IF ONY POSSIBLE was to be used to get trigger psychiatry against me(they tried through physical fight when police officers searche me for weapons and had ransacked even my backpack with hope to find anything that would justify by police provoked crime https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/preview/8331566248928246975/4548763899155444949 against me) ...I have even seen police drones fire me signal rockets during night hiking...transporters used for MK Ultra transports appeared lately on almost every corner of the night I cross saluting me from cars at night in the middle of the night and park cars/vehicles used for transport in hope to hype me with MK Ultra brainwash, but thats quite cool with me :)))))
BROUGHT JUST AS IN BELARUS, THAI PEOPLE WERE ALLWAYS THRILLED TO SEE ME BECAUSE ROYALS WOULD AT LEAST TEMPORARY GIVE THEM BREAK - THAI ROYALS DROVE EVERYONE INVOLVED IN HOUSEHOLD INSANE NOT WITH ME ON THE PICTURE...IT WAS SAID LUKASHENKO WOULD LOOSE SLEEP OVER MY VISTIS TO BELARUS AND WALK LIKE ZOOMBIE FOR MONTHS AFTER THOSE WOULD TAKE PLACE BECAUSE I WAS THE ONLY ONE WHO DIDN'T TAKE SHIT.
Japan’s ‘evaporated’ people: Inside an industry that helps people disappearIn Japan, there are people who go missing—because they want to. Meet the "evaporated people", the ones who just want to vanish completely.
Posted by South China Morning Post on Friday, March 17, 2023
57
Aditi Bharade
Mon, March 27, 2023 at 11:52 AM GMT+2·2 min read
Naoki Iwabuchi specializes in a peculiar business — helping battered women disappear without a trace.
He carries around a discreet "self-defense briefcase" that opens up into an armored plate.
"Night moving is sloppy and there's always trouble," Iwabuchi told the South China Morning Post.
In the small town of Chiba, just 32 miles from Tokyo, Naoki Iwabuchi works out of a nondescript office. Dressed in a sharp, black suit, he speaks in a low, measured voice, detailing matter-of-factly how he is in the business of "yonigeya" or "night moving" — which essentially involves helping people disappear.
In 2021, about 80,000 people were reported missing in Japan, per Statista. Of these "jouhatsu-sha," or "evaporated people," many of them chose to disappear because of debt, to escape domestic violence, or just to start over elsewhere, per a documentary by the South China Morning Post.
Iwabuchi's business is one of many that helps people, particularly abused women and victims of stalking, disappear from society and travel to a safe place, the SCMP revealed in a documentary released on March 19.
But it is a job full of risk and danger. He carries a discreet black "self-defense briefcase" with him at all times, which opens up into a shield with a layer of armor inside it. He also travels with a retractable baton-like device which he says he uses for protection.
"Night moving is sloppy and there's always trouble. I don't think a day goes by without trouble," Iwabuchi told the SCMP, adding that he always assumes "the worst" will happen.
He started his business 16 years ago after finding out that there was an increase in women facing domestic abuse who "just couldn't run away." He decided to step in and help them disappear, he told the SCMP.
Around 90% of Iwabuchi's clients are women, and 10% are men, Iwabuchi said, per the SCMP. And now, the number of people seeking to disappear is up to three times more than what it was before the COVID-19 pandemic, he added.
The Los Angeles Times reported in 2003 that "yonigeya" services can cost anywhere between $2,000 to $20,000 per job depending on the risk and complexity of the extraction. In some cases, people helping with the escape may need to pose as window washers or tatami mat tradesmen to slip under the radar.
Once they have "evaporated," it is easy for these people to maintain anonymity and hide in plain sight in Japan, per a 2020 BBC report.
Sociologist Hiroki Nakamori told the BBC that because privacy is highly valued in Japan, missing people can withdraw money from ATMs without detection.
"Police will not intervene unless there's another reason – like a crime or an accident. All the family can do is pay a lot for a private detective. Or just wait. That's all," Nakamori told the BBC.
Read the original article on Insider
No comments:
Post a Comment