Yes, Prime Minister of Japan
Page 701
"This is a new policy; every household must install solar panels on their rooftops and connect them."
There are even larger-scale power generation plans:
"The entire Chicheng Mountain has been designated as a photovoltaic power generation demonstration area. There are plans to cover the mountainside with photovoltaic panels, which is said to be able to cut electricity prices in the vicinity by more than half and reduce the cost of living for residents."
The surrounding villagers all supported it.
That's just how people are.
When you suggested installing solar panels all over the area, the villagers were extremely opposed. But as soon as they heard that electricity prices would drop significantly, they immediately became happy.
Li Xinghe suggested adding new immigrants, but the villagers were unhappy. However, if he said he could provide for their retirement, the villagers immediately agreed.
Just as the solar panels were being installed, the third group of people arrived.
This is a traveling medical team hired by Li Xinghe, drawn from various hospitals. They are to conduct physical examinations on these residents to prevent infectious diseases. This should have been done before the immigrants departed, but the Japanese bureaucrats were so foolish and incompetent that they forgot.
They forgot not only about the inspection, but some even forgot to check the identities of the new immigrants, letting in several drug dealers. After the truth came out, the drug dealers were all killed, and the official in charge was transferred to Hokkaido to herd cattle.
After a thorough examination, no infectious diseases were found, but one newborn was discovered.
The female nurse pointed to Quanzhou South:
"You're pregnant! You're four weeks along."
"what?"
Izumi Shin, also known as Koizumi, who lives next door, was stunned.
I'm almost 50 years old, and I've actually planted it so quickly?
If I do the math, he'd been living in the village for almost a month, so it must have been on the very first night that he slept with her. Was this destiny?
"Should we get rid of it?"
When Quan Nan found out she was pregnant, her first reaction was to have an abortion, because she still needed to work hard on the farm to save money to support her family.
But Koizumi quickly stopped her.
He's almost 50 years old, and he can't afford to miss this destiny-bound gift.
"I want to marry you." Koizumi knelt down in public and made this promise to Izumin.
The villagers were overjoyed, celebrating the arrival of the newborn with drums and gongs. Even the elderly Japanese villagers brought gifts to celebrate the birth of the village's first baby of the new century.
The wedding was held in a rush; red cloth was wrapped around the gate, and a few tables were set up.
The marriage ceremony was to invite a Henan chef to demonstrate the village's culinary skills by serving steamed meat, stewed vegetables, and rice porridge.
Quanxin and Quannan, dressed in their new clothes, sat down in their bridal chamber in front of everyone.
After an afternoon of celebration and joy, the village fell silent again in the evening.
In the bridal chamber.
Quannan reveals his identity:
“I’m from Chiang Rai. I used to be a tour guide. I fled the village, hoping to change my life in the provincial capital. But the company went bankrupt, and Chiang Rai’s tourism industry declined sharply. We had a hard time. I lost my job and was scammed by the female boss of the company using my identity. I ended up with a lot of small loans and had no choice but to flee Thailand. You don’t hate me, do you? My identity is illegal.”
Koizumi sighed deeply:
"In recent years, not only Thailand and Myanmar, but also Japan and South Korea have suffered severe economic blows, and everyone is very saddened."
Faced with his wife's questioning gaze, he thought for a long time before confessing:
"I am actually the Prime Minister of Japan. I am Shinjiro Koizumi, who is on the run."
Quan Nan chuckled.
The atmosphere in the bridal chamber was somewhat awkward.
Quan Nan touched her husband's forehead and thought he had drunk too much.
If you were the Prime Minister of Japan, wouldn't I be the Prime Minister's wife?
If our home were really that wonderful, why would you need to fix the roof and repair the pipes?
No matter what Koizumi says, Sennan doesn't believe it.
The next day, the groom sat in the village council and discussed their future life together with everyone.
"The newly produced water spinach has been inspected and is ready to be sent to the city."
"Several large villages should work together to buy an electric bus, which would make it easier to get to the nearest train station. It would only take a few hours to get to Tokyo by train."
The fourth wave of workers did not go to the village, but instead went to the cities surrounding the city.
While villages were being demolished and farms were being built on the Kanto Plain, a massive overhaul of the water supply system was also underway. The water supply network in Kanto was extremely outdated; at least 40% of the network was built during the time of Kakuei Tanaka in the last century, so a large-scale renovation was necessary. At least 203 million households' lead water pipes had to be removed.
The entire process was funded by the Central Agriculture and Forestry Treasury.
However, it was not without benefits. At least the lives of many people on the Kanto Plain gradually eased and even improved, and the efficiency of town operations also improved.
Within this operational logic of new village construction, numerous Chinese home appliance companies and various Japanese water and electricity network suppliers, guided by Li Xinghe's Price Commission, can all profit from the new infrastructure plan. They also take the opportunity to renovate and rebuild the abandoned infrastructure, completing the renovation plan for Japan. In return, these companies pay various taxes to supplement the treasury.
Of course, the core profit of the operation comes from the agricultural output of the local farm, which is enough to earn a certain income from urban life. The lives of the new immigrants can support the new market, which is worth Li Xinghe's money to subsidize and continue this model.
Thanks to the still relatively high prices, this model seems to have some potential.
This is the economic picture of new immigrants.
After this round of renovations—electricity, water, water pipes, infrastructure, and new town construction—Japan has barely begun its path of renovation.
As the new plan gradually unfolded in the eyes of the Japanese, Li Xinghe's popularity among the general public quietly rebounded. Farmers, in their contradictions, supported Li Xinghe, and ordinary citizens, in their contradictions, also supported him.
However, for every supporter there is a critic.
For example, in cities, young people around twenty years old with low levels of education find Li Xinghe very annoying.
Because Li Xinghe went around contacting and sending people to bring these young men with low levels of education to vocational schools.
Someone complained online:
"Are you my father? What business is it of my life whether I go to school or not?"
Li Xinghe's account arrived late, but he started cursing in the comments:
“I am your father, I deserve to take care of you, raise you, and provide you with food and clothing. I should travel back to before you were born and stuff birth control pills into your father’s mouth to prevent him from giving birth to you and polluting the air.”
This time, Li Xinghe's angry rant received zero negative comments, and the Japanese overwhelmingly praised him and even shared it everywhere.
"Young people who are newly emerging should be properly dealt with."
"The problems of young people should have been addressed a long time ago. The government didn't care before, but now we need to get them all working!"
Japanese people commented below.
A few hours later, Li Xinghe returned and continued his tirade:
"Damn it, the more I think about it, the angrier I get! Where do you live? Go report to the nearest state farm station!"
By the time Li Xinghe stopped replying, the account had been deleted at lightning speed. However, the account owner could not escape the search. An NHK toll collector delivered a penalty work order to his door, ordering him to work 180 hours at the nearest farm before going home.
Li Xinghe also demonstrated characteristics of governing through social media, repeatedly warning local authorities:
"I'm about to amend the constitution and abolish all forms of autonomy in Japan. Local governments and local councils that are trying to trip me up should watch out. When I have some free time in the second half of the year, I'll send you all to Hokkaido to raise horses."
Japan's political system is unique in East Asia, modeled after the federal self-government model of the United States. Each autonomous prefecture, city, or town governs itself and, in theory, is responsible for its own fiscal revenue and expenditure.
Under this model, Tokyo officials naturally only want to invest money in Tokyo. Places outside Tokyo? They don't care.
Therefore, disaster relief efforts for various large-scale disasters and major earthquakes tend to be extremely lengthy, because there is genuinely no need to provide disaster relief; it's a local matter. Local lords can die at will, and the magistrate of Tokyo doesn't have to take responsibility.
Locally, the prevailing attitude is one of prioritizing the interests of neighbors and causing mutual harm.
Li Xinghe made some harsh remarks to warn them and prevent them from causing trouble for the agricultural reclamation construction.
During the cabinet meeting, Professor Mizuo Katayama read data to Li Xinghe:
"Urban investment rose this month, and the number of immigrants from within and outside Tokyo increased significantly, with many people willing to move to satellite cities to live..."
So, although nominally it was a new agricultural reclamation project that merged villages and towns to fill the rural areas with immigrants, its main purpose was to draw out the funds and population that were excessively concentrated in Tokyo and transfer them to the countryside, turning the money into opportunities for electricity, new infrastructure and economic development, and then in turn making up for the foundation of economic development.
What gave Li Xinghe a headache was, of course, Japan's enormous national debt. Just looking at that amount of over 1300 trillion yen, Li Xinghe was speechless. The key was that this money was like water in summer, disappearing as soon as the sun shone on it, without anyone knowing what it did.
Damn it, those guys should all be killed.
Kagami Yuchi was at the hospital accompanying Misato during her delivery. She said over the phone:
"Some people have raised questions: How many people are needed? Will it change Japan's national identity?"
Li Xinghe clapped his hands and said:
"Our needs are not that great. 300 million? 500 million new immigrants? At most 1000 million. The number of people we bring in each year is only a few hundred thousand, barely enough to make up for the generational gap in this country, and it is far less than the number of illegal immigrants at the US-Mexico border. If we spread it out among Southeast Asian countries, their own population loss is not painful, and they can still get remittance income."
Japanese people are so pretentious.
In Li Xinghe's words, "I'm your father, so it's my duty to take care of you."
The first phase of the immigration plan was to fill in the abandoned villages on the Kanto Plain, which was the easiest step to complete.
The second phase of the plan will involve adjusting the six prefectures and one province in the Tohoku and Hokkaido regions. At that time, it will be necessary to expand agricultural production and categories, requiring cooperation from existing agricultural research institutes in Japan to develop branded agriculture.
The third phase of the plan will consider filling in Nagoya, Niigata, Nagano, and other areas, while also supplementing the population of Osaka Prefecture and Kyoto.
As for the mountainous regions of Chugoku, Shikoku, and Kyushu, those will be left for the Chinese immigrants from the mountains of Myanmar to work on themselves.
It's already filled in. In fact, even Li Xinghe himself didn't think that these three places lacking plains could open up much of a path to innovation. As long as they could lower prices, increase the population, and supply agricultural products to major cities like Hiroshima, Kyushu, and Fukuoka, that would be enough.
“That’s fine. But I still have a feeling that it’s probably more than 500 million or 1000 million. After all, absorbing cheap people can be addictive.”
Lu Yuchi Huayingmei was quite prescient.
The meeting here has ended, and the meeting there has begun.
With external threats of US tariffs and the trouble of Vance's house arrest of Trump, coupled with internal risks of implementing new policies and local constraints, Li Xinghe also needs to expedite the handling of affairs within Tokyo.
We visited our old friends from the Ministry of Public Security, including Hiroshi Nakajima, Taishi Hasegawa, and Kohei Kanazawa.
The three men exhibit three distinct personalities. Nakajima Hiroshi has been driven to despair by Li Xinghe, resigned to his fate and doing whatever he pleases, spending his days drinking tea in the office and ignoring the rampant problems of the "red violence" group reported by his subordinates. Hasegawa Taishi is a typical office worker, working during the day and taking care of his child after get off work, diligent and hardworking, always performing at a high level in the office. Kanazawa Kohei, although eager to accomplish something, unfortunately lacks guidance and wanders around aimlessly like a headless fly.
Li Xinghe looked at these three listless people:
“The three of you…”
Hiroshi Nakajima immediately sent a letter:
"This is a secret letter that Yoshimi Ogata asked me to give you before he fled to Singapore."
Upon opening the secret letter, Li Xinghe's eyes immediately lit up.
Aside from brief pleasantries, the letter contained a confession that Kazuo Ueda of the Bank of Japan had reached a secret agreement with the Americans to reduce the value of Japanese-held US bonds in order to avert disaster for the US. Although he may not have done it himself (because Li Xinghe did too), he was definitely the one to blame.
Although Ogata Yoshimi ran away, he left Li Xinghe with a good handle, making it easier for him to manipulate the Japanese government's financial management department.
When it came time to select the troops, Li Xinghe made the final decision:
“Hiroshi Nakajima, you… um, you will serve as the acting Superintendent General. The position of Superintendent General will remain vacant for the time being.”
By lying down, he's essentially relinquishing power to Li Xinghe. Therefore, he's suitable to be the director.
"Kouhei Hasegawa has been promoted to Minister of Public Security."
Hasegawa always puts in the effort when he should, so he must know about Li Xinghe's connection with the Red Violent Group.
"Kanazawa Kohei... Go to the Criminal Division and take charge of criminal offenses."
Kanazawa Kohei ultimately failed to realize his dream of becoming the Minister of Public Security. Now he's off to arrest criminals, and Li Xinghe needs him to step up and speed up the Tokyo police's incompetent and slow pace.
The three people had just left when three more arrived.
Junichiro Koizumi and his son, Kotaro Koizumi, first went to make a scene at Makiko Tanaka's house, and now they've both come to Li Xinghe to demand the release of their loved ones.
Li Xinghe was speechless and could only repeatedly emphasize:
“It really has nothing to do with me, and I’ve been looking for him.”
He really didn't kill Koizumi.
Why don't you believe me?
The Koizumi father and son, of course, did not believe it. Even Makiko Tanaka, the elderly lady, was skeptical. After all, Li Xinghe had indeed killed many people, and Yoshihisa Harada, Masayuki Ohara, and others had something to say about it.
Fortunately, Takikawa Masami is also looking for Koizumi.
She called:
"Found it! Found it!"
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