The first lady of Japan was abducted by aliens on Venus

13. 10. 2020
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

What would happen if the First Lady of the United States revealed that she believed she had traveled with aliens to Venus? No doubt that would provoke an international media sensation, wouldn't it? This is exactly what happened in the case of the Japanese first lady, Mijuki Hatoyama. But have you ever heard of it?

Miyuki Hatoyama

In 2009, 73-year-old Miyuki Hatoyama, the wife of former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama (in office between 2009-2010), became the focus of what she wrote in a 2008 book called "Watashi Ga Deatta Yonimo Fushigina Dekigoto *" translated as "Very strange things I've come across." In it, Hatoyama described the experience she had twenty years ago.

"When my body was asleep, I think my soul flew on a triangular UFO toward Venus. It was a very beautiful place and it was very green.

The retired actress and cookbook author also claimed to know actor Tom Cruise from his past life. "I believe he would understand if, when we met, I told him, 'We haven't seen each other in a long time,' 'she said in an interview. When she told her ex-husband, he told her it was probably just a dream. However, her current husband, Yukio Hatoyama, would certainly react differently. The divorced singer and dancer met this multimillionaire while working in a Japanese restaurant in San Francisco. They married in 1975. "My current husband thinks completely differently," she wrote. "He would certainly say, 'That's amazing.'"

Miyuki Hatoyama with her husband Yuki Hatoyama, Japan's former prime minister

Jukio Hatoyama

Yukio Hatoyama, a graduate of Stanford University and now 73, is the grandson of the former prime minister. According to Reuters, he earned the nickname "alien," because of his distinctive eyes. According to The Independent, the nickname comes from the couple's unconventional approach. Although Mr. Hatoyama is a multimillionaire and a fourth-generation family member who has made it to the top of the Japanese political world, his appearance is unconventional by strict Japanese standards: his hair is unruly and he rejects the political "uniform" in navy blue, which he prefers. brown or mossy green suits.

It is precisely this refusal to bow to conventions, as well as the tendency to dispel a concluding remark - such as his demand for a 'politics full of love' that he made during his election campaign - that led some Japanese politicians some time ago to they marked it with the word učudin, that is, an alien. Although he probably doesn't mean the one who took Mrs. Mijuki to Venus. "

One would think that this story of the journey to Venus could figure prominently in world news, but it seems to have just raised the surface. One reason may be that the Japanese approach to the existence of aliens is very different from the countries of the Western world. From the beginning, he tells ancient stories about extraterrestrial beings, represented, for example, by statues of Great Dane that came from heaven. Episode 14 of the 12th series of Aliens of Antiquity dealt with this very topic and looked in detail at the Japanese religion called Shinto. This belief connects Japan with the mythical past, in which beings called kami figure.

UFOs and the Japanese government

In 2007, Japanese government officials said the existence of unidentifiable flying objects believed not to be from Earth had not been confirmed. Then the Japanese Minister of Defense said that there was no evidence to completely question the existence of UFOs controlled by aliens. The BBC News reported that despite the lack of evidence, Nobutaka Machimura, the government's secretary general, later told reporters that he believed that [UFOs] were definitely real. Despite this confession, however, the article noted: "Japan has not yet planned what it would do if the aliens actually arrived here. ‟

Ucuro-bune hollow ship known from stories from the early 19th century, which is interpreted as an alien vessel.

A member of the opposition asked the government about its policy on UFOs. He said: "Urgent work should be done to confirm whether they exist or not, as they are constantly being reported." So the Japanese civil service took action. She said in a statement that "if a flying saucer was seen in the airspace of the country, the fighter pilots would try to visually confirm it."

However, in 2015, during the budget negotiations, Defense Minister Gen Nakatani answered the question regarding the occurrence of UFOs differently:

"Sometimes we find birds or some flying objects other than airplanes, but I don't know of any reports of an unidentifiable flying object that doesn't come from Earth."

You can learn more about this and other Japanese UFO stories in the 14th part of the 12th series of the Invaders of Antiquity called Mas Masuda-no-Iwafune ’. *I intentionally state the title of the book in Japanese and in international transcription, so that a potential applicant can find it. note translators.

Tip from Sueneé Universe

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