Politicians need to trust peopleThe speaker here -- the person asking whether Liberal Democratic Party has "the narrative skill, sincerity and honesty" to persuade the public?
December 11, 2013 --
[snip]
The issues we are facing today are things that should have been resolved by the Liberal Democratic Party 10, 15 or 20 years ago. They are, for instance, energy policy, tax system [reform], restructuring the economic structure, agriculture, changing security policy, and so on. But weren't solutions to these issues put off because such measures would cause the party to lose votes, would bring down support rates, or cause defeat in elections if they were mentioned to voters?
I believe the current state of affairs in Japan is that almost nobody trusts politicians. But do politicians trust the people? If you don't speak the truth for fear of losing votes, that may be self-preservation. People who act in such a way should give up politics.
Does the LDP have the narrative skill, sincerity and honesty to persuade people?
The guy who wrote this and more recently said this.
If a lack of self-reflection were a virtue, Ishiba Shigeru would be a living saint.
As it is, he is just a buffoon. A evil-looking, evil-sounding, patronizing buffoon who happens to run the day-to-day affairs of the only party that matters in this blessed land.
The full translated Ishiba comment, including further evidence of the LDP leadership's adolescent wide-eyed staring infatuation with decisiveness, can be accessed here.
"As it is, he is just a buffoon" -- so perhaps people do trust politicians, after all! :-) Another view is that he's a genuinely powerful and violent man, supported within his party, expressing the uncensored views and intentions of the LDP. Which, ironically, would mean that he's pretty awful at keeping secrets.
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