What kind of people would use words like “discrimination” in such a situation?

This morning, before the start of the game in which Otani is pitching, news broke about the Russian-language display at JR Ebisu Station.
I am surprised that Ebisu Station has a Russian-language sign.
But I am also astonished that there are signs in Korean and Chinese next to it.
I don’t understand the nerve of displaying the languages of anti-Japanese countries.
These are the countries that continue to carry out all sorts of anti-Japanese propaganda to keep Japan a political prisoner in the international community.
South Korea has been practicing anti-Japanese education, or Nazism, since the worst of the Syngman Rhee regime in the immediate postwar period until today.
China has been doing the same since Jiang Zemin started it to distract the public from the Tiananmen Square massacre and continues to do so to this day.
JR was initially a state-owned company that went to the trouble of putting a large sign in the language of such a country right above the station ticket gates.
It is one of the oddities of the world.
It is also made by the Asahi Shimbun, which ruled Japan until 2014.
At a time like this, there is a large sign in Russian right above the ticket gate that people pass through every day, which is nothing but a large, unnecessary sign.
The sign was covered with paper after complaints of “DISCOMFORT” were received.  
However, it put the sign back after encountering opposition (probably from a group of people) who said it was discriminatory.
What kind of people would use words like “discrimination” in such a situation?
In the ordinary course of events, it would be no other than people from anti-Japanese propaganda countries and the anti-Japanese Japanese who have given their support to them.
I immediately wondered if there were people in the upper echelons of JR who had brains that could not even discern such a thing.
However, when I searched the Internet to reconfirm the facts, I found the following statement by Chief Cabinet Secretary Matsuno.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Matsuno said, “Consideration must be given not to promote discrimination,” hiding the Russian-language sign at JR Ebisu Station.
The foolish pseudo-moralism created by Asahi in postwar Japan has even infected the heart of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

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