[コラム] 「脱日本」 ~あの国で”◯◯”するにはどうすればいいの?を調べる会社を設立

 

 

日本人が狂った島から出て生きていけるため、世界の法律を調べ、各国に会社を作って売り、そしてそれらを共有して投資家ビザが取れるように会社を作りますた。(正確には作ってる中 @2014/5/1)

 

あそがまこと望月です。

 

会社名はHemenadoa(へめなーどあ)。

 

意味は「ありません」。

おそらく地球上のどの言語でも意味がない”新単語”で、今日の段階ではGoogleの検索結果もありません。

この会社に関すること全てが、このGoogle検索結果に載るでしょう。

 

オラソダ、そしてキプロス、と実地調査を積み重ね、何人も弁護士や会計士と打ち合わせを繰り返して事業計画を練った会社で、今日の段階でぼくのほか3人の日本人の方が出資者になっていただく予定です。

 

具体的には世界の国の法律の条文と実際の運用の「スキマ」を見つけること、ヨーロッパを始めとした世界中の国にカスタムメイドで会社を作って希望者に売ること、それらを通して日本人が投資家ビザをとり、また事業で成功することをサポートすること、が主な仕事です。

 

今これを書いてる段階ではまだ設立手続き中ですが、ツイッターのつぶやきから生まれた

 

「オラソダでもふカフェをやるにはどうすればいいの?」

 

や、

 

「オラソダでアパートを買ってAirbnbとかやっちゃったらどうなの?」

 

という案件ですでに弁護士がスタンバっていて、費用を払えば一週間くらいで全て謎がとける状態にセッティングしておりもす。

 

サイトを作っている時間がないのでとりあえず顔本とたそぶらーで専用ページを作り、オレオ(10€~ すみもすん、ヨーロッパ在住なので€にいたしやしたm(_ _)m)を頂けた方に「読めますよ権」を発行。浮上中の案件やシェア出来る範囲での調査結果を載せていきたいと思っておりもふ。

 

例えば上の「オラソダでアパートを買ってAirbnbとかやっちゃったらどうなの?」については、法律上の規制について450€くらいで弁護士に調査をお願い出来ます。

調査費は個人、カンパ、なんでも構いません。Hemenadoaが弁護士に依頼して、調べてもらいます。調べてもらった内容はメールでも小さい専用グループでも、あるいは一般公開をご希望であれば一般公開でお伝えできもふ。

例えば今度の月曜日に払ったとして、次の月曜日にはオラソダでAirbnbをやるときの規制、規則について世界で一番詳しくなっているでしょう。

 

もう顔本とたそぶらーのページは作ってあるのですが、今ペーパルを引き落とし出来ない状態にされているのでもうちょっと経ってから公開していきたいと思いもふ。

 

 

You read this now because we’ve been surviving until today.
  1. 彼が欠如していますか

    Is he missing? (Kare ga ketsujo shite imasu ka?)

    Iori Mochizuki-sensei harassment has recently increased; and he has been subjected to asset seizures. Is he also now missing? We have not heard from Iori in about 3 days. Therefore, I mentioned this concern on a different website with a similar story.

    ‘How a Single Tweet Could Land a Japanese Nuclear Activist in Jail’

    By Nathalie-Kyoko Stucky May 11, 2014 | 2:15 pm https news vice com/ (article/how-a-single-tweet-may-land-a-japanese-nuclear-activist-in-jail)

    Sincerely,

    Bill Duff

  2. How a Single Tweet Could Land a Japanese Nuclear Activist in Jail

    By Nathalie-Kyoko Stucky May 11, 2014 | 2:15 pm https news vice com/ (article/how-a-single-tweet-may-land-a-japanese-nuclear-activist-in-jail)

    The translation: There’s a common point between the 2 criminals of the century. Yasuhiro Nakasone, who introduced nuclear plants in Japan, said: “I didn’t expect Japan in 2011 to become such a battered country.” Ryoko Ando, a (pro-establishment) citizen activist who hosts Ethos’ human experiments in Fukushima, said: “Is this the kind of world we’ve arrived at over the 67 years since the end of World Ward Two?” Written on Nagasaki Day.”

    The Tweet: Mari Takenouchi @mariscontact Follow

    世紀の罪人2人に共通項→日本に原発導入した中曽根康弘「2011年の日本がこんなにくたびれているとは思わなかった。」福島で人体実験エートスを主催する(御用)市民活動家、安東量子「戦後67年かけて辿り着いたのが、こんな世界とかや。」ー長崎の日にて
    5:25 AM – 11 Jul 2013

    After the tweet appeared, (nuclear lobbyist) Ando, (head of a project led by French NGO the Center of Studies on the Evaluation of Protection in the Nuclear Field (CEPN) and funded by the French nuclear energy lobby) reported it to the Fukushima Prefectural Police, accusing Takenouchi of either criminal defamation or criminal contempt. This past January 29, Takenouchi received a telephone call from Fukushima police, notifying her that Ando had filed a complaint against her. Two weeks later, Takenouchi said police came to her apartment in Okinawa and examined her computer.

    Fukushima police and prosecutors are currently investigating Takenouchi for criminal contempt; if found guilty, she could face a month in jail. Prosecutors confirmed they will be flying to Okinawa, where Takenouchi lives, to question her on May 13. Police have already traveled from Fukushima to Okinawa to interrogate her — an unusual occurrence. “We only send police officers from one prefecture to another if the subject is really a potentially dangerous criminal,” Fukushima police spokesman Lieutenant Tadashi Terashima told VICE News.

    Takenouchi, the potentially dangerous criminal in question, is a journalist and blogger who fled her hometown of Tokyo with her infant son days after the disaster, hoping to avoid fallout from Fukushima. (She was too late; radiation had already reached Tokyo.) Today, she reports on the health of children in Fukushima. ‘Escape to Okinawa’ – http www smh com au/ (world/escape-to-okinawa-20111205-1ofh3) html

  3. The looming arrest, of Mari Takenouchi, is SPONSORED BY: Barack Obama, John Kerry & Caroline Kennedy!

    Japan’s State Secrets Law: Hailed By U.S., Denounced By Japanese

    by Lucy Craft, December 31, 2013 6:53 PM ET, – npr org/ (blogs/parallels/2013/12/31/258655342/japans-state-secrets-law-hailed-by-u-s-denounced-by-japanese)

    While many Japanese see the official secrets law as a massive step backward for civil liberties in Japan, Washington is celebrating. American officials and the U.S. military have long demanded that Japan adopt American-style regulations to allow the seamless sharing of intelligence.

    Last month, Caroline Kennedy, in one of her first public statements as U.S. ambassador to Japan, added her endorsement for a Japanese secrets law. “We support the evolution of Japan’s security policies, as they create a new national security strategy, establish a National Security Council, and take steps to protect national security secrets,” she said.

    https news vice com/ (article/how-a-single-tweet-may-land-a-japanese-nuclear-activist-in-jail) — http www npr org/ (blogs/parallels/2013/12/31/258655342/japans-state-secrets-law-hailed-by-u-s-denounced-by-japanese) — http www smh com au/ (world/escape-to-okinawa-20111205-1ofh3) html

  4. Legal experts worry Japan’s secrecy law may silence journalists

    Stars and Stripes Home / News, By Erik Slavin, Published: December 17, 2013,
    http www stripes com/ (news/legal-experts-worry-japan-s-secrecy-law-may-silence-journalists-1.257943)

    Opponents of the law, passed Dec. 6 at the end of a special legislative session with little public debate, say its broad language and criminal penalty clauses could be used to keep government misdeeds from public view. The law penalizes civil servants with up to 10 years in prison for leaking state secrets, protocol similar to U.S. punishment. But Japan goes much further than the U.S. and other democracies with a clause that penalizes citizens with prison if they use “inappropriate methods” in encouraging a bureaucrat to divulge information considered secret.

    Japanese officials who crafted the law insist that it doesn’t target journalists or average citizens making information requests. “It says very clearly that these information-gathering activities are only subjected to penalties if the person is trying to get this kind of information on behalf of a foreign government,” Gen Nakatani, the government’s point man on national security, said in response to a Stars and Stripes question Dec. 11. “In other words, engaging in spying opportunities, or perhaps trying to work on behalf of a terrorist organization. “If that person, without that kind of motivation, reveals that information, I do not think he would be subjected to penalty.”

    However, legal analysts remain concerned about how current and future governments might evaluate the motivations of a citizen or journalist. Tsutomu Shimizu, secretary-general of the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, said his group is often consulted on matters of legal precision prior to bills being introduced in Japan’s national Diet. There was no such consultation for this law, he said. “What we lawyers are particularly concerned about is that this law could get out of hand,” Shimizu told reporters recently. “It really depends on … how a court would evaluate [a journalist’s] behavior.” Civil rights and media groups already take a dim view the Japanese government’s respect for its citizens’ right to know.

  5. Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan — “The Correspondents’ Table” podcast, March 2014: http www fccj or jp/ (news-and-views/club-news-multimedia/403-the-correspondents-table-march-podcast-talking-about-post-3-11-tohoku) html — http enenews com/ (n-y-times-reporter-untold-story-of-fukushima-is-the-radiation-issue-how-bad-is-it-really-govt-doesnt-want-us-talking-about-it-a-lot-going-on-that-just-doesnt-get-talked-about-i)

    NY Times Reporter: Untold story of Fukushima is the radiation issue, gov’t doesn’t want us talking about it; A lot going on that’s never reported by media — Afraid of being imprisoned under Japan’s new secrecy law; All officials have to do is say the info is secret (AUDIO)

    Host: Are you at all afraid of this new secrecy law affecting your sources, for example, on the nuclear issues?

    Martin Fackler of the New York Times Pulitzer-Prize nominated reporting team: Yeah, I am — the government gives us reassurances… My biggest concern is none of these protections of journalism that bureaucrats give you, these verbal reassurances that journalists won’t be affected by the law, none of them are in writing. The law itself doesn’t contain any of these reassurances, so we get these verbal reassurances: “It’s not aimed at journalists; it’s not aimed at journalism; it’s not aimed at transparency and public discourse.” But if you look at the law, none of that is in there. The law actually leaves a lot of leeway, that if somebody else were to interpret that a different way, you actually could throw people in prison. All the government has to do is say this is a secret and your source gets put into prison and perhaps you as well. It does worry me that the language is so broad and so vague that it could be taken a different way very easily.

  6. Transcript: Senate Intelligence hearing on national security threats, Published: January 29, The Senate Intelligence Committee held an annual hearing on the nation’s most significant security threats. Transcript courtesy of Federal News Service. — http www washingtonpost com/ (world/national-security/transcript-senate-intelligence-hearing-on-national-security-threats/2014/01/29/b5913184-8912-11e3-833c-33098f9e5267_story) html

    Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, CIA Director John Brennan, Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and FBI Director James Comey arrive at the hearing. http www washingtonpost com/ rf/image_404h/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2014/01/29/National-Security/Images/465762577-828 jpg

    SEN. RUBIO: OK. I wanted to ask you quickly about Asia. I just returned from a trip to Japan. I know that they have recently made changes to their intelligence — the laws governing their intelligence programs. Could you comment — whoever would be appropriate — briefly on how that’s increased our ability to partner with them and how you see the opportunities to more fully engage with the Japanese on intelligence sharing, given their increased capacity and the protections now afforded via that law?

    DIR. CLAPPER: Yes, sir. I was aware of your visit and appreciate your engagement with some of our intel people.

    SEN. RUBIO: Are you following me? (Laughs.) No, I’m kidding.

    DIR. CLAPPER: The Japanese are emerging as great partners. They — and the passage of this secrets protection law, as it’s called, are going to do just as you inferred — enable us to do more sharing with us.

    We are in — have agreed on a recent — recently on an intelligence-sharing arrangement where they will be sharing with us. I’d be happy to go into more detail about this, but they are really emerging as great intelligence partners, and this extends to the prime minister.

    SEN. RUBIO: Thank you. & SEN. FEINSTEIN: Thank you very much, Senator Rubio.

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About this site

This website updates the latest news about the Fukushima nuclear plant and also archives the past news from 2011. Because it's always updated and added live, articles, categories and the tags are not necessarily fitted in the latest format.
I am the writer of this website. About page remains in 2014. This is because my memory about 311 was clearer than now, 2023, and I think it can have a historical value. Now I'm living in Romania with 3 cats as an independent data scientist.
Actually, nothing has progressed in the plant since 2011. We still don't even know what is going on inside. They must keep cooling the crippled reactors by water, but additionally groundwater keeps flowing into the reactor buildings from the broken parts. This is why highly contaminated water is always produced more than it can circulate. Tepco is planning to officially discharge this water to the Pacific but Tritium is still remaining in it. They dilute this with seawater so that it is legally safe, but scientifically the same amount of radioactive tritium is contained. They say it is safe to discharge, but none of them have drunk it.

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