prokofiev
2020-1-25 00:14:22
It's a safe bet that the yen will continue falling in the next six weeks so you may as well go on holiday in Japan this spring. I enjoy visiting the annual spring carnival where I ride the thrill rides and eat sushi and pancakes soaking up the nice christmassy atmosphere. The sun has been dazzlingly bright so you might just as well have a good long soak in an outdoor onsen soaking up the sun. In fact I've just got out of an onsen and dried myself off and am getting dressed. My cousin too has just tried himself on a towel and am dressing. There's a pageant of which the final will take place in February in Tokyo. I would've imagined Aiko seems quite likely to enter the final. My cousin said "I'll bet Fumi will enter the final" My friend Alex has accepted a commission to compose a waltz for the pageant as one of the contestants is going to showcase her waltz dance which we all can't wait to see. Let me offer Alex my congratulations for having got a commission for a waltz from the pageant since it's a rare opportunity. I too endorse the congratulations to my friend Kawai on progressing through the preliminary round. She's a contestant in the beauty contest and I won't be surprised if she progresses through the semifinal. I remember two decades ago there was a protest where the protestors clashed with the police in Osaka. I saw it on NHK then. I thought the police were not tough enough. All the riot police were holding a truncheon in one hand and a shield in the other hand. In this way you can't really fight the protestors and arrest them since you have no free hands to get hold of them. That's why it took four policemen to grab hold of one demonstrator. From a fighting angle, some of the police should be holding just a shield, some just a nightstick, the other both. And all of them should be trained on how they fight when they're holding just a shield, holding just a baton and holding both. It was absolute chaos. I didn't think Osaka had ever been so disastrous before. All the police who I wholeheartedly supported only used tear smoke in an attempt to disperse the demonstrators which was clearly not enough. The police shouldn't have been afraid of being criticised for using excessive force because it was utterly not the case. Firing rubber bullets and bean bags at the protestors was necessary, lawful and appropriate. Those who sabotaged the nearby buildings and the railings should've been put in jail. The train network was partially paralysed by the strikes for many weeks. The world had brought the city to the edge of a catastrophe. The united states had already imposed trade sanctions against Japan at that time. The then US president said he would take punitive measures against Japan if the police there used excessive force. Japan was afraid that America would toughen punitive import tariffs still further on alcohol, clothes, agricultural products and food and worse still they would convince other nations to impose international economic sanctions on the country. Of course the downside was that the costs of the products in America which they had imposed import duties on would rise still higher. The economic sanctions against Japan wouldn't be lifted until the then US president's presidency expired a year later. The next day everybody was warned of the danger of violent clashes around the place only to discover that it was a false alarm. There were half as many people in the street. However as long as you kept up with the news and stayed away from places where there were demonstrations, it was safe in Osaka. On the same day a bus crash killed twenty passengers. Detectives assigned the blame for the accident to a hailstorm. I expressed my condolences to the families of the people who died in the accident- and then a brutal murder took place in the capital. Detectives assigned jealousy as the motive for the horrendous crime.
博多小櫻花
2020-1-25 00:33:51
15120円包兩餐
ISLAND LUMINA嘅入場劵唔記得有冇包埋