Japan Remains, in Substance, the World’s Second Super Economic Power
Japan remains, in substance, the world’s second-largest economic power and was meant to lead the creation of 21st-century capitalism.
This essay identifies the forces that prevented Japan from fulfilling that role and contributed to global instability.
2016-04-07
As I have stated many times, Japan remains, in substance, the world’s second super economic power.
Furthermore, through the course of my own life, I was compelled to enter the world of the Internet and convey to the world a fact that delivered one of the greatest shocks of the postwar era: that Japan is a country where, as a law of divine providence, the turntable of civilization continues to rotate.
The reason for this was also a fact that the world saw for the first time and learned for the first time.
In my writings, I stated that Japan, a country where the turntable of civilization rotates as a matter of divine providence and which must lead the world alongside the United States, should create a form of capitalism suited to the twenty-first century, in contrast to the twentieth-century capitalism that still continues unchanged.
Now, the time has come to tell the world that this was something that had to be created.
In August of the year before last, everything became clear.
It was Asahi Shimbun that prevented Japan from fulfilling the role it was meant to play.
Therefore, it is also Asahi Shimbun that created the extremely unstable world we now face.
That this company was a traitor to Japan, a betrayer of the nation, is now a historical fact.
However, they committed grave crimes not only against Japan but against the world and humanity itself.
Of course, the governments of South Korea and China, as well as the CIA and its agents, who infiltrated this newspaper company and manipulated it at will, must have been smirking with satisfaction.
Yet they committed crimes against humanity comparable to those committed by the Nazis and by the United States against Japan in the final stages of the Second World War.
To be continued.
