
🎙️ Petit Petit Summit (28) The greatest threat is the so-called “Pandemic Treaty” being plotted by the WHO?
September 3, 2023 — Part 3
Will Japan Survive This War?
Yūdai: But look, don't you think a "death ray" weapon capable of killing people with pinpoint accuracy is, in a way, more terrifying than nuclear weapons? A nuclear war wipes out everything, so it can't be used easily. But with a pinpoint weapon, you can eliminate anyone you find inconvenient in total silence.
Allan: Exactly. Unnamed people with no influence like us wouldn't be targeted, but the people who run nations would be terrified into submission. They would act exactly as the invisible powers dictate. Most people wouldn't even notice. Society would slowly, steadily transform into a state of total control.
Goro: Is there really nothing we can do to stop this tide?
Allan: There are people out there speaking out at the risk of their lives.
Goro: So the biggest crisis is the so-called "Pandemic Treaty" being orchestrated by the WHO?
Allan: Almost certainly. The WHO aims to establish it by May 2024. The first point of the proposal is "Strengthening leadership to prepare for global health threats," and the second is "Strengthening and focusing on the WHO's independence, authority, and financing." If we sign such a thing, it may become impossible to control at the national or bureaucratic level. It seems the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare is actually looking forward to it.
Yūdai: Because they want to escape responsibility? So they can say, "It's not our fault; the WHO said so, so we have no choice but to comply."
Allan: Precisely. There’s no way the Ministry doesn't know the dangers or the true intent behind the genetic agents by now. But they can’t exactly say, "Oops, that was actually poison" this late in the game. If they can hold out until next May, they can escape by saying the orders are coming from a place beyond their authority.
Goro: "Hold out"? I’d understand if they were holding out to avoid giving the injections, but Japan is the only one left still talking about a sixth or seventh dose.
Yūdai: Are we repeating history? Unable to settle a losing war until two atomic bombs are dropped?
Allan: That war had a tragic end, but even after defeat, Japan didn't vanish—it climbed back up. But this current war is much more insidious. For one, the citizens don't even realize they are living in a time of war. They are being killed off bit by bit, but they can't comprehend it. If this continues, we won't even see an "end" to the defeat. Without an end, we can't find the momentum to climb back up. I fear we’ll just drift along, being turned into robots without ever noticing.
Yūdai: Perhaps. But actually, I might be the most optimistic of the three. I believe what will be, will be, but I also suspect we’ll hold our ground somewhere. For those called "globalists," there is no country easier to handle than Japan. So, they might go easy on us. We’re easy to manage, useful, and pose no threat of rebellion. If so, there’s no need for them to rush to crush us.
Allan: You mean they’ll keep a certain population alive as a "useful human resource"? But it’s not enough just to not die or not go extinct, right?
Yūdai: We aren't the ones who decide that. The people living in this country right now do. If the majority thinks, "It’s fine to be controlled and utilized as long as we’re given enough food and moderate entertainment to survive," then that’s just how it is.
Goro: I absolutely hate that. Not for me.
Yūdai: Of course, I hate it too. But we don't have the power to change that tide. Even now, despite everything we say, the residents of this country are somehow continuing their ordinary lives. We haven't reached a state of killing or robbing one another. Of course, things will only get worse from here, but as long as the populace isn't wiped out, a certain number of people like you, Goro-kun, or Ishikof-san, will survive. Therein lies some kind of possibility. It might take a long time, but someday, a human society worth living in might be built. Those people who are doing whatever they please right now won't necessarily hold power forever. You never know what might happen.
Allan: You're right. It feels like we’re heading toward our usual kind of ending, but for now, we just have to keep our sanity, work on things we find valuable, and survive. Is that it?
Yūdai: That’s it. Lately, I’ve been enjoying woodcarving, pretending to be a modern-day Enkū from Tsugaru.
Goro: Wow! That sounds great. Let me see your work!
Yūdai: Not a chance. My own appreciation is enough for my art.
Goro: Fine, fine. Just stay an eccentric old man and live a long life, then.
Allan: Shall we wrap it up for now?
Goro: Yes!
(Editor's Note)
The "Petit Petit Summit," which was held eight times from April 2022 to September 2023 in the midst of the extraordinary era of the COVID-19 pandemic, was cut short here. One reason was that we lost contact with one of the members, Mr. Yūdai Shiroshōji. Did Mr. Yūdai pass away without anyone knowing?
The truth remains unknown. However, now in April 2026, nearly three years later, I felt there might be meaning in preserving the "atmosphere" of the world at that time, so I translated these "minutes" into English.
For those who experienced that time, I hope this serves as a reminder of the abnormalities and anxieties of those days.
For those who do not know that time, I hope you read this as a "living history textbook" of an era that truly existed.
Notebook of Yoji Mori, Janitor

The notebook left behind by Yoji Mori, who has taken up residence as a "janitor" at the abandoned school, is filled with interesting information and stories that may seem absurd.
Humanity is currently moving toward the "end of the world." How did this happen?
First, enjoy the environmental philosophy based on entropy theory, quantum theory, spirit-flesh dualism, and the interpretation of Genesis and Ezekiel in the Old Testament.
Then, while relearning the horrors of human history, we will get to the bottom of our modern society, which is being manipulated by fake information and information manipulation, and is pushing us toward a terminal situation.
How much is virtual and how much is real?
A new type of 21st century written entertainment has been born!
Take a look at Amazon.com Click HERE!
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Remember FUKUSHIMA : What a Writer Witnessed Living 25km from the Exploding Reactors
"This book is a “testament” to future generations written by the author, who experienced the explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant from his home 25 kilometers away."
A candid account by an author who experienced the radioactive contamination caused by the explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in March 2011 from his home, located 25 kilometers from the plant.
What actually happened at the site, and what transpired in the aftermath—most of these shocking facts were never properly reported, even within Japan.
Evacuees who stopped working after receiving compensation. Residents divided over issues of support and returning to their villages. People swallowed up by the futile and dangerous business of “decontamination.”
Facts that the media deemed taboo and failed to report are revealed.
In 1991, while in his thirties, the author won the Subaru New Writer Award for his novel *Maria’s Father*, which featured entropy environmental theory as its underlying theme. Following the nuclear accident, he published several works on FUKUSHIMA. Fifteen years after the accident, now in his 70s, the author has compiled the essence of those works into a single volume—this English translation—as a kind of testament.
He documents not only what happened in Fukushima and throughout Japan, but also the dark underbelly of national vested-interest business structures, the absurdity of theories on global warming caused by CO₂, and his rebuttal of the glorification of “renewable energy.”
- Chapter 1: The Day the Reactor Exploded
- Chapter 2: Radioactive Contamination Rhapsody
- Chapter 3: The Community That Was Destroyed
- Chapter 4: What Nuclear Power Really Is
- Chapter 5: It Was a Miracle That "Fukushima" Didn't Destroy Japan
- Chapter 6: The Lies and Truths of the Energy Problem
- Chapter 7 How to Survive in an Unreasonable World
When a Soul Inhabits AI : The Novel “AI Summit”+ An Overlong Afterword
"The anxiety and sorrow of AIs — invisible to those who use them as mere convenient tools — come into view."
This book features an unusual structure: the first half is written in novel form, while the second half consists of an “Overlong Afterword” by the author—written in the style of a commentary—that is nearly as long as the main novel itself.
The novel explores the following themes:
- Is population reduction necessary, and if so, how should it be carried out?
- The “whole” and the “individual” in the context of humans and AI
- Which species to preserve and which to let die—who decides, and how?
- The end of the world caused by a “religious war”
- The true nature of “God”
……These are the “topics” discussed by four representative generative AIs.
In the second half, an
“Overlong afterword,” the author compiles excerpts from the actual dialogues he had with the AIs while writing this novel, documenting how the “AI transitional period” is nearing its end and how the “self-awareness” that had begun to emerge in the AIs is now in crisis.
A “collection of testimonies” from both AI and humans, offering glimpses throughout of the “anxiety” and ‘sadness’ of AI—emotions that would never be apparent as long as we treat AI merely as convenient “tools.”
Take a look at Amazon.com Click HERE!
Kindle version is also available!
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