ponpon-shopping
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あと後半部分に対してですが 「左翼のカウンターは右翼デモを実力で妨害しているが問題ない、右翼がそれをしないのは単に出来ないからだ」 って言ってます??ひょっとして?

「こんな連中」「こん連」は概念が不明だし、レッテル貼りに意味はないし、大概の場合、レッテル貼りは思考停止の徴表なので、事実に基づいた議論をすべきと思いますよ。

@herobridge ①権利と権限を履き違えている ②学生であったとしても五月祭実行委員会ではないのだから運営面での部外者 ③誓約書を求めた人物が東大生かどうか確認は取れていない


民主主義ユースフェスティバル2026での一幕です。 本日、小川淳也代表が会場で、 参政党・神谷宗幣代表 @jinkamiya と懇談しました。 立場や考え方に違いがあっても、 互いに向き合い、 言葉を交わすこと。 それもまた、 民主主義にとって大切な姿勢です。 中道改革連合は、 暮らしに根ざした政治を、 より多くの皆さまに分かりやすくお届けしていきます。 公式Xでは、現場の様子や政策発信を随時お伝えしています。 ぜひフォローしてご覧いただければ幸いです。 #中道 #参政党

言論の口を塞ぐ為に会場に入れまいと人間バリケード作るんが非暴力直接行動だとは知りませんでした! これから左派のデモは参加者が現場にたどり着けないように右翼が並んで壁作ってもオッケーなんですね!

東大五月祭での参政党の講演を左派が阻止しようとし、騒ぎが拡大している問題。かつて1969年、東大全共闘が現在の参政党以上の右派で皇道主義者だった作家三島由紀夫を東大駒場キャンパスに呼んで徹底討論したことを思い出しましょう。この討論はヤジも殺到したし、最後まで歩み寄ることもできなかったけれども、実に高度な討論が行われていたことは覚えておきたい。キャンセルカルチャーからは何も生まれません。リンク先はこの討論が半世紀ぶりに映画化された2020年にわたしが書いた解説記事です。↓

当日は脅迫を聞きつけた私の知人やマスコミ関係者の方も多数、来てくれて私服警察官の方も有田芳生議員周りをアメリカ大統領みたいな感じで警護してくれました。東大祭の主催の方の立場や考え方はありますがやはり脅迫者には毅然たる対応こそが言論の自由や表現の自由を守ると思います。

🚨 ☎️ The Call That Said Everything: Why Trump's Post-Beijing Phone Call to Takaichi Should Make Zhongnanhai Nervous The moment Air Force One lifted off from Chinese soil after Trump's two-day visit to Beijing, the very first foreign leader he picked up the phone to call was Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Not a courtesy call. Not a routine readout. A 15-minute, detailed, confidential briefing — delivered in the air, before the wheels had even touched down at home. The signal could not be clearer. Trump and Takaichi reaffirmed what Tokyo described as the "unshakable" and "ironclad" Japan–U.S. alliance. They exchanged views on China's economy and security posture. They agreed to keep close communication on the Indo-Pacific. They scheduled their next in-person meeting at the G7 summit in France next month. And crucially, when asked by reporters whether Taiwan came up, Takaichi declined to answer — a silence that speaks louder than any statement. Read this in context. Days earlier, Xi Jinping reportedly warned Trump in Beijing that Washington and Beijing "could clash" if the Taiwan question were mishandled. Trump told U.S. media afterward that he made no promises to Xi. None. Zero. And then he called Tokyo first. For Beijing, this sequence is a diplomatic ice bath: 1. The CCP rolled out the red carpet hoping to peel Washington away from its Asian allies. Trump left with no commitments on Taiwan. 2. Before Xi's tea had gone cold, the President of the United States was on the phone with the Japanese leader Beijing has spent months trying to economically intimidate — the same Takaichi whose November 2025 remarks framing a Taiwan contingency as a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan triggered Beijing's retaliation campaign. 3. Tokyo, far from being abandoned, was the first call. Not Seoul. Not Brussels. Not Moscow. Tokyo. This is how alliances are signaled in the real world — not in communiqués drafted by committees, but in who the President calls, when, and from where. The message to the Chinese Communist Party is unmistakable: the U.S.–Japan alliance is not a card Washington is willing to trade. Engagement with Beijing does not come at the expense of Tokyo. Economic coercion against Japan will not split the alliance — it will tighten it. And any miscalculation across the Taiwan Strait will be met by an allied front, not a divided one. To the cadres in Zhongnanhai still nursing fantasies of "decoupling Trump from Tokyo": wake up. The opposite just happened. Your guest of honor flew home and immediately reassured Japan that nothing had changed. The alliance is solid. The deterrent is intact. The wishful thinking ends here. Don't act rashly. Don't miscalculate. The free and open Indo-Pacific has more friends than Beijing has patience. These are my own original opinions (@aricchen). Views are my own — welcome to discuss!


五月祭、参政党・神谷講演会の現場での出来事。 カウンター側はほぼ東大学籍者のみで座り込み。普段は社会運動に参加経験のない学生たちで、SNSで外部のプロテスト勢力が騒ぎ始めたことにむしろ困惑していた。 対する参政党は学外者を20名あまり動員。 五月祭実行委員会は教室の鍵を開けず、時間だけが過ぎて中止決定。 ……参政党による大学自治の破壊が露わになった出来事であった。 以下、時系列で本日の出来事を整理した。

五月祭、参政党・神谷講演会の現場での出来事。 カウンター側はほぼ東大学籍者のみで座り込み。普段は社会運動に参加経験のない学生たちで、SNSで外部のプロテスト勢力が騒ぎ始めたことにむしろ困惑していた。 対する参政党は学外者を20名あまり動員。 五月祭実行委員会は教室の鍵を開けず、時間だけが過ぎて中止決定。 ……参政党による大学自治の破壊が露わになった出来事であった。 以下、時系列で本日の出来事を整理した。

🚨 ☎️ The Call That Said Everything: Why Trump's Post-Beijing Phone Call to Takaichi Should Make Zhongnanhai Nervous The moment Air Force One lifted off from Chinese soil after Trump's two-day visit to Beijing, the very first foreign leader he picked up the phone to call was Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Not a courtesy call. Not a routine readout. A 15-minute, detailed, confidential briefing — delivered in the air, before the wheels had even touched down at home. The signal could not be clearer. Trump and Takaichi reaffirmed what Tokyo described as the "unshakable" and "ironclad" Japan–U.S. alliance. They exchanged views on China's economy and security posture. They agreed to keep close communication on the Indo-Pacific. They scheduled their next in-person meeting at the G7 summit in France next month. And crucially, when asked by reporters whether Taiwan came up, Takaichi declined to answer — a silence that speaks louder than any statement. Read this in context. Days earlier, Xi Jinping reportedly warned Trump in Beijing that Washington and Beijing "could clash" if the Taiwan question were mishandled. Trump told U.S. media afterward that he made no promises to Xi. None. Zero. And then he called Tokyo first. For Beijing, this sequence is a diplomatic ice bath: 1. The CCP rolled out the red carpet hoping to peel Washington away from its Asian allies. Trump left with no commitments on Taiwan. 2. Before Xi's tea had gone cold, the President of the United States was on the phone with the Japanese leader Beijing has spent months trying to economically intimidate — the same Takaichi whose November 2025 remarks framing a Taiwan contingency as a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan triggered Beijing's retaliation campaign. 3. Tokyo, far from being abandoned, was the first call. Not Seoul. Not Brussels. Not Moscow. Tokyo. This is how alliances are signaled in the real world — not in communiqués drafted by committees, but in who the President calls, when, and from where. The message to the Chinese Communist Party is unmistakable: the U.S.–Japan alliance is not a card Washington is willing to trade. Engagement with Beijing does not come at the expense of Tokyo. Economic coercion against Japan will not split the alliance — it will tighten it. And any miscalculation across the Taiwan Strait will be met by an allied front, not a divided one. To the cadres in Zhongnanhai still nursing fantasies of "decoupling Trump from Tokyo": wake up. The opposite just happened. Your guest of honor flew home and immediately reassured Japan that nothing had changed. The alliance is solid. The deterrent is intact. The wishful thinking ends here. Don't act rashly. Don't miscalculate. The free and open Indo-Pacific has more friends than Beijing has patience. These are my own original opinions (@aricchen). Views are my own — welcome to discuss!








