The Abe Press Conference Exposed the Abnormal Structure of Foreign Correspondents and Japan’s Media

This article criticizes the conduct of a foreign reporter who asked the final question at Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s press conference on the state of emergency declaration, and examines the reporting posture of the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, and others. It discusses the abnormal structure in which some foreign correspondents living in Japan continue to send out anti-Japan narratives overseas while Japanese media eagerly make use of them.

April 8, 2020
The awfulness of the man who called himself an Italian, a man of whom it is no exaggeration to say that he extended the question time solely in order to harm the prime minister’s health.
His appearance, his manner, and the content of his question.
Last night, the fact that the following chapter was overwhelmingly number one in goo’s real-time search count showed the high discernment of my readers.
Those who watched the broadcast of Prime Minister Abe’s press conference on the state of emergency declaration clearly and concretely learned that among the reporters attending the press conference, there were people who could hardly be called reporters at all.
The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, where for some reason disreputable foreign reporters, of the same kind as, or even worse than, the ugly opposition political operators, act with great arrogance.
Last night, Prime Minister Abe’s schedule — that is, the regular mealtime most essential to maintaining his health, the prime minister’s schedule, and after the press conference, live appearances on NHK and TV Tokyo.
The awfulness of the man who called himself an Italian, a man of whom it is no exaggeration to say that he extended the question time solely in order to obstruct the dinner time between those engagements and to harm the prime minister’s health.
His appearance, his manner, and the content of his question.
Most Japanese people probably had a favorable impression of Italy, but that man alone may have greatly lowered the Japanese people’s favorable impression of Italy.
If there is one thing to say to that man for now, it would be this:
“Ask your question to Xi Jinping of China.”
When a person like that acts arrogantly under some strange misunderstanding, it makes one wonder whether Italy’s politics and journalism are truly all right.
Apart from its tourism resources, it even made me think that political and journalistic deterioration stands out in that country.
The pitiable children brainwashed by them.
That is the true nature of them, the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, and others.
I am republishing the chapter sent out on March 24, 2019, under that title.
Speaking of the reality of the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, there are Pio d’Emilia, Michael Penn, David McNeill, Justin McCurry, Jeffrey Kingston, and Koichi Nakano, who provides them with information that demeans Japan.
What is truly malicious about them is the abnormality of their conduct.
They settle in Japan, the cleanest and safest country in the world, a country where even a lost wallet is delivered to the police and returned, a country full of the safest and most delicious food in the world, and especially the country with the largest number of Michelin-recognized restaurants in the world.
In other words, they enjoy Japan fully.
Some of them live with Japanese wives.
And yet, under the title of Japan correspondents, they have continued to write articles for newspapers in their home countries that demean Japan.
The abnormality of the Asahi Shimbun and other newspapers, and of their television news programs, is that far from pointing this out, they gratefully and joyfully continue to bring these people into reports designed to demean Japan.
It is a bizarre spectacle found nowhere else in the world.
Who created such an abnormal spectacle?
GHQ did.
Marxism, that is, communism, did.
Pseudo-moralism did.
It is highly possible that many of the people named above have fallen into honey traps or money traps set by China or the Korean Peninsula, or at the very least are being used in the information warfare of those countries.
I believe that one of the figures who played a major role in getting Italy, the country Xi Jinping is now visiting, to support the Belt and Road Initiative may also have been Pio d’Emilia.
There is also, if I remember correctly, a Frenchman who lives in Kyoto while distributing pamphlets throughout Paris that demean Japan.
Through the activities of this one man, anti-Japanese sentiment may be increasing in France as well, as if catching up with the conduct of the reporters of the Süddeutsche Zeitung.
This man too may have fallen into a honey trap or money trap, or at least may be incorporated into part of the information war to demean Japan.
It goes without saying why these foreign individuals fiercely opposed the anti-espionage bill.
Through their opposition movement and their joint work with the ultimate fools that are Asahi and NHK, Japan has become the world’s greatest paradise for spies.
In such a Japan, China and the Korean Peninsula may be using them like agents, manipulating their home countries from Japan.
Whether it is the division of the EU, or the maneuvering to multiply anti-Japanese states within the EU.

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