Moon Jae-in and the Kim Gu Memorial Hall.Face the Leftward Drift of South Korea and Japan’s Security Crisis.
Written on May 8, 2019, this essay discusses South Korea’s sharp leftward drift, its growing proximity to North Korea, and the resulting danger to Japan’s national security, through the political posture of the Moon Jae-in administration and the heroization of Kim Gu in South Korean society.
It sharply criticizes the reality that Japan’s essential tasks—constitutional revision, the rebuilding of national defense, and security reform—are being obscured by opposition parties and media organizations such as the Asahi Shimbun and NHK.
2019-05-08
2019-02-27… Yesterday, South Korea’s Moon Jae-in held a Cabinet meeting at this man’s memorial hall! … the first Cabinet meeting outside a government building except in wartime (presumably the Korean War)…
This is the chapter I published on 2019-02-27 under the title, “Now that the structure of a South Korea being absorbed by North Korea has become clear, when we must urgently decide what to do about Japan’s defense and hurry to rebuild Japan’s security system.”
Yesterday, South Korea’s Moon Jae-in held a Cabinet meeting at this man’s memorial hall! … the first Cabinet meeting outside a government building except in wartime (presumably the Korean War)…
(From the front page of this morning’s Sankei Shimbun.)
Moon Jae-in is an extremely dangerous and malicious human being for Japan and for the world…
Or rather…
The worst far-left activist among all South Korea’s presidents…
A devotee of North Korea’s Juche ideology has become the president of South Korea…
It is no exaggeration whatsoever to say that in reality he is a North Korean operative.
To put it by way of example…
It is as if activists of Zenkyōtō, Kakumaru, Chūkaku, Minsei, and the like…
Had taken control of the country and were playing at politics while pretending to be revolutionaries…
That is the reality of South Korea today…
And now that the structure of a South Korea being absorbed by North Korea has become clear…
At a time when the urgent task is what to do about Japan’s defense…
And when we must hurry to rebuild Japan’s security system…
And for that purpose…
At a time when it is urgent that we revise…
The Constitution imposed by GHQ…
For the purpose of weakening Japan permanently…
The opposition parties, of which it is no exaggeration to say that they are under the influence of the Korean Peninsula and China…
And the Asahi Shimbun and NHK’s Watch 9, which are of the same nature…
In order to divert the people’s eyes from that…
And because, for China and the Korean Peninsula, the greatest thorn in the eye…
Precisely because…
Prime Minister Abe was formerly the finest…
A genuine politician…
And proof that he is the politician with the greatest influence in the free world…
They seek to make the Liberal Democratic Party led by Prime Minister Abe…
Lose the House of Councillors election and weaken its influence…
That is to say…
Their words and deeds are exactly those of traitors and enemies of the state acting as agents of China and the Korean Peninsula… petty bureaucrats in the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare…
Apparently bureaucrats most despised in Kasumigaseki…
And needless to say labor unions connected with the opposition parties…
Members who are also one of the main forces waging the anti-base struggle in Okinawa…
The union members…
So to speak deliberately…
Through sabotage so fitting for communists…
Probably with the intention of throwing national politics into confusion…
Matters such as misconduct in statistical work and the like…
Are being impressionistically manipulated…
As though they were urgent issues for the Japanese nation…
They are engaging in activities that are nothing but the masochistic view of history itself… anti-Japan ideology itself…
The very activities of traitors and enemies of the state…
And serving China and the Korean Peninsula…
These are the opposition politicians, and the Asahi, Mainichi, Tokyo, Chunichi newspapers, NHK, and the like.
As for the two Okinawan newspapers…
There is no room for debate, because they are newspaper companies completely under the influence of China, the Korean Peninsula, or the Communist Party.
Now, what follows is the chapter I published on 2012-08-28 under the title… Kim Gu….
When I searched through the internet, the greatest library in history, following the parallel lines of related matters that are its most splendid feature, I came across the name Kim Gu, which I had never heard before.
He is said to be treated as a hero in South Korea.
I seriously worry whether the country called South Korea possesses intelligence at all.
The following is from Wikipedia.
Kim Gu.
… He served as chief of police headquarters, interior minister, acting prime minister, and premier (prime minister) of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea. He was the president of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea from 1940 to 1947.
1896, the Chiha-po Incident.
When he ordered a meal and became enraged on seeing a female server give a tray of food to someone before him…
He killed Tsuchida Jōsuke, a Japanese who had absolutely nothing to do with the assassination of Empress Myeongseong, as punishment against Imperial Japan and the Japanese.
Kim Gu later described Tsuchida as a Japanese army lieutenant, but the victim Tsuchida was in fact a merchant from Nagasaki Prefecture (employed by the trader Ōkubo Kiichi).
After killing him, he stole money and valuables and fled, was captured, and sentenced to death as a robber and murderer.
Later his sentence was commuted by special pardon, and still later he escaped from prison.
Poor Tsuchida Jōsuke, who was tortured to death by such a person, truly cannot rest in peace; it was a death of uttermost bitterness beyond all measure…
By now, Kim Gu must be suffering the torments of Enma in hell…
Or perhaps the only consolation is that Mr. Tsuchida has taken his revenge.
“Record of Interrogation in the Case of the Beating-to-Death of Tsuchida Jōsuke.”
A commoner of Nagasaki Prefecture named Tsuchida Jōsuke, accompanied by one Korean man (Hayashi Gakukichi, aged twenty, resident of Yonggang, Pyongan Province), on his way from Hwangju to Chinampo in order to return to Japan, chartered one Korean boat at Hwangju Sipni-po, descended the Taedong River, stayed the night of March 8 at Chika-po, and at about 3 a.m. on the following 9th, after completing preparations to set sail from that place, went to the innkeeping house of Yi Hwabŏ for a meal, and while returning once more to the boat, was beaten to death in front of the house by four or five Koreans lodging there.
—Asia Historical Records Center Reference Code: A04010024500, “Further Report by Acting Consular Officer Hagiwara Morikazu at the Consulate in Incheon Concerning the Situation at Incheon Port.”
The employed Korean, Hayashi, also narrowly escaped the danger of being killed, came to Pyongyang on the night of the 12th, and reported the above circumstances to Police Inspector Hirahara stationed there; accordingly, that inspector led two policemen and five patrolmen to the scene on the 15th to conduct an inspection, but the innkeeper had fled upon hearing of the arrival of the police, and the corpse of the murdered man had already been thrown into the river, making it impossible to conduct an autopsy.
—Asia Historical Records Center Reference Code: A04010024500, “Further Report by Acting Consular Officer Hagiwara Morikazu at the Consulate in Incheon Concerning the Situation at Incheon Port.”
I slashed the Jap slave from head to toe in many places.
It was on a cold dawn in February, and on the frozen ground the blood flowed as though a spring were gushing forth.
I scooped up that blood with my hand and drank it, and I smeared that Jap blood on my face as well…
—Kim Gu, Baekbeom Ilji, Japanese edition, Heibonsha (1973), p. 79
