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Reviews
Shôgun: Tomorrow Is Tomorrow (2024)
The fallback episode
Think that the third episode was the weakest link among the three.
I think that following episodes will be better than the third one because this lacked the storyline and world building the first two and hopefully the rest will have.
The first two concentrate on world building which is the most fun part. Like creating a world where Portugal and Spain have the monopoly and Englishmen are trying to reach Japan.
The third one is strictly for Toranaga to travel to point B from point A and nothing more.
The Journey although necessary was kind of boring to follow.
The best thing about this tv-series is that it is less focused on characters than the world it is trying to paint.
The most intriguing part is not the Blackthorne's journey but the steps Japan will take to figure out what is really going on. Who is controlling them and so on.
This is why having a separate scene for Blackthorne to come out victorious seems very narrow minded as it serves no big purpose compared to the first two episodes.
Think that Blackthorne has done enough already like coming to Japan and informing Toranaga of Portugal's hidden bases.
Hopefully we get to see more of the big scale steps and actions like Ishido plotting to take over Japan or Portugal's emissaries trying to kill Anjin than scenes solely focused on Blackthorne or anything individual.
Maybe I am the only one looking at it this way but I am not interested in Blackthorne's family in England like it was hinted in episode 3 or how good of a sailor he is.
I am more interested in what Portugal will plot, how the "good guys" will reach England for potential backup or how Japan will unite to fight the foreigners.
Qumi-Qumi: Qumi-Mix (2012)
WoW!
Truly masterpiece kux mi kux mi
shakalaka kux mi kux mi qumi qumi shumadan
opa juga opa yusi opa shumadan.
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The Constitution assigned to Congress responsibility for organizing the executive and judicial branches, raising revenue, declaring war, and making all laws necessary for executing these powers. The president is permitted to veto specific legislative acts, but Congress has the authority to override presidential vetoes by two-thirds majorities of both houses. The Constitution also provides that the Senate advise and consent on key executive and judicial appointments and on the approval for ratification of treaties.
For over two centuries the Constitution has remained in force because its framers successfully separated and balanced governmental powers to safeguard the interests of majority rule and minority rights, of liberty and equality, and of the federal and state governments. More a concise statement of national principles than a detailed plan of governmental operation, the Constitution has evolved to meet the changing needs of a modern society profoundly different from the eighteenth-century world in which its creators lived. To date, the Constitution has been amended 27 times, most recently in 1992. The first ten amendments constitute the Bill of Rights.