China’s Honey Traps and the Weakness of Japanese Intellectuals — The Danger of Intelligence Operations Hidden in Ultra-Luxury Resorts
Published on August 27, 2019.
Prompted by an FNN Prime report describing a Chinese cadre training facility and its facial-recognition system, this essay discusses the danger of honey traps by Chinese and Korean Peninsula intelligence agencies, the possibility that Japanese intellectuals and writers may be targeted, and criticizes opinion leaders shaped by Asahi Shimbun-style pseudo-moralism.
August 27, 2019.
When I saw that such a beauty had been placed at the entrance, I became convinced that there was no doubt that a considerable number of targeted Japanese had already fallen into honey traps.
This is from the internet news site FNN Prime, https://www.fnn.jp/posts/00047013HDK/201906282000_HirotomoTakahashi_HDK?obtp_src=FNNjp_AR_1, in an article titled “The Chinese Spokesperson Who Disappeared for Four Months — The Truth Behind the ‘Disappearance’ Is…?” which, while explaining a facility, a university-like school with dormitories where officials receive training when they are promoted, states that a facial-lock recognition system has been introduced.
When I saw that such a beauty had been placed at the entrance, I became convinced that there was no doubt that a considerable number of targeted Japanese had already fallen into honey traps.
There is a certain bestselling novelist who stays at ultra-luxury resorts around the world, whose true nature no one in Japan knows, enjoying ultra-luxury wines while writing bestselling novels, and who, in the pages of the Asahi Shimbun, disparaged as “cheap-sake thinking” those who began writing on the internet about the reality of Asahi, China, and the Korean Peninsula, in other words, about what they truly are.
Not only did he declare that “Japan must apologize to the Korean Peninsula forever,” but in a recent work he also wrote things exactly in line with Chinese propaganda, such as, “The Nanjing Massacre did happen… and the number was not 300,000 but 400,000…”
He is sustained by plagiarism and continues to conceal that plagiarism.
He possesses nothing except “self-serving pseudo-moralism.”
He is a truly cheap mind formed by reading the Asahi Shimbun.
In Israel, he uttered words of pseudo-moralism so childish and so sickeningly sanctimonious that nothing could surpass them.
Such a truly cheap novelist, because of his popularity among the Japanese people and throughout the world, including in his own country, and they must surely have played a part in that as well, is without question an ideal target for the intelligence agencies of China and the Korean Peninsula, for whom propaganda is everything.
In an ultra-luxury resort somewhere in the world that no one knows about, there is a cleverly arranged encounter with a perfectly educated, refined beauty.
Ryutaro Hashimoto picked up a dropped handkerchief near the entrance of a luxury hotel and fell into a honey trap.
And men who will not “eat the meal set before them” are harder to find.
All the more so when they are placed in the closed room of an ultra-luxury resort that no one in Japan knows about.
Those gentlemen who, without even realizing that they are false images created by the publishing world, which was in steep decline, have reached the height of self-importance and fallen under the illusion that they themselves are ultra-luxury, would surely be finished in an instant by a perfectly prepared ultra-luxury beauty.
