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I agree juw, 2020 should not have responded to my question to you.
So, do you want to answer?
So, do you want to answer?
A Japanese craftsman's one-man Olympic boycott
The maker of iron shots favored by elite shot-putters refuses to produce any for the Beijing Games to protest China's Tibet policy.
By Bruce Wallace, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 11, 2008
TOKYO -- Masahisa Tsujitani is getting a lot of attention these days for a man who has spent much of the last 40 years bent over a lathe in a garage workshop, where amid the sharp smell of burnt oil and iron he grinds out some of the finest 16-pound shots ever tossed by Olympic athletes....
"I feel badly for the athletes who won't get to use my shots, but after Tibet I know I'm right," he said last week. "Enough is enough."
With his one-man boycott of the Games, Tsujitani has become a reluctant hero here among those unhappy with the muted response of politicians to China's crackdown on dissent in and near Tibet. Japan's political class has uttered barely a peep of protest, with Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda saying only that he would "welcome talks between the concerned parties in a way acceptable to both sides."
The Asahi newspaper dismissed that comment as "tantamount to saying nothing."
Tsujitani is more blunt. "Japanese politicians are wimps," he said.
Top-level relations have since thawed, even as the Japanese public remains conflicted over whether to treat China as an opportunity or a threat.
Unlike his most recent predecessors, Fukuda has been an advocate of a Beijing-friendly foreign policy, calling China an indispensable partner and nurturing the warming diplomatic mood.
No government officials were allowed to meet the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, during a 10-day visit to Japan last fall shortly after Fukuda took office. And diplomats here acknowledge that Fukuda is loath to take a hard line over Tibet ahead of Chinese President Hu Jintao's arrival next month for a summit that Tokyo is eager to see go off without a hitch.
.Still, Tsujitani doesn't want the athletes to be hurt by a boycott, and said it was a pity they won't be able to use his shots. The politicians should stay away, he said. Not the athletes
"barbaric acts that cost the lives of 15 million Chinese "As It Happened
Friday, April 11, 8.30pm
Channel: SBS
Duration: 60 minutes
Rating: M
In December 1937, Japanese troops entered Nanking. On the road to the southern Chinese capital and in the city itself, massacres, rapes and thefts were committed by the Japanese troops day after day for months.
agree with all of that robWhen you de-humanise the others you are able to treat them how you wish...without resorting to your conscience.
I do not think that anything in Tibet approaches these scenarios...
The third was Dr Nelson's inability this week to articulate a clear position on China and Tibet - he was even contradicted by senior colleagues - as the Prime Minister performed strongly on the issue on the last leg of his 17-day world tour.
... this week insisted the Prime Minister should attend the Olympics even though other democratic leaders were considering staying away from the opening ceremony in protest at China's recent crackdown in Tibet.
He also criticised Mr Rudd for making public statements about human rights violations in China.
Dr Nelson's colleagues told The Weekend Australian his comments reinforced the proposition that the Opposition Leader stood for nothing.
Others said the fact that Opposition legal affairs spokesman George Brandis contradicted his leader by saying no politician should go to the Games opening ceremony showed how little regard Liberals were giving to Dr Nelson's views.
None of the frontbenchers, backbenchers and former ministers contacted by The Weekend Australian offered any support to Dr Nelson on the issue of China, instead volunteering that he was almost certain to be challenged.
"Nelson's a dud," one shadow minister said. "The public have made up their mind on him."
Another said there was "an air of inevitability" about Mr Turnbull becoming leader.
PS correction to previous... on recollection, I think the question was "so, if the AOC decided to boycott the Olympic Torch relay" - sorry.2020 said:Then he was asked "so, if the AOC decided to boycott the Olympics, would you support that?" -
answer "that is a matter entirely for the AOC".
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