The Asahi Shimbun’s Fabricated Reporting Known as the History Textbook Issue: A Record of an Online Article Concerning Tsujimoto Kiyomi, Peace Boat, and the Japanese Red Army
Published on February 5, 2020.
This article republishes a chapter originally posted on May 15, 2018, and introduces an online article concerning Tsujimoto Kiyomi, Kitagawa Akira, Peace Boat, the Japanese Red Army, Osaka’s 10th district and Takatsuki City, and rumors about her parents’ nationality and naturalization.
It also criticizes the Asahi Shimbun’s reporting on the history textbook issue as an ideology rooted in masochistic historical views and pseudo-moralism, siding with anti-Japanese totalitarian states.
2020-02-05
The Asahi Shimbun’s fabricated reporting itself, known as the history textbook issue, was an ideology rooted in masochistic historical views and pseudo-moralism, siding with anti-Japanese totalitarian states.
I am republishing the chapter posted on May 15, 2018.
And it is said that Takatsuki City in Osaka’s 10th district, Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s electoral district, is known as an area with many people connected to and supportive of the Japanese Red Army.
2018-05-15
A little while ago, I found an article online titled “Was Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s Husband Kitagawa Akira a Former Member of the Japanese Red Army?
Are Her Parents Korean Nationals?
The Truth About the Rumor of Naturalization!”
http://corocoro-tabi.com/stujimotokiyomi-husband-kitagawaakira-japan
October 25, 2017
The passages marked with *~* are mine.
Hello!
It has become clear that the Constitutional Democratic Party will appoint Tsujimoto Kiyomi, its current Policy Research Council chair, as chair of the Diet Affairs Committee, and that from now on she will concurrently hold both posts while showing a confrontational stance toward the administration.
There is no doubt that attention will continue to focus on Tsujimoto Kiyomi as she exercises great influence in the political world.
This time, the topic is Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s husband.
Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s husband is named Kitagawa Akira, and because there were rumors that he had been a member of the Japanese Red Army, I investigated in detail what kind of person he is.
Also, there were rumors that Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s parents were Korean nationals and that she had naturalized, so I would like to approach the truth.
Name: Tsujimoto Kiyomi
Date of birth: April 28, 1960
Birthplace and upbringing: Born in Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture; raised in Takatsuki City, Osaka Prefecture
Education:
Graduated from Nagoya University Affiliated Upper and Lower Secondary School
Graduated from Waseda University, School of Education
Student days:
While studying at Waseda University, in 1983, inspired by the history textbook issue that had occurred the previous year, *I learned this fact for the first time, but this fact alone made me certain that my statement was right on the mark: that in any advanced country other than Japan, it would not be an exaggeration to define Tsujimoto Kiyomi as a spy for the Korean Peninsula.
That is because the Asahi Shimbun’s fabricated reporting itself, known as the history textbook issue, was an ideology rooted in masochistic historical views and pseudo-moralism, siding with anti-Japanese totalitarian states.* she founded the NGO Peace Boat with the aim of revitalizing exchanges between Asian countries and Japan.
After that, in 1992, she became an NGO representative at the United Nations Earth Summit.
Career:
She worked for two years as a salesperson at a department store.
She entered politics in 1996.
At the invitation of Doi Takako, leader of the Social Democratic Party, she ran in the 41st House of Representatives general election and was elected for the first time.
In 1998, she became acting secretary-general of the party, and in September became chair of the party’s Public Relations Committee.
In July 2000, she became chair of the Socialist Party Policy Deliberation Council.
Omission.
When I looked into it,
I found that Kitagawa Akira is the president of a publishing company called Daisan Shokan.
It is also said that he was a European operative of the Japanese Red Army.
The publishing company Daisan Shokan, run by Kitagawa Akira, is said to publish many antisocial books on subjects such as terrorism.
In fact, Peace Boat, founded by Tsujimoto Kiyomi, is the public-facing organization of the support organization that the Japanese Red Army was trying to create internationally.
Tsujimoto Kiyomi, the founder of Peace Boat, has deep ties with the Japanese Red Army.
Omission.
Incidentally, the Japanese Red Army is a group of people who believe that “revolution can be achieved through armed force.”
And it is said that Takatsuki City in Osaka’s 10th district, Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s electoral district, is known as an area with many people connected to and supportive of the Japanese Red Army.
Are Her Parents Korean Nationals?
The Truth About the Rumor of Naturalization!
Are Tsujimoto Kiyomi’s parents Korean nationals?
Since there were many rumors that their nationality was Korean,
when I looked into the truth behind the rumor of naturalization,
Tsujimoto Kiyomi denied in an interview that her nationality was Korean.
It is also said that the standing udon shop her parents started when they were in Nagoya got on track and became stable.
*When I read this passage, I recalled an occasion in my work as a real-estate sales broker when I received a request from a pachinko operator who was a Korean resident in Japan to sell an income-producing building worth more than 100 million yen.
Because the location and the contents of the property had defects, I had difficulty brokering the sale and ended up having to budget a large amount for advertising expenses.
At that time, I found a buyer who had been operating a small udon shop and had somehow received approval from a financial institution for the financing needed to make the purchase.
The seller had said that he would respond to price negotiations, but the moment this buyer, who had finally appeared, asked to negotiate the price, the seller said, “Turn down this deal.”
Having spent a tremendous amount of time and effort to reach the purchase decision, I was left helpless by the sheer absurdity of it, but when I heard the reason, I was left even more speechless.
“I do not like having the price lowered by such a poor person…”
Was this not a fellow countryman who had struggled and worked hard?
At that moment, I first recognized the intense discriminatory consciousness of people from the Korean Peninsula.*
