Famous Japanese commentator: Xi has “Hitlerized”

Kenichi Ohmae, a famous Japanese management scientist and economic commentator, pointed out in the latest issue of The Weekly Mail that Xi has “Hitlerized”.

According to Kenichi Ohmae, there are many similarities between Hitler and Xi. Hitler and Xi both hold high the banner of nationalism; back then, Hitler used the theological idea of “God’s chosen people” to say that “we (Germanic people) are the best people”; while Xi talked about “the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”. The great revival of the Chinese nation” is on the lips of Xi. Hitler proposed the policy of “imperialist territorial expansion and aggression” and planned to make Berlin “the capital of the world, Germania”; Xi, on the other hand, through his “One Belt, One Road” plan, wanted Beijing to become “the capital of the world”. Xi, through the “Belt and Road”, wants Beijing to become the “capital of the world”.

Kenichi Ohmae stressed that Japan should “learn from history”: when the Greek devil rose to power, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain adopted a policy of appeasement (appeasement policy) towards Nazi Germany to avoid involvement in the war; although Chamberlain signed the Munich Agreement with Hitler in 1938, at the expense of the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland, betraying the interests of Czechoslovakia that was not present; but still, the Greek devil broke his word and sent troops to Czechoslovakia in 1939. Kenichi Ohmae fears that Japan is repeating the mistakes of Chamberlain, because The Japanese Foreign Ministry last year at the Group of Seven (G7) summit, in order to avoid further deterioration of relations with the powerful countries, even confronted with the six countries of Europe and the United States, which attach importance to human rights, and demanded that the words “avoid isolation of China” be included in the declaration of condemnation.

In the past, Kenichi Ohmae has proposed interesting ideas such as “M-shaped society”, “low-IQ era” and “low-desire society”, thus earning him the title of “Japan’s trend I wonder if you agree with this “trend guru’s” observation this Time?