2016年12月27日火曜日

The CiP Digital Special Zone: In Order to Expand Future Prospects

The CiP (Contents Innovation Program) is a plan to construct a digital and content zone in Takeshiba, Minato Ward, Tokyo. The second question in my interview was, "How can we expand the future prospects of Tokyo and Japan?”

There are three points.

1. Expand Strengths

Our greatest strength is the coexistence of technology and pop culture. Corporate groups with high technological strength and productive creators and users are gathering in Tokyo. This is unparalleled. We should polish that cooperative force and draw in wealth from the world.

This will require relaxation and integration. We must relax the regulations of legislation, the business world, etc., as much as possible. And we should make concentrated investments in skilled and talented persons. People are arguing that we need to rectify the high concentration of resources in Tokyo, but we must not weaken it.

Conversely, if we do not intensify the investment of resources in Tokyo and compete with NYC, London, Paris, Shanghai, and Seoul, Japan will subside. If other regions intensify cooperation between Tokyo and foreign powers, that is what will drag them down. Strengthening Tokyo strengthens other Japanese regions.

The CiP exists for that purpose. It will create a convergence point for technology and culture and connect with other domestic major cities to become a new-age breeder reactor.

Universities hold the key. Can Japanese universities accomplish the platform functionality that Silicon Valley, the east coast, and US universities have accomplished, or not? This is our homework.

2. Preserve Freedom

One of the reasons Japanese pop culture has become popular overseas is our freedom of expression. Models of religion, class, etc., are lax, and we give a pass to erotic and violent depictions that would be disallowed in other countries. Although this can be connected to social problems, it is the cause of our content variety and international competitive force.

The young women of European and Asian countries see Japanese school uniforms and Lolita fashion as symbols of freedom. Clothing that could make one feel self-conscious in a person’s own country is accepted in Japan. We are unaware of our free atmosphere.

Edo (1603-1868 Tokyo) was crowded with bars. if we compare the amount of alcohol drunk by Edo citizens and Tokyo citizens, there is no change. They seem to have been drunk from early in the morning. Records show that at a heavy drinking party 200 years ago, a woman named Kikuya Osumi drank down a 4.5 liter cup of sake. It was a free society!

What do we think of that? Animation representation is regulated, liver sashimi is banned, schools disallow cell phones, a single drone falling by the Prime Minister’s Office resulted in drone regulation, and now with the TPP derivative works may cease to be created.

Is that standard practice? Then our strategy is to maintain competitive strength with the non-standard. Takeshiba will also be a national strategy special zone.

3. The Ocean

Tokyo has an ocean. America, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada...no other G7 country has a seaside capital city. The defensive advantage is obvious. Nor do China or Russia have such a capital.
This is common for standing member-nations of the UN Security Council. It is likewise with India, Spain, or Brazil. This is true of all major powers. But Tokyo has an ocean. There are very few shining metropolises on the sea: Singapore and Scandinavia.

Japan was an ocean nation, and Edo was made the capital so as to effectively use sea routes more than land routes. But how does that play out? Is Tokyo now leveraging its seaside location? Hasn’t it been filling it up, killing it? The same is true of rivers. By putting a lid on our waters, we are killing our capital city.

Let’s use it. What can we do that other nations cannot? Revitalize water navigation. Send countless vessels and drones over the water to create streets. Make one great screen of the water surface. Constant shouts of joy rise up along the waterfront.

There must be other resources we are not using. Let’s uncover them and be productive.

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