Day: April 8, 2025
News – NEWS.am
I first learned of Emanuel Pastreich’s activities in Japan last August when I came across his speech announcing his candidacy for president of the United States on YouTube. I saw an informed American delivering a carefully crafted speech that addressed the major true problems facing the United States and then fielded questions from the audience in Japanese. I asked myself, could there really be a candidate for president in the United States who actually speaks Japanese—it seemed too incredible to believe.
I had never heard of Pastreich. The Japanese media only reports on the Democratic and Republican parties, and suggests that there is no alternative. In Pastreich’s presidential speech I discovered an articulate American with a constructive attitude who was actually trying to solve the real-world problems that he had identified through careful study.
Lots of people say lots of things on YouTube, but Pastreich’s historical analysis of the United States is not something that can be easily thrown together, easily imitated.
That is to say that although his statements are political, he addresses institutional and civilizational issues with both detachment and compassion, avoiding the appeals to emotions that make up politics today.
I wrote to him by email, curious to know whether I had misunderstood something, or whether he was a bit crazy; to my surprise, I received an enthusiastic response in Japanese and when we met soon afterwards. I learned that not only does he have a Ph.D. in Japanese classical literature, but he is equally fluent in Korean and Chinese.
Not only did Pastreich understand international affairs, as well as American and Japanese politics, he also had a deep familiarity with Japanese culture.
His recent book in Japanese, “Watching the sinking of the USS America from a distant shore,” is best read as an autobiography detailing his efforts to understand Asia and Asian culture and to reimagine and reform the United States to respond to the challenges of the current day.
He explains how he made the unlikely transition from research on classical Japanese literature to the articulation of policy as a candidate for president in the United States.
The book also gives a concise history of the geopolitical earthquakes that have reshaped the United States and left one of its capable intellectuals as a “castaway” in Korea and Japan. I was reading the tale of an expert with unique skills tossed back and forth by hidden political currents that pushed him out far from his base in Illinois.
And yet, Pastreich does not give up; he keeps up his adventures, exploring each possible road forward.
Pastreich started out his career trying to convince the University of Illinois to take Asian studies seriously in light of the rising importance of that region. That led Pastreich to write about geopolitics and international security. Those efforts led him to his current campaign to promote peace in Asia from a new base in Tokyo. It was a long march to get here, starting from his handshake with former ambassador Edwin Reischauer in 1987, to his friendship with Murakami Haruki, to his close ties to his senior from high school, Harvard, and University of Tokyo, Robert Campbell.
Then came encouragement he received from Joseph Nye and Ezra Vogel at Harvard to consider working on foreign policy in Washington D.C.
Finally, there was his close work with the Korean president Park Geun-hye, and other Korean and Japanese politicians and government officials to create a lasting peace in the region.
The important theme in the book is not the famous people he encountered during his Odessey, but rather the dead ends he hit, the walls he ran up against, and the darkness that crept over education and politics in the United States.
I have seen a similar trend in Japanese universities. Those who claim to be experts, the scientists and scholars who demand our attention and expect our respect, become oddly timid when serious contradictions in society, or malfeasance in governance, or even in university administration, appear.
Much of the story revolves around a proposal that Pastreich made back in 2000 for cooperation in teaching and research between the United States, Japan, South Korea and China that led to tremendous, if cloaked, pressures from within and outside the university that ultimately forced him out of the university and the ended of most of his interactions with his scholarly community.
Although Pastreich took a critical position concerning the policies of the George W. Bush administration, he refused to condemn government in principle and he continued to work closely with those trying to restore the rule of law. He has spent his time between the United States, Japan and South Korea since then, observing the vagaries of American politics from a distance and writing policy proposals.
I was most impressed by how Pastreich accept spersonal responsibility for his own actions and their consequences, making no effort to blame third parties, or to draw people in with false promises.
That is precisely the approach to politics and policy we would like to see here in Japan. Both politics and society have spun out of control in the post-COVID era.What we need is concrete action aimed at breaking out of the current mental paralysis and coming up with substantial solutions. I could sense from this book that Pastreich is one of the rare intellectuals who is willing to take concrete action.
As a Japanese I saw much of the samurai tradition in his actions. He assumes that fearlessness is the necessary condition for real political change.
The assumption in his thinking is that even if an individual’s action is but casting a single pebble into a vast lake, the expanding ripples generated will, in one way or another, be passed on to the hearts and minds of others who will offer the potential power to transform the course of events, to remake institutions and habits.
I personally felt that the essential message offered by this book in an age of increasing discord and uncertainty is at least as profound as what has been expressed in so many bestseller books.
Ichihashi Masaru
Hiroshima University
Director
Organization for International Cooperation, IDEC
Georgia: The Head of the National Environment Agency of Georgia Vasil Gedvanishvili congratulated the specialists of the Geology Department on the Geologist’s Professional Day which falls on April 7, every year.
While wishing the geologists of Georgian on this special day, Vasil gedvanishvili expressed his heartfelt gratitude towards them for their contribution to the development of the field.
It is to be specifically mentioned that the Professional Day of Geologists in Georgia has been celebrated since 1965. Moreover, the first geological works in Georgia date back to 1841. At the same time field geological studies and the first works were published in 1843. The Geologist field has evolved ever since 1843 when the first work was recognized.
Notably, Geology is one of the important field areas in the National Environment Agency. For today, the specialists of the agency will carry out the monitoring of geological hazards (landslide, landslide, rocky quarry); also, in the conditions of extreme activation of natural hazards, prompt assessment of the area, identifying the causes of natural geological processes, preparing recommendations for protective measures to be carried out, compiling state geological maps And monitoring of underground drinking water.
Recently, to set up a network of monitoring systems on the territory of Georgia, modern equipment has been actively being installed in the districts. Also, across the country, the assessment of residential plots, residential houses, and infrastructural facilities is affected by geological hazards.
It should be noted that in 2024 1622 visual engineering-geological conclusions were compiled, based on letters received from citizens by the Department, evaluating the geodynamic condition of 4266 residential lands, residential and adjacent areas living in 2385 populated areas, and, for emergency measures, the relevant conclusions were developed Nations.
In addition to a collection of mineral resources and tectonic maps with pertinent geological reports that include information on geological conditions within the target area, 1,200,000 state geological maps were created last year based on geological surveys conducted around the nation.
142 chemical, 137 microbiological, 100 heavy metal, and 15 petroleum product samples were collected in 2024. Additionally, data gathering and control from the subterranean drinking water monitoring network’s automatic stations was in progress.
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