Why Turning Japan into a “Political Prisoner” Destabilized the World

Japan’s postwar treatment as a political prisoner lies at the heart of today’s global instability, exposing Western hypocrisy and the exploitation by China and the Korean Peninsula.

2016-02-20

My discovery that Japan had in fact been a “political prisoner” in the international community for a long time after the war is, together with the discovery of The Turntable of Civilization, worthy of the Nobel Prize.

This is because making Japan such an existence has created the extremely unstable world we see today.

The instability of today’s world stems from the evil of hypocrisy in white societies that, for seventy years after the war, discriminated against Japan and kept it as a political prisoner—much as the United States once discriminated against Black people.

At the same time, there is the evil of China and the Korean Peninsula, which, despite being fellow Asians, continued to exploit Japan—a nation that also fought for the liberation of Asia from Western colonial rule and for Asian independence.

The truth behind the extreme instability of today’s world is that divine anger is now descending—or is about to descend—upon these evils.

And I declare here and now, for the first time in the world, that this is the true nature of the present global disorder.

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