Son Masayoshi, Look Carefully — What Korea’s Court Rulings Reveal About the Alarming Reality of Korean Nuclear Plants

A Korean court recently ruled in favor of residents near nuclear plants who developed thyroid cancer, implying chronic radiation leaks from Korean reactors. Yet Son Masayoshi once told President Lee Myung-bak, “Japanese nuclear plants are bad; Korean nuclear plants are good.” This chapter exposes the contradiction, the media manipulation linking thyroid cancer to Fukushima, and Japan’s revelation that cesium levels in Seoul’s air are twice those of Tokyo. These facts point to a far more disturbing reality behind Korea’s nuclear industry.

2016-01-07

The day before yesterday—though this is already obvious—there is no one on earth other than Son Masayoshi who believes that Korea’s nuclear technology surpasses Japan’s.
The moment I searched for the number of new reactors Korea was building, an article appeared immediately: residents living near Korean nuclear plants had filed thyroid-cancer lawsuits, and the Korean courts ruled in their favor.

Naturally, I do not trust Korea’s judiciary, so I could not know the true facts.
As I tried to examine the details, the first thing that appeared was an article from Asahi Shimbun.

In that article, I recalled the moment Son Masayoshi told Lee Myung-bak—
I happened to watch that scene from my hospital bed—
“Japanese nuclear plants are bad; Korean nuclear plants are good.”
Following the logic of the Korean court ruling, Korean plants must be “good,” too, so his words were exposed as complete lies.

After all, Korean reactors leak radiation so constantly that residents around them come down with thyroid cancer in droves.
The article described lawsuits being filed by the hundreds.

Reading this, I remembered how TV Asahi’s Hōdō Station—and especially Furutachi—repeatedly tried to link thyroid cancer to Fukushima.
Relentlessly.

I am now convinced their information source overlapped with the very groups orchestrating these actions in Korea.
The so-called citizens’ groups and the Japan Federation of Bar Associations are simply terrible—Marxist-infected “evil,” in the literal sense.

This is a problem on a level before “good or bad.”

Next to that article appeared another:
Korea’s harassment of Japan—part of a broader anti-Japan propaganda strategy—namely its continued total ban on imports of Japanese marine products.
This was a ploy to obstruct Tokyo’s Olympic bid, engineered by the Korean government.

After Japan filed an official complaint with the WTO, Japanese government officials revealed a fact most Japanese, including myself, had never heard:

“Cesium levels in Seoul’s air are double those of Tokyo and other Japanese cities.”

Judging from the context of the Korean court ruling—

Son Masayoshi, what does this say about the true condition of Korea’s nuclear reactors?
It suggests something extraordinarily dangerous.

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