Seeing the completely abandoned state of Noto, people were saying how glad it was that the Liberal Democratic Party was not in power during the Great East Japan Earthquake.
>>1 Hey Yumiba~ I already got my polling station admission ticket postcard How about you? Has it arrived yet? Let’s all start a thread to upload pictures Of course, you’ll be the one to post yours first. You can do that, right? lol You post yours all the time.
Looking at how left alone Noto is now, we must have been incredibly lucky that the Liberal Democratic Party was not in power at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake. As long as the LDP remains in power, disaster-stricken areas will continue to be abandoned like Noto. Those who vote for the LDP need to think carefully about this.
>>4 The misfortune of Noto is that it is an LDP kingdom, and it is full of Abe supporters. The tax money spent on reconstruction will go to the representatives.
>>7 The Democratic Party goes to the front lines to lead the charge The Liberal Democratic Party changes into work clothes in Tokyo and just takes commemorative photos.
>>9 Even though the Democratic Party was trying to put together a budget for reconstruction, it was the Liberal Democratic Party that continued to boycott the Diet and hold back the disaster-stricken areas.
Because of the third sector, it would have been impossible to invest in government funds and the line would have had to be closed down. Sanriku Railway also went through some crazy paperwork and was reopened with government funds.
The bigwigs at the central level act like they don’t know what’s going on except for Tonkin. Politicians, bureaucrats, and the mass media are all like that.
0024Anti-Japanese pavilion big face (garden) [fr].Oct. 13, 2024 (Sun) 11:40:40.32ID:7kOYXUcq0(5/37)
>>19 It’s your own fault for living in such a depopulated area.
Even before we leave them alone, there are already so many isolated villages full of elderly people that there is nothing that can be done and the residents just continue to live there without voluntarily relocating.
It seems that, having learned from the lessons of the Great East Japan Earthquake, they have come to the conclusion that it is not enough to just rebuild everything. Even if the area is rebuilt, the costs of water bills and other daily infrastructure will ultimately be passed on to residents in the future.
>>25 When you look at the haphazard spending of government funds on the Sanriku Railway, I think that’s really true. Emotional arguments make anything possible.
There’s nothing you can do about areas with nothing but mountains and people crowded along the river. Even if they were to rebuild, young people wouldn’t move there.
If it weren’t for the Democratic Party, they would have provided an appropriate power source or a power supply vehicle and the building wouldn’t have exploded in the first place.
Even though the Noto earthquake occurred on the 1st, the Liberal Democratic Party continued to hold New Year’s parties in a festive mood until the 3rd.
The reconstruction tax, the renewable energy surcharge, the soaring electricity prices and the resulting downward pressure on the economy – these are just some of the remaining remnants of earthquake-related bad governance that I can think of, they’re really in trouble.
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