Those Who Kept Japan a “Political Prisoner” for Seventy Years
This essay condemns the coordinated actions of the UN, civic groups, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, and Asahi Shimbun, arguing that Japan has been treated as a “political prisoner” since the war while being forced to fund the very institutions attacking it.
2016-04-20
That Asahi Shimbun is, in reality, a traitor and an enemy of the nation is now being clearly demonstrated by TV Asahi’s program “Hōdō Station.”
As usual, the program reported in a prominent frame that a suspicious individual named David Kaye, calling himself a special rapporteur of the UN Human Rights Council—probably UNESCO—had claimed that Japan’s level of press freedom was lower than that of South Korea.
The disgraceful, crude, inferior, foolish, and malicious nature of the United Nations in allowing such a worthless man to criticize Japan without any sense of shame is astounding.
This is most likely the result of blindly accepting the arguments of South Korea and China, which have made anti-Japanese propaganda their national policy and have aggressively pursued it in the international arena.
As a Japanese citizen, what is most pathetic, infuriating, and utterly unforgivable is that so-called civic groups, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, and Asahi Shimbun—without exaggeration their mastermind—have continued to make the United Nations do such things, despite being Japanese themselves.
The time has long since come for us to treat such people as serious criminals and put them behind bars.
I want to say this to all of them.
And of course, to David Kaye, with his shallow face that clearly reveals his lack of intellect, and to the United Nations as well, with an anger that I can no longer endure.
If you have the time to come to Japan with money that Japan itself provides and commit such outrageous acts, then go to China.
Go to South Korea.
Or go to the countless countries around the world where freedom and human rights are actually violated.
You blockheaded, idiotic, good-for-nothing, colossal fool.
Nevertheless, readers should now understand even more clearly the correctness of my argument.
That is, the correctness of my claim that the international community has kept Japan as a “political prisoner” for seventy years since the war.
And yet, they have continued to force Japan to pay a large share of the money needed to maintain the United Nations.
South Korea, China, and the United Nations have continued to extort money from Japan while carrying out such outrageous acts.
The Japanese people must now, with anger, recognize the gravity of the fact that so-called civic groups, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, and Asahi Shimbun—without exaggeration their ringleader—have incited all of this.
