The Words of True Patriots and the Propaganda Binding Postwar Japan.

The words of two figures deeply concerned for Japan challenge the postwar narratives surrounding the country’s international position.
This text examines propaganda, media influence, and historical perceptions that have shaped Japan’s image since the occupation era, urging readers to reassess national awareness and responsibility.

All Japanese who read the words of these two genuine figures who love Japan more than anyone else will surely realize the truth.
2018-01-05.
As living human beings in whom reside the spirits of countless great figures and honorable men and women produced by Japan—a nation with a rare 2,600-year tradition of governance in the world—these two who truly care for the country and who look straight at Japan and the world, love Japan more than anyone else, and all Japanese who read their words will surely realize the truth.
For seventy-two years after the war, China and South Korea have continued propaganda that takes advantage of the U.S. occupation policy to keep Japan in a completely false position as a political prisoner within the international community.
Supporting these two countries have been the Asahi Shimbun, Mainichi Shimbun, Tokyo Shimbun and their television networks, and, unbelievably, NHK, which despite being a national broadcaster has aligned with them, along with so-called cultural figures, human-rights lawyers, and opposition parties.
Taking advantage of their masochistic view of history, they have continued reporting that frames Japan as a nation equivalent to Nazi Germany in its crimes, and newspapers such as Süddeutsche Zeitung, which has instilled anti-Japan sentiment in half of the German public, along with Western media such as The New York Times and Western audiences who accept their anti-Japan propaganda.
One must recognize that their folly and malice have reached an extreme.

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