Criminals always show up at the scene.
Criminals always show up at the scene.
The majority of my readers are people who have lived their lives right.
They are veteran employees, retirees, men, and women living abroad. They are executives of listed companies, professors emeritus, etc.
As those of you who post on goo know, this blog has real-time analytics.
It’s a great system that shows the current top 10 searches and the contemporary readers at a glance.
Most of the readers are grateful repeaters, and they are all very sincere.
However, the other day, a man with an alphabetical handle such as “Political and Economic Research” appeared.
I was instantly convinced that he must be the criminal in question.
Reading his blog, I found it to be a blog that, despite its plausible pretense, instantly struck me as suspicious to anyone with an eye for detail.
What convinced me to read the man’s blog was that he claimed to have studied welfare at university and that he wrote that Japan’s welfare system was failing.
I was even more convinced when I read that it had something to do with so-called nursing homes.
I thought it would be depressing to write about it in this column.
There was a comment section below this man’s blog.
I’ve never written in someone else’s comment section before, but I thought I should report directly to the man himself this time.
However, I also thought that if I did, it would probably make the man’s repeated criminal activities against search results worse, which he has been doing since June 2011 (except for the period when he was arrested and detained in prison for fraud, probably from 2015 to 2018/19).
My hunch was 100% correct because the day after I wrote and sent out my comments, he attacked me so that all my posts were not searchable.
Internet criminals, cybercriminals are using rented servers under false names.
It is long overdue for the Japanese government to enact a law against this. (I will discuss later.)
But then again, Google has no control over criminals.
Even a layman like me could figure out the trick this guy is using.
Here is what I wrote as a comment on this man’s blog
A criminal was arrested for defrauding a bank out of a large sum of money, 150 million yen.
This man showed up at our building with three men and a woman while on bail.
He also defrauded our company in the same way as the bank.
We filed both civil and criminal charges.
Naturally, we won 100% of the civil case.
However, since this man had no fixed address, our lawyer could not do anything because of the Personal Information Protection Law enacted several years ago.
Our company had suffered so much damage that we could not pay enough money for the current lawyer, but the lawyer was a person who hated computers and did not even want to look at the Internet.
Since June 1, 2011, this man has been sabotaging my “Turntable of Civilization” with unbelievable search sabotage on the Internet.
Even the lawyer mentioned above said at first glance, “This is terrible.”
During the interrogation at the police station that investigated the case as a criminal matter, the man confessed that he did it himself.
Omission.
This man’s criminal activities on the Internet were so bad that I searched his real name on Facebook, which I had reopened a few months ago, to see if I could find him.
Surprisingly, I don’t know if it was after or before he was released from prison, but the man proudly opened a franchise group home in Senrioka with his mother as the owner.
Naturally, he must have received a large amount of subsidy from the Japanese government.
As mentioned above, a former prosecutor, the lawyer, told me at the initial consultation that many of the managers of “nursing homes” are antisocial.
You say that the welfare of Japan is failing, etc., but Japan is the best welfare state in the world, even if it is cynical to say so because it provides enormous subsidies to such criminals.
Don’t you realize that the welfare of the Japanese nation is not bankrupt, but that Japan is the best welfare state in the world?