Episodios

  • 今も呼吸する買弁資本 ― 文明を前に進めない経済構造の正体
    Jan 27 2026

    This episode explores the idea of “comprador capital,” not as a moral failure, but as an economic structure that survives by connecting powerful external capital to local markets without creating real value. Drawing from personal experience in Bangkok, the talk shows how companies and individuals can exist by borrowing strong brands, translating, mediating, and managing relationships while producing nothing themselves. Such systems feel active but do not move civilization forward. They avoid both victory and defeat, clinging to winners and changing shape endlessly. Comprador capital becomes a quiet, zombie-like presence in modern economies, invisible yet persistent, revealing hollow economic survival.

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    13 m
  • 観光立国と外国人規制の矛盾 ― 経済と安全保障をどう両立させるか
    Jan 26 2026

    Japan welcomes foreign tourists while remaining cautious about foreign land ownership and long-term settlement. This episode explores the apparent contradiction between tourism policy and security-oriented regulations. By looking at issues such as overtourism in Kyoto, land purchase restrictions, and foreign labor programs, it shows how economic growth and national security operate on different logics. The key is not choosing between acceptance or rejection, but designing a balanced framework that separates short-term visitors from long-term residents. Many countries already manage this distinction. The real challenge for Japan is building a realistic, calm, and sustainable policy that harmonizes economic benefits with social stability and security concerns.

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    9 m
  • “希少”ではないレアメタル──レアメタルとレアアースの本当の違い
    Jan 25 2026

    Many people think “rare metals” are rare because they hardly exist. This episode explains why that idea is wrong. “Rare” actually means difficult to separate, refine, and use industrially. Metals often exist in ores, but in tiny concentrations and tightly mixed with similar elements, making purification complex. Rare earths are a specific group of 17 elements whose separation requires advanced chemical technology. The real resource competition is not about who owns mines, but who controls refining and separation processes. This is why countries with strong processing capabilities dominate supply chains. Understanding this changes how you read news about resources and geopolitics.

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    8 m
  • 外側だけ老人で、中身が未成熟な人たちが増えていく日本
    Jan 24 2026

    This episode explores the danger of aging without inner maturity in Japan. Inspired by a travel YouTuber who records movement without reflection, it argues that experience alone does not create depth. True growth comes from interpretation: how we understand change, failure, and conflict. A generation shaped by early internet culture could accumulate memories without developing thought, and social media now exposes that gap. Maturity is not measured by years or destinations, but by the stories we build from them. The episode invites listeners to choose a different aging: becoming elders who can speak about the world, not just pass through.

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    8 m
  • 水清ければ魚棲まず ― 清潔すぎる社会が人間を終わらせる
    Jan 23 2026

    This episode explores the danger of a society that worships cleanliness, harmony, and harmlessness. Inspired by a perfectly curated travel video, the talk reflects on the proverb “Clear water has no fish” and argues that humans need contradiction, desire, and imperfection to stay alive. When life becomes a showcase of virtue, it turns into an exhibit rather than a living process. By separating public morality from private impulses, we remain healthier and more creative. A world that allows no “murkiness” produces finished, silent people. This podcast questions whether our pursuit of purity is quietly erasing the wild, thinking, human core.

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    9 m
  • 序列という麻薬:日本型組織の精神構造と脱却
    Jan 22 2026

    This episode compares hierarchy in Japanese white-collar culture to a drug. Promotions once symbolized honor and recognition, but the structure has collapsed, leaving addiction to titles and status. When people confuse positions with personal worth, organizations stagnate and individuals stop growing. The talk argues for shifting from vertical control to horizontal trust, where credibility comes from skills, responsibility, and real contribution. True professionals are defined by roles, not rank, and leadership means enabling others rather than dominating them. Breaking free from the “hierarchy drug” requires courage, because it removes familiar validation, but it opens a path to autonomy and maturity.

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    11 m
  • 日経を読めと言われた時代の嘘
    Jan 21 2026

    This episode questions the old belief that reading the Nikkei automatically means thinking. The Nikkei once gave Japanese salary workers a shared language about companies, finance, and policy, but it also trained them to accept a single worldview. By consuming it daily, people learned to adapt to dominant values rather than examine them. Reading is not the same as thinking, and information is not the same as questioning. True thinking begins when we notice who is missing from the story, and whose interests are assumed. The Nikkei can explain the world, but it cannot teach us how to doubt it.

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    8 m
  • 経営者のコスプレをするための主要キーワード解説
    Jan 20 2026

    This episode explores the phenomenon of “cosplay executives” in online business culture, where language replaces substance. It shows how polished endings, polite phrases, and trendy buzzwords create the image of leadership without real experience. Terms like KPI, LTV, PL, BS, and PMF become costumes, not tools, while phrases such as “let me,” “I think,” and “thank you for reaching out” manufacture authority and demand. By combining vocabulary and tone, anyone can sound strategic without accountability. The episode asks why this culture spread, how it rewards appearance over practice, and why real credibility must come from experience, responsibility, and consistent thinking.

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    9 m