Why Did This Absurdity Persist for Seventy Years After the War?
Huang Wenxiong’s work exposes the historical and structural reasons behind decades of distortion surrounding Japan, China, and Korea.
At the center lies media dominance and sustained information warfare.
Why did such foolish conditions persist for seventy years after the war.
2016-10-25
Differences Among Japan, China, and Korea That Have Astonished Foreigners for 2,000 Years, Why the World Ultimately Grows Weary of China and Korea and Comes to Admire Japan, by Huang Wenxiong, is a book that teaches us Japanese people how little we have known about our neighboring countries, Korea and China. More than that, it also teaches us how little we have known about Japan itself.
The number of discerning individuals who nod in agreement with my answer—that Asahi Shimbun has dominated Japan—must surely be increasing.
Last year, through the writings of Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the postwar world, I learned that by exploiting the policies of GHQ at the time of defeat, large numbers of resident Koreans infiltrated media organizations such as NHK and the Asahi Shimbun.
It is an undeniable fact that Korea and China possess powerful intelligence agencies such as the CIA and the FBI. The incident in which the South Korean intelligence agency brazenly abducted Kim Dae-jung from Tokyo in broad daylight is as recent as yesterday.
Only kindergarten children fail to notice—or are incapable of even considering—that such intelligence agencies, from countries that continue to pursue anti-Japanese education as a national policy, are conducting information operations against Japan.
Therefore, it is no exaggeration at all to describe the intellects of media organizations such as the Asahi Shimbun and the so-called cultural figures aligned with them as being below the level of kindergarten children.
Mr. Huang has also perfectly demonstrated, as a scholar, that my arguments are one hundred percent correct.
Why the Turntable of Civilization revolves in Japan, and why Korea and China persist in repeating such relentless and malicious attacks against Japan without shame,
the causes—rooted in ethnic and national history—are made clear by Mr. Huang.
For people around the world who believe that knowing the truth is the duty of those living in the twenty-first century, this book of his is essential reading.
All the more so because it reveals such an enormous amount of truth for the mere price of 1,000 yen.
The many verifications through which he proves the correctness of my arguments one hundred percent will be presented in the chapters that follow.
