A Message to the People of Miyagi|Do Not Be Misled by Anti-Japanese Propaganda from China and the Korean Peninsula
Published on July 18, 2019.
This essay addresses the House of Councillors election in Miyagi Prefecture, pointing to the problem of an information environment shaped by local newspapers and NHK, similar to Okinawa, Akita, Niigata, Iwate, and Shiga.
It discusses China’s hegemonism, the Senkaku Islands, the Okinawa issue, and the danger of the Constitutional Democratic Party and the Communist Party, while urging voters to consider what must be chosen in a national election through the lineage of Aichi Jirō and his grandfather Aichi Kiichi.
July 18, 2019.
Okinawa is probably the prefecture in Japan with the largest number of information-vulnerable people whose only sources of information are NHK and the two prefectural newspapers that are now under the control of anti-Japanese propaganda from China and the Korean Peninsula to an extent that is beyond remedy.
A message to the people of Miyagi Prefecture.
I borrowed the title from one of the works of Komuro Naoki, an extraordinary talent born in Fukushima Prefecture, which neighbors Miyagi Prefecture, my truly proud hometown that I will forever love without ceasing, entitled A Message to the Japanese People.
One reason is that, as far as I know, at one of Japan’s leading preparatory high schools, the only people who, while still high school students, stood at the teacher’s platform in place of a teacher and conducted a class were he and I.
Recently, when a former female announcer, supported by the Constitutional Democratic Party and others, and, unbelievable as it is, close to people such as Tsujimoto Kiyomi, was elected in the Sendai mayoral election, I felt as though about fifty percent of my love for Sendai had disappeared, and I could not endure the shame.
To make an excuse, I did not know about the Sendai mayoral election at the time.
What meaning this House of Councillors election has is not what the media such as the Asahi Shimbun and NHK say, but something far more important.
China, Japan’s neighboring country, is a one-party dictatorship of the Communist Party and has finally realized the surveillance society predicted by Orwell; in reality, it is an outrageous country.
This country, unbelievable as it is, though one may say that it is indeed the natural manifestation of communism, is plotting world domination.
Not knowing that it is a country in which the Turntable of Civilization, the providence of God, could never turn, it is instead aiming to become a hegemonic state surpassing the United States.
It has trampled on its international promises concerning Hong Kong, trampled on the decision of the International Court of Justice, and militarized the South China Sea.
It openly declares an invasion of Taiwan.
It acts day and night so that, if Japan shows any opening regarding the Senkaku Islands, Japan’s ancient territory, it will immediately invade and occupy them.
A time when Japan shows an opening would be, for example, when the Abe administration is brought down by attacks from the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, and others, and opposition parties such as the Constitutional Democratic Party, which is even worse than the former Democratic Party, take power.
Regarding the Senkaku Islands, Inoue Kiyoshi, who was a representative of left-wing infantilism at Kyoto University, where a communist became president, expressed views in line with China’s wishes under the title of Kyoto University professor.
He said outrageous things, such as that they were Chinese territory.
However, although Kyoto University has not a few left-wing infantilism patients like the fools connected to Kumano Dormitory, the reality of Kyoto University is that, as one of the world’s finest universities in its proper form, it has produced people of genuine intellect.
Ishii Nozomu, the author of the historic masterpiece Senkaku Rebuttal Manual: One Hundred Questions, a painstaking work that could even deserve the People’s Honor Award, graduated from Kyoto University’s Department of Chinese Language and Literature and is now an associate professor at Nagasaki Junshin Catholic University.
He brilliantly refuted the lies of Inoue Kiyoshi, one of the left-wing infantilism patients who entered and emerged from Kyoto University and one of those who have harmed the Japanese state, and it is no exaggeration at all to say that he served as China’s agent.
Unexpectedly, he restored the honor of Kyoto University all by himself.
He is an intellect that is a treasure of Japan, standing exactly opposite to those students who are filing a lawsuit against the state over the Kumano Dormitory issue.
Now, this happened last week.
I suddenly received a telephone call from someone one year junior to me at Sendai Second High School, which I love forever, and who supports Komeito.
When I heard the content, I was truly surprised.
I had thought that the problematic prefectures in this House of Councillors election, the prefectures dominated by local newspapers composed of articles distributed by the Asahi Shimbun and Kyodo News and by NHK, were Akita, Niigata, Iwate, Shiga, and Okinawa, where the number of information-vulnerable people whose only sources are NHK and two prefectural newspapers now under the control of anti-Japanese propaganda from China and the Korean Peninsula to an extent beyond remedy is probably the largest in Japan.
I thought these five were the problem.
Especially regarding Akita, Shiga, and Iwate, I thought that by election day I would have to write a piece to reach all citizens of each prefecture.
A bolt from the blue.
Yet, incredibly, he said that Miyagi Prefecture, which I will forever love without ceasing and which is also my pride, is in the same situation.
I was truly surprised.
When I asked for the details, I learned that the structure is similar to that of the Sendai mayoral election: the opposition parties such as the Constitutional Democratic Party and the Communist Party are carrying a former female announcer, and naturally, she apparently looks good.
As for the Sendai mayoral election, as I have already written, the candidate carried by the ruling parties was a man who looked inferior to the female opponent, and they carried a candidate who was overwhelmingly inferior in name recognition; this was the fatal cause of defeat.
When I asked what it was like this time, he said that the candidate was the grandson of the late Aichi Kiichi, who went from Sendai Second High School to the Faculty of Law at the University of Tokyo, then to the Ministry of Finance, and then to the Liberal Democratic Party, a man who served successively as a minister and was eventually of the caliber to become party president, though he died early as a politician, a man of such insight and character that Tanaka Kakuei described his death as “a giant star has fallen,” a man of the caliber to become prime minister, and long one of the first politicians in Japan to be declared certain of election as soon as the vote count began.
His name is Aichi Jirō.
According to him, Aichi’s speeches have no appeal, while the opponent’s profession is speaking, and moreover she also looks good.
He said, “I called you because I thought we must borrow the strength not only of politicians and others, but also of people like you, my senior.”
I told him that I had long since written about matters outside Miyagi Prefecture as well, and I read aloud almost the entire long piece concerning Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory.
Now, when I read the newspaper for the first time in a while, it said that there is a nationwide common tendency for support for opposition candidates to be high among the elderly.
I thank God that I was born and raised in Yuriage, Natori City, Miyagi Prefecture.
Thanks to a local researcher, I learned that Yuriage Port was a port directly controlled by the Date domain, and I truly felt that this was why the hearts of the people of Yuriage were gentle and rich.
First, to everyone in Yuriage.
This election is a national election.
In other words, at a time when China and the Korean Peninsula are in their present condition, this election asks which party and which prime minister can defend Japan and protect the Japanese people.
It deals with problems that cannot be handled by female announcers and the like, who have merely read scripts prepared by media controlled by left-wing infantilism patients, a profession that is not only the most foolish but in fact the most malicious.
In other words, it is an election to choose someone who can discuss the affairs of the nation and the world in the true sense.
Please, never make a mistake.
I hear that Aichi Jirō is poor at speeches, and the criticism was harsh: he cannot give speeches that seize people’s hearts.
Regarding this, please remember the proverb, “Fine words and an insinuating appearance are seldom associated with true virtue.”
No human being is perfect.
Compared with Aichi Kiichi, it is natural to feel that he is lacking.
Feelings similar to comparing Nagashima Shigeo with his son may arise.
In that case, one must remember that the House of Councillors election is a national election, and that what matters more than the individual is what kind of party it is.
In other words, this is an election in which we must consider whether to choose Abe Shinzo, a politician who may well be called the greatest of the postwar era, who risked his life for Japan and the Japanese people and traveled around the world, who as the leader of a country in which the Turntable of Civilization had turned developed diplomacy that looked over the globe as a whole, and who ultimately achieved an unprecedented historical accomplishment as the prime minister of Japan, the prime minister of the ally on whom the President of the United States relies most, and the prime minister of Japan on whom all the leaders of the G7 rely, or whether to choose the Constitutional Democratic Party and the Communist Party, which it is no exaggeration to call parties serving as agents of anti-Japanese propaganda states.
Therefore, one must not question the fact that Aichi Jirō lacks appeal.
His grandfather is Aichi Kiichi.
The blood of his grandfather, who devoted his life to the administration of Japan, flows continuously within the grandson.
As an example of this, in Osaka City, where I happen to have chosen to live as the stage of my life, when the city was one step away from becoming a financially bankrupt municipality and no decent person wanted to become mayor, the person carried by the Democratic Party at the time was Hiramatsu, an announcer from Mainichi Broadcasting.
This man won by a narrow margin amid low voter turnout.
From that point began the shocking great decline of Osaka, Japan’s second-largest metropolis.
I will write about this in the following chapters, but all of you who are wise and love Japan more than anyone should understand from this essay alone which side you should choose.
