishida, Japanese Prime Minister.
(Typical double-speak and wordplay. )

In English, you can use the automatic translation to English.

So there is a very important connection that Shinzo Abe was surely going to hinder regarding the "rearming" (which they already are, they just need to go into attack mode) of Japan among other things more thoroughly.


Where was the security?

Waiting for the killer to show up to let him shoot. Great flank uncovered at his back, when the logical thing to do is to have security justly attentive to all blind spots.
 
Waiting for the killer to show up to let him shoot. Great flank uncovered at his back, when the logical thing to do is to have security justly attentive to all blind spots.

It is also possible that the strange behavior of the security is just another „sign of the times“ in the sense that they might have just been out of sorts, or rather, sleepwalking/being dumbed down and/or desensitized as the rest of the general public. The fact that all did wear masks might have contributed as well, for them not being able to do their job properly. The abnormal behavior of the security and the crowd could actually be one of the strangest and alarming things about that whole tragedy. It might tell us something about the dismal state many people are in by now, after years of conditioning, propaganda, lies and terror without there necessarily having been any direct conspiracy at work.
 
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It is also possible that the strange behavior of the security is just another „sign of the times“ in the sense that they might have just been out of sorts, or rather, sleepwalking/being dumbed down and/or desensitized as the rest of the general public. The fact that all did wear masks might have contributed as well, for them not being able to do their job properly. The abnormal behavior of the security and the crowd could actually be one of the strangest and alarming things about that whole tragedy. It might tell us something about the dismal state many people are in by now, after years of conditioning, propaganda, lies and terror without there necessarily having been any direct conspiracy at work.
I'll add my clarification. The Japanese wore masks long before covid, if you look at some bloggers from Japan or who came to Japan in videos of pre-Covid times, it will not be difficult to find people in masks. The reason is that Japan is the most urbanized country on the planet (I do not take into account dwarf states and city-states) and as you know, the urban lifestyle produces allergy sufferers.
Here is an example article from 2013
"It seems about half the people outside are wearing masks now," said businessman Masahiko Haneda, whose boss has warned him to wear a mask at work whenever he catches a cold.
(...)
The biggest reason for the face coverings, however, is hay fever. Japan's pollen levels are five times higher than they were last spring, thanks to a hot summer last year and a sudden spike in temperatures this month that has caused Japanese cedar and hinoki cypress trees—the main culprits—to release their pollen all at once.
(...)
Drug stores prominently display dozens of types of masks, with many claiming to "keep out 99 percent" of pollen, germs and dust. Sendai-based mask maker Iris Ohyama Inc. says sales are twice as good as last year.
(...)
The portion of Japanese who suffer from hay fever has grown to a third from a tenth 30 years ago. The reasons aren't exactly clear. The increase in pollen from Japanese cedar trees—many planted after World War II to increase greenery—is one factor, while diet may be another, experts say.


 
that they might have just been out of sorts, or rather, sleepwalking/being dumbed down and/or desensitized as the rest of the general public.

True, interesting observation. When I saw the videos where part of the audience appeared to be lethargic, but I attributed it to the "Japanese discipline". As Tyomodachi points out, it has been a society that has been wearing masks for a long time before covid and it is only now that the consequences of the excessive use of masks on the brain have been discussed.

I just read that one of those many consequences, besides the lack of attention that possibly has to do with the inability to react to danger due to the lack of adequate processing of a situation:

Affective or emotional flattening, which refers to a psychopathological phenomenon in which the individual presents a difficulty or inability to experience feelings and emotions, as well as to express them in their environment. It has also been called affective or emotional indifference.
 
It could be due to the masks but also to unpreparedness. When people are confronted to a situation they have never encountered or thought about before, they often freeze. For example, if you go to a building and note mentally the exit routes, if there is an emergency (earthquake, fire, etc.) you escape without thinking, the instinct takes charge and you don't even realize that you escaped until you find yourself outside. When the mind has no map of what to do in such situations, the automatic reflexes don't know what to do. A few months ago there were fire shots and instinctively I ducked behind a tree because I've been caught in the middle of a fire exchange before (a long time ago), but some people around stayed there looking around, not sure of what to do. Non exposure to danger makes people "comfortably numb", but surely the masks and the enforced habit of waiting for official instructions play a role as well. OSIT
 
It could be due to the masks but also to unpreparedness. When people are confronted to a situation they have never encountered or thought about before, they often freeze. For example, if you go to a building and note mentally the exit routes, if there is an emergency (earthquake, fire, etc.) you escape without thinking, the instinct takes charge and you don't even realize that you escaped until you find yourself outside. When the mind has no map of what to do in such situations, the automatic reflexes don't know what to do. A few months ago there were fire shots and instinctively I ducked behind a tree because I've been caught in the middle of a fire exchange before (a long time ago), but some people around stayed there looking around, not sure of what to do. Non exposure to danger makes people "comfortably numb", but surely the masks and the enforced habit of waiting for official instructions play a role as well. OSIT
Seems like that to me too. Assassination attempts are rare, and even the best security teams can be caught unaware if it isn't a high-security venue or location. I would suspect that they didn't do a full security check on everyone in the vicinity. (Plus Japan has a ridiculously low crime rate, which would add to the normalcy bias.)

As for the behavior of the security guards, it didn't look too out of the ordinary to me. After the first shot, they seemed a bit stunned, but managed to spring into action after a second or two. They even did what they're most likely trained to do: put themselves between the attacker and the target. I wouldn't be surprised if those briefcases are bulletproof and designed to be used as shields, which they did. But the difference between life and death can come down to a split-second decision, and unfortunately, these guys weren't fast enough.
 
But this video is certainly fresh, but they don’t say anything here, because I didn’t throw it.
I wouldn't put too much weight of conspiracy to this type of "celebration" by Chinese. Each nation has a traditional rival nations given that so many wars happened. people are fickle and there will always be businesses (mostly small one's)who wants to cash those sentiments.

To give example, Anti-China sentiment in India is nothing new. During corona shutdown, as usual they went with west's narration of "China did it", even banned some Chinese products and flooded these sentiments in the social media. Modi went with making India as alternative to china with some success. But they couldn't ban every thing and people couldn't even stop using Chinese products or watching popular programs sponsored by Chinese manufactures. If they banned every thing from china, the same people would have came to streets demanding to replace their own government.

It is a circus. Neither Chinese manufacturers stop selling( they even sold through intermediary third countries) and lay off his employees ,nor the consumers stop using them either. These are fleeting sentiments.
 

WHEN THE GLOBALISTS CROSSED THE RUBICON: THE ASSASSINATION OF SHINZO ABE​

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When the Globalists Crossed the Rubicon: The Assassination of Shinzo Abe
Illustrative Image
Written by Emanuel Pastreich. Originally published by GlobalResearch
July 8 was a muggy day in the ancient capital of Japan. Shinzo Abe, the most powerful figure in Japanese politics, was delivering a stump speech for a local Liberal Democratic Party candidate in front of the Nara Kintetsu railway station when suddenly a loud bang rang out, followed by an odd cloud of smoke.
The response was incredible. Among those in the unusually large crowd gathered, not a single person ran for cover, or hit the ground in terror.
Abe’s body guards, who stood unusually far away from him during the speech, looked on impassively, making no effort to shield him, or to pull him to a safe location.
A few seconds later, Abe crumpled and collapsed to the ground, lying there impassive in his standard blue jacket, white shirt, now speckled with blood, and trademark blue badge of solidarity with Japanese abductees in North Korea. Most likely he was killed instantaneously.
Only then did the body guards seize the suspect, Yamagami Toruya, who was standing behind Abe. The tussle with Yamagami took the form of a choreographed dance for the television audience, not a professional takedown.
Yamagami was immediately identified by the media as a 41-year-old former member of the Maritime Self-Defense Force who had personal grievances with Abe.
Yamagami told everything to the police without hesitation. He did not even try to run from the scene and was still holding the silly hand-made gun when the bodyguards grabbed him.
Even after Abe was lying on the pavement, not a single person in the crowd ran for shelter, or even looked around to determine where the shots came from. Everyone seemed to know, magically, that the shooting was over.
Then the comedy began. Rather than putting Abe in a limousine and whisking him away, those standing around him merely called out to passersby, asking if anyone was a doctor.
The media immediately embraced the “lone gunman” conclusion for this attack, repeating entertaining tale of how Yamagami was associated with Toitsu Kyokai, a new religion started by the charismatic shaman Kawase Kayo, and why he blamed Abe, who had exchanges with that group, for his mother’s troubles.
Because Toitsu Kyokai has followers from the Unification Church founded by Reverend Moon Sun Myung, journalist Michael Penn jumped to the conclusion that the conspiracy leading to Abe’s death was the result of his collaboration with the Moonies.
Although the mainstream media accepted this fantastic story, the Japanese police and security apparatus did not manage to squash alternative interpretations. Blogger Takashi Kitagawa posted materials on July 10 that suggested Abe was shot from the front, not from the back where Yamagami stood, and that the shots must have been fired at an angle from the top of one, or both, of the tall buildings on either side of the intersection across from the railway station plaza.
Takahashi Kitakawa’s postings:
When the Globalists Crossed the Rubicon: The Assassination of Shinzo Abe
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When the Globalists Crossed the Rubicon: The Assassination of Shinzo Abe
Click to see full-size image
Kitagawa’s analysis of the paths of the bullets was more scientific than anything offered by the media that had claimed, without basis, that Abe had only been shot once until the surgeon announced that evening that there had been two bullets.
The chances that a man holding an awkward home-made gun, standing more than five meters away in a crowd, would be able to hit Abe twice are low. The TV personality Kozono Hiromi, who is a gun expert himself, remarked on his show “Sukkiri” (on July 12) that such a feat would be incredible.
A careful viewing of the videos suggests that multiple shots were fired by a rifle with a silencer from atop a neighboring building.

安倍晋三元総理大臣暗殺について 言明します from Emanuel Pastreich on Vimeo.

The message to the world

For a figure like Shinzo Abe, the most powerful political player in Japan and the person to whom Japanese politicians and bureaucrats rallied in response to the unprecedented uncertainty born of the current geopolitical crisis, to be shot dead with no serious security detail nearby makes no sense.
Perhaps the message was lost on viewers at home, but it was crystal clear for other Japanese politicians. For that matter, the message was clear for Boris Johnson, who was forced out of power at almost exactly the same moment that Abe was shot, or for Emmanuel Macron, who was suddenly charged with influence peddling scandal for Uber, and faces demands for his removal from office, on July 11—after months of massive protests had failed to sway him in any way.
The message was written all over Abe’s white shirt in red: buying into the globalist system and promoting the COVID-19 regime is not enough to assure safety, even for the leader of a G7 nation.
Abe was highest ranking victim so far of the hidden cancer eating away at governance in nation states around the world, an institutional sickness that moves decision making away from national governments to a network of privately-held supercomputer banks, private equity groups, for-hire intelligence firms in Tel Aviv, London and Reston, and the strategic thinkers employed by the billionaires at the World Economic Forum, NATO, the World Bank and other such awesome institutions.
The fourth industrial revolution was the excuse employed to transfer the control of all information in, and all information out, for central governments to Facebook, Amazon, Oracle, Google, SAP and others in the name of efficiency. As J. P. Morgan remarked, “Everything has two reasons: a good reason and a real reason.”
With the assassination of Abe, these technology tyrants, and their masters, have crossed the Rubicon, declaring that those dressed in the trappings of state authority can be mowed down with impunity if they do not follow orders.

The Problem with Japan

Japan is heralded as the only Asian nation advanced enough to join the “West,” to be a member of the exclusive G7 club, and to be qualified to enter into collaboration with (and possible membership in) the top intelligence sharing program, the “Five Eyes.” Nevertheless, Japan has continued to defy the expectations, and the demands, of global financiers, and the planners within the beltway and on Wall Street for the New World Order.
Although it was South Korea in Asia that has constantly been berated in Washington as an ally not quite up to the level of Japan, the truth is that the super-rich busy taking over the Pentagon, and the entire global economy, were starting to harbor doubts about the dependability of Japan.
The globalist system at the World Bank, Goldman Sachs, or the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University has a set track for the best and the brightest from “advanced nations.”
Elites from Australia, France, Germany, Norway or Italy, learn to speak fluent English, spend time in Washington, London, or Geneva at a think tank or university, secure a safe sinecure at a bank, a government institution, or a research institute that assures them a good income, and adopt the common sense, pro-finance, perspective offered by the Economist Magazine as the gospel.
Japan, however, although it has an advanced banking system of its own, although its command of advanced technologies makes it the sole rival of Germany in machine tools, and although it has a sophisticated educational system capable of producing numerous Nobel Prize winners, does not produce leaders who follow this model for the “developed” nation.
Japanese elite do not study abroad for the most part and Japan has sophisticated intellectual circles that do not rely on information brought in from overseas academic or journalistic sources.
Unlike other nations, Japanese write sophisticated journal articles entirely in Japanese, citing only Japanese experts. In fact, in fields like botany and cellular biology, Japan has world-class journals written entirely in Japanese.
Similarly, Japan has a sophisticated domestic economy that is not easily penetrated by multinational corporations—try as they do.
The massive concentration of wealth over the last decade has allowed the super-rich to create invisible networks for secret global governance, best represented by the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders program and the Schwarzman Scholars program. These rising figures in policy infiltrate the governments, the industries, and research institutions of nations to make sure that the globalist agenda goes forth unimpeded.
Japan has been impacted by this sly form of global governance. And yet, Japanese who speak English well, or who study at Harvard, are not necessarily on the fast track in Japanese society.
There is stubborn independence in Japan’s diplomacy and economics, something that raised concerns among the Davos crowd during the COVID-19 campaigns.
Although the Abe administration (and the subsequent Kishida administration) went along with the directives of the World Economic Forum and the World Health Organization for vaccines and social distancing, the Japanese government was less intrusive in the lives of citizens than most nations, and was less successful in forcing organizations to require vaccination.
The use of QR codes to block service to the unvaccinated was limited in its implementation in Japan in comparison with other “advanced” nations.
Moreover, the Japanese government refuses to fully implement the digitalization agenda demanded, thus denying multinational technology giants the control over Japan that they exercise elsewhere. This lag in Japan’s digitalization led the Wilson Center in Washington D.C. to invite Karen Makishima, minister of Japan’s Digital Agency (launched under pressure from global finance in September, 2021) so that she could explain why Japan has been so slow to digitalize (July 13).
Japanese are increasingly aware that their resistance to digitalization, to the wholescale outsourcing of the functions of government and university to multinational tech giants, and the privatization of information, is not in their interest.
Japan continues to operate Japanese-language institutions that follow old customs, including the use of written records. Japanese still read books and they are not so enamored with AI as Koreans and Chinese.
Japan’s resistance can be traced back to Meiji restoration of 1867. Japan set out to create governmental system wherein Western ideas were translated into Japanese, combined with Japanese concepts, to create a complex domestic discourse. The governance system set up in Meiji restoration remains in place to a large degree, using models for governance based on pre-modern principles from Japan and China’s past, and drawn from 19th century Prussia and England.
The result is feudalistic approach to governance wherein ministers oversee fiefdoms of bureaucrats who carefully guard their own budgets and who maintain their own internal chains of command.

The Problem with Abe

Shinzo Abe was one of the most sophisticated politicians of our age, always open to make a deal with the United States, or other global institutions, but always cagy when it came to making Japan the subject of globalist dictates.
Abe harbored the dream of restoring Japan to its status as an empire, and imagined himself to be the reincarnation of the Meiji Emperor.
Abe was different from Johnson or Macron in that he was not as interested in appearing on TV as he was in controlling the actual decision making process within Japan.
There is no need to glorify Abe’s reign, as some have tried to do. He was a corrupt insider who pushed for the dangerous privatization of government, the hollowing out of education, and who backed a massive shift of assets from the middle class to the wealthy.
His use of the ultra-right Nihon Kaigi forum to promote an ultranationalist agenda, and to glorify the most offensive aspects of Japan’s imperial past, was deeply disturbing. Abe gave his unflinching support for all military expenditures, no matter how foolish, and he was willing to support just about any American boondoggle.
That said, as the grandson of Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, and the son of foreign minister Shintaro Abe, Shinzo Abe showed himself to be an astute politician from childhood. He was creative in his use of a wide range of political tools to advance his agenda, and he could call on corporate and government leaders from around the world with an ease that no other Asian politician could.
I remember vividly the impression I received from Abe on the two occasions that I met him in person. Whatever cynical politics he may have promoted, he radiated to his audience a purity and simplicity, what the Japanese call “sunao,” that was captivating. His manner suggested a receptiveness and openness that inspired loyalty among his followers and that could overwhelm those who were hostile to his policies.
In sum, Abe was sophisticated political figure who was capable of playing one side against the other within the Liberal Democratic Party, and within the international community, while appearing to be a considerate and benevolent leader.
For this reason, Japanese hostile to Abe’s ethnic nationalism were still willing to support him because he was the only politician they thought capable of restoring global political leadership to Japan.
Japanese diplomats and military officers fret endlessly about the Japan’s lack of vision. Although Japan has all the qualifications to be a great power, they reason, it is run by a series of unimpressive, University of Tokyo graduates; men who are good at taking tests, but are unwilling to take risks.
Japan produces none like Putin or Xi, and not even a Macron or a Johnson.
Abe wanted to be a leader and he had the connections, the talent, and the ruthlessness required to play that role on the global stage. He was already the longest serving prime minister in Japanese history, and had plans for a third bid as prime minister, when he was struck down.
Needless to say, the powers behind the World Economic Forum do not want national leaders like Abe, even if they conform with the global agenda, because they are capable of organizing resistance within the nation state.

What went wrong?

Abe was able to handle, using the traditional tools of statecraft, the impossible dilemma faced by Japan over the last decade as its economic ties with China and Russia increased, but its political and security integration with the United States, Israel and the NATO block proceeded apace.
It was impossible for Japan to be that close to the United States and its allies while maintaining friendly relations with Russia and China. Yet Abe almost succeeded.
Abe remained focused and cool. He made use of all his skills and connections as he set out to carve a unique space for Japan. Along the way, Abe turned to the sophisticated diplomacy of his strategic thinker Shotaro Yachi of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to assure that Japan found its place under the sun.
Abe and Yachi used contradictory, but effective, geopolitical strategies to engage both East and West, making ample use of secret diplomacy to seal long-term deals that put Japan back in the great powers game.
On the one hand, Abe presented to Obama and Trump a Japan that was willing to go further than South Korea, Australia or other India in backing Washington’s position. Abe was willing to suffer tremendous domestic criticism for his push for a remilitarization that fit the US plans for East Asia.
At the same time that he impressed Washington politicians with his gung-ho pro-American rhetoric, matched by the purchase of weapons systems, Abe also engaged China and Russia at the highest levels. That was no small feat, and involved sophisticated lobbying within the beltway, and in Beijing and Moscow.
In the case of Russia, Abe successfully negotiated a complex peace treaty with Russia in 2019 that would have normalized relations and solved the dispute concerning the Northern Territories (the Kuril Islands in Russian). He was able to secure energy contracts for Japanese firms and to find investment opportunities in Russia even as Washington ramped up the pressure on Tokyo for sanctions.
The journalist Tanaka Sakai notes that Abe was not banned from entering Russia after the Russian government banned all other representatives of the Japanese government from entry.
Abe also engaged China seriously, solidifying long-term institutional ties, and pursuing free trade agreement negotiations that reached a breakthrough in the fifteenth round of talks (April 9-12, 2019). Abe had ready access to leading Chinese politicians and he was considered by them to be reliable and predictable, even though his rhetoric was harshly anti-Chinese.
The critical event that likely triggered the process leading to Abe’s assassination was the NATO summit in Madrid (June 28-30).
The NATO summit was a moment when the hidden players behind the scenes laid down the law for the new global order. NATO is on a fast track to evolve beyond an alliance to defend Europe and to become an unaccountable military power, working with the Global Economic Forum, the billionaires and the bankers around the world, as a “world army,” functioning much as the British East India Company did in another era.
The decision to invite to the NATO summit the leaders of Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand was a critical part of this NATO transformation.
These four nations were invited to join in an unprecedented level of integration in security, including intelligence sharing (outsourcing to big tech multinationals), the use of advanced weapons systems (that must be administrated by the personnel of multinationals like Lockheed Martin), joint exercises (that set a precedent for an oppressive decision-making process), and other “collaborative” approaches that undermine the chain of command within the nation state.
When Kishida returned to Tokyo on July first, there can be no doubt that one of his first meetings was with Abe. Kishida explained to Abe the impossible conditions that the Biden administration had demanded of Japan.
The White House, by the way, is now entirely the tool of globalists like Victoria Nuland (Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs) and others trained by the Bush clan.
The demands made of Japan were suicidal in nature. Japan was to increase economic sanctions on Russia, to prepare for possible war with Russia, and to prepare for a war with China. Japan’s military, intelligence and diplomatic functions were to be transferred to the emerging blob of private contractors gathering for the feast around NATO.
We do not know what Abe did during the week before his death. Most likely he launched into a sophisticated political play, using of all his assets in Washington D.C., Beijing, and Moscow—as well as in Jerusalem, Berlin, and London, to come up with a multi-tiered response that would give the world the impression that Japan was behind Biden all the way, while Japan sought out a détente with China and Russia through the back door.
The problem with this response was that since other nations had been shut down, such a sophisticated play by Japan made it the only major nation with a semi-functional executive branch.
Abe’s death parallels closely that of Seoul’s mayor Park Won Sun, who went missing on July 9th, 2020, exactly two years before Abe’s assassination. Park took steps in Seoul City Hall to push back on the COVID-19 social distancing policies that were being imposed by the central government. His body was found the next day and the death was immediately ruled a suicide resulting from his distress over charges of sexual harassment by a colleague.

What to do now?

The danger of the current situation should not be underestimated. If an increasing number of Japanese come to perceive, as the journalist Tanaka Sakai suggests, that the United States destroyed their best hope for leadership, and that the globalists want Japan to make do with an unending series of weak-minded prime ministers who are dependent on Washington and other hidden players of the parasite class, such a development could bring about a complete break between Japan and the United States, leading to a political or military conflict.
It is telling that Michael Green, the top Japan hand in Washington D.C., did not write the initial tribute to Abe that was published on the homepage of CSIS (Center for Strategic and International Studies), his home institute.
Green, veteran of the Bush National Security Council and Henry A. Kissinger Chair of the Asia Program at CSIS, is the author of Line of Advantage: Japan’s Grand Strategy in the Era of Abe Shinzo. Green was a close associate of Abe, perhaps the closest of any American.
The tribute to Abe was drafted by Christopher Johnstone (the Japan chair at CSIS and former CIA officer). The weird choice suggests that the assassination is so sensitive that Green instinctively wished to avoid writing the initial response, leaving it to a professional operative.
For responsible intellectuals and citizens in Washington, Tokyo, or elsewhere, there is only one viable response to this murky assassination: a demand for an international scientific investigation.
Painful as that process might be, it will force us to face the reality of how our governments have been taken over by invisible powers.
If we fail to identify the true players behind the scenes, however, we may be led into a conflict in which the blame is projected onto heads of state and countries are forced into conflicts so as to hide the crimes of global finance.
The loss of control of the Japanese government over the military the last time can be attributed in part to the assassinations of prime minister Inukai Tsuyoshi on May 15, 1932 and of prime minister Saito Makoto on February 26, 1936.
But for the international community, the more relevant case is how the manipulations of an integrated global economy by the Rothschild, Warburg, and other banking interests created an environment wherein the tensions produced by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary on June 28, 1914 were funneled towards world war.
 
There is a message in this assassination but I suspect it is not for the common man. What it is I have no way to even guess.

However Shinzo's assassination for some reason reminds me of this one,

Didn't Anna Lindh rock the boat of the Globalists with her stand on certain global issues ???

 
Not directly related to this thread, but perhaps a geopolitical influence - ivermectin is a derivative of avermectin, and avermectin has only ever been found in Japanese soil samples.

Despite decades of searching around the world, the Japanese microorganism remains the only source of avermectin ever found.


I thought that I'd read somewhere that Abe supported the use of ivermectin and that the Japanese government had approved it, but if I search on that now all I find is factcheck articles disputing those claims. That probably means that they did.
 

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