2025年6月4日 星期三

self-rule. 自我治理 self-government. ominous, Pearls before swine, saltwater and freshwater pearls. Their courage in the face of certain danger reminds us that the principles of freedom, democracy, and self-rule are not just American principles. They are human principles the CCP cannot erase.

 

法語教學(不定期po出)
今天想跟大家分享的是一句法文諺語:jeter des perles aux pourceaux
直譯:把珍珠丟在豬前。
這句法文諺語出自《聖經.馬太福音》第七章第六節。
原譯文為:「不要把聖物給狗,也不要把你們的珍珠丟在豬前,恐怕牠踐踏了珍珠,轉過來咬你們」。
意思就是「把東西給某個不知感恩、不知珍惜的人,還恩將仇報」。翻譯成台語就是「好心乎雷親」。

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearls_before_swine

Pearls before swine" and "casting pearls" refer to a quotation from Matthew 7:6 in Jesus's Sermon on the Mount, implying that you should not put what is valuable in front of those who will reject the notion that it has value and furthermore that they will seek to diminish or destroy what you offer.

"Do not give what is holy to the dogs; nor cast your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you in pieces."

 

OPINION | Op-Ed Contributor

The Great War's Ominous Echoes

By MARGARET MacMILLAN

If we cannot determine how World War I happened, how can we hope to avoid another such catastrophe?

 

Japan pearls in peril amid recession, competition

Mon Jun 8, 2009 6:29am EDT
By Mariko Katsumura

MIE, Japan (Reuters) - Japan's akoya pearl industry, which began in the 1890s when Kokichi Mikimoto created the world's first cultured pearls, is facing collapse due to plunging sales and stiff competition from China.

In the small fishing town of Wagu on central Japan's Ago bay, about half of the 45 growers are about to close down their pearl beds after prices halved this year, sending them even deeper into the red.

"It's the end if you lose your passion for the work you do -- and I'm losing it," said Akihiro Takeuchi, 43, one cultivator of Japan's renowned akoya cultured pearls.

"We can't live like this. It's really unprofitable ... Akoya may die out completely in this town in a few years."

Saltwater akoya oyster pearls have long been a benchmark of quality in the industry, with domestic production peaking at 88.5 billion yen ($900 million) in 1990.

But by 2008, output had fallen to one-fifth of that.

First, a "red tide" of deadly phytoplankton washed in each year in the mid-1990s, killing two-thirds of the country's akoya oysters. Then the market was flooded with less expensive Chinese freshwater pearls.

At the same time, young people's tastes have shifted to more casual accessories.

The current recession -- the country's deepest in decades -- could be the last straw. Loss-making jeweler Tasaki Pearl (7968.T: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) has closed seven of its eight pearl farms in Japan this year, and U.S. upscale retailer Tiffany & Co (TIF.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) has announced plans to end its pearl-only store outlets.

In Wagu, young growers have already drifted away, while their elders see little hope of survival after this year's open tender, which was delayed by a month, resulted in a 50 percent drop in prices.

"Those who can quit are lucky, but many can't because they've got bank debts from the past," said Makoto Yamamoto, president of the Pearl Cultivation Fishery Union in Mie, where one-third of Japanese akoya pearls are produced.

"I was always optimistic in the past, even when we had the red tide, but this time I've got no ideas," the 74-year-old veteran said in an interview for the Reuters Luxury Summit.

SEEKING SURVIVAL

Chinese growers have succeeded in cultivating freshwater pearls as big and round as akoya and have been exporting them since the 1990s. Unlike akoya oysters, which can yield a few pearls, a single freshwater mussel can produce as many as 40.
China now has 50 times Japan's pearl production capacity and the pearls are much more price-competitive, according to Mikimoto director Takashi Shimokura.

There is also more competition now from South Sea and Tahitian pearls which are often bigger than akoya, attracting consumers especially in many western countries.

Japan's global exports of cultured pearls have tumbled 60 percent over the last 25 years, and the country currently imports more than double the amount of pearls it exports.

Since last autumn, the country's retailers have seen falls in sales of up to 40 percent at home and 70 percent overseas, a document they submitted when seeking government support showed.

The Japanese government unveiled in late May a 120 billion yen emergency package for small fishery companies as part of a supplementary budget.

But that alone won't help, said lower house member Norio Mitsuya, who also sits on parliament's Pearl Promotionary Group.

"They (pearl industry) must come up with more innovative ideas. Whining about competition won't change the situation because we can't stop the imports," said Mitsuya.

"For survival, the industry as a whole must seriously consider to whom they want to sell and how," he added.

Akoya pearl producers and retailers agree that they need to raise public awareness about the quality of their products.

"Not many people know the difference between saltwater and freshwater pearls and that the chance of cultivating a top-class akoya pearl is so small -- less than 1 percent," said Yoshimasa Ohata, president of Ohata Pearl Industry, a pearl processor that also owns oyster beds in Ago Bay.

Ohata said an increasing number of pearl stores, especially those on the Internet, are selling freshwater pearls without clear explanations of their origin as they can be sold at lower prices.

In an ominous sign, even the company that first gave the world the akoya pearl now appears ambiguous about its future.

"As the originator of akoya pearls, we do feel responsible for akoya, but there are also high-quality South Sea pearls," Mikimoto and Co's Shimokura said.

"We want to keep providing customers with high-quality jewelry, whether it's akoya, South Sea pearls or diamonds."

(For summit blog: blogs.reuters.com/summits/)

(Reporting by Mariko Katsumura; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
《美國國務卿盧比歐天安門大屠殺36週年聲明》
美東時間 2025年6月3日
1989年春天,成千上萬名學生聚集在北京最大的公共廣場,悼念一位曾試圖引導中國走向更開放與民主的中共領導人。這個行動激發了一場全國性運動,接下來持續數周的時間,數十萬名民眾在首都及全國各地走上街頭,行使言論自由與和平集會的權利,並呼籲民主、人權,以及終結猖獗的貪腐。中國共產黨卻以殘酷鎮壓回應,派遣解放軍向聚集在北京街頭與天安門廣場上手無寸鐵的平民開火,試圖撲滅民眾的民主訴求。
中共至今仍積極封鎖與扭曲事實,但世界不會遺忘。今天,我們緬懷那些在爭取基本自由的過程中遭受殺害的中國人民的英勇,也向至今仍因追求六四事件真相與正義而遭受迫害的人們致敬。他們在面對危險時展現出的勇氣提醒我們,自由、民主與自我治理的原則不僅是美國的價值觀,更是全人類的普世價值,中共無法抹滅。
STATEMENT BY SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO
On the 36th Anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre
June 3, 2025
In the spring of 1989, tens of thousands of students gathered in Beijing’s largest public square to mourn the passing of a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader who tried to steer China toward a more open and democratic system. Their actions inspired a national movement. Hundreds of thousands of ordinary people in the capital and throughout China took to the streets for weeks to exercise their freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly by advocating for democracy, human rights, and an end to rampant corruption. The CCP responded with a brutal crackdown, sending the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to open fire in an attempt to extinguish the pro-democracy sentiments of unarmed civilians gathered on Beijing’s streets and in Tiananmen Square.
The CCP actively tries to censor the facts, but the world will never forget. Today we commemorate the bravery of the Chinese people who were killed as they tried to exercise their fundamental freedoms, as well as those who continue to suffer persecution as they seek accountability and justice for the events of June 4, 1989. Their courage in the face of certain danger reminds us that the principles of freedom, democracy, and self-rule are not just American principles. They are human principles the CCP cannot erase.

2018
Ominous Signs Remain in City Run by Iraqis 
By SOLOMON MOORE
An experiment with self-rule in Basra, Iraq’s second largest city, suggests to many that the country’s future remains dark.



self-government
/ˌsɛlfˈɡʌvnm(ə)nt/
noun
nounself-government
  1. 1.
    government of a country by its own people, especially after having been a colony.
    Similar:
    independence
    self-rule
    home rule
    self-legislation
    Opposite:

omen

noun [C]
something that is considered to be a sign of how a future event will take place:
England's victory over France is a good omen for next week's match against Germany.
bad omen
Many people believe that a broken mirror is an omen of bad luck.

ominous
adjective ━━ a. 不吉な; 険悪な; 前兆の ((of)).
suggesting that something unpleasant is likely to happen:
There was an ominous silence when I asked whether my contract was going to be renewed.
The engine had been making an ominous sound all the way from London.
ominous dark clouds
At the plant, nurses in the medical department had also begun to notice the same ominous pattern. The three workers had complained to them of “heavy legs,” and the nurses had urged them to see doctors. The nurses knew of a fourth case, too and they feared that more workers would get sick, that a serious disease might be spreading through the plant.

ominously
adverb
I went into the kitchen and found him lying ominously still on the floor.


「'ominous, gothic' adaptation」生吞活剝過來。我很好奇,怎樣的改編才能「不祥」?難道有死亡詛咒,觀眾看了會中降頭?「ominous」這兒指風格,不妨譯「陰森」,並非「不祥」。

ominous

Pronunciation: /ˈɒmɪnəs/
Translate ominous | into French | into German | into Italian | into Spanish

adjective


suggesting that something unpleasant is likely to happen:
There was an ominous silence when I asked whether my contract was going to be renewed.
The engine had been making an ominous sound all the way from my parentshouse.
ominous dark clouds
  • giving the worrying impression that something bad is going to happen; threateningly inauspicious:there were ominous dark clouds gathering overhead



Derivatives

ominously

adverb

ominousness

noun

Origin:

late 16th century: from Latin ominosus, from omen, omin- 'omen'

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