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00:00:00Many people think that the Lunar New Year is on February 3rd, but the Lunar New Year is on February 2nd.
00:00:09It's been 4 years since the Lunar New Year was celebrated on February 2nd.
00:00:13And this year's lunar calendar is the southwestern solar calendar.
00:00:16However, there is a problem with the mass disposal of the remaining lunar calendars every year,
00:00:21and the thoroughness of the Datsu Fuudosu is required.
00:00:25Speaking of Datsu...
00:00:28There is a problem with the dependence on excessive smartphones,
00:00:33such as not being able to let go of your smartphone even for a moment during the day.
00:00:36Even in Japan, the Datsu smartphone is called out.
00:00:40However, in the Australian Parliament in November last year,
00:00:43a bill banning the use of SNS under the age of 16 was passed.
00:00:49In order to protect children from sexual crime and bullying,
00:00:52and to encourage them to play outdoors and participate in sports,
00:00:56Prime Minister Albanese pointed out that SNS causes social harm
00:01:01and keeps children away from true friends and true experiences.
00:01:08So, today's Sokomade Itte Inkai N.P. is on the theme of Datsu.
00:01:15While President Trump, who chants America First, is advancing from an international framework,
00:01:22can Japan, an ally of the United States, be able to break away from the dependence on the United States?
00:01:28While there are many defectors from North Korea,
00:01:31there are still abnormalities, such as the arrest of the four presidents who issued a resolution in South Korea.
00:01:39What is the future situation of the Korean Peninsula?
00:01:44While there are many robberies and special fraud cases involving illegal prostitution,
00:01:49the police are strengthening the protection of the perpetrators who applied for a part-time job.
00:01:54Can Datsu's illegal part-time job be realized in the future?
00:01:59While the world is full of desires and temptations,
00:02:02there are more and more young people who escape from their instincts,
00:02:06such as leaving alcohol, cars, and brands.
00:02:09What do young people spend their money on?
00:02:14The members of the committee will discuss this with experts.
00:02:20SOKOMADE ITTE INKAI N.P.
00:02:22It's a question of whether or not you can break away from it.
00:02:26Think about Datsu.
00:02:39Hello.
00:02:40Hello.
00:02:41Today's SOKOMADE ITTE INKAI N.P. will be discussing the latest news on Datsu.
00:02:49Please take care of us.
00:02:55It's been a long time since we've seen you.
00:02:59Mr. Konishi, it's been a long time, hasn't it?
00:03:02Yes, it is.
00:03:03I'm usually called on winter vacation or summer vacation.
00:03:07When I'm off from college.
00:03:09You're often called on winter vacation.
00:03:11I'm a seasonal worker.
00:03:12That's not true.
00:03:14When I was young, I didn't eat much egomaki.
00:03:19I'm from Osaka.
00:03:21I don't think this generation has eaten it.
00:03:23That's right.
00:03:24In Kansai, it's an unusual act to eat it silently.
00:03:29It's natural to talk a lot and eat it,
00:03:32but I don't eat it because it's unusual.
00:03:34If Kanto people were silent, it wouldn't be unusual.
00:03:38And this is actor Tony Trouden.
00:03:41Nice to meet you.
00:03:45By the way, where is Mr. Trouden from?
00:03:48I'm half German.
00:03:50That's great.
00:03:51Everything is cool.
00:03:53Is that so?
00:03:55Your real life is cool.
00:03:58Do you admire Germany?
00:04:00I feel inferiority.
00:04:02That's not true.
00:04:03Let's move on to the first topic.
00:04:06First of all, the golden age has arrived in the United States
00:04:09with the inauguration of President Trump.
00:04:12What should Japan do at that time?
00:04:20Decapitation is a state where the joint is removed and the bone position is removed from its original position.
00:04:26Shouhei Otani of the American Major League Dodgers
00:04:30was diagnosed with left shoulder adduction
00:04:35when he tried to fight in the World Series with the Yankees on October 26th last year.
00:04:40After that, he continued to play while being fixed with taping
00:04:44and achieved the first victory of the World Series for himself.
00:04:49Otani, who underwent surgery in November last year,
00:04:52is scheduled to join the spring camp which will start this month.
00:04:56Will the two-sword style be revived this season?
00:05:00There is also a lot of attention on the opening match held in Japan next month.
00:05:05There is also news about the pregnancy of a Korean.
00:05:10Otani is active in the United States across the sea from Japan.
00:05:16On the 20th of last month, Donald Trump became the 47th president of the United States.
00:05:24It's been 132 years since the president's experience has come back.
00:05:31President Trump said in the election campaign,
00:05:34I will make the decimated United States great again.
00:05:38In the past four years, the increase in the number of influential immigrants,
00:05:42and the dissatisfaction with the current situation of society and politics,
00:05:45he took a strategy to appeal and won.
00:05:48In his inauguration speech on the 20th of last month,
00:05:51The golden age of the United States begins now.
00:05:55He emphasized the change of policy from the Biden administration.
00:06:00The Paris Agreement, a framework for warming measures,
00:06:03and the withdrawal from the WHO,
00:06:06He signed them one after another from the first day of his inauguration.
00:06:11President Trump said last month,
00:06:14In Panama, which was once managed by the United States,
00:06:17It is an honor for the country to pay for its own shipments.
00:06:22He claimed the right to manage Panama.
00:06:25In addition, he said it was necessary for the security of the country.
00:06:29He showed interest in Greenland, Denmark.
00:06:32In order to achieve this, he showed a position where military and economic pressure was not enough.
00:06:39In addition, he is seeking to raise the national defense cost to 5% of GDP
00:06:44for the Kamei country, a treaty mechanism for the North Atlantic.
00:06:49Of course, such pressure will be applied to Japan, the ally country.
00:06:55President Trump understands the importance of the U.S.-Japan alliance,
00:07:00China, which aims for rapid military expansion,
00:07:03and North Korea, which promotes the development of intercontinental ballistic missiles,
00:07:07which will dominate the U.S. mainland.
00:07:10Therefore, there is a possibility that Japan will face a significant increase in the burden of the U.S.-Japan military budget.
00:07:17According to Mr. Bolton's memorandum, who served as Vice President of the Trump administration for the first term,
00:07:24the U.S. military budget is expected to exceed 4 times that of Japan.
00:07:28The U.S. military budget is expected to exceed 4 times that of Japan.
00:07:34The U.S. military budget is expected to exceed 4 times that of Japan.
00:07:41However, Mr. Trump pointed out that Japan is expected to face a significant increase in the burden of the U.S. military budget.
00:07:52During his inauguration speech in October of last year,
00:07:57Mr. Ishiba stated that he would aim for an agreement to strengthen the U.S.-Japan alliance,
00:08:02and that the military base should be placed in the U.S. for the purpose of improving the ability of the Self-Defense Force.
00:08:09Mr. Ishiba has long said that Japan is an independent sovereign state,
00:08:14and that it should build an equal U.S.-Japan relationship.
00:08:18However, during his inauguration speech, Mr. Ishiba explained that Japan has no obligation to defend the U.S.
00:08:24If the U.S. side wants to review the U.S.-Japan regional agreement that Mr. Ishiba has raised,
00:08:30it is possible that President Trump will take this as an opportunity to make a new proposal,
00:08:34and will demand a greater responsibility and burden on the Japanese side.
00:08:40On the other hand, the Japanese government is in a hurry to expand the export of defense equipment
00:08:45in order to develop the domestic defense industry,
00:08:49and is also working on joint development of missiles for the U.S.
00:08:53and joint development of the next fighter jet with the U.K. and Italy.
00:08:57Will it be possible to reduce the dependence on the U.S.
00:09:02by avoiding President Trump, who is approaching the purchase of equipment in his own country?
00:09:08I have a question for all of you.
00:09:11Do you think Japan should withdraw from the U.S. dependence?
00:09:18I have a question for all of you.
00:09:20Do you think Japan should withdraw from the U.S. dependence?
00:09:24I have received various questions from all of you,
00:09:27and many of them say that Japan should withdraw.
00:09:30Ms. Moe, do you think it is difficult for Japan to withdraw from the U.S. dependence?
00:09:34When I saw Mr. Trump's speech,
00:09:39I thought he was a big mouse who had taken over the country.
00:09:44He had a lot of momentum.
00:09:46At this stage, if you look at the power of Japan,
00:09:50I think it would be dangerous if it were not in a position to follow the U.S.
00:09:54I think it would be dangerous if it were not in a position to follow the U.S.
00:09:59I was very curious about Mr. Trump's response to Ms. Ishiba.
00:10:05I was very curious about Mr. Trump's response to Ms. Ishiba.
00:10:08I met Mr. Akiyama right away.
00:10:13I met Mr. Akiyama right away.
00:10:18If I were in Mr. Ishiba's position,
00:10:21I would have thought he was completely naive.
00:10:23I would have thought he was completely naive.
00:10:26Mr. Trump likes Ms. Abe too much.
00:10:28He knows that Ms. Ishiba is his enemy.
00:10:31He hasn't seen her as a human being from the beginning.
00:10:36He hasn't seen her as a negotiator yet.
00:10:39He hasn't seen her as a negotiator yet.
00:10:43He refused to meet her.
00:10:45He said he refused to meet her.
00:10:47I wonder if it's true.
00:10:49I wonder if it's true.
00:10:51The guy who was hit on the cheek got up and said,
00:10:53The guy who was hit on the cheek got up and said,
00:10:55I'll do this much for you today.
00:10:57I'll do this much for you today.
00:10:59I heard this from Mr. Abe.
00:11:01I heard this from Mr. Abe.
00:11:03In Japan and the U.S.,
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00:22:07In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:09In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:11In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:13In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:15In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:17In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:19In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:21In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:23In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:25In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:27In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:29In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:31In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:33In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:35In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:37In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:39In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:41In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:43In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:45In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:47In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:49In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:51In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:53In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:55In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:57In Japan and the U.S.,
00:22:59In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:01In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:03In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:05In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:07In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:09In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:11In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:13In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:15In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:17In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:19In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:21In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:23In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:25In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:27In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:29In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:31In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:33In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:35In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:37In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:39In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:41In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:43In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:45In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:47In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:49In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:51In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:53In Japan and the U.S.,
00:23:55From North Korea to foreign countries...
00:23:59North Korea sent 12,000 troops to Russia last autumn,
00:24:05and participated in the battle with the Ukrainian army in the western Kursk region.
00:24:09It has been reported that they have already made many sacrifices.
00:24:13The Ukrainian President Zelensky said in a speech on the 4th of last month
00:24:17that the casualties were as much as one-third of the dispatch forces.
00:24:23The decrease in the number of soldiers fighting on the front line is serious.
00:24:27According to the internal information of Daily NK, a North Korean intelligence website,
00:24:33the soldiers dispatched to Russia are terribly intimidated by the fear of death,
00:24:37and are unable to adapt to various aspects such as culture.
00:24:41It is said that there are signs of ideological change.
00:24:45If the people of North Korea find out about this,
00:24:49there is a possibility that the number of North Korean defectors will increase even more.
00:24:53On the other hand, in South Korea,
00:24:55President Yoon Son-nyeol issued a resolution on the 3rd of last December.
00:25:01Mr. Yoon explained that it was to protect South Korea from the threat of North Korea and the anti-national forces,
00:25:06and to protect the order of the constitution.
00:25:10However, the real reason for issuing the resolution was not the threat from the outside,
00:25:15but the fact that he himself was politically cornered.
00:25:21And on the 15th of last month,
00:25:24the Joint Investigation Headquarters of South Korea, which is in charge of the emergency resolution declaration,
00:25:29began the execution of Mr. Yoon on suspicion of suicide.
00:25:34The investigators broke into the court and arrested the body of President Yoon.
00:25:39It was the first time in history that the current president was arrested in South Korea.
00:25:44Mr. Yoon released a video call,
00:25:47and said that he had decided to take action against the illegal investigation in order to avoid bloodshed.
00:25:56And on the 19th of last month, the court issued an arrest warrant,
00:26:01and Mr. Yoon was arrested by the investigation authorities.
00:26:05After that, on the 26th of last month,
00:26:07President Yoon was charged with the crime of conspiring against South Korea.
00:26:13Until now, President Yoon has refused to investigate,
00:26:17but according to South Korean law,
00:26:20a person charged with conspiring against South Korea is sentenced to death or imprisonment.
00:26:24The whereabouts of the investigation are being investigated.
00:26:28On the other hand,
00:26:29even in the psychology of the Constitutional Court, which judges Mr. Yoon for conspiring against South Korea,
00:26:33the treatment of conspiring against South Korea has become the focus.
00:26:37Last December, the National Assembly passed a resolution on conspiring against South Korea,
00:26:41and two points were pointed out.
00:26:44First, the opinion of the National Assembly itself,
00:26:47and the suspicion of conspiring against South Korea.
00:26:50However, on the 3rd of last month,
00:26:52the National Assembly's resolution on conspiring against South Korea was announced
00:26:55that it would remove the part about conspiring against South Korea from the resolution.
00:27:00It stated that the charge of conspiring against South Korea would be proven in court,
00:27:05and that it would focus on whether to violate the Constitution rather than the Constitution.
00:27:10It was seen as a concern that if there was a debate on the proof of conspiring against South Korea,
00:27:13the judgment would not be long-term.
00:27:17Meanwhile, North Korea's Chosun Central Telecommunications
00:27:21pointed out that the international community voted for Yoon Son-ryul's political life to end early.
00:27:28Mr. Yoon filed a case against the people of South Korea,
00:27:33and the whole of South Korea fell into the hands of the ABI.
00:27:37It was reported that 1 million citizens surrounded the National Assembly this year,
00:27:42and that the gap between the Korean society and the ABI has widened.
00:27:47North Korea's Kim Jong-un's early days
00:27:50was seen as a welcome event for South Korea,
00:27:53which had been in a fierce confrontation with the ABI until May 2027.
00:27:57It was seen as a welcome event for South Korea,
00:28:00which had been in a fierce confrontation with the ABI until May 2027.
00:28:05So, I have a question for everyone.
00:28:07Do you think that the relationship between South Korea and Japan will deteriorate
00:28:10under the leadership of President Yoon?
00:28:17I have a question for everyone.
00:28:19Do you think that the relationship between South Korea and Japan will deteriorate
00:28:22under the leadership of President Yoon?
00:28:24Yes, it's divided into whether it will deteriorate or not.
00:28:27As Mr. Trauden said, what is happening in South Korea?
00:28:31Yes, something amazing is happening.
00:28:34I can't predict what will happen in the future.
00:28:38But now, South Korea should concentrate on its own affairs.
00:28:42So, the problem between Japan and South Korea
00:28:46should be solved first before we talk about its own affairs.
00:28:53This is really shocking.
00:28:55I definitely don't want to be the president of South Korea.
00:28:58I don't know why some people in the United States
00:29:01Why? Why do they end up like that?
00:29:05Why do they end up like that?
00:29:07They get arrested, they get arrested, they die.
00:29:11There are many jobs in this world, but the president's job in Korea is the most dangerous job.
00:29:17That's true.
00:29:19But if you think about it, even if you are the president, if you do something bad, you will be arrested.
00:29:25It's a democratic country.
00:29:27Does that mean you can't get used to it unless you do something bad?
00:29:30No, let's keep quiet about that.
00:29:33But I think that if it's democratic, it's democratic to elect the president,
00:29:39so it's a democratic policy to change it in the next election.
00:29:43The government's mechanism is quite subtle, so it's up to a very small number of government agencies
00:29:52to decide whether to implement it or not.
00:29:55I think it's non-democratic.
00:29:58Let's hear from Mr. Bak first.
00:30:01The biggest problem is that the public opinion, which was overwhelmingly supported by the opposition,
00:30:06has collapsed, and now there are more than 50% who support President Yun's conservative party.
00:30:11It's leading.
00:30:13So I wonder what the judges of the Constitutional Court will think about this public opinion.
00:30:19As for the next flow, the main figure who said he would arrest President Yun will be arrested for incitement.
00:30:28Then the public opinion will move again, and the person who tried to arrest him for incitement will be arrested for incitement.
00:30:37It won't end, will it?
00:30:40Which one is incitement?
00:30:43The 29 consecutive executions and the confusion of nationality,
00:30:49and yet the Democratic People's Party did it.
00:30:54So President Yun did this, and the country is already in a mess.
00:31:00He said he couldn't do anything, so he should have appealed and appealed more and mobilized the people.
00:31:07But what he did was an emergency appeal.
00:31:11Mr. Bak, I'd like to ask you again about the moment when you issued the appeal.
00:31:15Why did you decide to issue this appeal?
00:31:19Is it because you thought North Korea and China had an influence on South Korea?
00:31:24I think so.
00:31:25The President was serious about the information on YouTube.
00:31:29In other words, the opposition is under the direction of North Korea,
00:31:34and the election was a false election.
00:31:36So he burned out the false election and arrested all the so-called EJ members of the opposition.
00:31:43He issued the appeal because he wanted to do politics as he wanted.
00:31:46Wait a minute. So the election was stolen.
00:31:49Yes.
00:31:50It's exactly the same as America.
00:31:51It's exactly the same.
00:31:52That's basically Trump's fake,
00:31:55but in the case of South Korea,
00:31:57how much reason do you think there is for North Korea's election to be modified or stolen by foreign forces?
00:32:06I don't think there's any reason.
00:32:08Then it's fake, isn't it?
00:32:09I think it's fake news.
00:32:11I heard from a reporter in South Korea that he often watches the broadcasts of conservative YouTubers.
00:32:18That's why South Korea is a YouTube society.
00:32:20They don't watch TV much.
00:32:21YouTube is almost always leading the public.
00:32:24In particular, the older generation supports President Yoon.
00:32:27They trust all the content on YouTube.
00:32:30I'd like to hear about what's going to happen to President Yoon.
00:32:36So the most important thing is...
00:32:42I'd like to hear about what's going to happen to President Yoon.
00:32:48So the most important thing is what the Constitutional Court will decide.
00:32:53If there is a dispute, President Yoon will return to the presidency.
00:32:58Then I think Japan-Korea relations will definitely stabilize as before.
00:33:04It's a matter of whether or not it will deteriorate.
00:33:07In the first place, I think the relationship between beer and Japan-Korea is as good as it gets.
00:33:13In the first place, the Yoon administration...
00:33:19The Yoon administration says it's a new day, but this is a little strange.
00:33:23Lee Akihiro and the Bokken family...
00:33:26When the new day started, they landed in Takeshima and apologized to the Emperor.
00:33:31It was a mess.
00:33:33It's not that the good and bad are shaking.
00:33:37It's just that the super bad and the super bad are moving here.
00:33:41This is a normal state.
00:33:43It says Pyongyang, but it's normal.
00:33:46That's a great applause.
00:33:50I'm sorry to keep you waiting.
00:33:52I'm sorry. I don't understand.
00:33:54Was Yoon right?
00:33:56That will be clarified from now on.
00:33:58From now on, is it really something that you don't know unless you go to court?
00:34:02So it will be clear whether or not President Yoon had legitimacy in the Constitutional Court.
00:34:11The problem is when President Yoon's term has been approved.
00:34:15There is a possibility that he will be elected as a representative of the ruling party.
00:34:20As President Yoon said, he has repeatedly made anti-Japanist remarks.
00:34:25However, at a press conference with the Asahi newspaper last month,
00:34:30he said that if he were to become president,
00:34:33he would cut off economic ties with Japan on the issue of labor and history.
00:34:41So I think he's probably trying to create a strategic relationship with Japan.
00:34:48However, Mr. Lee Jae-myung is also guilty at the level of Korea.
00:34:52He's got a few problems.
00:34:55So if he's arrested, he'll lose his right to be president.
00:35:00It's a very high risk.
00:35:02That's also unclear.
00:35:03Mr. Park, when will President Yoon's argument end?
00:35:09I think it will take about three months for President Yoon's argument to end.
00:35:14But if he's arrested, even if he has a good reputation in Japan, he'll have a good reputation elsewhere.
00:35:19The only thing he wants to do is have a relationship with China.
00:35:22That's right. If the exports from Japan go to North Korea again,
00:35:25there will be a need to remove the White House again.
00:35:28What if Lee Jae-myung becomes president?
00:35:30There is no possibility that he will.
00:35:32I don't think he will implement the North Korea-South Korea policy.
00:35:42I don't think he will implement the North Korea-South Korea policy.
00:35:47I don't think he will.
00:35:49I don't think the U.S. will allow it.
00:35:52Before that, there is a possibility that Trump will go to North Korea.
00:35:56Everyone, I forgot something important.
00:35:59In 2025, it will be the 60th anniversary of the normalization of national security.
00:36:03That's right.
00:36:04Did you know that?
00:36:06I was surprised.
00:36:08Did you know that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is putting out a catchphrase?
00:36:12It's a catchphrase that says,
00:36:14take both hands and go to a better future.
00:36:18Everyone, let's remember it and go home.
00:36:21I can't remember.
00:36:23Mr. Takeda, please say that.
00:36:25Mr. Takeda said that the 60th anniversary of the normalization of national security.
00:36:29But the foreign minister said,
00:36:31as long as Japan does not think about the issue of history,
00:36:35it is not a very effective position.
00:36:39It's a conservative government.
00:36:41I don't think it's a catchphrase.
00:36:43If Japan becomes a people's party,
00:36:45I think it's a catchphrase.
00:36:47Mr. Moe, I want you to see not only the homepage of the Japanese Foreign Ministry,
00:36:50but also the homepage of the Korean Foreign Ministry.
00:36:54Okay. I will do that.
00:36:58You have some thorn.
00:37:00But at a civil level,
00:37:03you're on good terms with each other,
00:37:05but at a political level,
00:37:07you're on bad terms with each other,
00:37:10or you're on bad terms with each other as a country?
00:37:14I think that's something that makes you feel better.
00:37:18The international exchange is a civil exchange.
00:37:21It's a exchange between people.
00:37:23No matter how much they argue, I think it's important for the people to get along with each other.
00:37:29In Korea, there are New Year's Day and Korean New Year's Day.
00:37:32The Korean New Year's Day is really terrible.
00:37:34It's like destroying Japanese things.
00:37:38In Japan, there is a New Year's Day.
00:37:40When there is a Korean New Year's Day,
00:37:42for example, there is no such thing as boycotting Korean things or setting fire to BBQ restaurants.
00:37:47I also talk about various Korean political issues.
00:37:50I eat BBQ every day and drink Makgeolli.
00:37:54I don't think there is such a thing in Korea.
00:37:56In Korea, we all drink beer together.
00:37:59Let's go to Korea together and see if Mr. Takeda can do it.
00:38:04Let's move on to the next topic.
00:38:06Next, we will talk about the reality of dark part-time jobs that have been causing trouble in society recently.
00:38:12Are you and your family okay?
00:38:17Outsider Information
00:38:20In December of last year, a group of artists and a group of ordinary people,
00:38:26called Yazakura-kai, and a group of artists and a group of ordinary people,
00:38:31held a meeting in about 40 places around the country.
00:38:33The total amount of compensation for both parties was about 1.25 billion yen.
00:38:38The total number of people who participated in the meeting was about 90,000.
00:38:42Most of them were users who had paid for their expenses,
00:38:46so it was extremely difficult to pay them back.
00:38:50Even recently after COVID-19,
00:38:52there has been a surge in the number of artists who have lost their jobs due to competition with their peers.
00:38:58Speaking of a surge in the number of artists who have lost their jobs...
00:39:01Since August of last year,
00:39:03there has been a series of robberies in the dark part-time jobs
00:39:06in places such as Hokkaido, Tochigi, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, and Kanagawa.
00:39:11About 80% of the suspects arrested by the police in August
00:39:16were young people in their teens and twenties.
00:39:18According to investigators,
00:39:20most of the suspects searched on the Internet with search terms such as high-priced reward,
00:39:24and applied for a job where they were in charge of carrying luggage and white case.
00:39:29Several suspects said that they wanted to pay off their debts,
00:39:34that they thought they could make a lot of money,
00:39:37and that they were looking for a reward.
00:39:40Also, according to the consultation of people who applied for a job in the dark part-time jobs,
00:39:46the police nationwide protected 125 cases until the end of November of last year.
00:39:50About 70% of the suspects were young people in their teens and twenties,
00:39:53and they were threatened to expose their personal information
00:39:56if they refused instructions from their supervisors.
00:39:59On the other hand, the supervisors used the form of other people's names
00:40:04to register their phone numbers in the United States
00:40:07and hid their identities.
00:40:12It is said that it is difficult to arrest them.
00:40:16In the future, the key to whether or not they can leave the dark part-time job
00:40:21will be how to arrest them and reduce the number of applicants for the dark part-time job.
00:40:25In the meantime,
00:40:26the police will introduce a new method of investigation this year,
00:40:30which is a virtual identity investigation.
00:40:32If the police hide their identities and apply for a dark part-time job,
00:40:36they will be sent a fake ID card and searched for their identities.
00:40:40By doing so, it is an infiltration investigation that clarifies illegal employees.
00:40:46Mr. Tadashi Tadashi, a journalist who is familiar with criminal law and criminal law,
00:40:53has been involved in various fraud groups in the same way.
00:40:58Mr. Tadashi Tadashi, a journalist who is familiar with criminal law and criminal law,
00:41:02has been involved in various fraud groups in the same way.
00:41:09In fact, since last year,
00:41:11there have been many cases of seniors joining the dark part-time job.
00:41:15In particular, in Fukui, Osaka,
00:41:17a video was made for seniors.
00:41:23Hey, hey.
00:41:24Yes?
00:41:25I'll send this to my grandchild.
00:41:27You're so rude.
00:41:29I have a good part-time job.
00:41:31I can make a lot of money just by lending a smartphone or making an account.
00:41:37No, that's a dark part-time job.
00:41:39Dynamite?
00:41:40No, it's a dark part-time job.
00:41:43Only young people get caught like that.
00:41:46There are more seniors.
00:41:48You're using a smartphone, aren't you?
00:41:50What?
00:41:51It's about us.
00:41:54After this, Mr. Tadashi Tadashi appears in the studio.
00:41:57He will talk about the dark part-time job that young people should be careful about.
00:42:03I have a question for you.
00:42:05What do you want to ask Mr. Tadashi Tadashi?
00:42:12I'm asking you what you want to ask Mr. Tadashi.
00:42:17We have a guest.
00:42:18Mr. Tadashi, a journalist who is familiar with fraud and criminal law.
00:42:22Nice to meet you.
00:42:24Nice to meet you.
00:42:27I'm sure you have a lot of questions for Mr. Tadashi.
00:42:30I'd like to answer your questions.
00:42:33Mr. Tadashi, how about the people around you?
00:42:36I don't think anyone has a dark part-time job.
00:42:39Have you seen any of that information on social media?
00:42:43It's a pretty bad thing around me.
00:42:47There's a lot of talk about the dark part-time job.
00:42:51I don't want to see that kind of information.
00:42:53I think a lot of people are saying that it's all suspicious.
00:42:59So that's how you use social media.
00:43:02There's a regulation here.
00:43:05It's not about the right to speak.
00:43:07It's a regulation in terms of law enforcement.
00:43:10After all, social media is treated like a bad thing.
00:43:14All of the dark part-time jobs are based on social media.
00:43:19It's not that social media itself is bad.
00:43:22It's the people who abuse social media that are bad.
00:43:25I'd like to ask you what's going on with this kind of law enforcement to get rid of the bad image.
00:43:32That's right.
00:43:34We're trying to get rid of the people who think it's a dark part-time job.
00:43:41Originally, the police were trying to get rid of the people who thought it was a dark part-time job.
00:43:49But over the past decade, there have been so many more frauds.
00:43:53It's a problem that more and more people are looking for dark part-time jobs.
00:43:58I've been saying this for over 10 years.
00:44:00I've been doing it on TV.
00:44:02It's been about last year.
00:44:04Finally, people started to pay attention and the police started to act.
00:44:08I think it's too late to respond to this kind of law enforcement.
00:44:12We need to get rid of the dark part-time jobs on social media as soon as possible.
00:44:18People are getting involved one after another.
00:44:21By the way, how do you tell the fundamental difference between a dark part-time job and a non-dark part-time job?
00:44:27Basically, the people who are recruiting are a group of frauds, so they're lying.
00:44:32I don't think we can judge just by the content of the recruitment.
00:44:35I can't judge that.
00:44:37Isn't that weird?
00:44:39If you teach dark part-time jobs, you'll know that they're a top-class job.
00:44:43But you can't judge that.
00:44:45I think they're a top-class job.
00:44:47If you teach a dark part-time job, you'll see that they're a top-class job.
00:44:52I don't think they're a top-class job.
00:44:55But I think they're a top-class job.
00:44:58I don't think so.
00:44:59I mean, if you teach people to work in the dark, you can tell that it's a super high-paying job.
00:45:05But if you look at the news, you have to use AI to find out.
00:45:10If it's normal, you'll be fooled.
00:45:12So if you expect a normal part-time job, it's a matter of how to deal with it.
00:45:16It's a matter of whether or not AI can see through it.
00:45:19How do you deal with this?
00:45:21Simply, it's a job that pays a lot of money.
00:45:24It's still suspicious that it's a good job.
00:45:26It's different.
00:45:27It doesn't cost much. It looks like a normal part-time job.
00:45:30What kind of part-time job is there?
00:45:32First of all, I think you'll be fooled.
00:45:35There are cases where people who think this is a part-time job are actually caught.
00:45:41Why? That's what I thought, too.
00:45:43It's a normal part-time job.
00:45:45When I heard about the story of a housewife who became a housewife, it was a part-time job for 10,000 yen a day.
00:45:51What's the job?
00:45:52The job is to carry the luggage.
00:45:55Carry the luggage?
00:45:56That's right.
00:45:57Was it a problem to carry the luggage?
00:46:00That's right.
00:46:01I didn't notice it when I saw it for the first time.
00:46:03When I was waiting for the luggage at the station, it came.
00:46:06I brought it to the designated place.
00:46:09Then I got 10,000 yen.
00:46:11When I got a paper bag from an elderly person for the second time, I noticed it.
00:46:20In fact, all personal information is kept in advance.
00:46:24Everyone's personal information is kept in advance.
00:46:27The person around him is raising a child alone.
00:46:32Then I have to go pick up the child.
00:46:34So I asked him if this paper bag was a scam.
00:46:39I should have asked the police.
00:46:42I've been taking care of him all the time, and I've been getting paid, so I contacted the person who hired me.
00:46:47So I told him to put it in the park locker.
00:46:52But I think it's a good idea to believe the word white case.
00:46:56The word, I'm not suspicious, is the most suspicious.
00:47:01That's right.
00:47:02I don't think everyone has that kind of idea.
00:47:07I've heard of it.
00:47:09The main method of YAMI-BYTE is to collect personal information.
00:47:16Don't you usually ask for personal information when you work part-time?
00:47:20Is it strange to ask?
00:47:22First of all, I'm going to tell you how to find out about YAMI-BYTE.
00:47:28I have a lot of YAMI-BYTE recruiters.
00:47:33I'm calling a lot of recruiters.
00:47:35They ask me how much I owe.
00:47:38They ask me if I have a debt at work.
00:47:42They don't ask me that.
00:47:44They don't ask me how much I owe.
00:47:47They only talk about money.
00:47:50When I hear that, I think it's YAMI-BYTE.
00:47:53That's the first thing.
00:47:54And I'm trying to get in touch with them on Telegram or Signal.
00:48:02I don't know who they are.
00:48:05I don't ask for that kind of thing.
00:48:10What do you mean by YAMI-BYTE recruiters?
00:48:15There are many young people in their 20s and 30s.
00:48:20The reason why there are so many of them is because of COVID-19.
00:48:28We couldn't make money, so we were in debt.
00:48:31We had to pay off our debts.
00:48:33Now we have to pay off our debts.
00:48:37The criminal group knew that.
00:48:40They took advantage of that and said,
00:48:42It's hard. Let's make a comeback.
00:48:45That's how we made money.
00:48:48When I look at YAMI-BYTE recruiters' hats,
00:48:50I can see that many of them are underage.
00:48:53When I called them, they were very angry.
00:48:56Why?
00:48:57The staff made me look like I was in my 20s.
00:49:01They said, You look like an old man.
00:49:05They got angry as soon as I called them.
00:49:07They said, Don't lie to me.
00:49:09Don't lie to me.
00:49:11I don't like it.
00:49:13Don't lie to me.
00:49:15TADA-san.
00:49:17Can I ask you a question?
00:49:21Yes.
00:49:22Go ahead.
00:49:24It's okay.
00:49:26When I called YAMI-BYTE,
00:49:32I was in my 40s.
00:49:34I'm only 60 years old.
00:49:38When I called them at that age,
00:49:40some of the recruiters said,
00:49:42It's better to be old.
00:49:45They said, Young people don't listen to me.
00:49:48They don't do what I tell them to do.
00:49:50But when they are in their mid to high school years,
00:49:52they do what I tell them to do.
00:49:54Since YAMI-BYTE has increased,
00:49:57crime has become more violent.
00:50:00For example, if it's a professional robber,
00:50:02if they don't kill him,
00:50:04they won't kill him.
00:50:06The risk of being caught
00:50:08and the amount of money you get
00:50:10depend on how safe you try to do it.
00:50:14But if there's an eye for an eye,
00:50:16they'll kill him.
00:50:18It's like taking tens of thousands of yen
00:50:20and killing a lot of people.
00:50:22I don't know what to do.
00:50:24I'm not a professional.
00:50:26I don't know what to do.
00:50:28For example, if you sell an account,
00:50:30you'll get 10,000 yen if you carry it.
00:50:32But if you go there and kill 10 people,
00:50:34you'll get instructions to take things.
00:50:36You'll say, I understand.
00:50:38You'll do it.
00:50:40No matter how many ID cards you have,
00:50:42you'll say, kill people, I understand.
00:50:44How does that connect?
00:50:46I don't think it connects normally.
00:50:48I feel like there's too much difference
00:50:50between what you say and what you don't say.
00:50:52That's because you're in control
00:50:54out of fear.
00:50:56If you don't do what you're told,
00:50:58you'll get killed.
00:51:00Because of that fear,
00:51:02you do what you're told.
00:51:04If you say you're right,
00:51:06you're right.
00:51:08You don't understand people's pain.
00:51:10Another reason why there are
00:51:12so many organized robberies
00:51:14and frauds caused by Yamabito
00:51:16is because
00:51:18Yamabito is weak when he's in an organization.
00:51:20If he's in an organization,
00:51:22he'll move around in it.
00:51:24I've asked a lot of Yamabito people
00:51:26about their sense of guilt,
00:51:28but they all say, no.
00:51:30Ms. Tadano,
00:51:32what everyone wants to know the most
00:51:34is what's going on in the back.
00:51:36That's what I was told.
00:51:38Is it the violence?
00:51:40Or is it China?
00:51:42Or is it Vietnam?
00:51:44Is it the foreign mafia?
00:51:46Or is it the mafia?
00:51:48How do you analyze
00:51:50what's going on
00:51:52in the back?
00:51:54Ms. Tadano,
00:51:56how do you analyze it?
00:51:58Anyway,
00:52:00there are a lot of parents in this era.
00:52:02Anyway, there are a lot of
00:52:04organized robberies.
00:52:06I think there are parents
00:52:08in each group.
00:52:10I always think that
00:52:12it's similar to the social structure
00:52:14in Japan.
00:52:16There are more than 90% of small and medium-sized businesses.
00:52:18There are a lot of groups
00:52:20in the world.
00:52:22But there are also groups
00:52:24that really have
00:52:26financial power
00:52:28in the group
00:52:30of the violent group
00:52:32or the anti-gay group.
00:52:34For example,
00:52:36if you make a phone call
00:52:38overseas,
00:52:40you need people, money,
00:52:42and grudges.
00:52:44Recently,
00:52:46there have been a lot of
00:52:48robberies and
00:52:50life-threatening cases.
00:52:52So,
00:52:54I think
00:52:56it's a kind of grudge.
00:52:58So,
00:53:00I think
00:53:02it's a kind of grudge.
00:53:04So,
00:53:06I think
00:53:08it's a kind of grudge.
00:53:10So far,
00:53:12there are criminal organizations in Japan,
00:53:14but there are also criminal organizations
00:53:16overseas.
00:53:18For example,
00:53:20there are criminal organizations in Vietnam
00:53:22and Southeast Asia.
00:53:24There are also Chinese criminal organizations
00:53:26that are doing international online fraud
00:53:28to the world.
00:53:30Japan is also a target.
00:53:32Now, in Japan,
00:53:34it's called SNS-type investment fraud.
00:53:36I think it's already
00:53:38being deceived by the media.
00:53:40I think it's already being deceived by the media.
00:53:42I think it's already being deceived by the media.
00:53:44If a supporter or a black label
00:53:46is overseas,
00:53:48it's not good to have a false identity.
00:53:50If a supporter or a black label is overseas,
00:53:52they will give up.
00:53:54I think it's better
00:53:56to have a better way.
00:53:58For example,
00:54:00is it a criminal suppression agreement?
00:54:02I think so.
00:54:04First of all,
00:54:06they are doing it in Southeast Asia,
00:54:08Myanmar,
00:54:10so everyone is caught.
00:54:12Because there is no relationship
00:54:14between Japan and China at all.
00:54:16Is it happening in other countries
00:54:18other than Japan?
00:54:20Of course, there are also in Korea.
00:54:22And recently,
00:54:24there are some foreigners
00:54:26who have come to Japan
00:54:28to apply for un-vote overseas.
00:54:30Investment fraud is often in the United States.
00:54:32There are various frauds in the United States,
00:54:34but the president himself
00:54:36was doing fraud.
00:54:38This is not reported in Japan,
00:54:40but Trump was doing it
00:54:42in a communication education
00:54:44called Trump University.
00:54:46In the end,
00:54:48there was almost nothing in it.
00:54:50In the end,
00:54:52dozens of people were sued.
00:54:54In the end,
00:54:56it will eventually be reconciled.
00:54:58Trump is doing hundreds of kinds of business.
00:55:00One of them was fraud.
00:55:02One of them was fraud.
00:55:04You shouldn't say bad things about Trump.
00:55:08You can't enter the country anymore.
00:55:10By the way,
00:55:12what was Mr. Yamaguchi's first question?
00:55:14I forgot, too.
00:55:16But somehow
00:55:18I can hear what I want to hear.
00:55:20It's okay.
00:55:22Do you have a watch?
00:55:24No, I don't.
00:55:26Do you have a car?
00:55:28No, I don't.
00:55:30No, I don't.
00:55:34Let's move on to the next topic.
00:55:36Next,
00:55:38what did you spend money on
00:55:40recently?
00:55:46This year's New Year's holiday
00:55:48is said to be a miraculous nine consecutive holidays,
00:55:50but is it good?
00:55:52On January 6th,
00:55:54when many people
00:55:56started working,
00:55:58a request came
00:56:00from a person
00:56:02who wanted to quit the company.
00:56:04After a long break,
00:56:06many of the salaried workers
00:56:08returned to reality,
00:56:10but there were
00:56:12many people who had
00:56:14a lot on their minds.
00:56:16On the other hand,
00:56:18there are desires
00:56:20and temptations
00:56:22that you can't get out of.
00:56:24However,
00:56:26it has been a long time
00:56:28since the young people
00:56:30who have abandoned their desires
00:56:32have been pointed out.
00:56:34In 2020,
00:56:36the company Resolution
00:56:38conducted a survey
00:56:40on the lives of young people
00:56:42targeting men and women
00:56:44in their 20s across the country,
00:56:46and found that
00:56:48they were not interested
00:56:50in gambling,
00:56:52smoking,
00:56:54and gambling.
00:56:56What do young people
00:56:58spend their money on?
00:57:00By the way,
00:57:02the domestic market
00:57:04for anime,
00:57:06idol, and games
00:57:08announced by a private investigation
00:57:10company is
00:57:12about 6,687 billion yen
00:57:14in 2021,
00:57:16about 7,164 billion yen
00:57:18in 2022,
00:57:20and the anime industry,
00:57:22which has gained
00:57:24a new fan base.
00:57:26Among them,
00:57:28one of the major consumption
00:57:30activities of young people
00:57:32is called Oshikatsu.
00:57:34What is Oshikatsu?
00:57:36It is common to support
00:57:38idols and anime characters
00:57:40and buy works and goods,
00:57:42participate in concerts,
00:57:44and celebrate birthdays,
00:57:46but in recent years,
00:57:48fans have become advertisers
00:57:50who publish messages
00:57:52to support idols.
00:57:54It is said that
00:57:56support ads are
00:57:58gaining popularity.
00:58:00In November last year,
00:58:02Osaka Metro Midosuji Line
00:58:04Shinsaibashi Station
00:58:06published a support ad
00:58:08celebrating the birthday
00:58:10of a member of a singing group
00:58:12who does activities
00:58:14without showing his face
00:58:16on the Internet.
00:58:18It was born from the enthusiasm
00:58:20of fans who wanted to be known
00:58:22by the public,
00:58:24and the market capacity
00:58:26in Japan in 2023
00:58:28is estimated to be
00:58:3037.7 billion yen.
00:58:32In addition,
00:58:34according to a survey
00:58:36released by Hakuhodo
00:58:38in February last year,
00:58:40more than 30% of
00:58:4250,000 men and women
00:58:44in their teens and
00:58:4620s were over 80%.
00:58:48Young people these days
00:58:50may be satisfying themselves
00:58:52by spending money
00:58:54on their favorite
00:58:56rather than
00:58:58spending money on themselves.
00:59:00On the other hand,
00:59:02in December last year,
00:59:04the Japanese government
00:59:06announced that
00:59:08the GDP per capita
00:59:10in Japan in 2023
00:59:12was 33,849 dollars per dollar,
00:59:14which was 4.75 million yen
00:59:16at the time.
00:59:18Among the 38 countries
00:59:20that are part of
00:59:22the OECD Economic Cooperation
00:59:24Development Organization,
00:59:26Japan ranked
00:59:2821st among the 22 countries.
00:59:30According to the Cabinet,
00:59:32this is the first time
00:59:34since 1980
00:59:36that the ranking of Japan
00:59:38has reversed.
00:59:40It seems that
00:59:42there will be a day
00:59:44when young people
00:59:46in Japan will be able
00:59:48to pay off their debt.
00:59:50So I have a question for everyone.
00:59:52Do you think that
00:59:54Japan's national power
00:59:56will decline further in the future?
01:00:00We are asking everyone
01:00:02whether Japan's national power
01:00:04will decline further in the future.
01:00:06Many people are saying
01:00:08that it will decline.
01:00:10Why do you think so?
01:00:12Because the government
01:00:14has a bad policy.
01:00:16First of all,
01:00:18if young people get older,
01:00:20they may not be able
01:00:22to pay their pension.
01:00:24The government is spreading
01:00:26its incompetence
01:00:28and making young people
01:00:30anxious.
01:00:32And the other good thing
01:00:34is that young people
01:00:36no longer smoke,
01:00:38drink alcohol,
01:00:40and spend a lot of money
01:00:42on medical expenses.
01:00:46Also,
01:00:48there are more young people
01:00:50who work together.
01:00:52If a man and a woman
01:00:54work together in a company,
01:00:56the consumption will increase.
01:00:58What are you doing
01:01:00depending on the government's policy?
01:01:02That's right.
01:01:06I think that's right.
01:01:08In the 1970s,
01:01:10the national burden
01:01:12of tax and social security
01:01:14was about 20%,
01:01:16so 3 out of 4 people
01:01:18were able to use it.
01:01:20Now it's 50%,
01:01:22so it's over 50%.
01:01:24It's a mess.
01:01:26It doesn't even
01:01:28lead to consumption.
01:01:30If you spend
01:01:32a lot of money
01:01:34and work together,
01:01:36the national power of Japan
01:01:38will not increase,
01:01:40but if you make a big change,
01:01:42it can be revived at any time.
01:01:44I don't think it's a matter
01:01:46of change of policy.
01:01:48There was a movie
01:01:50called Always.
01:01:52In those days,
01:01:54people wanted to go up.
01:01:56I think so, too.
01:01:58Anyway,
01:02:00people thought
01:02:02they were playing in a club.
01:02:04However,
01:02:06there is no such thing
01:02:08for young people now.
01:02:10They don't want a watch,
01:02:12a car,
01:02:14or a nice suit.
01:02:16They just want
01:02:18cheap clothes.
01:02:20They don't want to go on a trip,
01:02:22get married,
01:02:24or have a girlfriend.
01:02:26I'd like to hear
01:02:28what you think.
01:02:30They don't have money.
01:02:32No matter how hard they work,
01:02:34they can't make money.
01:02:36So they can't buy
01:02:38what they want.
01:02:40That's why they don't have money.
01:02:42Do you have a watch?
01:02:44No, I don't.
01:02:46Do you have a car?
01:02:48No, I don't.
01:02:50It's not like that.
01:02:52I've been saving money
01:02:54since I was a kid.
01:02:56I think it's a luxury.
01:02:58I don't know how to save money.
01:03:00I don't want to work in a good company.
01:03:02It's like a free TV.
01:03:04People like the king
01:03:06of the bubble
01:03:08are still doing it.
01:03:10The Japanese companies
01:03:12can't get out of
01:03:14the success experience.
01:03:16All Japanese companies
01:03:18are like that.
01:03:20If they can't change,
01:03:22they can't go
01:03:24to the 90s.
01:03:26After the Cold War,
01:03:28Japanese companies
01:03:30invested in
01:03:32various people
01:03:34in Japan.
01:03:36Japanese companies
01:03:38are doing their best.
01:03:40There are more jobs.
01:03:42But even if they make
01:03:44a lot of scenes in Japan,
01:03:46the world is doing
01:03:48a lot of scenes in the Olympics.
01:03:50The gap is widening.
01:03:52For example, Fuji TV.
01:03:54People like the king
01:03:56of the bubble
01:03:58are still doing it.
01:04:00Some people have been
01:04:02in charge of it for 40 years.
01:04:04That's not just a problem
01:04:06of Fuji TV.
01:04:08One of the Japanese companies
01:04:10has not been able to
01:04:12make progress in Japan
01:04:14for 30 years.
01:04:16Mr. Tragen,
01:04:18do you think
01:04:20the more you work,
01:04:22the more you get paid?
01:04:24I don't think so.
01:04:26Instead of working hard
01:04:28to get paid,
01:04:30you should reduce
01:04:32your responsibilities
01:04:34and focus on
01:04:36what you like.
01:04:38I think that's the mainstream.
01:04:40I think so, too.
01:04:42If the salary goes up,
01:04:44maybe the mentality
01:04:46will change.
01:04:48In fact, the salary goes up.
01:04:50The minimum wage is 300,000 yen.
01:04:52They are trying to raise
01:04:54the minimum wage.
01:04:56They say that they will
01:04:58get paid from now on.
01:05:00If you don't
01:05:02regulate the government,
01:05:04Japanese companies
01:05:06are doing their best,
01:05:08but the government
01:05:10is crushing it.
01:05:12For example, there are many
01:05:14venture companies
01:05:16that have grown in the United States.
01:05:18They are doing their best,
01:05:20but it's illegal
01:05:22because it's a white house.
01:05:24There are more and more people
01:05:26who use it as a part-time job.
01:05:28What should we do?
01:05:30If we stop it now,
01:05:32some people will lose their jobs.
01:05:34Then what should we do?
01:05:36It's a legal debate.
01:05:38There is no business model
01:05:40like this in Japan.
01:05:42It's over if you crush it.
01:05:44Uber is very convenient.
01:05:46When a flexible young person
01:05:48makes something that is not convenient,
01:05:50adults crush it
01:05:52and say it's against the law.
01:05:54The government is eyeing it.
01:05:56If it's like this,
01:05:58venture companies won't grow.
01:06:00As Mr. Traudy wrote,
01:06:02in our time,
01:06:04we wanted to work.
01:06:06There was a declaration
01:06:08that we could work 24 hours a day.
01:06:10There were many people
01:06:12who had a hobby of working.
01:06:14However, young people
01:06:16now want to work
01:06:18as little as possible.
01:06:20They want to do what they want to do.
01:06:22Moreover,
01:06:24there are more people
01:06:26who don't want to be involved with people.
01:06:28I want you to understand this.
01:06:30Oshikatsu is mental health.
01:06:32It suppresses anxiety.
01:06:34They don't have dreams,
01:06:36so they have dreams.
01:06:38I've heard that
01:06:40many people
01:06:42want to quit.
01:06:44However,
01:06:46I feel a little gloomy.
01:06:48You're depressed.
01:06:50I'd like to ask you
01:06:52what you want to quit
01:06:54and what you want to quit
01:06:56at the same time.
01:06:58I'd like to ask you.
01:07:00Let's open at the same time.
01:07:02What do you want to quit?
01:07:04What do you want to quit?
01:07:06What do you want to quit?
01:07:08What do you want to quit?
01:07:10What do you want to quit?
01:07:12Wait a minute.
01:07:14Do you want to quit?
01:07:16I think so.
01:07:18As I said,
01:07:20Oshikatsu is mental health.
01:07:22It suppresses anxiety.
01:07:24It suppresses anxiety.
01:07:26If I don't have a plan for a week,
01:07:28I buy food for 7 days on the first day
01:07:30and don't go out at all.
01:07:32What do you enjoy at home?
01:07:34Reading, studying,
01:07:36playing games,
01:07:38listening to music.
01:07:40I do everything I can do at home.
01:07:42Do you do everything by yourself?
01:07:44I do everything by myself.
01:07:46I do everything by myself.
01:07:48However,
01:07:50I feel a little lonely.
01:07:52How about you, Mr. Taku?
01:07:54There are so many comments.
01:07:56There are so many comments.
01:07:58I can't quit it.
01:08:00I can't quit it.
01:08:02Why?
01:08:04Because I'm sure I'll die.
01:08:06I'm sure I'll die.
01:08:08I'm sure I'll die.
01:08:10My daughter tells me that my father is dead.
01:08:12My daughter tells me that my father is dead.
01:08:14I check whether my father is dead.
01:08:16I check whether my father is dead.
01:08:18I'm old enough to know how to use it.
01:08:20I'm old enough to know how to use it.
01:08:22But now,
01:08:24I can't quit it.
01:08:26I can't quit it.
01:08:28You're sure to survive.
01:08:30You're sure to survive.
01:08:32What about your pension and YouTube?
01:08:34I want my pension to be cashless.
01:08:36I want my pension to be cashless.
01:08:38However,
01:08:40in Kitashinchi,
01:08:42in Kyoto,
01:08:44in Kabukicho,
01:08:46there are so many stores that only accept cash.
01:08:48How are you, Mr. Taku?
01:08:50I'm sure you're doing that.
01:08:52I'm sure you're doing that.
01:08:54I don't know.
01:08:56I'm sure you're doing that.
01:08:58What about YouTube?
01:09:00Since last year,
01:09:02I made my own channel.
01:09:04I made my own channel.
01:09:06The number of viewers and subscribers
01:09:08is not so good.
01:09:10I can't monetize it yet.
01:09:12How many people do you have?
01:09:14I have about 10,000 to 40,000 subscribers.
01:09:16I have about 10,000 to 40,000 subscribers.
01:09:18I have about 10,000 to 40,000 subscribers.
01:09:20I'm counting on you.
01:09:22When I first met Mr. Taku,
01:09:24When I first met Mr. Taku,
01:09:26I was surprised.
01:09:28I was surprised.
01:09:30I was surprised.
01:09:32I looked for it.
01:09:34I looked for it.
01:09:38Mr. Yamaguchi is looking for it.
01:09:40Mr. Yamaguchi is looking for it.
01:09:42I don't want to quit it.
01:09:44Even if I want to quit,
01:09:46Even if I want to quit,
01:09:48I want to change my face.
01:09:50I want to change my face.
01:09:52What are you looking for?
01:09:54It's my hobby.
01:09:56It's my hobby.
01:09:58I've known him for a long time, and I've met him for the first time in a while, and when I first saw him, I was like,
01:10:10Oh, he's a pervert.
01:10:13That's what I thought.
01:10:16I was like, should I go look for him?
01:10:19And I did.
01:10:21I really want to quit, but I can't help it.
01:10:28What about the black theater?
01:10:30It's okay. I'm not playing.
01:10:33I'm not playing.
01:10:34The TV is bad.
01:10:36Why?
01:10:38It's 8K, right?
01:10:40So, really, Shimi and Shabakasu...
01:10:428K? I can't watch it.
01:10:44It's a time when you can see the foundation that hides the pimples.
01:10:48That's why everyone says they don't want to be on TV.
01:10:54If you look closely,
01:10:56He's pulling and pulling.
01:11:00Huh?
01:11:02He's wearing a titanic mask.
01:11:04I feel like he's not dead.
01:11:09Takuro Morinaga, who appeared on the committee last week, has passed away.
01:11:16I humbly apologize.
01:11:19Mr. Morinaga, thank you very much for your many passionate comments.