The Dark Side of the Reporting Around Shōichi Nakagawa’s Press Conference — Criticism of “Class-A War Criminal Journalists” and the Structure of Media Distrust —
This article republishes a passage originally posted on May 30, 2018.
It discusses the reporting surrounding Shōichi Nakagawa’s post-G7 press conference, criticism directed at the journalists alleged to have been involved, and a broader distrust of Chinese honey-trap operations and the Japanese media’s stance toward China.
Naming reporters such as Yomiuri journalist Tomoko Echizenya, it is an essay that accuses the media of concealment, manipulation of public impressions, and deeper corruption within Japan’s information space.
2019-04-19
It is also said that Echizenya told this to a Reuters reporter, and that Nakagawa’s press conference then took place.
To the Reuters reporter….
Echizenya: “Tomorrow’s press conference is going to become something interesting.”
The chapter I posted on 2018-05-30 under the title,
The following three are the Class-A war-criminal reporters who owe an explanation to the nation.
- Yomiuri Shimbun, Tomoko Echizenya.
Entered the official hashtag ranking at No. 34 in Argentina.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
In the comments section of the above blog, there was also a post like the following.
In the past as well, after visiting China, there have been countless people in politics, government, and the private sector who, to such an extent that one wonders whether they had been brainwashed, turned 180 degrees away from their previous thought and statements, leapt beyond being pro-China, and became like Chinese agents, so this time too it will probably be the same.
That nearly 150 puppet politicians hold seats in the Diet — how great a danger does that contain.
It should be obvious even to an elementary-school child.
As expected, it seems that there are lawmakers and related persons in this visiting delegation to China who were honey-trapped.
Also, if one searches the names Ōe Kenzaburō, Katō Shūichi, and Oda Makoto together with “honey trap,” results will appear.
So perhaps people of the Left as well fell into honey traps.
And among the cases of media non-reporting introduced on my humble blog, there are cases unfavorable to China.
Among those cases, at least as far as I have grasped them, are the violence at the Nagano Olympic torch relay, China’s aircraft carrier construction, follow-up reports on the poisoned dumpling incident, organ harvesting, health damage from nuclear testing, the Uyghur issue, China’s opposition to continental shelf applications, the claim that more than 65 percent of organ donors were death-row inmates, the expansion of the Three Withdrawals movement, and genocide charges against Jiang Zemin in Spain and Argentina.
If one takes into account that China has as many as 5,000 honey-trap operatives and targets important people around the world, then it would not be strange to think that Japan’s media as a whole was caught in China’s honey trap.
Reference.
The existence of honey traps inside Japan.
Reprinted from the blog Are There Any Bad Guys? Yes, Plenty — Takeda Jūmei.
The Chinese spy and influence organs in Japan are truly subtle and rich in strategy.
Information from newspaper reporters is something on the surface, so China pays no attention to things like that.
For example, large numbers of Chinese students are sent into Japanese graduate schools, and they become the hands and feet of Chinese spy organs.
And in an unusual area as well, the high-class Chinese hostesses in Ginza clubs are also honey-trap setups.
When you hear the name “Chinese Communist Party Strategic Information Control Unit,” even a heavily made-up hostess will sober you up.
There is also a strong theory that Mr. Shōichi Nakagawa himself was caught up in a honey trap.
The man who drank with him “the night before” was a male Nikkei reporter.
And afterward, his meeting with Russia that same day was reportedly fine while sober.
Then, just before the press conference, there was a celebration gathering proposed by the reporters.
That was because everyone present was deeply moved by the remarks of the IMF Managing Director.
Laughs.
So, after all official events had ended, the drinking began.
The problem was that this was only about one hour before the press conference.
Wry laugh.
The participants were the two secretaries Takagi and Suwazono, Bureau Director Tamaki of the Finance Ministry, a female Nippon TV reporter, a female Yomiuri reporter, and a female Bloomberg reporter.
Director Tamaki.
Or rather, the present Finance Ministry.
Was extremely close to Yosano.
And in addition strongly opposed government-issued currency, so there is also a view that this was meant as a threat against the Asō administration.
The settlement to resign after passage of the budget was arranged by Kawamura and Ōshima and the Democratic Party’s Yamaoka.
And overturning that was Ozawa’s specialty.
Laughs.
Moreover, because they brandished the threat of summoning all those involved as witnesses, it turned into a sudden resignation drama.
Addition.
Mr. Nakagawa was a rare politician who resisted anti-Japan policies such as the Human Rights Protection Bill and the 10-million-immigrants law.
If the IMF meeting had been such a historic success that he simply drank too much afterward, then couldn’t Japan’s media just have had an announcer read a script and that would have been enough.
Why did they not convey the achievements of a meeting praised by the IMF as a historic accomplishment, and instead repeatedly broadcast footage saying that he had become this drunk at the celebration after the meeting.
All they needed to do was talk about the success of the G7 meeting.
Yet without touching on the G7 at all, they repeatedly aired footage of him looking drunk as if he had been drinking during the meeting, and made only the fact that he was drunk into the news.
I think they clearly set him up.
It is shameful that Japanese people, dancing to the tune of such media, would dismiss as “a disgrace to Japan” one of the few politicians who was most concerned for Japan and who had resisted the Human Rights Protection Bill and the 10-million-immigrants law.
Please look carefully at the images as well.
The following three are the Class-A war-criminal reporters who owe an explanation to the nation.
- Yomiuri Shimbun, Tomoko Echizenya.
Amazingly, as of today, all information about her has been deleted from the web.
At this rate, perhaps her very existence will be completely erased.
Excerpt from Google search results.
LET’S — for university students thinking about “working.”
Active working professionals….
Tomoko Echizenya.
Joined the company in 1996.
After working for more than five years at the Utsunomiya bureau, she moved through the local desk arrangement section at the Tokyo headquarters into the economics department.
At present, she covers the distribution industry, such as department stores, supermarkets, and convenience stores, running around in pursuit of stories.
The page itself has already disappeared.
Even if you search for “Tomoko Echizenya,” there are only scraps of information left on the web.
- Nippon Television, Satoko Hara.
Nippon TV’s female ninja. - Bloomberg, Kyōko Shimodoi.
Did you vanish into the clouds the moment it was revealed that you had been encouraging him to drink?
On February 14, former Finance and Financial Services Minister Nakagawa left the G7 luncheon partway through at around 1 p.m. and then dined with Finance Ministry International Bureau Director Rintarō Tamaki and several others, including female reporters accompanying the trip from Japan.
After this matter was exposed on the internet, the Yomiuri removed from its own website information on Tomoko Echizenya, who had accompanied Mr. Nakagawa.
An article written by Echizenya.
Before deletion.
There was a photo of Ms. Echizenya and a link.
2009/02/18 12:55.
Around here, they hurriedly deleted information on Ms. Echizenya.
And it remains so to the present.
There was also, apparently, a fan club for beautiful Yomiuri reporters.
The fact that they erased Tomoko Echizenya’s profile makes Yomiuri smell extremely suspicious.
It is also said that Echizenya told this to a Reuters reporter, and that Nakagawa’s press conference then took place.
To the Reuters reporter….
Echizenya: “Tomorrow’s press conference is going to become something interesting.”
↓
Echizenya gets him to drink.
↓
Nakagawa, ill and “taking cold medicine,” drinks.
A double punch of cold medicine plus alcohol.
