Heizo Takenaka “Japan easily accepts the protection of the weak. This weakens the entire country.” “Everything is paid for by raising taxes and borrowing money.”
Heizo Takenaka: “Japan easily accepts protection for the weak. This weakens the whole country”…Pointing out the contradiction of “raising the minimum wage” In the end, everything is covered by tax increases and debt The source of the subsidies is the taxes and government bonds paid by companies and citizens. Many people probably feel that this is contradictory. On the one hand, the government is also protecting companies that cannot even pay the minimum wage. And in order to do so, it is raising taxes and taking on debt. In any case, Japan is a country that easily accepts protection for the “weak”. However, this is weakening the whole of Japan. Subsidies are necessary for those who are truly handicapped and have other circumstances. However, for those who are not, For details, see the source 2024/7/16 Previous thread
>>1 Total amount of overseas handouts by the Kishida administration (as of May 2023) India 5 trillion yen Developing countries 8.8 trillion yen Africa 4.1 trillion yen Philippines 600 billion yen Sri Lanka 4.6 billion yen Ukraine 2.5 trillion yen Indo-Pacific region 9 trillion yen Total 28.25 trillion yen As of July 2024, the figure is being recounted, but it appears to have exceeded 40 trillion yen *Please refrain from making irrelevant replies such as “This is an investment!” or “They’re just lending it!” Is it necessary to hand out money even if it means raising taxes?
The reason this happens is that when the economy gets too big, honest work alone is no longer enough to keep the people going. That’s why they start spending money in the name of helping the weak. Protecting minorities is also part of this movement. However, once it becomes a big trend, it’s impossible to stop it exactly at the right pace. This leads to overprotection, and various problems start to occur.
If it means it’s easier for us to live, then I think that’s a good thing. But what kind of people exactly are the weak people that Takenaka is talking about?
If we create weak people and then don’t recognize them as weak, the number of suicides and fugitives will only increase. If we squeeze people dry and then just let them take responsibility for their own actions, we don’t need a country.
Deregulation of temporary employment has led to an explosion in the number of vulnerable people, and then they are cut off just before they can receive their pensions as they grow older and can no longer work. What a brute act.
They don’t complain because they are weak. They put themselves in the position of the weak because they want to complain. They willingly become “weak.”
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