Foreign Correspondents as Proof of Japan’s Postwar Political Captivity

This article criticizes the intellectual and moral bankruptcy of foreign correspondents in Japan who ignore repression in China and South Korea while enjoying complete freedom in Japan, thereby demonstrating that Japan has remained a “political prisoner” in international society for decades.

April 23, 2016
Even so, the level of humanity, or perhaps intelligence, of the foreign correspondents based in Japan is simply appalling.
Think about it.
In China or South Korea, there is no way they could enjoy complete freedom and write whatever they please in the way they live and work in Japan.
In China, it goes without saying that they constantly face the risk of arrest, bureau closures, or expulsion from the country.
In South Korea, if they openly criticize the government or the country, it is equally obvious that they could be arrested, detained, and prosecuted, just as Kuroda, a genuine journalist from the genuine newspaper Sankei Shimbun, was.
That alone would be bad enough, yet when as many as two hundred lawyers were arrested all at once in China, they did absolutely nothing.
Instead, they were fully enjoying life in Japan, a country that, lacking anything like the CIA or the FBI, possesses freedom and intellect surpassing even that of the United States.
They took no action whatsoever in response to the fact that their fellow journalists were being subjected to speech repression in Hong Kong and mainland China.
They simply enjoyed life in Japan, a country that is not only number one in freedom and intellect, but also home to the world’s finest restaurants of every cuisine.
And yet, when a schemer like David Kaye, meaning a despicable individual who obediently acts at the behest of the CIA of human-rights-violating states, brandishes a chart declaring that Japan’s press freedom ranks below that of South Korea, they offer not a single word of rebuttal.
What a contemptible group they are.
I could even assert with confidence that they must be receiving money, gifts, or lavish entertainment from the governments of China or South Korea, or from organizations such as the Asahi Shimbun.
Yet it is precisely their attitude that proves the correctness of my Nobel Prize–level discovery that Japan has been, and remains, a “political prisoner” in international society for seventy years after the war.
The foreign correspondents residing in Japan themselves are the ones who demonstrate the truth of my argument.

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