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Chapter 125 Great leaders can change the world

As long as everyone works hard, we can get rid of the low IQ society.However, there are limits to the ways in which "awakened individuals" can be added.It is doubtful that Japanese citizens will be as awakened as most of Germany and Great Britain.If not, it will be difficult to change this low IQ society. However, even if many people are not awakened, as long as there is an outstanding leader, they can lead the people to change the country. I wrote such a sentence in the last part of "Instant Combat Power" - to change Japan, only one person is enough. Looking back at history, in many cases, it was one person who changed history.Thatcher in the United Kingdom, Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore, Putin in Russia, etc., all changed the entire country and its people with the leadership of one person.

Therefore, no matter how low IQ a society should have an outstanding leader.If the citizens can elect such a leader, Japan can change. However, as I said in Chapters 6 and 7, Japan's current educational system cannot produce outstanding leaders.Moreover, because the collective IQ is too low, citizens have no ability to judge who is an outstanding leader and what kind of leader can lead the country to prosperity. Speaking of this, I thought of Junichiro Koizumi. If he had been a real leader, a real reformer, Japan would not be what it is now.He has mastered the method of manipulating public opinion and the skills of winning people's hearts, has the courage to treat stupid politicians as puppets, and has the force to attack the Takeshita faction and Hashimoto faction. He has won 70%~80% approval rate.He has the ability to change Japan, but he didn't do it.

Prime Minister Koizumi has almost no ideal of "what kind of country he wants to create".He's a destructive type, and he's an absolute genius when it comes to destructiveness.However, he has nothing in terms of creation.He kept repeating the word "reform", but in the end we didn't see "how he reformed". Speaking of the absolute approval rating of the people, the same is true for Prime Minister Hosokawa Morohei.He got a support rate of 92% at that time. If he wanted to change Japan, it would definitely not be difficult, but he did not find the direction of reform in the end.

Before he established the Japan New Party, I established the "Heisei Restoration Association", and we often exchanged opinions at that time. What I have been advocating is "reform from the people's side" and "the people's perspective".However, when I put forward a specific plan, the matter turned into "the status quo in this country is very chaotic, and it would take a lot of time and energy to just adjust these, and no one is willing to do this." From this point of view, Japan has yet to have a real leader.Although there are many people who advocate reform, they are all just lip service.

I wondered, "Is it possible that the Japanese people do not expect real reform at all?"Are the citizens thinking, "It is best to maintain the status quo. If there are real reformers, society will continue to change. We cannot let this happen."Because if reforms are truly desired, the citizens will not choose these people who talk but don't act to lead the country.
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