The Illusion Called the “International Community.”A Critique of the United Nations, Asahi Shimbun, and NHK in Resonance with WiLL.
This essay sharply criticizes NHK and the Asahi Shimbun for uncritically accepting the United Nations’ freedom ranking and gleefully using it as material for attacking Japan, thereby exposing the deception behind the phrase “the international community.”
By quoting a dialogue between Masayuki Takayama and Rui Sasaki published in WiLL, it denounces how foreign worship and submission to external pressure have deeply permeated Japan’s judiciary and media.
2019-03-26
I had only just written the other day that there is such a thing as resonance between events, and in the issue of the monthly magazine WiLL released today, there was indeed a passage that could only be described as exactly that kind of resonance.
I had only just written the other day that there is such a thing as resonance between events, and in the issue of the monthly magazine WiLL released today, there was indeed a passage that could only be described as exactly that kind of resonance.
This morning, in an essay I wrote about Rika Kihira, I added the following and sent it out to the world.
That said, what is called the international community is nothing but a gathering of extremely low-level people dominated by dreadful stupidity, lack of study, ignorance, and pseudo-moralism.
The freedom ranking recently announced by the United Nations exposed to the whole world their ignorance, their foolishness, and therefore their malice.
Japan, incredibly enough, was placed 58th, and on top of that, below South Korea.
NHK, which once again joyfully broadcast this as though it had found fresh material for criticizing Japan, is controlled by trash unworthy of being called Japanese citizens.
As I have repeatedly pointed out, their vulgarity is beyond description.
That is what I added and transmitted to the world.
And as my readers know, I was the first person in the world to declare and make known to the world that the reality of the United Nations, which the Asahi Shimbun and others have worshipped as though it were the representative of the international community, is not merely something truly equivalent to ignorance and benightedness, but is in fact so low-level that it takes anti-Japan propaganda from China and the Korean Peninsula at face value, and can even be called the worst organization in human history.
The following is from the dialogue feature by Masayuki Takayama and Rui Sasaki titled, “A Judiciary and Media Weak Against External Pressure: Kakuei Died of Rage, While Ghosn Lives Leisurely on Bail. What ‘Razor-Sharp’ Investigators. Both those who pursue and those who are pursued are nothing but suspicious characters.”
Takayama.
Omitting the preceding text.
In a recent Tensei Jingo, it said that Hironaka had quoted a French newspaper as saying, “If this is treated as a crime, then capable executives from abroad will no longer come to Japan.”
But has there ever been a truly capable foreign executive involved with Japanese companies up to now.
Sasaki.
Howard Stringer at Sony and Michael Woodford at Olympus were both a series of failures.
Takayama.
Exactly.
Stringer even handed Sony’s corporate secrets to Samsung for free.
And yet people want to treasure such worthless foreigners.
Hironaka too, and the media such as Asahi, have still not shaken off their worship of foreigners.
The stock phrase, “What will the international community think when it sees this,” is often used in Tensei Jingo.
Bitter laugh.
The rest omitted.
