The Wuhan Virus Exposed the True Face of the Chinese Communist Party: Yoshiko Sakurai Reveals the Lies of the Pro-China Faction

Yoshiko Sakurai exposes the true nature of the Chinese Communist Party through its initial concealment of the Wuhan virus outbreak, its suppression of Dr. Li Wenliang, and its influence over the WHO, revealing the fragility and danger of China’s autocratic regime and the lies concealed by pro-China factions.

May 20, 2020
As is usual in a society under an autocratic dictatorship, maintaining a posture of waiting for instructions rather than raising problems guarantees one’s personal safety.
At times, it can even make it possible to hope for great advancement.
The following is from the opening chapter of Yoshiko Sakurai’s book, The Lies of the Pro-China Faction, published on May 12.
She is a “national treasure” as defined by Saicho, and one of Japan’s treasures.
Introduction—The Lies of the Pro-China Faction
The True Face of China Exposed
The novel coronavirus that broke out in Wuhan, a major city in Hubei Province, China—the Wuhan virus—has vividly revealed the true face of the Chinese Communist Party.
Within China, it rules the people by force, and toward the outside world, it expands its power by pushing through the logic of the strong with economic power, military power, and information manipulation.
It was the Wuhan virus that suddenly exposed the fragility hidden behind that hardline policy.
As is well known, the Chinese Communist Party regime initially had no sense of crisis about the Wuhan virus, and the Wuhan city authorities concealed the outbreak of infected patients.
On the other hand, Dr. Li Wenliang, who regarded the occurrence of pneumonia patients of unknown cause as a serious matter, posted in a group chat on December 30, 2019, “Seven people at the Huanan Seafood Market have contracted SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome, and are isolated in the emergency department of our hospital.”
Dr. Li Wenliang was blamed for that post, questioned, and made to sign a “letter of reprimand” concerning an “illegal issue.”
This series of events shows that the Chinese Communist Party had learned nothing from the SARS problem of 2002 to 2003.
After SARS, the Chinese Communist Party was supposed to have made enormous investments in building organizations and facilities to prevent the outbreak of epidemics, as well as in human-resource development, research, and development.
However, the Communist Party government was unable to collect dangerous information, analyze it, or devise countermeasures.
Why?
Because authority had become concentrated in Chairman Xi Jinping alone, and the country had become one in which no one could say anything to the “great leader.”
Under an autocratic dictatorship, not taking risks is the secret to survival.
The best course is not to report unpleasant information that the authorities do not want to hear and do not want to acknowledge.
As is usual in a society under an autocratic dictatorship, maintaining a posture of waiting for instructions rather than raising problems guarantees one’s personal safety.
At times, it can even make it possible to hope for great advancement.
In this way, countermeasures were delayed, and the virus spread to a level beyond control.
Having realized the seriousness of the situation, Xi immediately carried out two things.
One was to protect China’s position in the international community.
The other was to conceal, by any means, the truth about Wuhan.
As also mentioned in the main text, China first put strong pressure on the World Health Organization, WHO, and caused it to postpone the declaration of a “public health emergency of international concern” at its January 22–23 meeting.
It even made the WHO issue false information, such as that human-to-human transmission of the virus was limited, and as a result spread the virus throughout the international community.
WHO Director-General Tedros also said such things as “the world has become safer thanks to the large-scale infection prevention and control actions taken by China.”
The effect of Chinese money is vivid.
This article will continue.
*Whether what is working on newspapers such as the Asahi Shimbun and television media such as NHK is the Japan-China Press Agreement, a mere private agreement created in accordance with China’s wishes under the beautiful name of Japan-China friendship, or whether it is a money trap, or perhaps a honey trap, the truth remains utterly unknown.*

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