A Reality Widely Known—Except Where Narratives Are Distorted
An essay examining why widely known facts fail to be recognized within certain international institutions, foreign press circles, and aligned media ecosystems, questioning the distortion of common sense and information sovereignty.
June 5, 2016
China and South Korea are, even today, arguably the world’s first- and second-largest exporting countries of prostitutes.
This is a well-known fact among people who possess sound minds and common sense.
The reason this is not regarded as a well-known fact exists only within the world of the United Nations, UNESCO, Asahi Shimbun and the so-called cultural figures who align with it, or within the world of Tokyo correspondents—represented by outlets such as the Süddeutsche Zeitung—who likely read Asahi Shimbun without paying and receive meals and other hospitality from Asahi Shimbun employees.
Or else, it is within the realm of those who unquestioningly accept anti-Japanese propaganda written by correspondents who read only Asahi Shimbun and who should have no real knowledge of Japanese history or culture,
and thus, within the minds and common sense of roughly half of the German public as reflected in opinion polls that come as a bolt from the blue to the vast majority of us Japanese, this is not considered a well-known fact.
Or it is not a well-known fact even within the world of so-called civic groups—NGOs and NPOs—that have repeatedly gone to the United Nations to have various human-rights correction recommendations issued against Japan in order to damage Japan’s honor and credibility.
Moreover, most of the organizers of these civic groups are not genuine Japanese. The majority are groups that should be connected to resident Koreans in Japan.
This reality demonstrates the shoddiness of Japan as a country that possesses neither the CIA nor the FBI.
Furthermore, the fact that a newspaper like Asahi Shimbun has long dominated various sectors makes this reality doubly chilling.
To be continued.
