Reassuring Quotes - page 2
After the war, Japan was occupied by the allied forces, and based on peace and democracy as values to be upheld, established the Constitution of Japan, undertook various reforms and built the foundation of Japan that we know today. I have profound gratitude for the efforts made by the Japanese people at the time who helped reconstruct and improve the country devastated by the war. I also feel that we must not forget the help extended to us in those days by Americans with an understanding of Japan and Japanese culture. Today, more than sixty years since the end of the war, we have seen that, in the face of major disasters such as the Great East Japan Earthquake [March 11, 2011], there are so many people in Japan who value the bonds between people, can deal with various situations calmly, and work hard towards reconstruction. I have found this most reassuring.
Akihito
A very interesting report on the London property market as a refuge for secret assets and dirty money – published in March 2015 by Transparency UK – spoke of money coming from corruption or corrupt individuals, without ever mentioning the word "”; nor did it ever mention "organised crime”. The reason is simple: with the exception of a few very rare cases, in the UK the mafia is not something that you can see or hear. There aren't dead bodies on the streets, or shootings. In Mexico or in Italy, between corpses, blood and drug seizures it's impossible to think that the Mafia doesn't exist. In Italy and in Mexico Mafia is loud and it smells of blood. In London, as in Paris, it exists, but it's quiet, it acts in the dark. And most of all it doesn't have the pungent smell of blood, but the reassuring smell of money. It's not true that money doesn't smell, it does smell indeed, but you definitely can't rely on your sense of smell to identify criminal money.
Roberto Saviano