A female doctor who “donated a piece of her body” and Governor Saito’s PR woman president… “The Trap of Desire for Approval” that these women fell into.
Dr. Aimi Kuroda of Tokyo Cosmetic Surgery, of which Dr. Yasushi Aso, 52, is the general director, is under fire for showing her dissection practice online.
The reason is that she uploaded a partially unmosaiced image of her making a peace sign in front of a donated body,
“It’s a question of ethics as a human being.
Too impolite.
The post was deleted. Although the post was deleted, influencers with a lot of influence joined in one after another, further expanding the uproar.
Director Takasu was furious, saying, “Stupid doctor! he said angrily.
Hiroyuki Nishimura, 48, a.k.a. “Hiroyuki,
“A cosmetic surgeon who used a body donated for autopsy as an Insta-Exposure.
He also accused Takafumi Horie, 52, a.k.a. “Holliemon,” said
Takafumi Horie (52), a.k.a. Holliemon, expressed his anger, saying, “It’s really unbelievable to expose photos of a donated body.
Takasu Katsuya Takasu, 79, director of the Takasu Clinic, who is also a fellow member of the clinic, expressed his anger, saying, “‘Namu amidabutsu’ means ‘Amitabha.
Amidabutsu Namu Amidabutsu, you stupid doctor! Stupid doctor!
He also made a single-minded criticism of the beauty pageant.
“If you look at her Instagram and other sites, you will see that in addition to beauty information, she is full of “sparkling posts” of celebrity girls, such as attending fancy parties and enjoying her trips abroad. She may have released a photo of herself posing for a picture in front of a donation to satisfy her own need for approval, but it can only be described as thoughtless.
One woman whose desire for approval led her to post a photo that may have violated the Public Offices Election Law is Kaede Orita, 33, a PR firm owner who is said to have been in charge of PR for the campaign of Governor Motohiko Saito, who won the Hyogo Prefecture gubernatorial election in November.
On November 20, he published an article on the social networking service “note” and “proposed” an election strategy using social networking services to Governor Saito’s side.
I was entrusted with overall public relations.
The post was published on the social networking site “note” on November 20, 2011.
The post was published three days after the gubernatorial election, and at the time, many in the media pointed to Takashi Tachibana of the NHK party as a key figure in Saito’s election. Mr. Orita may have been unable to stand the fact that Mr. Tachibana was featured as a “contributor” who created the Saito whirlwind mainly on social media. She was supposed to be the black girl, but she was the one who promoted her own “merits”.
The fact that Orita has not yet deleted the offending post shows her pride.
A sense of “I am special
A look at Orita’s Instagram page reveals that, like Dr. Kuroda, she is full of dazzling, sparkling posts, such as a picture of her holding a Hermes Birkin worth more than 1 million yen and a picture of her dining at a luxury hotel, showing off her full potential as a celebrity girl.
These people have a strong need for approval and want to show that they are different from others. Dissecting a human body is a way of appealing to the “specialness” of the chosen one, and Ms. Orita probably wanted to show off her “specialness” in getting a governor elected against the wind.
When we analyze the cases that have gone up in flames, we find that many people have gone up in flames because they are too conscious that they are “special. It’s okay to be special if you can get it by spending money, but if you appeal to your connections or the privileges that come with your position, you can easily become the subject of a flame war. If you fall into such a trap, it will remain on the Internet as a digital tattoo, and there is no way to get it back,” said a person involved in online media.
These women have appealed to their “specialness” in order to satisfy their own need for approval. The fear of the Internet must have sunk in.