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Okaya, Nagano Prefecture, Japan

December 2010

Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner.


Thursday, December 2, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

For public consumption, the majority of scientists had been likely to avoid the question of whether extraterrestrial beings exist in the universe or not, because of the lack of the data necessary to estimate it and the suspiciousness accompanied by numerous wild rumors. Recently, however, it has gradually become a reasonable question because of some favorable discoveries. In the present stage, the answer that extraterrestrial beings don't exist isn't correct, scientifically speaking. The other answer that extraterrestrial beings do exist in the universe isn't correct, either. The right answer to the question above is that human beings don't know it. Some recent discoveries such as the water in the soils on both Mars and the Earth's moon and an amino acid on the surfaces of some meteorites have raised the possibility of the existence of extraterrestrial beings a little bit. In the future, human beings will be able to estimate the possibility of the existence of extraterrestrial beings rather accurately when the number of solar systems similar to our solar system in the whole universe is approximately known through astronomical observations.
In the following paragraphs dealing with some SF-like topics, let's assume that extraterrestrial beings really exist somewhere in the universe. The question of whether human beings will be able to go to a distant planet and meet an extraterrestrial being there some future day or not is difficult to answer for everybody. If human beings were to find a method that enables them to travel "safely" and "controllably" beyond the limit of the speed, which is the speed of light in empty space according to the special theory of relativity, human beings may be able to find extraterrestrial beings on a faraway planet from the earth. Different from what human beings dream, however, human beings may be unable to find a method forever. Within the reach of human beings traveling at a speed up to 99% of the speed of light without a method, which is tens to hundreds of light-years away from the earth at best, human beings may discover the existence of extraterrestrial beings and their vestiges, as luck would have it. In such a very limited space, human beings may never discover any evidence of extraterrestrial beings at all.
There is another way to encounter extraterrestrial beings. An extraterrestrial being may find the earth in advance. In this case, there is no knowing what would happen to human beings. It's absolutely certain that an extraterrestrial visitor is much more advanced than a human being. Whether human beings live or die would be completely up to an extraterrestrial being who could find us. Indeed, this is a really unfortunate situation.
Space travel beyond the limit of the speed "safely" may be just impossible for all forms of life in the universe. This may be the reason why any extraterrestrial being has never visited the earth though there are many stars in the night sky. In this case, no extraterrestrial being will ever come to the earth from a far distant space. Still, there is only a small possibility to meet with extraterrestrial beings from the not very distant planets. This idea may be boring but it's surely secure.
"My intuitive belief" is that extraterrestrial beings exist in the universe. This is simply because this thought is delightful even though it's really hard for people of today to find its evidence out within our lifetime. Actually, it's very faintly possible that a fossil of the extraterrestrial microorganisms that might have lived in the disappeared oceans could be discovered in the crust of the planet Mars in the near future.  For the sake of our safety, however, "my hope" is that extraterrestrial beings will never find and come to Planet Earth through a wormhole of space-time or any other means.


Friday, December 3, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and pieces of Archer Farms' pizza for dinner.

My wife and I were looking forward to seeing both the movie under the title "King's Speech" which was released last Friday and the movie under the title "Black Swan" which was released at limited theaters today. Unfortunately, however, both movies haven't yet been released in Austin Texas.

Since the end of the Cold War structure in the early 1990s, the meaning of the existence of the Japan-US Security Treaty has been the subject of the argument whenever occasion arose. It's not too much to say that what was substantially agreed by the Japan-US Security Treaty are both the stationing of the US forces in Japan and the suppression of an unlikely event of its domestic warfare though there are other Articles. If an emergency had arisen in the Far East during the Cold War, the US would have staged a military intervention immediately without being asked, regardless of the Security Treaty. In the post-Cold War period, the US hasn't had any hostile rival in the military power in the Far East region, at least as the outward appearance. Since almost the same period of time, the functions of the manufacturing industries for world demands that used to be centralized in Japan have been gradually getting dispersed over various countries in Asia, especially China, as the price wars have proceeded. In other words, the gist in dispute is whether the US will stage a military intervention post the Cold War or not if an emergency should arise in the Far East. To be honest, there is an uncertainty.
Reluctantly, what Japan had to accomplish for the last two decades and has to do for the future is to increase its own defense capacity, while maintaining a nearly empty threat produced by the Security Treaty at least until the accomplishment of the expansion of its defense system to some extent observing the three non-nuclear principles, and remaining as neutral as possible. The conclusion is inevitable that there's no other choice but to protect its own country by its own efforts. Needless to say, however, war must be avoided, especially when it isn't sure whether it can terminate the war for a short period of time, withholding the number of casualties on both sides to a minimum, or not. Therefore, before increasing its defense power beyond a certain strength, an irritable character of the Japanese should be brought under control, as firmly as possible. As written several times previously, it's just a weakness from an international perspective.


Saturday, December 4, 2010
Got up at ten forty-five in the morning. Ate a Japanese meal for lunch. Went out shopping at a grocery store this afternoon. Ate a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.


Sunday, December 5, 2010
Got up at ten forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and an American meal for dinner.


Monday, December 6, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate an American meal for lunch. Went to request some photos, one of which is attached to the application form for the renewal of my wife's passport, a neighborhood photo studio. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the Reuters online news today". The following is my comment on it:
Have been taking a low dose of aspirin to reduce the risk of stroke once a day since May 27, 2009. Although whether it's true or not is uncertain, taking low doses of aspirin seems to be rather preferable in preventing some major adult diseases, including also cancer according to Reuters. By the way, it would be wonderful if both my wife and I could undergo a thorough physical examination because we both are forty-something.


Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.


Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

    -"This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following are my comments on it:
This topic reminded me of a short story by Mr. F. S. Fitzgerald, "A Diamond as Big as the Ritz". In the crust of a planet 1,200 light-years distant from the earth, a diamond as big as a Ritz Hotel might exist, exaggeratedly speaking. In order to visit a possible diamond-rich planet, a method that makes it possible to travel beyond the limit of speed has to be discovered. Without using such a method, a manned spacecraft that is capable of accelerating to nearly 99.99% of the velocity of light in vacuum or beyond will be necessary to shuttle between the earth and a distant planet in thousands of years when it's measured on the earth, within the crew's lifetime of tens of years measured on a spacecraft by taking the time dilation of the theory of relativity into consideration, in order to mine diamonds on a distant planet and transport them to the earth in the far future. When a spacecraft is capable of reaching 99.99% of the speed of light, the time elapsed on it is about 1.41% of the time elapsed on the earth due to the slowing down of time. Indeed, it's too hard for a spacecraft to reach such an extremely high velocity because the inertial mass also increases up to 70.7 times larger than the rest mass increasing the speed up to 99.99% of the velocity of light. In other words, it's getting more difficult to accelerate as the velocity becomes closer to its maximum beyond a certain level.
If it's just impossible to find either a method that makes it possible to travel beyond the limit of the speed or another method that enables it to accelerate to 99.99% of the velocity of light or beyond, no human being will be able to accomplish this mission forever. Instead of a manned spacecraft, an unmanned spacecraft that is capable of accelerating to 1 ~ 90% of the velocity of light and is loaded with the automatic equipment specialized for diamond mining might be able to shuttle between the earth and a distant planet in thousands, tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of years, without worrying about the crew's lifetime. Needless to say, neither a humanoid crew nor a humanoid miner is necessary for this purpose. There is no guarantee that human beings will still be alive on the earth until its return, however.

By the way, my preference is for platinum rather than gold and silver because of its hardness, stability, and rareness, and then the gems because of their easiness of process. My wife is rather interested in the dazzling blaze of the gems, such as a diamond.


Thursday, December 9, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Western-Japanese meal for dinner.


Friday, December 10, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Western-Japanese meal for dinner.

In a fickle manner, my wife changed her mind about seeing "Black Swan", which was released at a movie theater in Austin TX today. Probably, it worries her intuitively that either a strange person may wait for us at a theater, as happened previously, or a hidden unsavory meaning may be included in the movie. If only we could simply enjoy seeing a movie, listening to music, and reading a book, without any trouble.


Saturday, December 11, 2010
Got up at ten-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch. Went out shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Ate pieces of Archer Farms' pizza for dinner.

For the last few days, by following its outline either on a couch or a bed, my knowledge of the theory of relativity that I learned about two decades ago has been refreshed. It took me months to understand the theory in my school days, but it now took me just a few hours to refresh what was once understood.


Sunday, December 12, 2010
Got up at ten-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Monday, December 13, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.


Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following are my comments on it:
Voyager 1, which was launched in 1977, is now taking its way toward the heliopause of our solar system at the velocity of 17km/s, which is 0.00567% of the velocity of light in a vacuum. If Voyager 1 were to go towards the possibly diamond-rich planet 1,200 light-years away from our solar system at the constant speed of 17km/s, it would take Voyager 1 about twenty-one million years to reach there. The areas opened for developments by human beings will be limited on planets, satellites, and asteroids in our solar system for quite some time.

An idea about a future spacecraft for interstellar travel occurred to me this evening. This is a version improved by me based on a photon rocket that was originally proposed by a German engineer in the 1950s. A future spacecraft that is capable of accelerating to as near the velocity of light as possible may need to be equipped with a rocket engine utilizing the energy released from pair-annihilations between antiparticles and their particle partners. An enormous quantity of antiprotons has to be created and stored in a high vacuum fuel camber in a non-contact way at an interplanetary space station, as described in my diary on November 10, 2010. An antiproton fuel camber should be uploaded on a future spacecraft at the dock of a station. In operation, a small amount of negatively charged antiprotons is continuously brought out from a fuel chamber and jetted out from the nozzles placed at the rear of a spacecraft in a non-contact way inside the rocket electro-magnetically, with nearly the same amount of positively charged protons jetted out from the other nozzles. The antiproton beam and the proton beam are designed to cross each other. The controlled pair-annihilations that should occur near the jet nozzles surrounded by the heat-resistant reflecting mirrors generate a massive outpouring of high-energy and high-dense gamma rays in the rearward direction, like a jet engine. The inertial mass of a photon with the frequency of n is equal to the value dividing its total energy of hn by the square of c (h: Planck's constant, c: velocity of light). Therefore, only high-energy (i.e. high-frequency, short-wavelength) electromagnetic radiation is effective in transmitting force. A spacecraft emitting very high-powered gamma rays from its jets may gather speed in the forward direction, ruled by the law of conservation of momentum.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Got up at seven o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

In a design of the Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket, the amounts of both antiprotons and protons consumed per unit of time, the size, shape, and material of the heat-resistant reflecting mirrors, and the shortest distance between the point where the antiproton beam and the proton beam cross each other and the surface of the reflecting mirrors have to be carefully optimized in order not to break the reflecting mirrors while minimizing loss of energy.


Thursday, December 16, 2010
Got up at eight-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

On the assumption that the energy from pair-annihilations between antiparticles and their particle partners are converted to gamma rays and then to the energy of translational motion of a rocket without loss of energy, at a rough estimate the final velocity of the Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket is about 70.7% of the velocity of light when the mass of antiproton fuel, that of proton fuel and that of a rocket without fuels are 25%, 25% and 50% of the entire mass, respectively. In order to reach 99.99% of the velocity of light, which is necessary for human beings to shuttle between the earth and a planet 1,200 light-years distant from the earth, a rocket engine needs to consume both the antiproton and the proton fuels, the masses of which are about 49.3% and 49.3% of the entire mass. It seems to be very difficult even for the Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket to reach 99.99% of the velocity of light. However, in the best-case scenario, an unmanned Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket can travel to a planet 1,200 light-years distant from the earth in thousands of years. In this case, a possible accident will take no victim.
Is there any platinum-rich planet in the not-too-distant space from the earth?


Friday, December 17, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Went to the Consulate-General of Japan in Houston in order to pick up my wife's renewed passport. Ate a lunch meal at an Italian restaurant halfway to Houston. Returned home this evening, after receiving my wife's passport there. It was about a seven-hour drive to and from Houston. Blinking often while driving a car today helped prevent eye fatigue. Ate a bowl of cereal and a bowl of vegetable soup for dinner.


Saturday, December 18, 2010
Got up at eleven o'clock. Ate a bowl of cereal for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, December 19, 2010
Got up at eight-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch. Went out shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Ate a Japanese-Chinese meal for dinner.

With the use of pair annihilation, one of two major problems of a photon rocket, that is the energy source, is solved, but the other still remains. The gamma rays are very penetrating because their wavelength is below 0.01nm, which is smaller than a lattice constant. In order to make the Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket gather speed effectively in the forward direction without breaking the reflecting mirrors, the reflectivity of the reflecting mirrors has to be significantly improved. The loss in energy due to scatterings of the transmitted gamma rays by nuclei and electrons, ionizations by ejection of orbiting electrons, and emissions of lower energy photons by transitions of orbiting electrons between energy levels inside the reflecting mirrors may decrease with increasing their reflectivity. Ideally, the total reflection is desirable in order to accelerate to as near the velocity of light as possible. It seems that this aim cannot be carried out by only the choice of the material among heavy metals (e.g. Tungsten) and their alloys. A unique treatment that improves the gamma-ray reflectivity of the material for the reflecting mirrors in operation, in addition to the polishing of their surface, may need to be identified. This problem cannot be settled with any ordinary method, to my knowledge. Well then, let me devise an extraordinary solution to the problem in my mind either on a couch or a bed sometimes.


Monday, December 20, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

According to my proposal, in addition to a fusion reactor, an accelerator for a particular purpose, and an interplanetary space station, the development of a special reflector is also necessary in order for future interstellar travel. Currently, none of them are available. Obviously, it will require a lot of time.


Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Got up at six-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese-Western meal for dinner.


Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following is my comment on it:
Hopefully, the fissional nuclear materials taken away from a lot of nuclear warheads disarmed under the terms of a treaty will be reused only for peaceful purposes. How many months or years these "bonus" nuclear fuels will additionally satisfy our energy needs is an interesting question. This will allow stalling for time, so that the beginning of the conversion from the currently common reactors such as LWR and HWR to the future fast-breeder reactors may be delayed to some extent.


Thursday, December 23, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and pieces of Archer Farms' pizza for dinner.


Friday, December 24, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, a piece of shortcake at snack time, and a dish of Italian pasta and other dishes for dinner.

In a desirable mode for the reflecting mirror of a photon rocket, an incident gamma ray is backscattered by a nucleus without ejecting any orbiting electron or emitting any low-energy photon, and then a reflected ray travels right backward. On the other hand, in an undesirable mode, an incident gamma ray is backscattered by a nucleus with ejecting orbiting electrons or emitting lower energy photons, and then a reflected ray is again backscattered by another nucleus toward the inside while canceling a gained momentum out approximately. In another undesirable mode, an incident gamma ray is multi-scattered by nuclei and free electrons while consuming energy and causing needless ionizations inside the reflecting mirror. These undesirable modes happen more frequently as the incident gamma rays go deeper inside the reflecting mirror. In other words, the incident gamma rays have to be backscattered by heavy nuclei located in a few dense layers or "something else" near the surface for the application to the reflector of a photon rocket.
The reflectivity for X-ray may be tunable by depositing a certain kind of superlattice layers on the surface of the reflector and optimizing its lattice structure. It seems that this sort of method may also influence the reflectivity of gamma rays but may not be effective because of its very short wavelength. What I have been revolving in my mind sometimes since this Sunday is the above-mentioned "something else".

My wife and I have seldom watched TV programs from the summer of 2006 until the spring of 2009. For that period of time, the average time we spent watching TV programs was about ten hours per year. We haven't seen any TV program since February 2009 at all. Indeed, there is no TV set in our house.


Saturday, December 25, 2010
Today is Christmas Day. Got up at ten-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, a piece of shortcake at snack time, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.

Went to see the movie under the title of "The King's Speech" at the Regal Arbor Theater this evening. The well-known episode in the British royal family's history in the early twentieth century about the accessions of King Edward VIII and his younger brother King George VI to the throne has ever been fascinating to me since way back. This historical comedy deals with a friendship between King George VI and his speech therapist as its theme plays out against the backdrop of the pre-WWII. In the film, the remarkable contrast in character between King Edward VIII, who tends not to follow the fixed ways, and King George VI, who hardens into the fixed ways, arouses audiences' curiosity. A speech-training scene just like "Rocky" is very amusing.


Sunday, December 26, 2010
Got up at eleven o'clock. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch. Went out shopping this afternoon. Ate a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner.

Went to see the movie under the title of "Black Swan" at the Regal Arbor Theater this afternoon. The film stares deeply into the real self of a ballerina, who devotes herself to ballet dancing. She is a perfectionist with a frail mentality and lives alone with her mother with peculiarly artistic and overly protective temperaments. A ballet master of a ballet company she belongs to attempts to make her outgrown and released from a spell suitable for performing the role of Black Swan by every trick possible. Different from what a ballet master plans, she continues to seek an ideal perfectionism. At last, she achieves her perfection of Back Swan but gets cracked in conclusion.
Contrary to a Jedi master of "Star Wars" films, a very eccentric ballet master tries to lead a ballerina to the darker side. Let me add a few more words just to make sure. This film is rated R.


Monday, December 27, 2010
Got up at eight-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.


Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Today is our 9th wedding anniversary. Got up at eight forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch. Went out shopping at a grocery store this evening. Ate a dish with Cornish Blue Cheese, pear, and vegetables as an appetizer, and a main dish followed by an additional Japanese meal for dinner.


Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Got up at ten-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a Japanese-Western meal for dinner.


Thursday, December 30, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese-Western meal for dinner. Watched a DVD of the movie under the title of "The Hunt for Red October" on my computer monitor this evening.


Friday, December 31, 2010
Got up at eight-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, a dish of Extra-Aged Appenzeller Cheese, pear, and vegetables, and a bowl of Japanese buckwheat noodle soup for dinner. Watched a DVD of the movie under the title of "Casablanca" on my computer monitor this evening.

It shouldn't be difficult for a person who was born and brought up in a non-English-speaking country, graduated from colleges there, and currently lives in an English-speaking country where one's native language isn't spoken to guess the purpose of this diary. The primary purpose is to translate the words retained in my memory from Japanese into English, by visiting as many various topics attracting my interests as possible and writing about them in English. For my diary, only the topics that aren't touching any sensitive matter were selected. If a topic is rather sensitive, an evasive expression is usually used. Take the topic of the Pair-Annihilation Photon Rocket, for instance. Naturally, this sort of advanced rocket designed for interstellar travel is far ahead of the time. It will be necessary in the world a few hundred years hence or beyond. The invention and the development of such a future device in my mind either on a couch or a bed for the purpose of refreshing what I learned about previously such as Physics, Material Sciences, and other fundamental and social sciences, and translating the technical terms in these fields kept in my mind into English shouldn't cause any trouble. This process also helps me maintain my creativity and imagination while avoiding being a person who is ignorant outside one's field. The secondary purpose of my keeping a diary is the countermeasures for dealing with groundless outrageous rumors, as written several times in my diary.

November 2010

Monday, November 1, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.


Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Western meal for dinner.

The recent peripheral circumstances of Japan may suggest that even a tortoise-shell cat should put on its own impenetrable armor and hold up its own unbreakable shields, not only beckoning something from outside. Although it's true that attack is the best form of defense, it's hoped that an advantage in technologies will be used to establish its own necessary defense systems only, making up for a weakness of offensive strengths.


Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball, and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.


Thursday, November 4, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner.

Pumping too much water and gases from the ground has gradually caused land subsidence in many cities in the world since the Industrial Revolution until the late twentieth century, as well known. In ports such as Venice and Amsterdam, the problems that have been caused by subsidence of the ground are more serious. Some of these ports sank near sea level and the others became the areas below sea level. Obviously, these cities are very delicate for future rising sea levels due to other reasons, such as the possible climate change.

BTW, the circulating groundwater to utilize geothermal energy will not cause any land subsidence, possibly.


Friday, November 5, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and pieces of California Pizza Kitchen's pizza for dinner.

During a period of rapid economic growth, the division of a company may be beneficial in some cases but not in others. During the period of the comparatively sedate pace of growth in a matured economy, instead, the trend of merger is probably more necessary in order to cut down on wastefulness in management, production developments, and so on. In this period of stagnation, however, the spin-offs in expectation of future mergers among separated companies in the same line of business might be meaningful. In the case of Motorola Inc., it seems that any spin-off has been unnecessary since the year 2000. Indeed, I have never fully endorsed Motorola's spin-off.


Saturday, November 6, 2010
Got up at eight forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.


Sunday, November 7, 2010
Got up at eight forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Ate a BBQ meal for dinner.

It's an undeniable fact that all of the fossil fuels on the earth will be drained in the near future. In broad terms, human beings have to make a choice from two categories of available energy resources, renewable energy resources and nuclear energy resources. Which Hollywood movie you prefer, "Deep Impact" or "Armageddon", may help you make it clear which energy strategy you really prefer, "Renewable Energy" or "Nuclear Energy". As written about one year ago in my diary, small meteors continually showered the earth but most of them burn up in the earth's atmosphere. If a gigantic meteor comes, it won't be burned up in the atmosphere and its impact on the earth could wipe out mankind. Such a very large meteor will hit the earth someday in the distant future though humankind may not be alive there due to other causes until the time comes. In these two Hollywood movies, both of which were released in 1998, a Texas-size meteor comes within months or years. The movie "Deep Impact" gives serious dramas of human relationships in extremely tragic situations. In this movie, most of human being on the earth accepts their fate. On the other hand, the movie "Armageddon" is clamorous and highly entertaining. In the latter movie, a team consisting of elite astronauts from NASA and rough engineers of a drilling firm go to a meteor, break it miraculously, and come to a happy ending.
People who like the movie "Deep Impact" may also like "Renewable Energy Scheme". In this course, human beings have to alternate fossil fuels with renewable sources of energy, such as solar power and wind power, "very slowly" while consuming and exhausting fossil fuels and exploiting and recycling natural resources necessary to gain renewable energy. Here, the possibility that this plan will succeed cannot be assured. The plan may require a human being to reduce its population drastically. The global economy may need to slow down in order to relieve climate change. Indeed, this plan isn't an effective measure against possible global warming. Although at first blush it seems peaceful, the plan may not be so. Some aggressive people prefer this plan because, as they always have done, they can continue to wage wars for a long period of time, without changing the state of the world. The developments in physical sciences and space technologies won't be vigorously pursued after all of the fossil fuels run out because of the non-abundance of energy resources.
People who like the movie "Armageddon" may also like the "Nuclear Energy Scheme". In this course, human beings have to improve the safety and the efficiency of both nuclear fission reactors and breeder reactors ceaselessly and will have also to bring a nuclear fusion reactor to realization in the future. With the development of reactors, more concentrated peacemaking efforts should be made. Until the peacemaking is considerably advanced, the widespread of nuclear reactors among the countries with political instability have to be tightly restricted. Here, the possibility that this plan will succeed depends upon the feasibility of a nuclear fusion reactor. If it has a low degree of practicability, human beings will have to alternate fissional fuels with renewable sources of energy when all fissional fuels are used up in the future millenniums from now. If the D-D fusion reactor comes to pass in the future, human beings will never have to rack their brains over energy problems. The developments in physical sciences and space technologies can be vigorously pursued, especially when a D-D fusion reactor becomes a reality. Human beings may be able to have a defense system to protect Planet Earth against coming meteors in the distant future, for instance by using large amounts of the energy that are released from massive pair-annihilations when ordinary matters and antimatters meet, or something else. However, such dangerous stuff mustn't be developed on the earth. It should be built and stored by the unified nation only at a very clean spot in interplanetary space in the far-off future.
My preference is the middle way between the former and the latter. Human beings should continue to alternate fossil fuels with renewable sources of energy while making efforts for peacemaking and also developing advanced nuclear reactors for the future. Hopefully, a fusion reactor will come true. Neither any nuclear weapon nor a stronger one is necessary on the earth. Any destructive weapon such as nuclear weapons shouldn't be carried in orbit around the earth and into outer space until a unified nation is founded in the future.
Indeed, the majority of people are self-seeking and they aren't interested in either the future tens to hundreds of years from now when the influence of global warming may be actualized, or the far-off future when a gigantic meteor comes into collision with the earth. Most people are interested in the future within their lifetime, especially the near future a few days, a few weeks, a few months, or a few years from now, depending on each personality. Rather disinterested people may care about the future within the lifetimes of their children and grandchildren. It seems that they have little interest in the above-mentioned topics though they may be entertained with those Hollywood movies. One of the government's duties is to educate those people.


Monday, November 8, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

US officials at the White House made a comment as if they would have been encouraging Iran to carry out nuclear testing. A recent chain of events may be interpreted as a sort of allegiance test. Most unfortunately, it seems that there exists a group that wants Iran to follow in the footsteps of North Korea.


Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Purchased a book under the title, "Decision Points" written by former President Mr. George W. Bush tonight. It goes without saying that my purchasing of this book doesn't imply my support to all the second generations and all the third generations.

Has anyone ever created the antimatter of hydrogen in a solid state? The antiparticles (the positron, the antiproton, the antineutron, etc.) that have the same mass as a given ordinary particle but opposite electric/magnetic properties, and are the elements of the antimatters have been found in cosmic rays and can be created by means of particle accelerators. It means that the pieces of a puzzle are available. Probably, any currently operating particle accelerator doesn't have enough ability to generate such enormous amounts of both the antiproton and the positron. Extraordinary amounts of electricity have to be consumed in order to produce it. Extracting the antiparticles from the particle accelerator and maintaining them in a chamber while preventing them from colliding with their ordinary particles may be rather difficult.
Probably, the antiproton that is an antiparticle of proton and negatively charged can be magnetically confined in a high vacuum chamber in theory. Maintaining a few antiprotons in a chamber doesn't lead to any serious accidents. However, the degree of danger definitely increases in proportion to the increase in the number of antiprotons in a chamber. Therefore, it's difficult to hold a mass of the antimatter of solid-state hydrogen that is composed of the positron and the antiproton at the center of a high vacuum chamber safely, especially on Planet Earth. If a mass of the antimatter of solid-state hydrogen were to be formed and held at the center of a high vacuum chamber at the temperature below its melting point of 14 K, in noncontact with any ordinary matter, somewhere on the earth, it must be very carefully dealt with. As written yesterday, this may be rather safely carried out only in interplanetary space, out of the influence of both the interactions with ordinary matters and the strong gravity of the nearby planets.
Deuterium can be refined out of abundant water on the earth, the moon, the planet Mars, etc. A tank of the Liquid-state Deuterium, which is non-toxic, is transported to a station with a D-D fusion reactor placed in interplanetary space in order to generate electricity and operate a particle accelerator there. The antiprotons are produced through the use of a particle accelerator and then confined in the clean space electromagnetically. A mass of the antiproton that is the nucleus of the antimatter of hydrogen can also be kept as the antimatter of solid-state hydrogen in space. When a gigantic meteor coming toward the earth is found in the far-off future, human beings just need to run either a mass of the antimatter of solid-state hydrogen or a large flux of antiprotons into it. That's all there is to it.
Anyway, it's a great relief that neither the private sector nor the country can achieve this future plan single-handedly, to my knowledge. Needless to say, at present time, no country can do it. Any antigovernment group will never be able to handle such extraordinary stuff. Although it sounds like an SF novel, this plan isn't so unrealistic.


Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Started reading "Decision Points". In the first section, the story of his early life is told in a Texan-taste narrative style.

It seems that the pair-annihilations through the collisions between the ordinary particles that dominantly compose our universe and the antiparticles that can be produced by the use of a particle accelerator aren't appropriate for commercial applications to the generation of electricity. This is simply because the consumption the energy for both the production of the antiparticles and their storing may always be larger than that for the gain in the energy from pair-annihilations occurring when the yielded antiparticles meet their particle partners. Probably, the future discovery of antimatter as a natural resource shouldn't be anticipated at least within the spaces of our universe where human beings will be able to reach, since the antimatter is extremely rare in our universe.
Human beings have ever been spending vast amounts of funds for developments in physical sciences and space technologies until now, especially since the middle twentieth century. The spending of the funds for the establishment of a defense system to protect the Planet Earth in interplanetary space against coming large meteors seems to be more meaningful than that for military purposes after the end of the Cold War structure and even for resource development from outer space. In any case, it takes quite a long period of time because before starting the development of such an advanced accelerator or a new device for the purpose of creating the antimatter of solid-state hydrogen, the human being has to realize a D-D fusion reactor and also to build a space station somewhere in interplanetary space.


Thursday, November 11, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Read two more sections of "Decision Points". Two episodes about former Texas Lieutenant Governor Mr. Bob Bullock and former US Vice President Mr. Dick Cheney are amusing.

Both a geranium in a flowerpot and a stand in the Greek column style placed at the entrance of my house disappeared today. It seems that a group doesn't like a geranium or a Germanium. Probably, a group also doesn't like either a Greek-style or a Roman-style.


Friday, November 12, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and pieces of Archer Farms' pizza for dinner. Read a section on "Decision Points".

Currently most promising candidate for the coolant of the next-generation Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR) is liquid sodium. The other coolants such as the helium-gas and the liquid-lead have also been evaluated, so far. Naturally, all of these coolants don't moderate the fast neutrons emitted from the fission reactions. The uses of both types of liquid metals as the coolant have an advantage in the high heat conduction over the use of the gas. However, the use of liquid sodium has a disadvantage in its explosiveness, and that of liquid lead has a disadvantage in its poisonousness. The use of helium gas as the coolant has an advantage in the safety of others but has a disadvantage in the low heat conduction.
The liquid sodium catches fire in contact with the air and explodes with the water. At least, any accidental explosion associated with the contact between the liquid sodium and the water has to be avoided for mass production. Therefore, it's desirable that the sodium FBR should be built in arid regions. Moreover, for the sodium FBR, the supercritical fluid turbine may replace the steam turbine. In this case, there is far less risk due to the contact with the water. For instance, supercritical CO2 is less reactive in contact with the sodium than the water is. There may exist more suitable supercritical fluid than the supercritical CO2 for the turbine of the sodium FBR. Therefore, the problem of the explosiveness of the liquid-sodium coolant of the sodium FBR may be resolved by the choices of both the location to construct and the type of turbine. There is another benefit to building the reactors only in either arid or desert regions where few forms of life live. 
Although the helium gas coolant has a disadvantage in low heat conduction and requires a high-temperature operation, the degree of its safety is most desirable. The helium-gas coolant should be one of the potential options for multiple places.


Saturday, November 13, 2010
Got up at nine o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Read two sections of "Decision Points".


The following indicates two figures explaining the unique design of the wind turbine produced jointly by my wife and me. The left figure illustrates a wind turbine in no wind condition and the right figure illustrates a wind turbine when blades are rotating. The purpose of this design of the wind turbine is to protect any bird from the fatal blow by its rotating blades at both a rather slow speed and a high speed of rotation.
Birds are instinctively afraid of high-contrast coloring (e.g. Black & Yellow, Black & White, etc.) of concentric circles because it probably brings up the image of the eye of its enemy. The influence of this color arrangement on smaller birds is certain, but its influence on larger birds such as raptors and wading birds is uncertain, to our knowledge. This design of the wind turbine may let most birds avoid coming closer to any deadly wind turbine at every rotation speed. Birds can recognize these two-toned concentric circles painted on the blades and the pole of the wind turbine at short to long ranges. The presence of many wind turbines with this design onshore and offshore may cause many birds neurosis but may help protect their lives. For offshore uses, a device that is designed to produce explosively loud noise in order to shoo away sea birds can be attached as an option though it may slightly reduce its efficiency of electricity generation.
The above-mentioned design and option of our bird-friendly wind turbine may increase the cost of a wind turbine by about 0.1 to 0.2%, at most.

Sunday, November 14, 2010
Got up at ten-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Ate a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner. Read a section on "Decision Points".


Monday, November 15, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a Japanese rice ball and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Read a section on "Decision Points".  The 8th section, "IRAQ" expresses a very tense atmosphere those days before a multinational force mainly composed of the US and the UK forces invaded Iraq in order to remove the dictatorial government that had surely possessed and used chemical weapons until 1998 at least, may still have maintained them in its arsenals, possibly with biological weapons, and had always been suspicious of sponsoring terrorist groups.


Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner. Read three sections of "Decision Points".

A report on the items that were stolen from the entrance of my house last Thursday was filed to a sheriff this afternoon. The partisans that are composed of some sorts of Asians including senior Japanese want to give root to the seniority system among American people interferingly. For some reason or other, they have used intimidation to pressure us in various punk ways, with the assistance of Americans with anti-establishment thoughts and/or Americans with anti-Japanese feelings, unfortunately.

The following letter was also filed with a formal theft report:
Dear Law Enforcement Officers,

On Thursday, November 11, 2010, both a geranium in a flowerpot and a stand in the Greek-column style placed at the entrance of our house disappeared. It seems that an anti-Japanese group with a grudge stole the above-mentioned items from our house. The estimated total prices of the stolen items are about $ 100.00.

The following explains the other threatening incidents that we have ever suffered since 1999.

1) Somebody threw a stone or shot an air gun at a window of my wife's room of our house in June 2009.

2) One of the tires of the pickup truck of mine, which was parked in front of the garage of our house, had a puncture in May 2006. It was found that a nail pierced the tire of my vehicle. Since 1999 until 2006, my pickup truck has several times gotten nails in its tires. It's too often to get them accidentally. Some of these incidents were reported to the local police in 2001. This is one of the reasons why our vehicles have been kept in the garage of our house when we were at home since the summer of 2006. Fortunately, our vehicles have never gotten any puncture since then.

3) Either a large-size pickup truck or SUV hit my wife's Beetle and left the scene of the accident in either June or July 2005. This incident was also reported to the local police.

Sincerely yours,
Yasuhito Shiho
Naoko Shiho


Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Read two sections of "Decision Points".

--- According to Page 424 of "Decision Points" tells about the author's conversation with China's former President Mr. Jiang Zemin, "After a few months with no progress, I tried a different argument. In January 2003, I told President Jiang that if North Korea's nuclear weapons program continued, I would not be able to stop Japan – China's historic rival in Asia – from developing its own nuclear weapons. ---
It seems to me that the statement above was only an assumption made in an American-style strategic argument. To my knowledge, no Japanese statesman has ever mentioned any comment ambitious for its own nuclear weapons officially. My memory of this matter may be incorrect.


Thursday, November 18, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

I finished reading "Decision Points". The grandfather of the author of this autobiography was a US Senator in Connecticut.  His father was the 41st President of the US. The author, Mr. George W. Bush was the 43rd President. Although who is the best, the first, the second, or the third generation is uncertain, number in terms of the outcome of the election campaigns and the terms of services talks that the third generation reached the highest achievement. Probably, only their relatives who well know three of them may be able to tell the answer. It seems to me that the subtleties of politics cannot be easily learned from ordinary textbooks and lectures at schools. The fine points of politics may be only obtained from the parent's education at home and from other people's successes and mistakes in the actual world of politics. Obviously, a person who aims to be in the same profession as a statesman in their previous generation should be more advantageous, and may also be able to inherit the publicity. This autobiography unsparingly touches on many key decision points in the serious political situations that the author had ever faced.

One of the main material sources of the most energetically developed rechargeable batteries so far is the element of lithium. It's fresh in our memory that huge deposits of lithium were recently discovered in Bolivia. Actually, there are many expected applications of the lithium-ion batteries. An excellent rechargeable battery is necessary for the full use of solar (photovoltaic) power generation. It's no exaggeration to say that the success of a coming electric car will depend on the high capacity and low leakage of its rechargeable battery. Most of the mobile devices are going to come with lithium-ion batteries. All of the above-mentioned applications are harmless.
There are many applications of lithium in various fields, other than the battery. Unfortunately, some of them are harmful. Whether it's necessary to control the export of lithium seems to be uncertain because it isn't rare in the earth's crust. Probably, its export control to some limited countries should be inevitable. The arrival of everlasting peace is sincerely hoped, indeed.


Friday, November 19, 2010
Got up at eight-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of rice porridge for lunch, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.

In which manner do you like to express your gratitude, Thanks, Thank you, or Thank you very much? Naturally, "Thanks" is a friendly, "Thank you" is a standard, and "Thank you very much" is a polite way. People may use "Thanks very much" or other ways they prefer.
Thinking back to the past, since about the year 2000, some people had begun to say to me for no particular reason, "Thank you." My reply is "For What?" At some time in those days, they said to me, "Thanks." My reply is "For What?" At other times, they said, "Thank you very much." The strangest aspect of these occurrences is that there weren't any particular reasons to express their gratitude. Probably, they tried to drop some obvious verbal hints to me. Maybe.
Since my attendance at the RNC Presidential Gala in May 2005, people around me had begun to say to me consistently for no reason as usual, in a depressed manner different from a previous manner, "Thanks." One day in summer, a senior woman suggested I say to everybody for an answer, "Thanks." That idea interested me. When in Rome, do as the Romans do. For the next three years, the way of expressing my gratitude was a friendly one, "Thanks." 
For the last two years, the way of expressing my gratitude has changed into a standard one, as default, "Thank you." This is because it's getting more and more irksome for me to keep company with such people with an indefinite communication skill. Still, an expression of gratitude for no reason makes me feel weird. The best reply to such fellows seems to be "Thanks for nothing."


Saturday, November 20, 2010
Got up at ten o'clock in the morning. Ate pieces of bread and a half of an apple for lunch. Went out shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Ate a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner.

The fifth generation of Shogun in the Edo period, Tunayoshi Tokgawa, who was called in the back "the Dog Shogun" in those days, has mostly been notorious in Japan's history. Even in modern times, Shogun Tunayoshi Tokgawa has quite a bad reputation. Today, an edict forbidding cruelty to all living things shall be evaluated from the modern point of view, though the evaluation of a historical figure and its acts by judging on the basis of modern moral and ethical standards isn't reasonable. 
The edict forbidding cruelty to all living things, which has gained notoriety, was issued in 1687 and had been valid through Shogun Tunayoshi's death in 1709. This edict for animal welfare originated on the advice of a Buddhist monk. The teachings that lead people to the path of having compassion for all living things should be ideal and valuable. At the present time, the teaching of animal welfare has to be praised more than in the medieval period.
Considering that it was about three hundred years ago, however, it can't be helped that Shogun Tunayoshi's edict was considered to go to extremes. His edict banned both the raising of birds and fish as food and the taking of the lives of domestic animals, especially the lives of dogs. Animal lovers nowadays may like such an edict, but stock raisers lose their livelihood.
The most criticized point of this edict is that it carried very stiff penalties. In one case a criminal was commanded to commit the hara-kiri which is suicide by disembowelment, and in the other case, he was ordered to be exiled on a distant isolated island for a certain period of time with having a hardly-erasable tattoo on his arm. If a proper penalty for disobeying the edict, such as a fine or a whipping, had been established and the ban on the raising of birds and fishes as food had been excluded, it might have been accepted favorably in those days and had been admired in later ages. Anyway, it's sure that the edict was too early for the Japanese in the late 17th century. At the present time, "the Dog Shogun" might be able to obtain popularity comparable with the eighth generation of Shogun Yoshimune Tokugawa (the so-called Maverick Shogun?), who established a complaints box.


Sunday, November 21, 2010
Got up at ten-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

By a strange coincidence, during the rule over Japan by Shogun Tunayoshi, bloodshed involving two families flared up in the capital city of Japan, Edo (Tokyo). The lord (daimyo) of a provincial daimyo family got angry at the derision of the instructor for manners, who was the head of an upper-class family, and he stupidly struck his instructor with a sword in 1701.  He failed in his attempt. Thereafter, a daimyo of a provincial family was ordered to commit hara-kiri and his daimyo family was deprived of its fiefs as punishment for its incident of bloodshed, by the government. At midnight a few years after the incident, forty-seven samurais, who used to be in the service of a dead daimyo, suddenly got in by stealth a residence of an upper-class family hostile to them and assassinated its head. After the assassination, all forty-seven assassins were arrested and ordered to commit hara-kiri as punishment before the judge. On the other side, an assaulted upper-class family was also broken up, though it was not their fault. In Japan, there used to be a unique custom that when two quarrel, both are to blame. From the Western viewpoint, it sounds unfair. In Japan, such a custom hasn't been contested because the enforcement of it gave the administration convenience.
Unfortunately for the Shogun Tunayoshi, as the result of the influences of many kinds of entertainment fictional dramas based on this true incident, shown repeatedly since then, most of the common Japanese people have ever considered that the Dog Shogun helped dogs loyal to their owner but didn't help retainers loyal to a daimyo. In most of the theatrical performances embroidered to cater to the masses, a story was dramatized as if a dead daimyo had been a victim and his retainers had been heroes. Indeed, this drama setting is interesting as an entertainment show but rather risky, especially for a modern society.
The truth is that forty-seven samurais were faithful only to their lord and honor, and behaved as the samurai code recommends. However, they weren't faithful to the law and order of Japan. Indeed, it's a matter of regret that almost all Japanese people didn't have a clear concept of the nation of Japan until the Meiji Restoration in the 1860s because of its geographical condition and national isolation policy. Judging on the basis of modern standards, both a hasty daimyo and his forty-seven retainers are all guilty. There should have existed some lawful ways to protest against the shame and/or to carry out a reprisal against it. What can be learned from bloodshed trouble is that a short temper doesn't produce success. It can be said that Shogun Tunayoshi and his hangers-on ran to an extreme in animal welfare. The basic concept of the edict forbidding cruelty to all living things is precious. Dogs, except mad dogs, are always innocent.


Monday, November 22, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

In a private conversation, the Japanese have a tendency to call the name of a well-known person such as a public figure, a historical figure, or a celebrity without prefixing a title in order to avoid longwindedness. A wiretapper should stop finding fault with everything in our private conversations at home.
In public, however, Japanese prefix a title to the name of any person, as the case may be. With the exception, some male Japanese tend to call the name of a childhood friend without prefixing a title. It seems that those are quite normal.


Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.


Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

--- According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, "Bureaucracy" is a system of government in which most of the important decisions are taken by state officials rather than by elected representatives, and "Democracy" is a system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives. ---
There is no necessity for criticizing the bureaucracy and the democracy now because the evaluations of both government systems have already been exhausted long ago though many problems have been left unsolved. In a modern society, the will of the people cannot be publicly overridden though it's often childish and selfish. In most countries in the world today, a democratic system is more favorably accepted than a bureaucratic system. In some countries, however, it's still simply for appearances. There, the will of the people is well controlled by the self-proclaimed ruling elites through education and mass media, and the elected statesmen don't actually take any lead in making important decisions. Ideally, the elected leaders of the elected statesmen should take the initiative in the drafting of the government's internal and international policies and bills predominantly, and the public officials should be actively supportive of the leadership of the statesmen.
In order to grow to be a highly democratized country, higher education of the masses including future statesmen and officials is indispensable. The public officials have to act continuously "on their own judgment" to shift the initiative in the decision-making to the statesmen step-by-step, aiming at an ideal goal of democracy. The shift has to be done because bureaucracy has constitutional problems in inefficiency, inflexibility, absolutism, standardization, troublesomeness, insistence on secrecy, and so on. In some ways, for instance, by taking a survey, public officials may be able to reflect the will of the people, but the touchy questions may be always excluded and the gathered public opinions may be filtered expediently.
The struggles for power between the officials and the statesmen are utterly nonsense. The public officials shouldn't be so afraid of the presences and risings of the elected statesmen who are supported by certain industries and foreign powers, because their terms of services in the positions are limited to years. In the government system, their roles are designed to help each other, needless to say.
On the other hand, in a highly democratized country, what the public officials in a bureaucratic government are afraid of could surface and could damage the country's interests. The officials should moderately control the influences of certain industries and foreign powers on the statesmen. However, there is no need to break them off.  In some cases, their influences serve the interests of a country by dealing with domestic stagnation, but in other cases, their influences harm its interests due to various possible causes. In a fully matured democratic country, the good balances between freedom and control in terms of this aspect have to be maintained.


Thursday, November 25, 2010
Today is Thanksgiving Day. Got up at eight-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of rice porridge for lunch, and a Western meal for dinner. There was a sudden drop in temperature this morning. It's getting cooler.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following is my comment on it:
A brake forbidding the use of condoms for religious reasons was favorably released.


Friday, November 26, 2010
Got up at eleven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. According to a weather forecast, the temperature will drop to a minimum of 25 degrees F (-3.9 degrees C) tomorrow morning.


Saturday, November 27, 2010
Got up at nine o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Japanese-Western meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, November 28, 2010
Got up at ten forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Monday, November 29, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese rice porridge for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following is my comment on it:
By means of magic, food aid turned into several destructive weapons and, subsequently to their tests, energy aid turned into thousands of centrifuges that enabled to mass production of destructive weapons potentially. Hopefully, nuclear fuel will never be enriched up to weapon-grade levels in a recently detected facility.


Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Went out shopping at a grocery store this evening. Sent a personal check for my 2008 Tax Changes to the IRS via the US postal service. Ate pieces of Brie and drank glasses of cider.

In a peaceful society, sometimes, only a tiny number of people run to an extreme because they probably believe that only an extreme act can change the existing sluggish condition. My opinion on extremism is that it's only a way to change out of many. An extreme act may be expected to be effective quickly, but in most cases, it involves various risks to not only an extremist itself but also many others. There always exist other moderate general ways to change the condition though these ways may take some time and may require many supporters. There may be a new sensible way though it cannot be found easily.
Two extremisms in the behavioral principles of humans have been very much in the air these days. One is an obsession with secrecy and the other is an obsession with disclosure. Higher officials and bankers have a tendency to be obsessionally secretive due to the nature of their occupations. Self-protective people tend not to talk candidly. A sort of person may get on smoothly with others only in ambiguous ways of conversation. On the other side, journalists, scientists, and pioneers have a tendency to be communicative. Forward-facing people tend to talk candidly.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both extremisms. In some cases, the insistence on secrecy of sensitive matters may help maintain amicable relations between nations, between groups, and between individuals. However, through excessively secretive ways, many of the important factors that they desire to forget but shouldn't be forgotten for peace may simultaneously be buried in the oblivion of the distant past. There is a strong tendency for corruption, unfairness, scandal, and gossip to prevail more as the degree of secretiveness in a society deepens. In an extremely secretive society, demagogic and tricky people can act as they please. Contrary to the aforesaid, the disclosure of sensitive matters may lead to hostile relations. Overly open communications can naturally contribute to damage to the education of children in terms of various aspects. In a simpler society, however, the rampant corruption and scandal can be suppressed to some extent in due course.
My preference is for a rather unsecretive society. It goes without saying that it should be indispensable to draw the lines between the matters that should be kept classified and those that should be disclosed to the public while considering the needs of the times. In broad outline, the matters of no small concern either for the remote future or in several generations past can be rather safely unveiled.

October 2010

Friday, October 1, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate pieces of Central Market's pizza for dinner.


Saturday, October 2, 2010
Got up at eight-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, October 3, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at a grocery store this afternoon. Ate a Central Market meal for dinner.


Monday, October 4, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.

My opinion on a hereditary system shall be told today. There are many types of things and rights that can be succeeded such as a fortune, a real property, a legacy, a status, a gene, a social connection, a reputation, a percept, and so on. Either a second-generation or a third-generation usually has advantages over others, especially in terms of its starting point. However, it's often seen that the first generation finds a business, the second expands it, and the third ruins it. This empirical proverb suggests that the outstanding abilities of the first generation may fade away from generation to generation. This trend becomes more striking as both inheritance and gift taxes increase. Although the lack of experiences in enduring hardship in their growth period may weaken the characters of the second and third generations, it can be compensated with good education based on the first generation's personal experience. It's likely that being either a second-generation or a third-generation is advantageous, anyway. Even if one doesn't aim to be in the same profession as one's father, the succession to the estates is favorable in most cases. Needless to say, no one wants to succeed in any debt or vicious habit.
A family with a long and glorious history is favorable because it tends to have respectable tradition, breeding, and percept. Those might enable a descendant to be better than a first-generation. Therefore, no more than either a second-generation or a third-generation is unable to count on my support.

My wife sent me the following email today:
Yesterday two little mice followed after us at the parking area of a HEB grocery store. They are a father mouse and his son, perhaps. Beatrix Potter was inspired by them and created some pretty stories, like "The Tale of Mrs. Tittlemouse" and "The Tale of Two Bad Mice". However, they reminded me of some Japanese political figures. I am not interested in them at all. It is not respectable to play a joke on a lady in public.

BTW, I am also not interested in Takeshi Kitano because I have rarely watched his comedy show since I was young.

Naoko Shiho
***
It seems to me that a devil dispatched new types of servants in order to bother my wife and me recently. Unfortunately, they are willing to fulfill their duties without reluctance to be called servants of the devil. Hopefully, hangers-on of some high-lineage families have no connection with the devil's servants. Indeed, both the vulgarity and the unscrupulousness of their hangers-on may be really awkward.


Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

An excellent vehicle should have both a good driving device and a good braking device. The world that is advancing towards the future while carrying billions of people should also have both a good driving system and a good braking system. It goes without saying that a vehicle without brakes is very dangerous. A speed reduction by applying the brakes has to be carried out properly and opportunely while avoiding wasteful spending and fatal accidents. Favorable competition between accelerators and brakes is always necessary, barring unfortunate developments due to overloading of passengers.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Got up at six-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and an American meal for dinner.

A clumsy acting in the neighborhood this evening was trying to allude to one of the possible solutions for energy problems. Concisely speaking, that's about what funds will be used for. Probably, where funds will be used is more important than that for the sort of people. People here want to use them in a state in the US. It's our earnest wish that any fund will never go to any city or organization unfriendly to my wife and me.


Thursday, October 7, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate an American meal for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

My wife sent me the following email today:
I came to America at 30 years old and married at 31.
Now I am 39 years old.

Naoko Shiho
***
Generally, Japanese people look young for their age. Americans may think that my wife looks younger than her real age by about ten years. She still has no gray hair.


Friday, October 8, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball a side dish of salad for lunch, and pieces of Newman's Own pizza for dinner.

The following letter was sent to the contact person for this issue of Freescale Semiconductor via email today:
Twenty-one days have already passed since my email and letters regarding the return of my diplomas were sent to Freescale Semiconductor, and seven days have passed since in your last email you promised to check whether my diplomas have been kept in the drawers of the desk I used to use or not. Just an hour seems to be enough time to check it. Because of your slow response, I feel as if Freescale Semiconductor might have been refusing to return my diplomas to me for some reason or other. It's inevitable that suspicion would fall on Freescale Semiconductor. Hopefully, this isn't true.

With this letter, I again request that either the human resources or the security departments of Freescale Semiconductor should have my diplomas reissued if my diplomas were shredded already.

Yasuhito Shiho

The following letter was also sent to the CEO of Freescale Semiconductor via email today:
Dear Chairman and CEO Mr. Rich Beyer, and
Sr. Vice President, Human Resources and Security Mr. Michel Cadieux

It seems to me that the contact person for this issue isn't suited to this role because of his insufficiency of circumstantial judgment and his insincerity, as seen in his previous emails. With this letter, I again request that either the human resources or the security departments of Freescale Semiconductor have my diplomas reissued because my diplomas were stolen or missed on its site due to Freescale Semiconductor's negligence. It seems that a representative of the Human Resources and the Security departments should be the right person to investigate and resolve this issue successfully.

Sincerely yours,
Yasuhito Shiho


Saturday, October 9, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out for shopping at grocery stores this afternoon. Bought two gallons of low-fat milk and half a gallon of orange juice. No other beverage such as a soft drink was purchased. Ate a Japanese meal for dinner.


Sunday, October 10, 2010
Got up at ten o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Japanese pasta for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.

Who should be a professor? Someone who comes top academically at a university is most appropriate. A rare occurrence that a person with bad results becomes a professor through relying on their parents' connections is one of modern social ills. An increase in the number of second and third-generations whose assumptions of their positions are often attributed to the influence and the economic strength of their parents degrades the quality of education in universities.


Monday, October 11, 2010
Got up at six-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

If you want to discover a person who looks like a great man standing out in history very much, you should try to find a person having good points of likeness to a great man predominantly. You don't have to make too much fuss about any bad point of resemblance to a great man. Supposing he were to meet a person full of bad aspects of resemblance to him, a great man would become thoroughly offended. The problem is that it's much easier to find a person full of bad aspects than to find a person full of good aspects. You should not make easy compromises.


Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Got up at six forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the OpEdNews today". The following are my comments on it:
About one month before an off-year election, the current ruling party in the US the Democrats is holding to a more middle course in terms of military and energy affairs. They don't want any more counteroffensives from pressure groups in addition to medical groups. In this case for peacekeeping, the obligation to a medal had been valid for one year only.
Indeed, the US is a complicated nation. Some officials of the US government are imposing economic sanctions on nuclear-ambitious Iran, whereas others behave as if they would be encouraging Iran to test its nuclear bombs. Diversity isn't only a good aspect but also a bad aspect of the US. Hopefully, its virtues and faults continue to strike a balance without troubling other countries fatally.


Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

Instead of the reissues of my diplomas by Freescale Semiconductor, an undamaged fence of one of the neighbors' houses was renewed this morning. The replacement of an unbroken fence of the neighbor's house is of no help to us at all. Unfortunately, a troublesome broken fence in the other neighbor's house was left unrepaired.


Thursday, October 14, 2010
Got up at eight-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

All of the acorns growing on two Texas Live Oak trees and one small White Oak tree in front of my house have already changed color from green to tan. About half of the acorns have already fallen to the ground. Undamaged acorns were scattered on the ground near the bottom of my backyard for wildlife. Damaged acorns were also scattered on the ground around Oak trees for fertilization.

The following letter was sent to a representative of the Blackstone Group via email today: 
Dear a representative of the Blackstone Group,

After two weeks of disregard, the contact person for ethical issues of Feescale Semiconductor has replied to my letter at last. However, the exchange of some letters with the contact person of Freescale Semiconductor for the last two weeks led me to the conclusion that he isn't suited to this role because of his insufficiency of circumstantial judgment and his insincerity. It seems to me that my emails and letters still have never reached their destination for unknown reasons. It's highly probable that a community in Austin Texas the contact person for ethical issues and some secretaries to the executive officers of Freescale Semiconductor belong to might have been obstructing the delivery of my emails and letters to their correct destination. I would appreciate it if you could forward the following letters to the chairman and CEO of Freescale Semiconductor directly.

Unfortunately, the contact person for ethical issues of Feescale Semiconductor made irresponsible statements, as seen in the attached emails below. He didn't tell me any details of his investigation into the matter I raised. He refused to reissue my diplomas, probably because the formalities of reissuing my diplomas are rather complicated. Judging from communication with the contact person for ethical issues, Freescale Semiconductor doesn't deserve the World's Most Ethical Companies by the Ethisphere Institute as the matter stands. It's my belief that Freescale Semiconductor must be responsible for reissuing my diplomas because my diplomas were missed or stolen by some HR employees on its site due to Freescale Semiconductor's negligence. Freescale Semiconductor shouldn't conceal any act of larceny and harbor any criminal.

I hope your company will successfully help Freescale Semiconductor improve its ethical conduct. 

Sincerely yours,
Yasuhito Shiho


Friday, October 15, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball and a side dish of salad for lunch, and pieces of California Pizza Kitchen's pizza for dinner.

Three new versions of my signatures were created. One is designed for the purposes of a contract, a personal check, and so on. Two others are just for identification and one of them is used in the header of this diary.


Saturday, October 16, 2010
Got up at ten o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, October 17, 2010
Got up at nine o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at a grocery store this afternoon. Ate a Japanese meal for dinner.

Chinese may prefer the idea of three-cornered competition to that of one-to-one competition because of its popular novel the Sanguo Zhi Yanyi (Romance of the Three Kingdoms). This story has been handed down by popular tradition from generation to generation since olden times in China and was novelized based on oral literature and a history of the Sanguo Zhi in the Ming period (the 14th ~ 17th century). In the middle of the story, Zhuge Liang, who is a strategist in private life in Shandong (Jiangling ?) and will become a famous statesman of the kingdom Shu in the Three Kingdoms period (A.D 220 ~ A.D. 280), suggests a far-seeing national scheme to Liu Bei, who is a wandering general at that time and will be a founder and a King of Shu. It's called the scheme of division of the three kingdoms that is intended to enable the weak to compete with the strong, that is, Wei. The weak stirs up a fight between the strong and the third, Wu, which has to be a powerful enemy of the strong, while forming an offensive and defensive alliance with the third, providing backup logistic support to it, and enriching a national prosperity and defense policy of the weak, resulting in the establishment of a three-kingdom structure as a temporary. Obviously, the final goal of Zhuge Liang's scheme is to find a unified kingdom by absorbing two other kingdoms as the result of battles.
The period of the Three Kingdoms had continued only for sixty years. The warring three-kingdom period lasted for quite a short period of time because of the nature of its instability. When one explores the pages of history in China, the Three Kingdoms period is interesting and entertaining because there were many dramas, diplomacies, tactics, strategies, alliances, and treacheries found in a moderately complicated triangular struggle. Considering that the strong finally won the triangular battle that took a heavy toll on lives during this period of time, it's uncertain whether Zhuge Liang's scheme brought good fortune or bad fortune to ancient China. However, it seems that his strategy is still an effective and practical measure that can be applied in various similar situations in modern times.
Like many Americans in the pioneering days, the Chinese have a liking for tall tales in the olden days. According to the vaudeville storytelling told in pubs those days, a deified mortal of Zhuge Liang is about 6 feet 4 inches tall (cf. Wikipedia) and he has three pupils on each side of the eye. He is like a Taoistic ghost. In a culture that has been nurtured by the magnanimity characteristic of continental people, most of the goodies are tall people, but a typical crafty baddie is a person of small stature.

BTW, the protagonist of a history of the Sanguo Zhi written by Chen Shou in the 3rd century is Cao Cao, who is an adopted son of a eunuch in the Han dynasty, and a founder and a king of Wei (the strong), and whose son ascends the Imperial Throne. On the other hand, the protagonist of a novel of the Sanguo Zhi Yanyi written in the Min period is Liu Bei, who is a peddler selling straw sandals and professes himself to be a descendant of a Han emperor. In this version of the Sanguo Zhi, Liu Bei's character is fabricated to raise people's loyalty to the Ming dynasty. In recent times, Communist China revalued Cao Cao, as a great general, for its convenience. The character of the protagonist of many classics has been interpreted and somewhat fabricated in a convenient way to either the Sovereign or the Government then in power for most ages in all places.


Monday, October 18, 2010
Got up at six forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

How many countries are necessary on the earth? My answer is that only a unified nation is necessary because of its stability and peace, as written in my diary several times previously. In this case, the highest priority is given to freedom from war.
A unified nation should have a separation of administrative, legislative, and judiciary branches of government. In the administrative branch, a two-party system is most appropriate. A multi-party system could be better than a two-party system if a major reform of the administration system were made. Here, high priorities are given to both stability and fairness.
How many companies are necessary in a grown market, such as a refrigerator, a semiconductor chip for PC, and so on? My answer is that two major leading companies and other smalls are proper because of their minimal wasteful spending. Here, high priorities are given to controlled competition and efficiency.
How many companies are necessary in an enterprising market? Any number of companies is possible at the beginning, and then it should be reduced depending upon the degree of the development of a market. In this stage, motive power, liberal ideas, and flexibility are most important.


Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a bowl of Japanese noodle soup for dinner.


Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the Reuters online news today". The following are my comments on it:
Apart from the question of whether the observations of probably disappearing of extremely high energy particles followed by appearing through neither pair-annihilation nor pair creation in the LHC could be the direct proofs of the existence of either parallel world or extra dimensions, or not, it's a sure bet that even the CERN scientists nowadays need to appeal to public opinion for their spending in their researches by referring some matters that interest the general public, especially SF fans in this case.


Thursday, October 21, 2010
Got up at eight o'clock in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

My view on recent robotics shall be told today. A tool is any instrument that a human being can use to do some particular sort of process. Both a computer and a robot are categorized as advanced tools. That can justifiably be said until either a computer or a robot is equipped with artificial intelligence in the future. A computer is an electronic device that can store and process large amounts of data at a high speed and may replace some particular kinds of brain work. A robot is any machine that can operate automatically by the control of a programmed on-board or remote computer and may replace some specialized manual works. Robots have ever been used to manufacture automobiles, electrical appliances, etc. automatically or semi-automatically in manufacturing factories. Advanced robots have already been used and may be used in the future for a variety of necessary tasks such as mining, probing, building, scrapping, nursing, and fighting in hazardous environments. In this case, only a robotic arm is necessary. In another case, a plane, a helicopter, a car, a ship, a submarine, a tank, a bed, a chair, or a satellite type is suitable, depending on the situation.
However, a robot isn't necessarily like a human. Indeed, almost all of the currently operating robots aren't humanoid types. It goes without saying that it's very difficult to create a humanoid that is capable of functioning like a human being. Although the application of a humanoid is currently unclear and may be quite limited, many laboratories of companies and institutes have been intensively engaged in the development of humanoids. What is the most desired application for a humanoid?  A clerk at the window may be the one. A toy may be the other. It's my view that people don't need any maid robot that can cook meals at home. People can go out to a restaurant or buy a frozen meal that is cooked by simple non-human-like robots in a food factory when they want to have an easy time. An advanced wheelchair should serve some useful purposes for both a handicapped person and an old person, but a biped robot chair seems to be unreliable and unsafe. An advance in the walking frames that are designed to support a lightly handicapped person in walking may be useful.
Recently, my wife said that the robotics engineers might have been developing humanoids from the same motive as Pygmalion. That sounds rather creepy. Indeed, it's true that there are some example cases indicating that a twist of such a primitive desire had helped promote the sales of some electrical appliances such as a video recorder, a PC, etc. in their early stages. Hopefully, the robotics engineers will have and retain the purity of Pygmalion's soul.
It seems to me that there are too many companies and institutes that have already demonstrated their state-of-the-art humanoids, probably as the advertisements of the robotics industry and their own advanced technologies. Surely, such humanoids can attract public attention. Contrary to their expectations, however, the general public may worry that robotics engineers must be taught not to waste funds.


Friday. October 22, 2010
Got up at seven forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball and a side dish of salad for lunch, and pieces of Central Market's pizza for dinner.


Saturday, October 23, 2010
Got up at nine-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, October 24, 2010
Got up at eight forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at several stores. Two bottles of zinc supplements and two pieces of frozen whole pizzas were purchased at a store of Target. Repaired a broken blower and cleaned out both the garage and the patio of my house using it this evening. Ate a Japanese one-pot meal for dinner.

Three servants of the devils were hanging around the Gateway area about one week before the US Midterm Election. This time, two of them are Koreans, and the remaining is an African American. Their acts happened to let fall a hint that who the devils are. Some of the minor devils seem to be unattractive politicians and comedians. Most of the devil's servants are made up of the Asian pressure groups. Their usual measures are always hyena and vulture's ways of doping.
Today's occurrences reminded me of what had happened at the Fairmount Hotel in Washington DC on 16 and 17 May 2006. My wife sent me the following email about it on April 30, 2009:

Some people who had experienced great hardship have written the memoir. A famous person's wife is one of them. I feel sorry about what happened to her.
My husband always tells me whatever happened to him, except classified information about business. For example, when he visited D.C. to attend a kind of meeting and gala, he told me over the telephone that a strange woman spoke to him in the hotel lobby. I'm happy that he is not such a man to fall into a trap.
By the way, in the summer of 2005, my husband and I invited a female Japanese student who stayed in Austin as an intern for dinner at a restaurant and it was all that happened.
--------Naoko Shiho

As my wife wrote in her email above, a strange woman who represented herself as a Korean tried to get to know me with an eye on mine at the lobby of the Fairmount Hotel just after both my check-in to at hotel and my registration for a meeting and a gala were completed that afternoon. She introduced herself as a Democrat supporter and presented her business card. She disturbed my pleasant rest on a lazy afternoon in late spring, by talking about her views on political matters without asking my permission for about fifteen to thirty minutes. It occurred to me that she might be either a lobbyist or the other shady woman. Within an hour after her unilateral talk with me in the lobby, my wife heard that occurrence related to a self-proclaimed Korean woman from me over the telephone, as my wife wrote in her email.
The next day at a meeting, a Korean woman suddenly entered the meeting room in the middle, talked to me about something one-sidedly in a little while, and then went to have a seat at the very front part of the meeting room. After that, other senior Asian women also appeared in a conference room, and one of them asked a presenter several meaningless questions about some energy issues. A presenter gave no answer to her questions and addressed questions to other attendees.
After the meeting, I attended the gala and then shook hands with the US President that evening, stayed in a room at the Fairmount Hotel that night, and got home the next day of the gala.
    Forty years old (~165 pounds)
Thinking back to the past, an African American group has persistently followed my wife and me in those days. It seems to me that there are some similarities between our situations in those days and now.

BTW, my wife received a card from me and she threw it into a trashcan at our house a couple of days after my visit to Washington DC. Within my knowledge, I have never made a pass at any non-Japanese woman in my life. I have never been unfaithful to my wife, as written several times previously.


Monday, October 25, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

It seems that Korean capitalists in the US have learned how to tame American politicians from Chinese capitalists, mainly Vietnamese capitalists, Chinese capitalists in Hong Kong, and Taiwanese capitalists. For quite a long period of time, the tamed US politicians have been acting in order to bring many benefits to their homelands and to be hostile to their adversaries. As well known, they used to get into favor with the Representatives. As their economic powers grow more, they have gradually become adventurous and have tried to help raise larger campaign funds for candidates for the Senate and even for the presidency.


Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

A fellowship group, some members of which support or belong to the Democrats in the US and the Labour Party in the UK while holding up anti-Establishment thought, may believe that the country that used to pursue an imperialistic policy long ago should owe the people who are originally from its former colonies. Based on the reason above, the politicians in the US whom Asian pressure groups including their Japanese endorsers tend to raise anti-Japanese feelings, as their usual measures.
Some sorts of members in a fellowship group always form a group, meddle in affairs, blackmail an opponent one after another, and disappear into the crowd of a group when inconvenient. As long as they are targeting a group, they might be justified in doing such dirty ways. When they go after an individual, however, their ways of doping are just nasty and cowardly. Indeed, they behave like people possessed of devils.


Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Got up at eight-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner.

    "This is an interesting topic found in the BBC online news today". The following are my comments on it:
My wife, who studied especially in children's literature at a University during her graduate school days, told me previously that in response to an interviewer's question that a ring of both The Lord of the Rings Trilogy and The Hobbit is a metaphor for nuclear energy, Prof. J. R. R. Tolkien answered that it isn't. In disregard of his comment, however, some readers have believed that Prof. Tolkien used the word a ring as a metaphor for a nuclear weapon. Indeed, every reader has the freedom to interpret novels how he/she likes. In any case, it's certain that a ring shouldn't represent the peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

There are several ways to categorize societies in the world. One of the most important categorizations is based on the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. One group doesn't support the use of nuclear reactors for peaceful purposes, and the other does support it. The former group is mostly made up of a majority of people in some aggressive countries that are currently or have often been at war and have already possessed their nuclear weapons. The latter group is mainly made up of a portion of people in some less aggressive countries that aren't currently at war and have already possessed their nuclear weapons, and a portion of people in many other countries that haven't yet possessed their nuclear weapons. Here, people who aren't interested in this matter are excluded.
The former group doesn't like the peaceful uses of nuclear energy simply because the widespread of nuclear reactors is inconvenient for its member countries. To put it plainly, the widespread of nuclear reactors could widen the scope of risk of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Especially, the exports of nuclear reactors to some opponents of the countries in the former cannot be overlooked, though all of the countries in the former are already armed with nuclear weapons. There should have been a large number of adverse criticisms of their unfairness and egoism. In the late1970s, the former realized possible risks related to nuclear terrorism and decided to abandon the peaceful uses of nuclear energy while maintaining their nuclear weapons in their arsenals. Instead of the use of nuclear reactors, the former decided to continue to rely on coal-fired power plants and to pursue alternative sources of energy such as wind power and solar power for electricity generation. Different from their expectation at that time, however, some grave problems have arisen. The increase of the world demand for energy is much beyond their expectation because of both excess increase in world population up to 6.9 billion and rapid progress in the developments of several developing countries with large populations. The possible changes in the Earth's climate have been beginning to worry people. The situation of the energy and the ecology issues are currently worsening. If these problems unexpected in the 1970s hadn't arisen, their decisions about three decades ago might have been justified and agreed upon. An undeniable fact is that the former group will never force all of the countries in the latter group into compliance because some countries in the latter are powerful advanced countries.
The latter group has a penchant for the peaceful uses of nuclear energy because most of the countries in the latter don't have any serious opponents in the world presently. Some of the advanced countries in the latter have been advancing both the safety and the performance of nuclear reactors. Especially, the nuclear-fuel-rich countries want to move ahead with the peaceful uses of nuclear energy for their own benefits eagerly. Unfortunately for the former group, some of the advanced countries in the latter group have ever sold their nuclear reactors to the opponents of the former group and the friendly nations of its opponents. Those trades might have led to some conflicts among large countries on both sides, out of the public eye in a variety of ways.
Considering based on the above-mentioned facts, what has to be carried out are the reconciliations of the countries in the former group with their opponents, as early and sincerely as possible. The former group should be incited to violence and vice versa. The countries in the latter group should refrain from exporting any nuclear reactor to the countries with unstable political conditions until the former attains some progress in peacemaking in the future, hopefully in the near future.
The recent maneuvers made by the former group in order to throw away the funds, the good and the efficient uses of which have to be made, in vain seem to be too inferior. They just don't want the funds to be used for the areas rather inconvenient for them, especially for the advancements of the technologies of nuclear fission and fusion reactors. These sorts of acts by ways of stirring up pressure groups, political groups, entertainment and manufacturing industries, academic organizations, and charitable institutions to the disturbances aren't necessary at all. They should set their wits not to hinder the advancements of the necessary technologies but to achieve the peacemaking processes.


Thursday, October 28, 2010
Got up at seven-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner.

Who should be a good example for people in the world, a simple-minded straightforward person, a complex-minded scheming person, or another type of person? Naturally, there should be many various opinions. The answer varies depending upon the when and the where. There have to exist diverse people in character in the world.
My role model is a complex-minded straightforward person, who understands the fine points of strategies, uses knowledge for self-defense, and behaves simply, calmly, and sincerely.


Friday, October 29, 2010
Got up at seven-thirty in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch. Went out shopping at a grocery store this evening. Ate pieces of Archer Farms' pizza for dinner.


Saturday, October 30, 2010
Got up at nine forty-five in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a Japanese meal for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.


Sunday, October 31, 2010
Got up at ten-fifteen in the morning. Ate a bowl of cereal, a rice ball and a side dish of salad for lunch, and a dish of Italian pasta for dinner. Stayed at home for the entire day.

A beckoning cat is a sort of object that it is hoped will bring fortune. A beckoning cat is a very popular good luck charm in Japan. In most of the sushi restaurants in other countries outside Japan, a beckoning cat is mostly placed near a cash desk. There is a small difference in the look of a beckoning cat between the US and Japan. A beckoning cat in the US has a rather tasteless face. Probably, it's designed not to scare American children.
In China, a statue of the valiant warlord "Guan Yu", who is one of the strongest steadfast warriors found in Sanguo Zhi, one of two sworn brothers of Liu Bei and became a famous general of Shu in the Tree Kingdoms period, is placed near the entrance of many Chinese restaurants. Guan Yu is over 7 feet tall (cf. Wikipedia), has a ruddy face and long whiskers, and carries a huge "Blue Dragon" broadsword. Guan-di Miao is the mausoleum that worships Guan Yu as a Taoism deity. Different from a Japanese beckoning cat, it is hoped that a statue of Guan Yu will protect fortune.