The Deception of UN Human-Rights Recommendations and Child-Abuse Reporting: The Structure That Singles Out Japan and Masayuki Takayama’s Warning
Published on August 18, 2019. This article introduces Masayuki Takayama’s Korea and the Media Shamelessly Tell Lies, discussing UN human-rights recommendations against Japan, the reality of child abuse in the United States, South Korea’s anti-Japanese education, the responsibility of the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, lawyers, and politicians, and the issue of child abuse in Japanese society.
August 18, 2019.
From China, with its population of 1.3 billion and its status as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, or from Russia, which likewise struts about as a great power while being a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, not a single person can take such action.
The reason is that if they did, they would be punished for a grave crime, including immediate execution.
The following is from the latest book by Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the postwar world, published by Tokuma Shoten on June 30, 2019, under the title Korea and the Media Shamelessly Tell Lies.
It is a book that every Japanese citizen must read, and they must go at once to the nearest bookstore to buy it.
It is also a must-read book for people throughout the world, and as for this, though I am ashamed of my poor English ability, I wish to make it known to as many people around the world as possible.
In this chapter, Takayama teaches us, especially with regard to child abuse, about the United States, where the situation is incomparably worse than in Japan.
As I have already written, I infer that the actual state of child abuse not only in the United States but in countries all over the world is incomparably worse than in Japan.
Nevertheless, why is it that, using the abuse death of one child in Noda City, Chiba Prefecture, the United Nations, as if it had been waiting for the chance, issues human-rights recommendations against Japan?
No one has ever heard of American citizens going all the way to the United Nations to file complaints about human-rights violations in their own country regarding child abuse in the United States, which is incomparably worse than in Japan.
From China, with its population of 1.3 billion and its status as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, or from Russia, which likewise struts about as a great power while being a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, not a single person can take such action.
The reason is that if they did, they would be punished for a grave crime, including immediate execution.
They would probably be assassinated before being punished by law.
Hashimoto Toru, who perhaps because he has a lawyer’s qualification keeps speaking only by looking at the phenomenon directly before his eyes, must also know that this is reality.
Why is it only in Japan that there are people who deliberately set up offices in Geneva, Switzerland, in order to denigrate their own country, and who attack their own country whenever something happens?
Hashimoto Toru must know that thinking about when and why Japan became such a country is, for example, what is called intellect.
Why does South Korea behave in such a way?
It is because of the fact that I have continued to mention, for the first time in the world, ever since I appeared in this way: that the world has continued to overlook the fact that South Korea has continued to carry out Nazism under the name of anti-Japanese education, which began with Syngman Rhee amid the postwar chaos and continues to this day.
It is because the United Nations has continued to overlook it.
It is because all Japanese lawyers, beginning with Hashimoto Toru, have continued to overlook it.
The Asahi Shimbun and NHK have not merely continued to overlook it; they have continued to serve as their agents.
The same is true of many political hacks.
The time has long since come to know that friendship with South Korea is impossible unless South Korea’s anti-Japanese education stops.
He should be ashamed that a person who does not even possess the degree of insight to understand how much writing Korean on Osaka subways, guide signs, and the like will embolden them has been meddling in politics and diplomacy.
I have never been to South Korea, and since I am someone who has decided that I will absolutely never go unless South Korea stops its anti-Japanese education, I have not confirmed it for myself, but surely Japanese is not written on South Korean subways, guide signs, and the like in the same way as in Japan.
Until he knows that the true cause of the present Japan-South Korea relationship lies there, Hashimoto Toru should not speak about Japan-South Korea relations.
No, if you are truly speaking out while thinking of Japan, then you should immediately stop being the kind of broadcast geisha you are now, because you are being made to speak exactly according to the intentions of TBS, TV Asahi, and others, who want you to criticize the government’s response—that is, you are being led, you are being used.
I will discuss this matter later.
Child abuse, too, has fallen to the level of chimpanzees.
In the July 2018 issue of the magazine Sound Argument, there was a sexual-harassment dialogue between the two people I respect, Hasegawa Michiko and Takeuchi Kumiko.
In it, regarding the difference between chimpanzees and humans, Takeuchi, an ethologist, explained that while “human women can mate at any time,” female monkeys “stop going into heat and stop ovulating while they have an infant and are nursing.”
Therefore, when there is a change of boss in a chimpanzee harem, the new boss slits the throat of the child the female is holding, a child by the former boss, and quickly kills it.
She said that the way of the animal world is that “the female who has lost her child does not grieve, but immediately goes into heat and becomes pregnant with the new boss’s child.”
That is the difference between human beings and beasts—or is it really so?
In Meguro Ward, Tokyo, five-year-old Funato Yua was killed by her father, Yudai, aged thirty-three, and her mother, Yuri, aged twenty-five.
Yudai was not Yua’s biological father.
In monkey terms, she was the child of the former boss.
From around the time Yua was three years old, Yudai, under the name of discipline, punched her in the face with his fists and left her outside under the cold year-end sky.
Staff members at the child consultation center in Kagawa Prefecture recognized it as abuse and took her into protection twice.
Yudai’s abuse continued until the winter after they moved to Tokyo; he woke her at four in the morning and made her study hiragana, and if she could not do it, he beat her.
He did not give her meals and often shut her out on the balcony barefoot.
At the end of her weakening, in March, Yua died.
Her feet were afflicted with chilblains.
“Tomorrow I will be able to do it, so please forgive me already, please.”
The letter written in hiragana and addressed to her parents is heartbreaking.
Looking at Yudai’s behavior, it is almost no different from that of a chimpanzee.
No, it is worse than that of a monkey.
According to another book by Takeuchi Kumiko, the new boss slits the throat of the nursing infant in a single stroke and kills it instantly.
But Yudai took two years, slowly and gradually, to torment her to death.
During that time, her biological mother, Yuri, also tormented her together with Yudai.
She, too, is lower than a monkey.
She tormented her own child while going into heat in order to attract the attention of the new boss.
There are astonishingly many cases of this kind, that is, cases in which a remarried man who has moved in with a woman who has children kills his stepchild.
Several years ago, Murayama Akira of Nishitokyo City, aged forty-one at the time of his arrest, continued to torment his wife’s child from a previous relationship, Yuisho, then fourteen years old, and threatened him by saying, “Kill yourself within twenty-four hours,” causing him to hang himself.
His sentence was only six years in prison.
In the 1990s, in Osaka City, there was an incident in which a sixth-grade elementary school girl burned to death in a fire while bathing at home.
The police found that her resident Korean father had been violating the girl, who was not his biological child, and furthermore that he had taken out a life-insurance policy of 15 million yen on her, and arrested both parents.
The two confessed that they had burned their daughter to death for the insurance money and were serving time, but after the defense filed a claim of wrongful conviction, they are now out of prison.
“Men who move in” are killing children at a fairly high rate.
In Yua’s case, the child consultation center in Kagawa Prefecture watched over her from the same viewpoint and reported the abuse to the police.
But the child consultation center in Shinagawa, which received the communication from Kagawa’s child consultation center, ignored it.
Its excuse is excellent.
It said that “the parent disliked it,” even though that parent was thinking of killing his stepdaughter from now on.
As a result of an excuse just like Fukuda Yasuo’s, it let Yudai kill Yua.
The lesson of this incident is clear.
As the Kagawa child consultation center and the Osaka police saw it, remarried men are extremely dangerous.
Incidentally, when it comes to child abuse, the United States is a super-advanced country, and the abuse of children there is appalling, such as “stuffing them into the kitchen oven and burning them to death,” or “making one’s very young child perform a blowjob,” according to the American psychoanalyst Judith Herman.
Therefore, in California, for example, child abuse is punished severely, and those who witness it are obliged to report it to the police.
If one hears a child crying and remains silent, one can be charged with a crime.
How thoroughly is this enforced?
A Japanese couple parked their car in front of a supermarket in Torrance, Los Angeles, locked the car while leaving their baby asleep in the back seat, and shopped for nearly half an hour.
When they finished shopping and returned to the parking lot, there was a huge crowd around the car.
Inside the car, the baby was crying as if on fire.
Police cars also arrived, and the parents were arrested on the spot in the act of child neglect.
There is a continuation to this story.
The baby was protected and examined at a hospital.
During the examination, a blue bruise was found on the baby’s bottom, and after the doctor judged it to be abuse and reported it, the parents were detained on the serious felony charge of child abuse.
It took quite a long time to get them to understand Mongolian spots.
Japan is better than the United States, but society, too, should have the awareness that “remarried men are almost murderers,” and if there is the sound of a child crying, it should report it immediately.
