Anyone Awake Since August Can See This Is an Article That Destroys Japan
A series of reports by Asahi-related media reveal a clear intention to undermine Japan.
By comparing them with past cases involving China, South Korea, and international organizations, the abnormal nature of this journalism becomes unmistakable.
May 13, 2016
Last night, I watched NHK’s Watch 9 and turned off the television.
After some time, thinking it might be the sports news, I switched on TV Asahi’s Hōdō Station.
It seems that the Asahi Shimbun group has begun to display its true nature without any restraint.
TV Asahi broadcast news suggesting that money was involved in the decision to host the event, and this morning’s Asahi Shimbun carried it as a special scoop on the front page.
Anyone with a sound mind would instantly think the same thing.
If such claims are to be made, then it would be only logical to ask whether money was not involved when the Beijing Olympics or the Seoul Olympics were decided, or when Japan’s sole hosting of the World Cup was forcibly turned into a co-hosted event with South Korea.
Furthermore, one should question whether money was not involved in the blatantly unfair refereeing in matches against South Korea at that time—an issue that was later revealed to have involved payments from the Korean side.
Before China applied to register the fabricated incident known as the “Nanjing Massacre,” which it had spread throughout the world using Asahi’s Honda Katsuichi, as a UNESCO Memory of the World item, China had staged that military parade intended to keep Japan a political prisoner in international society.
At that time, Irina Bokova, then Director-General of UNESCO—truly a vicious organization—actually attended the event, while calmly continuing to receive enormous sums of money from Japan, the world’s largest contributor that had sustained her organization.
For example, it is now common knowledge that something must have transpired between Bokova and the Chinese authorities at that time.
Propaganda and political maneuvering—that is everything for a one-party communist dictatorship.
Such a state ran for the Olympics and secured the decision.
This was a country whose party members overwhelmingly topped the Panama Papers in the number of accounts held, a country where bribery is endemic, a country where deceit has become an academic discipline, and where being a bureaucrat is virtually synonymous with amassing wealth through massive bribes.
The situation in South Korea is no different.
Not only that, South Korea was a country that had placed the heirs of the Hyundai conglomerate into FIFA and the IOC.
That the Asahi Shimbun is in its death throes is an undeniable fact.
It was Asahi that threw the Osaka North Yard development into confusion, overturned the decision, and blocked the true path to Osaka’s revival—so that it could save the ultra-high-rise twin tower in Nakanoshima, on which it had staked its corporate fate.
I was the first person in the world to realize this.
By forcing the floor-area ratio from 1,000 percent to 1,600 percent, this building project effectively eliminated the second-phase sale of the North Yard, yet managed to secure tenants without incident.
Without this rental income, Asahi might well have collapsed.
However, as a news organization, it is already effectively dead.
As I write this, a thought suddenly occurs to me.
Could there be some connection between this strange reporting and Wakamiya Yoshifumi’s sudden and mysterious death in Beijing?
That Asahi’s editorial writers are people who would calmly think, “If Asahi is going to collapse, then let Japan collapse as well,” was clearly proven by the evening edition’s Soryushi column that I introduced yesterday.
Anyone whose mind was awakened in August of the year before last should silently understand that such commentary is an article that destroys Japan.
To be continued.
