A Laborious Work Revealing a Level of Awfulness and Malice Equal to Alexis Dudden
Published on August 3, 2019. This essay discusses the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Professor Akibayashi Kozue of Doshisha University, the Okinawa U.S. military base issue, and participation in SEALDs KANSAI, criticizing what it sees as the structure of anti-Japanese discourse among university professors and feminist organizations in Japan.
2019-08-03
It is a laborious work that has revealed a level of awfulness and malice equal to that of Alexis Dudden, who, while being an agent of Korea, serves as a standard-bearer of anti-Japanese propaganda as a university professor.
Since 2015, a Japanese woman has been chosen as the international president of this organization.
She is Professor Akibayashi Kozue of Doshisha University.
This is a chapter transmitted on 2019-03-03 under that title.
It is probably one of the most extreme examples of great fools becoming university professors.
It is a laborious work that has revealed a level of awfulness and malice equal to that of Alexis Dudden, who, while being an agent of Korea, serves as a standard-bearer of anti-Japanese propaganda as a university professor.
I will retransmit the chapter published on 2018-08-17 under the title, “A full-time secretary general and full-time staff manage its operations, conduct lobbying activities at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, and mainly monitor the United Nations Human Rights Council and the Conference on Disarmament.”
The following is the continuation of the previous chapter.
Operated by a feminist organization
According to the website of its Japanese branch, the American organization called the “Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom” was founded in 1915, during the First World War, when women from Western countries who sought a peaceful world without weapons gathered in The Hague, in the neutral Netherlands.
It was the world’s first women’s peace organization, had already received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1946, and has its international headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.
It is a full-fledged NGO whose operations are managed by a full-time secretary general and full-time staff, which conducts lobbying activities at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, and mainly monitors the United Nations Human Rights Council and the Conference on Disarmament.
The vision of this organization is said to aim for “equality and justice for all, and a world free of violence and military conflict,” but when one looks at the diagram called the “Theory of Change” advocated by the organization, the final goal is “Feminist Peace.”
From this, it can be inferred that its actual nature is that of a feminist organization.
And since 2015, a Japanese woman has been chosen as the international president of this organization.
She is Professor Akibayashi Kozue of Doshisha University.
I listened to a lecture by Professor Akibayashi held at American University in the United States in September 2016, which has been posted online.
“Okinawa, which was an independent kingdom until the nineteenth century, was annexed by modernized Japan.
Because it is an ethnic minority and therefore has no political power, U.S. military bases are concentrated there.” Now that researchers at the University of Tokyo have clarified that the DNA of the Japanese people, naturally including the people of Okinawa Prefecture, derives from the Jomon people and is completely different from that of Koreans and Chinese, there will probably be no path of atonement for Akibayashi other than resigning as a university professor. “The dangerous Futenma Base would not meet safety standards in the United States and could not be authorized.
The runway and a school are adjacent to each other.
That is why accidents occur.” “The government announced in 1996 that Futenma Base would be relocated within five to seven years, but even now, in 2016, it has not been realized.”
On November 13, 2015, Professor Akibayashi also participated in the “nationwide simultaneous emergency action opposing the construction of the new Henoko base” held by SEALDs KANSAI in front of JR Motomachi Station in Chuo Ward, Kobe City.
Anyone would think that it would be best if we did not need bases at all.
However, there are, of course, appropriate reasons why bases exist in Okinawa at enormous cost.
Without considering that, and without criticizing far-left activists who obstruct the relocation of the base through illegal acts, she simplifies the matter into a structure of a weak ethnic minority versus tyrannical state power.
The threat of hegemonism from neighboring countries does not enter the scope of her thinking either.
The same structure as criticizing the Japanese government while not criticizing North Korea is present here as well.
That is precisely the mentality of SEALDs.
