Tax regime Japan…

…where Japan is America and America is Japan. Is there even a difference anymore? That should be apparent as Japan has been forced to submit the country to US policy directives. The country of Japan is a tax regime. There are so many taxes here one wonders what’s the point of working? Many elderly Japanese who don’t have sufficient savings and a pittance for pensions are forced into the labor force to pay taxes. One tax is a tax depending on your income at 65 years old paid monthly for eight months out of the year to take care of you in old age for nursing care. It is not optional. Let’s say you pay ¥6.800 per month for eight months out of the year from 65 and you live to 85 in Japan. That would be a total of one million yen. If you are married and depending on your income it could be much more than this.

Let’s use the analogy with the Japanese government taking excessive taxes: every possible source of tax revenue is taxed to the hilt in Japan; the marginal situation of each type of tax, i.e. the percentage, varies a lot, and depends on such factors as need (e.g. gasoline, water, food, shelter); objections made (food for example may be less taxed); awareness it happens at all (concealed taxes on purchases, rare taxes such as death duties and house purchase, taxes on companies, taxes on lotteries); addiction (tobacco, alcohol); taxes on imports or exports. We expect this system to collapse in the coming years at any one of a number of points. Now let’s transfer this analogy to the multiple forms of Jewish power that Japan is under. The average Japanese is a slave. They are terrified for fear the Japanese state might come after them if they question their tax burden. A non-resident taxpayer’s Japan-source compensation (employment income) is subject to a flat 20.42% national income tax on gross compensation with no deductions available. Not very encouraging if you want to retire or work in Japan. The tax bureaucracy from the local level up to the national level is a terribly complex system to try to understand.

Everyone knows the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England have monopoly powers in issuing legal, but otherwise worthless, currency. Money is debt. Other countries have similar central banks including Japan’s BoJ. Perhaps at some point groups experienced in banking will rebel and take over the functions for themselves, possibly paying off national debt at huge discounts or otherwise removing them. To what extent this will happen in Japan is not known or even if this is a possibility. The Japanese political class are cowards when it comes to facing the US. It’s very likely debts will be owed to legitimate groups, since we see Jews (see The Phoenician Empire Took the Throne of the Chrysanthemum) would tend to want to damage them (e.g. pensioners may find the assets sold them by Jews are worthless). It is a staggering amount of money but as of March 2023, the Japanese public debt is estimated to be approximately 9.2 trillion US Dollars (1.30 quadrillion yen), or 263% of GDP, and is the highest of any developed nation except perhaps the US

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