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发表于 2011-11-24 09:04:08
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VOX POPULI: Let's thank the workers, not the gamblers
The kanji that make up the Japanese phrase “kinro-kansha” (labor thanksgiving) look kind of stiff, but their meaning feels profound. Perhaps it has to do with the fact that Labor Thanksgiving Day coincides with the old “Niinamesai” (harvest festival), an ancient ritual to celebrate the harvest of rice and other grains. According to the national holiday law, kinro-kansha is a day "to pay tribute to labor, celebrate production and for citizens to express gratitude to one another." How nice and simple.
Let me also quote a maxim by the Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) about what is sometimes taken as the opposite of work: play. Shaw said: "We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." Playing does indeed make life richer, and people who are good at it sometimes achieve success. It goes without saying that they also work hard.
The former chairman of Daio Paper Corp. Mototaka Ikawa, 47, was arrested by the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office on a charge of aggravated breach of trust. He is suspected of having diverted more than 10 billion yen ($139 million) from Daio subsidiaries to gamble at overseas casinos, causing the company billions of yen in damages.
One can suffer heavy losses depending on the way the dice rolls, but Ikawa abused his power as the third generation heir of the family that founded the company. No matter how we look at it, the way he squandered someone else's money was debauched and showed no self-discipline. The young master of a paper wholesaler frequents questionable neighborhoods and spends money from the till. If it were a period drama, a long-serving head clerk would reprimand him. In this case, however, the misconduct did not stop.
There was a time when big businesses as well as heirs to family businesses flocked to gambling houses to make speculative investments. Olympus Corp.'s loss swelled to 130 billion yen, but company executives cooked the books to hide it. The case is also attracting the attention of the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office's special investigative unit.
Workers must work hard before they rest, and companies must concentrate on their main businesses before they use surplus funds to try to make extra money. Labor Thanksgiving Day must give bitter pause for thought to prodigal young heirs and big major businesses now under threat. I don't know if I'm lucky or not, but I am a stranger to sums in the order of tens of billions of yen. I want to celebrate labor thanksgiving with my fellow workers.
--The Asahi Shimbun, Nov. 23
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