The One Million Yen Claim and the Bank Transfer Slip Were Fabrications — Yoshishige Kagoike Reveals the Moritomo Affair and Tamotsu Sugano’s Maneuvering
Through Yoshishige Kagoike’s testimony, this chapter reexamines the core of the Moritomo affair. Based on his account that the claim of receiving one million yen from Akie Abe, the bank transfer slip, and even the testimony read at the Diet were orchestrated by Tamotsu Sugano, it exposes how the Moritomo uproar was used as a campaign to bring down the Abe administration.
June 1, 2020
The claim that my father received one million yen from Akie Abe, and the bank transfer slip shown as physical evidence, were all Sugano’s idea, in other words, fabrications.
The claim that my father received one million yen from Akie Abe, and the bank transfer slip shown as physical evidence, were all Sugano’s idea, in other words, fabrications.
I have absolutely no interest in a person called Kyoko Koizumi.
To begin with, I think she is probably a person of half-finished ability, whether as a singer, an actress, or a television personality.
But the fact that she is popular in Japan is something that, for example, Chinese intelligence agencies and others would know without fail.
Unlike me, she probably does not possess even a fragment of a philosophy such as “I will absolutely never go to China or South Korea.”
On the contrary, the fact that she grew up reading newspapers such as the Asahi Shimbun and possesses only a mind shaped exactly according to the editorials of the Asahi Shimbun is clear from the fact that she went along with the fake reporting once again launched by the Asahi Shimbun and the Constitutional Democratic Party in order to attack the Abe administration.
She has probably visited China and South Korea many times, and in those countries she must have personal connections that we do not know.
What is she doing now?
While China, which has spread the Wuhan virus and continues to inflict enormous damage on the whole world, is further exploiting that situation and strengthening its incursions around the Senkaku Islands, the Asahi Shimbun and the Constitutional Democratic Party reported falsely on the issue of the retirement age of prosecutors in order to divert the anger of the Japanese people.
I learned from Shukan Shincho that she apparently feels like the “leader” of the entertainers who rode along with it.
Those who read the monthly magazine WiLL will probably be familiar with this story.
Below, I will introduce an important chapter from it.
Of course, I do not imagine that a person like Kyoko Koizumi reads such magazines.
This article is also an extremely important documentary piece of evidence showing that media people who joined in the Moritomo Gakuen uproar should leave the stage immediately.
Readers who know Kyoko Koizumi and those around her should by all means teach them how the Asahi Shimbun and the Constitutional Democratic Party fabricate things.
Except for the headline, emphasis in the text is mine.
“The Moritomo affair was a castle built on sand.”
The day my father’s brainwashing was broken.
Yoshishige Kagoike.
“My father was used and abandoned in a movement to bring down the Cabinet.”
The eldest son reveals three years and three months of anguish.
Three years and three months have passed since the Asahi Shimbun’s first report on February 9, 2017, titled “Sale Price of State-Owned Land in Osaka to School Corporation Not Disclosed, Possibly One-Tenth of Nearby Land,” and this uproar is finally coming to an end.
On May 1, 2020, my father, Yasunori Kagoike, said the following on his own YouTube program:
“There were many people who moved for the purpose of bringing down the Abe administration.”
“The first person to rush over was Representative Kiyomi Tsujimoto.”
“I feel that I was used for media manipulation. The media must politely come and say, ‘We went too far.’”
In a video on May 4, he revealed that he had read my book, The People Surrounding the Kagoike Family, for the first time, and said, “I think it is generally correct.”
My father has now been convicted of fraud and is appealing.
He should sincerely apologize to those to whom he caused trouble, but that does not mean that even his educational ideals should be denied.
My father was used by left-wing forces and became involved in a movement to bring down the Cabinet.
This is a fact.
Many WiLL readers may feel anger toward my father.
However, my father now has been freed from “brainwashing” and has begun to look at things calmly.
His past sins will not disappear.
But if, from now on, he fights the forces that tried to crush the elementary school and clearly says “no” to the people who used him, I would like people to watch over that attitude.
With this, my own speech activities also reach one turning point.
All that remains is for me to hope that my father will continue to walk the right path.
Dad, wake up!
I had long felt guilt toward my father.
That is because I myself had created the opportunity for him to be “brainwashed” by left-wing forces.
After the Asahi Shimbun’s first report, the media rushed not only to our home, but also to the planned elementary school site and Tsukamoto Kindergarten, and our family fell into a state of panic.
The day after I held a press conference with my father out of anxiety, Tamotsu Sugano contacted me, saying, “I want to meet,” and we met.
At that time, I knew that Mr. Sugano was the author of The Study of Nippon Kaigi, but I did not understand his ideological background.
He defended us, saying, “Your parents are not bad,” and declared, “Osaka Prefecture and the Ministry of Finance are bad.”
Putting a faint hope in him, I introduced him to my father.
However, he ordered us, “Do not meet any media except those I introduce,” and even tried to arrange meetings with Ichiro Ozawa and Akira Koike of the Japanese Communist Party.
Furthermore, he even made threatening remarks such as, “The kindergarten may be burned down.”
The story that my father had received one million yen from Akie Abe, and the bank transfer slip shown as evidence of it, were all Sugano’s instructions, in other words, fabrications.
The testimony that my father read aloud at the sworn testimony in the Diet was also merely a manuscript written by Sugano.
The moment I began to have doubts was when I was told that the trial expenses would be paid by “an executive of Mindan.”
Mindan is an organization that receives funds from the South Korean government, and it is clearly incompatible with my father’s conservative educational ideals.
At that moment, I woke up.
After that, I distanced myself from left-wing forces and became estranged from my parents as well.
I responded to interviews by conservative media, published a book, appeared on Internet programs, and continued to appeal, “Father, wake up.”
And finally, my father’s “brainwashing” was broken.
This article will continue.