JAPAN DEALS WITH COVID-19 WITHOUT BIG BROTHER TACTICS - SO SHOULD WE


I SAW A RECENT COMPARISON BETWEEN THE DEATHS FROM COVID-19 BETWEEN NEW YORK AND TOKYO AND WONDERED WHY THERE WAS SUCH DISPARITY. THE DIFFERENCE IS STARTLING.

TOKYO HAS 100 DEATHS IN A POPULATION OF 9.2 MILLION.
NEW YORK HAS 11,000 DEATHS IN A POPULATION OF  8.4 MILLION.

YET TOKYO IS NOT LOCKED DOWN !! ............... ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

Because of the widely published instructions from US authorities to attribute even suspected or possible symptomatic deaths to COVID-19, it has to be assumed that the NYC and US figures are grossly overblown - maybe to confirm an agenda, but that's another matter.

Japan has not enforced strict measures on the people. Masks and hygiene come naturally to the people along with being more of an isolationist society - but that does not mean that the people lock themselves away normally. No, Japan has warned and advised the populace of the dangers and more or less let the people get on with life. It's even darn difficult to get tested for the virus. [Perhaps they know that the virus hasn't been purified and tests do not pick up the specific novel corona virus anyway?].


OH, THE ISOLATION !!!


SOURCE: https://www.aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/-covid-19-did-not-change-much-in-japan-s-daily-life-/1819015


It is a part of the Japanese culture to wear masks and maintain “utmost” cleanliness during the routine life, so COVID-19 pandemic did not change much in the country.
“The only issue is there is no aggressive testing of people to determine whether a person is infected or not,” a software engineer who identified himself with the name Ahmad and based in Tokyo told Anadolu Agency.
In their daily lives, the Japanese use hand sanitizers, wear masks, and maintain cleanliness, he said.
Japan reported nearly 13,231 cases of the coronavirus with 360 deaths. Despite an aging population, questions have been raised as to why authorities were not holding mass COVID-19 tests.
Ahmad said the government declared a health emergency but people had “already taken precautions and stayed home”.
“People felt like the anti-virus measures were already part of their routine and continued their lives but there has been less mobility since the outbreak started,” he added.
Wearing a mask has been mandatory in many countries in fighting the pandemic which has affected nearly 2.9 million people globally, while more than 203,000 have died since the virus first appeared in Wuhan, China last December.

Why no mass testing? 
One has to undergo a series of checkups, including blood tests, X-rays, and flu sampling for a doctor to decide if a patient fits the criteria for the COVID-19 test.
“This time-consuming process is done to eliminate the possibility that the patient has a different illness. And even if he determines that the patient is likely to have the coronavirus, the biggest hurdle is calling the local health center to request a test. This is almost always rejected,” Japan’s public broadcaster NHK reported, quoting a specialist from a Tokyo-based hospital.
Japan, the world’s third-biggest economy, has been able to do only 7,800 tests per day, far lower than the US which carries out about 150,000 per day. The limited number of tests has raised concerns about the accuracy of the Japanese government's total case numbers
"The healthcare center won't accept tests, even if it's for a patient who is highly likely to be infected,” the doctor added.
Japan has a population of more than 126 million, with over 30% older than 60 years of age -- one of the most affected age groups from the virus.
“Life in Tokyo is that of seclusion and isolation,” Ahmad also said, adding: “There are elderly homes and in one of them a cluster of coronavirus cases was recently found and there is a fear of more such clusters.”
The low testing pushed the US Embassy in Tokyo to urge Americans to go home immediately. “The lack of widespread testing has made it difficult to assess the situation,” said the embassy.
“One cannot ignore the fact that lifestyle of the Japanese is very hygienic,” said a businessman from Osaka who wanted to remain anonymous, and added: “The Japanese are clean people, in metropolitans, they live a secluded life … people here are only busy with their work.”
Health Ministry official Kato Takuma, however, said the government asked public health centers to conduct tests beginning in February.
"The government has never asked anybody to reduce the number of tests," Kato told NHK. But he also accepted the difficulties these centers are facing.

‘Lockdown to hit Japan’s export-oriented business’ 
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government faced stiff resistance for imposing a strict lockdown.
The parliament passed an amendment last month to allow Abe to declare a national health emergency to fight COVID-19. The emergency was expanded to all of
Japan after first being imposed in seven provinces, including Tokyo.
Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said the Japanese law makes it "impossible" to impose a forced shutdown in Tokyo.
“Japan’s economy is export-oriented,” said the Osaka-based businessman, adding: “Most of the consumers are outside the country. So, the business will dry if demand for exports drops, and lockdown is doing that.”
Abe acknowledged the stress on the economy, saying: “Japan’s economy faces the biggest crisis in the postwar era.”
Ahmad, the software engineer, said he, along with hundreds of IT employees, was working from home for more than a month.
“Shops are open, business centers are open but there is not much activity and the most affected are daily wager,” he said.
“Most Japanese work on a daily-wage basis,” he said, adding: “That is why we see opposition to lockdown.”
Japan has not been dependent on anything foreign, he stressed, noting: “They have produced everything themselves and revolutionized their industry and the economy but [foreign] consumer is a major importer of Japanese products which pushes forward the growth trajectory.”
To support the economy, the Abe government earlier this month unveiled the country’s largest-ever $990 billion stimulus package to help struggling businesses and households cope with the impact of the coronavirus outbreak.
The package is equivalent to 20% of the country’s GDP.
In Osaka, the businessman said: “People go to offices, shops are open but yes temperature testing is applied. Human-to-human contacts have reduced more than 70%.”
'Normal life full of precautions'
It is “Sakura” time in Japan when gardens and parks are full of cherry blossoms.
“Tens of thousands of Japanese celebrate this season by going to public parks and weekends are crowded but coronavirus has affected it and the number of people has gone down,” said Ahmad.
But he said people go out for fishing and playing games, too.
“Human-to-human interaction has minimized,” he said. “It is people who have imposed a lockdown on themselves not the government because they are careful and take precautions on time.”
To stem the spread of the infection, Japan also imposed restrictions on foreign travel or those who enter the country to undergo quarantine.
Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said foreign travelers who have been in 14 countries -- including several Middle Eastern countries such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and also Russia -- within two weeks of arrival in Japan will be denied entry following the upgraded advisory, Kyodo news reported.


FOR FURTHER READING ...........                                                                                                                        


Web results

16 hours ago - 'COVID-19 did not change much in Japan's daily life' ... Japan reported nearly 13,231 cases of the coronavirus with 360 deaths. ... “Life in Tokyo is that of seclusion and isolation,” Ahmad also said, adding: “There are elderly ...
Mar 31, 2020 - The Tokyo Metropolitan Government on Tuesday confirmed 78 new infected cases of the novel coronavirus on Tuesday, a record number for a ...
3 days ago - Clash looms in Japan as Tokyo governor says Abe's Covid-19 measures ... The virus has killed more than 300 people in Japan, with 29 deaths ...
17 hours ago - Even if the go easy on the testing you can't tell me that they hiding thousands and thousands of deaths from Covid. Full lockdown, partial ...
3 days ago - And it is this relatively low number of deaths that can be considered ... 2020 for seven prefectures, including Tokyo, before later expanding it to ...
6 days ago - The nationwide death toll from the virus has now increased to a total of 288, including those from a cruise ship that was quarantined in Yokohama ...
1 day ago - NYC has had 11,000 Covid deathsTokyo, the World's largest and densest city, has had 93. NYC is locked down. Tokyo was never locked ...
Apr 18, 2020 - Africa surpasses 20,000 cases, more than 1,000 deathsTOKYO — Japanese health ministry said Sunday that 568 new cases of the ...
On 13 February, a woman in her 80s died in Kanagawa Prefecture, next to Tokyo, marking the first death from COVID-19 in Japan. She was the mother-in-law of ...

HOW THE LGBT MINORITY BECAME A RULING BEHEMOTH



The Homosexual Jewish Billionaire Funding the LGBT Movement - Jon Stryker

There is nothing spontaneous or grass roots about the LGBT movement. Cabalist Jews are using gender dysphoria to destabilize society. Thanks to them, the LGBT rights agenda—note the addition of "T"—has become a powerful, aggressive force in American society. Its advocates stand at the top of media, academia, the professions, and, most important, Big Business and Big Philanthropy.
Meanwhile, Russian society is shoring up their defenses against this onslaught of homosexual perversions. They are literally changing the Russian constitution, defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman.
Originally appeared at: Truth to Power
Not long ago, the homosexual rights movement was a small group of people struggling to follow their dispositions within a larger heterosexual culture. Homosexuals and lesbians were underdogs, vastly outnumbered and loosely organized, sometimes subject to discrimination and abuse. Their story was tragic, their suffering dramatized by AIDS and Rock Hudson, Brokeback Mountain and Matthew Shepard. 
Today’s movement, however, looks nothing like that band of persecuted outcasts. The LGBT rights agenda—note the addition of “T”—has become a powerful, aggressive force in American society. Its advocates stand at the top of media, academia, the professions, and, most important, Big Business and Big Philanthropy. Consider the following case.
Jon Stryker, 62, is the heir to Stryker Corp., a medical device and equipment manufacturer. He has given nearly $250 million of his personal wealth to groups supporting homosexual rights and Jewish settlers in Arab East Jerusalem.
Jon Stryker is the grandson of Homer Stryker, an orthopedic surgeon who founded the Stryker Corporation. Based in Kalamazoo, Michigan, the Stryker Corporation sold $13.6 billion in surgical supplies and software in 2018. Jon, heir to the fortune, is homosexual. In 2000 he created the Arcus Foundation, a nonprofit serving the LGBT community, because of his own experience "coming out" as homosexual. Arcus has given more than $58.4 million to programs and organizations doing LGBT-related work between 2007 and 2010 alone, making it one of the largest LGBT funders in the world. Stryker gave more than $30 million to Arcus himself in that three-year period, through his stock in Stryker Medical Corporation.  
Stryker founded Arcus right when the AIDS epidemic was being brought under control in the U.S. Before he started Arcus, he was president of Depot Landmark LLC, a development company specializing in rehabilitating historical buildings. This would serve him well when he later renovated space for Arcus in Kalamazoo. He was also a founding board member of Greenleaf Trust, a privately held wealth management firm also in Kalamazoo.
Stryker with his husband?/wife?, Slobodan Randjelović
Jon’s sister Ronda Stryker is married to William Johnston, chairman of Greenleaf Trust. She is also vice chair of Spelman College, where Arcus recently bestowed a $2 million grant in the name of lesbian feminist Audre Lorde. The money is earmarked for a queer studies program. Ronda and Johnston have gifted Spelman $30 million dollars overall, the largest gift from living donors in its 137-year history. She is also a trustee of Kalamazoo College (where Arcus bestowed a social justice leadership grant for $23 million in 2012), as well as a member of the Harvard Medical School Board of Fellows.  
Pat Stryker, another sister to Jon, has worked closely with homosexual male Tim Gill. Gill operates one of the largest LGBT nonprofits in America and has been close to the Stryker family since Jon created Arcus. In 1999, Tim Gill sold his stakes to Quark, his computer software company, and went to work running the Gill Foundation in Colorado. Working closely with Pat Stryker and two other wealthy philanthropists, who together became known as the four horsemen due to their ruthless political strategies, they set out to change Colorado, a red state, to blue. They proceeded to pour half a billion dollars into small groups advocating LGBT agendas. Gill noted in his opening introduction for Jon Stryker at the 2015 GLSEN Respect Awards that, since knowing each other, he and Jon have “plotted, schemed, hiked and skied together,” while also “punishing the wicked and rewarding the good.”  
Prior to 2015, Stryker had already built the political infrastructure to drive gender identity ideology and transgenderism across the globe, donating millions to small and large entities. These included hundreds of thousands of dollars to ILGA, an LGBT organization for equality in Europe and Central Asia with 54 countries participating, and Transgender Europe, a voice for the trans community in Europe and Asia with 43 countries participating (Transgender Europe has also funded smaller organizations like TENI, Transgender Equality Network Ireland). 
In 2008 Arcus founded Arcus Operating Foundation, an arm of the foundation that organizes conferences, leadership programs, and research publications. At one 2008 meeting in Bellagio, Italy, 29 international leaders committed to expanding global philanthropy to support LGBT rights. At the meeting, along with Stryker and Ise Bosch, founder of Dreilinden Fund in Germany, was Michael O’Flaherty—one of the rapporteurs for the Yogyakarta Principles on the Application of International Human Rights Law in Relation to Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (principles outlined in Indonesia in 2006). With the Yogyakarta Principles, the seeds were planted to bring in and attach gender-identity ideology to our legal structures. O’Flaherty has been an elected member of the United Nations Human Rights Committee since 2004.
Out of the Bellagio meeting, Arcus created MAP, the LGBT Movement Advancement Project, to track the complex system of advocacy and funding that would promote gender identity/transgenderism in the culture. Simultaneously, the LGBTI Core Group was formed as an informal cross-regional group of United Nations member countries to represent LGBTI human rights issues to the U.N. Core Group members funded by Arcus include Outright Action International and Human Rights Commission. Core Group member countries include Albania, Australia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, El Salvador, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Montenegro, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, the United Kingdom, the United States, Uruguay, and the European Union, as well as the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights. 
These initiatives promote gender identity and transgenderism by training leaders in political activism, leadership, transgender law, religious liberty, education, and civil rights. The lineup of Arcus-supported organizations advancing the cause is daunting: Victory Institute, the Center for American Progress, the ACLU, the Transgender Law CenterTrans Justice Funding Project, OutRight Action InternationalHuman Rights WatchGATE, Parliamentarians for Global Action (PGA), The Council for Global Equality, the U.N., Amnesty International, and GLSEN. The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the U.S. (SIECUS), in partnership with Advocates for Youth, Answer, GLSEN, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation, and Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA), has initiated a campaign using a rights-based framework to inform approaches in reshaping cultural narratives of sexuality and reproductive health. Sixty-one additional organizations have signed a letter supporting an overhaul of current curriculums.
In 2013 Adrian Coman, a veteran of George Soros’s Open Society Foundations (a driver of transgender ideology that has begun initiatives to normalize transgender children), was named director of the international human rights program at the Arcus Foundation, to drive gender identity ideology globally. Previously, Coman served as program director of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. And in 2015, Arcus worked closely with and funded NoVo Foundation programs for transgenderism. NoVo was founded by Peter Buffett, son of billionaire Warren Buffett.  
These programs and initiatives advance gender identity ideology by supporting various faith organizations, sports and cultural associations, police department training and educational programs in grade schools, high schools (GLSEN, whose founder was brought to Arcus in 2012 as board of directors, has influenced many K-12 school curricula), and universities and medical institutions—including the American Psychological Foundation (APF). Arcus funds help APF (the leading psychology organization in the United States) develop guidelines for establishing trans-affirmative psychological practices. Psychologists are “encouraged” by those monies to modify their understanding of gender, broadening the range of biological reality to include abstract, medical identities.
Concurrently, Arcus drives gender identity ideology and transgenderism in the marketplace by encouraging businesses to invest in LGBT causes. Lest we forget, Stryker is heir to a $13.6 billion medical corporation. One only has to look at the corporations supporting LGBT during pride month this year to ascertain the success Arcus has had in this arena.
As the example of the Arcus Foundation shows, the LGBT civil rights movement of yore has morphed into a relentless behemoth, one that has strong ties to the medical industrial complex and global corporatists. The pharmaceutical lobby is the largest lobbying entity in Congress. Although activists present the LGBT movement as a weak, powerless group suffering oppression and discrimination, in truth it wields enormous power and influence—power it increasingly uses to remake our laws, schools, and society.
Jennifer Bilek writes from New York City