The Olympics is just one example of how terrible communist countries are. Among them, the cruelty of the Chinese Communist Party is unsurpassed.
Those who subscribed to the monthly magazines’ WiLL and Hanada, which went on sale yesterday before, must have been grateful.
They are full of articles that shed light on things that the media does not report at all, in other words, the hidden truth.
All subscribers must have been horrified by the fact that newspapers such as Asahi and TV media such as NHK were not reporting the truth at all.
By the way, these two magazines are excellent.
They contain so many genuine articles and are only 950 yen each (tax included).
Every Japanese citizen who can read must immediately go to the nearest bookstore to subscribe.
If you do not subscribe, you are not an intelligent person living in the 21st century.
The Asahi, NHK, etc., are nothing but a slightly better version of Xi Jinping.
It is not an exaggeration to say that they are the same kind of people in that they never tell the people the truth.
I will tell the people of the world what I can.
You should go to your nearest bookstore and subscribe.
Last night, NHK aired a lengthy program titled “100 Years of the Chinese Communist Party: What are the ‘Red Genes’ that Rule 1.4 Billion People? NHK aired a long program with this title.
The Chinese Communist Party must have made NHK, a friendly broadcaster, air the program especially for them.
Since I had watched this foolish propaganda program of the Chinese government until the middle of the program, the following special interview was even more impressive.
It is no exaggeration to say that the Japanese media has never reported on the realities of the Chinese Communist Party.
The same is true for the world media. The reason for this is as I have mentioned many times.
In other words, the actual situation of the Chinese Communist Party, which the world’s media have not reported, is beautifully revealed in the special feature interview between Mr. Naoki Hyakuta and Shi Ping in the monthly magazine Hanada, which went on sale yesterday.
It is the best of its kind in the post-war world.
Every Japanese citizen who can read must go to the nearest bookstore right now to subscribe.
I will make the world know.
p76-p80
The Chinese Communist Party is the worst parasite in history
A Tale of Olympic Cruelty
Hyakuta
The Tokyo Olympics have come to a close.
The number of gold medals was 39 for the U.S., 38 for China, and 27 for Japan, but behind the scenes of producing a single gold medalist in China, many tragic things are being done that would be unthinkable in Japan, aren’t they?
Shi Ping
There is a national system in place to train athletes to win gold medals. Children with potential are recruited from all over the country and placed in training centers called gymnastic schools. Many of them are as young as four or five years old, and the overwhelming majority are from rural areas.
Hyakuta
I hear that the children of the middle class and the wealthy are rarely there.
Their parents probably feel that there is no way they would send their children to such a horrible place as a sports school.
Shi
On the other hand, there is nothing to eat in the village for parents in poor rural areas, so if they send their children to a physical education school, they will eat. For that reason alone, they are glad that they chose their children.
Hyakuta
It may be a bit of a misnomer, but it is almost as if they abandon their children and send them to physical education schools in rural areas.
Shi
That’s right.
They gather hundreds of thousands of such children from all over China and make them train intensely from morning to night-time.
Hyakuta
Moreover, they do not receive general education or subjects taught in compulsory education, such as Japanese and arithmetic, but the only gymnastics for gymnastics, table tennis for table tennis, etc.
Shi
They are subjected to an abnormally Spartan education and become people who can only do “that.
Furthermore, differences in ability and skill appear due to this, and naturally, people start to drop out one after another.
When that happens, they are immediately eliminated.
Hyakuta
“There are many children who are forced to leave the physical education school, saying, “You can’t stay here, so get out.”
Shi
That’s right.
But it’s better to be excluded at the age of seven or eight.
Hyakuta
So they can get a second chance by getting a general education or going back to the countryside to work in the fields.
Shi
However, children who are excluded at the age of 15 or 6 are miserable.
They have nothing to do except play in those games and have little to no primary education.
They don’t study much, so they don’t have the knowledge or the ability to communicate with others.
Hyakuta
All they can do is gymnastics, table tennis, running, and swimming. It’s hard.
Shi
Even more miserable are those who are excluded in their twenties.
Their life is completely over.
Since they are useless in society, they cannot find a decent job.
The only way out is to become a beggar or get involved in the underworld.
*Please head to your nearest bookstore tomorrow and subscribe to the following.
I’m sure you’ll find it to be the most amazing thing you’ve seen since the war. *
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Hyakuta
I once heard a terrible story about a male gymnast in China.
He was a very talented gymnast who had won gold medals at the Asian Games and had been selected to compete in the Olympics.
However, he suffered a severe injury when he ruptured his Achilles tendon. When a top athlete tears his Achilles tendon, it’s as if his life is over, and it’s almost impossible for him to play.
Sure enough, they also judged him to be “he can’t do it anymore,” but at that time, what the physical training school said was scary again.
“You can’t do it anymore, so you can either get 35,000 yuan (about 500,000 yen) and leave here, or you can stay at school. Well, cut off that unusable foot and take part in the Paralympics. Then you can stay in school.”
Shi
I was indeed astounded!
However, it was not an implausible story.
Hyakuta
“I hate it,” so he quit the school after receiving 35,000 yuan, but after that, he became like a beggar without food.
In another example, after he was expelled from the gymnastics school, an athlete made a living by standing on his head, doing backflips, and doing street performances.
There was nothing else they could do besides gymnastics, and they could not eat.
It is a glimpse into the negative side of the Chinese Olympics.
“A gold medal-winning machine.”
Shi
Parents in rural areas are aware of this, but they send their children out with the faintest possibility of success.
However, 99.9% of the children never make it to the big time and are forced to leave gymnasiums, ruining the lives of many of them.
In China, there is no safety net for the excluded children. There is no sense of taking care of them at all.
They simply think, “Throw away the ones that are useless” or “There are enough alternatives to sweep and throw away.”
It’s extremely cruel.
Hyakuta
Furthermore, I have heard cases where hormones and other drugs are given to young children as “nutritional supplements” as part of athletes’ training.
For example, many Chinese gymnasts are particularly short.
Some experts suggest that they are forced to take growth inhibitors to prevent them from growing taller.
Or, if you look at female weightlifters, some of them have beards, and at first glance, they look like men.
The Chinese women’s track and field athletes have been a particular topic of conversation this year. “The Chinese women’s track and field athletes attracted a lot of attention on the Internet, with some people saying that their skeletons and voices made them look like men.
I saw a picture of her, but I had the impression that it was indeed …
I couldn’t help but write on Twitter, “Is This China’s new mixed-gender relay?
In fact, East Germany used to administer hormone medication to its athletes frequently, which helped the East Germans mass-produce gold medals in javelin and shot put.
These women were given male hormone-based muscle-building drugs, but their coaches told them they were vitamins and made them drink them.
And look into the post-retirement lives of these women. You will find cases where the side effects of doping have eaten away at their bodies, making them unable to bear children, committing suicide, being committed to mental hospitals, or changing their sex to become men.
Shi
Communism often sacrifices people for the sake of the state.
For the sake of national prestige, they feel that they are building a “gold medal-winning machine” instead of developing athletes as human beings.
So once the “mission” of winning a medal is done, the person is no longer needed.
They think they can just mass produce another “machine” from the next generation of young people.
Treated as a traitor to the nation
Hyakuta
And even if you are selected as an Olympian, it would be disastrous if you don’t win a medal.
Ishi
In China, if you don’t win a medal despite being expected to do so, it would be better not to compete at all.
Hyakuta
From the perspective of the Chinese Communist Party, it’s like, “How much money do you think the nation has spent to send you out as an athlete?
“Instead of contributing to the nation, you’re tarnishing it! I thought.
Shi
Not only will they be considered useless, but they will be treated as traitors to the nation.
Hyakuta
If you don’t win a medal, all the hard work you have done for the past 10 or 20 years will be in vain or even harmful.
If you are expected to win a gold medal, and you end up with a silver or bronze medal, people will say, “What are you doing to me? Your future is not bright anymore! And so on.
That’s why Chinese athletes go to the Olympics with their whole lives on the line.
It’s life or death. They are fighting under such circumstances, so they are powerful.
Shi
In Japan, they say that it is meaningful to participate, and even if they don’t win a medal, they praise the athletes by saying, “Thank you for the excitement.
I think that is the Olympic spirit, but in China, that is not the case.
Behind the gold medalists
Hyakuta
Also, in China, when a sport is removed from the Olympics, it seems that they are no longer looking at that sport.
All the various organizations and projects that set up to win the gold medal are dissolved. Of course, they don’t take care of the athletes at all.
“I don’t know the rest” is really cruel.
Shi
So the players were bullied, and the coaches and other people involved were all left in the lurch. But the Chinese Communist Party doesn’t care about that at all. They don’t think of people as people.
They think of us as mere machines and parts that can be thrown away and replaced with new ones when they are no longer needed.
Behind the Chinese gold medalists on TV, thousands and thousands of boys and girls whose lives have been ruined, and many others involved.
That medal is based on those sacrifices.
It is the furthest thing from the Olympic spirit, and there is no way we can allow such a country to participate in the Olympics.
And the host country? It is no joke!
China has no right to host the Olympics because of its genocide against the Uyghurs, Tibetans, and other minorities and its atrocities against its own people.
Hyakuta
The Olympics is just one example of how terrible communist countries are.
Among them, the cruelty of the Chinese Communist Party is unsurpassed.
This article continues.