“Sontaku” Is Not in Japanese DNA: The Praise of South Korean PCR Testing and the Korean Contamination of Japanese Media
The word “sontaku,” suddenly used by the Asahi Shimbun, the Constitutional Democratic Party, NHK, and other television media during the Morikake controversy, does not reflect the original character of the Japanese people, but rather a tendency peculiar to nations and peoples that were tributaries of China. The praise of South Korea’s PCR testing and the response of Japanese television media symbolize the Korean contamination of Japan’s media.
May 14, 2020
To begin with, the word “sontaku,” which the Asahi Shimbun, the Constitutional Democratic Party, NHK, and other television media suddenly began using during the Morikake uproar, is a mode of conduct peculiar to countries and peoples that are tributaries of China.
In other words, it is a word that emerged precisely because the Constitutional Democratic Party and media such as the Asahi Shimbun have continued to show “sontaku” toward China, South Korea, and North Korea, or in Japan, toward Chongryon.
It is a word that would not occur to a single decent Japanese person among the majority.
That is because Japanese people do not have the custom of showing such “sontaku” toward the government and the like.
There is no such word as “sontaku” in Japanese DNA!
Nobunaga said to Mitsuhide, “If things continue as they are, eventually there will be no land left to give as rewards to my retainers. Therefore, I intend to conquer China. If I do so, I will never have trouble finding land to distribute to my retainers according to their military achievements.”
I have mentioned that this clarification was the greatest achievement of NHK’s “History Historia.”
I am convinced of my theory regarding the true cause of the Honnoji Incident.
The current state in which Japan’s media has been contaminated by South Korea is foolish beyond belief.
In Daegu, South Korea, where a general election was imminent, a major cluster occurred in a new religion, a pseudo-Christianity peculiar to South Korea.
South Korean pseudo-Christianity is said to be such that crying and shouting loudly are not unusual, and clinging to trees while crying and screaming is also not unusual; in reality, it seems more accurate to call it almost an occult group.
In South Korea, for a president to lose an election, to put it in the most extreme terms, means death.
China, the great China, and South Korea, the little China, are almost identical in the fact that the rise and fall of those in power is almost directly connected to death.
The major cluster in Daegu was an incident that could have been a fatal blow to Moon Jae-in’s ruling party in the general election.
South Korea, like China, is a country made of propaganda, and it is no exaggeration to say that there is nothing else; true art, culture, or science cannot exist in China or South Korea.
There is no way that scholarship can exist in a country whose national policy is anti-Japanese education that is Nazism itself.
Because Moon Jae-in is not a man who lives by propaganda alone for nothing, he immediately took action.
Not only domestically but throughout the world, South Korea staged the spectacle, the show, of PCR testing while people remained in their cars.
At the same time, it also carried out anti-Japanese propaganda.
It said, “The reason Japan has few infected people is that it conducts few PCR tests.”
As an act of ultimate evil, he took a step that killed two birds with one stone.
Moon Jae-in achieved the greatest possible result and won the general election.
In Japan, he had his compatriots who had infiltrated television media, beginning with NHK, and who control the reporting and editorial divisions, respond in concert.
I do not watch wide shows, so I cannot state this definitively, but NHK’s 7 p.m. news, Watch 9, and perhaps TV Tokyo’s WBS continued, just as Moon Jae-in intended, to report in a single-minded way: testing, testing, testing, until even the government began to pay attention to it.
The Korean contamination of television media, beginning with NHK, has reached its extreme.
I say this to them and to those who are beginning to be influenced by them.
You say that South Korea’s large number of PCR tests stopped the infection of the Wuhan virus.
Then a cluster occurred at clubs in Seoul, and as of yesterday, the number had exceeded 115!
How do you explain that?
This is a number far larger than the total number of infections in all of Japan yesterday.
To begin with, what kind of poor minds do the people in Japanese television media have if they think that the numbers, or the medical measures, of a country like South Korea are correct?
This matter also proves the correctness of what I wrote the other day: that the people who get jobs in the media are by no means Japan’s finest players; they are second-rate and third-rate people.
When I was a junior high school student, my track-and-field teacher told me, “If you devoted yourself to track and were trained by a good coach, you could run the 100 meters in the ten-second range.”
Because I was blessed with a body with outstanding athletic ability, I am one of the great sports lovers.
Recently, however, I have come to dislike watching NHK Sports on Sundays.
Needless to say, it is because the host is Okoshi, whom I suspect to be one of the bosses behind the present conduct of NHK’s news division.
Okoshi is someone from Niigata Prefecture who studied hard for entrance exams and happened to get into the University of Tokyo.
In Niigata, he read either the Asahi Shimbun or a local paper made up of Kyodo News articles, and after entering the University of Tokyo, his mind was formed by carefully reading the Asahi Shimbun; he possesses a mind of the level that says on Watch 9 that he respects Kang Sang-jung, and Shukan Shincho and others also reported that in bars he made his anti-Abe stance clear and held forth passionately.
There is no reason I would want to watch a sports news program hosted by such a man, and recently I have been watching late-night sports news on commercial stations.
The other night, I saw in the program guide something about selecting the all-time J-League fifteen, so I watched it.
Among those selecting the members was one NHK announcer.
Previously, on a TBS program I happened to see, probably “Chichin Puipui,” the attacks on the Abe administration were terrible; in particular, Takashi Matsuo, who appeared to be a regular performer, made an outrageous criticism of Prime Minister Abe, and both the expression revealing his hatred and his whole manner were exactly those of a Korean with nothing but anti-Japanese sentiment, and the program was too terrible to watch.
I was truly appalled at the reality of TBS, which uses someone who makes such remarks as a regular.
The man hosting that program was also terrible.
A man with the same surname as that host appeared as the representative NHK announcer in charge of sports.
When one speaks of the all-time J-League fifteen, one is speaking of a truly distinguished group.
However, among the candidates’ list was the name of Hong Myung-bo.
The program was one in which each person chose his fifteen, and Okoshi then had each select one person from among them and explain the reason.
The turn of the NHK announcer came, and he had included Hong Myung-bo in his fifteen.
I watched, thinking that he probably intended to talk about Hong Myung-bo, and sure enough, that announcer began to praise him at length.
The total number of ethnic Koreans in Japan is said to be about 650,000, but the proportion of them among NHK announcers must be outstanding when compared with their proportion in the population as a whole.
The Korean contamination of television stations, beginning with NHK, is extraordinary, and the national interests Japan has lost because of it are enormous.
Astronomical amounts of national tax money have flowed out to China and South Korea.
Japanese television media made the greatest contribution to allowing their anti-Japanese propaganda to continue expanding until August six years ago, and as a result to the enactment of such laws as the Personal Information Protection Act, the hate speech law, and the Ainu law.
Just as in Moon Jae-in’s propaganda, Japanese television media have not uttered a single word about China’s responsibility, which is the essence of every aspect of this catastrophe.
The only exceptions are Mr. Takita of WBS, who criticized the WHO, and his pointing out of China’s fabrication of news about Italian reactions.
The Japanese people do not know that this conduct is so abnormal.
And therefore the world cannot possibly know it either.
Today, in a small column in the Nikkei, there was an article about Xi Jinping and Moon Jae-in.
Moon Jae-in eagerly hoped for Xi Jinping to visit South Korea.
South Korea is like a plague god to the democratic camp.
Rather, the time has come for not only Japan but the world to clearly recognize that South Korea is not a legitimate democratic nation, and that while it is not a one-party communist dictatorship like China, in reality it is a totalitarian state that has continued, ever since the war, anti-Japanese education based on altered and fabricated history.
That, too, is probably one of the things this Wuhan virus catastrophe is urging the world to understand.