When I Realized That the United Nations and UNESCO Are Made Up of Ignorant, Crude, and Absurd People

This chapter condemns the ignorance and moral corruption of international organizations and Japanese media elites, urging readers to rediscover Japan’s beauty and civilization through direct experience rather than propaganda.
It asserts that truth reveals itself through reality, not ideology.

When I realized that the United Nations and UNESCO are made up of ignorant, crude, and absurd people,
2016-11-03
I have many readers in Bulgaria as well.
As you already know, I have come to realize that the United Nations and UNESCO are composed of ignorant, crude, and nonsensical people, and I have continued to condemn the fact that they themselves are the ones who must be corrected, and that it is they who have prevented the twenty-first century from truly becoming the twenty-first century.
A friend of mine, an avid reader, knew that yesterday was the release date of the monthly magazine Seiron, and bought it for me.
Needless to say, this month’s issue is also packed with essays that must be read. I repeat once again: it costs only 780 yen.
Those who pay a monthly subscription of about 5,000 yen to read the Asahi Shimbun, and who watch news programs and wide shows on its affiliated private television stations (NHK often falls into the same category), continue to damage the credibility and honor of Japan, and in this nuclear age, diminish Japan’s world-leading technological strength—meaning they weaken national power—and thereby greatly contribute to the national strategies of countries such as China, South Korea, and Russia, which have made nuclear power exports a key state objective.
Or rather, even if they may become Japanese who serve those countries and their interests under conditions that could hardly be exaggerated as being manipulated by foreign intelligence agencies,
the time has long since come for them to realize that they can never become people who truly contribute to Japan, a nation that has preserved a rare culture and beautiful land unparalleled in the world throughout history.
If you wish to understand your own mistake,
go to the most beautiful place nearest to where you live.
If you still do not understand, then come to Kyoto, Nara, and Shiga.
No, do not view Tokyo through someone as inconsequential as Yuriko Koike,
but look at Tokyo, where Japan’s most capable people work—Tokyo Metropolitan Government employees being a prime example—
and which, as a result, has become a city that can be called the greatest in the world without exaggeration,
and observe Tokyo with the utmost concentration, mobilizing all of your abilities.
You will understand without words how fatal it is to watch the reporting and wide shows of the Asahi Shimbun and its television stations.
You have believed the commentaries of the most unfaithful people in the world—who are also the most immature and malicious of all—above all, the most unmistakable traitors imaginable, to be correct.
Yet if you quietly contemplate in a beautiful place near your home,
you will realize how beautiful and worthy of pride Japan truly is,
and that it is a nation possessing a rare culture and civilization unlike any other in the world.
At the same moment that you realize this, you will also recognize that you had been unconsciously influenced by them, and you will gnash your teeth in regret, feeling unforgivable anger and resentment.
You will instantly realize the foolishness of having been influenced by the editorials of Asahi Shimbun commentators, the essays of Kenzaburō Ōe, and the childish prose of Haruki Murakami—things that may well be grouped together as pseudo-moralism.
This manuscript continues.

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