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Re: Abe to change Japanese constitution?

By: Cactus Flower in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Fri, 03 May 13 6:36 PM | 87 view(s)
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Msg. 13434 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 13433 by faul)

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hi doma,

For me, the pre-eminent concern is to be able to change your constitution over time without setting the voting bar too high. A government must not lag too far behind the environment it inhabits.

"Under Article 96, changes to the constitution must be approved by at least two-thirds of both houses of parliament and then a majority of voters in a national referendum. Abe wants to require a simple majority of lawmakers before a public vote."
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/01/us-japan-politics-constitution-idUSBRE9400ZT20130501

The Japanese constitution was written by Americans and reflects American ideals. Japan has a different history and its society works in its own way.

I think changing from a model of fixed and unalienable rights and a constitution that is hard to change is a sign of Japan taking its future back from its past.

So long as change remains possible, mistakes will get ironed out over time.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Abe to change Japanese constitution?
By: faul
in ALEA
Fri, 03 May 13 5:17 PM
Msg. 13433 of 54959

Alea....seems someone wants to change the
constitution.

"If there was ever a clear sign that the leadership of Japan is fully aware that the country is about enter a terminal economic catastrophe this is it. Using the cover of currency devaluation and a rising stock market, Japan’s Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, is attempting to make it easier to change the country’s constitution so that they can eliminate freedom of speech and set the stage for a military dictatorship. Reuters reports that:

The draft deletes a guarantee of basic human rights and prescribes duties, such as submission to an undefined “public interest and public order.” The military would be empowered to maintain that “public order.”

This article will blow your mind. Some key excerpts:

Shinzo Abe makes no secret of wanting to revise Japan’s constitution, which was drafted by the United States after World War Two, to formalize the country’s right to have a military – but critics say his plans go deeper and could return Japan to its socially conservative, authoritarian past.

Abe, 58, returned to office in December for a second term as prime minister and is enjoying sky-high support on the back of his “Abenomics” recipe for reviving the economy through hyper-easy monetary policy, big spending and structural reform.

However, sweeping changes proposed by Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in a draft constitution would strike at the heart of the charter with an assault on basic civil rights that could muzzle the media, undermine gender equality and generally open the door to an authoritarian state, activists and scholars say.

Abe’s grandfather Nobusuke Kishi was a pre-World War Two cabinet minister who was arrested but never tried as a war criminal. Kishi served as premier from 1957-60, when he resigned due to a furor over a U.S.-Japan Security Treaty.

If you’re like me, you may have to read the above paragraph twice. Absolutely incredible.

[link to www.zerohedge.com]


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