Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory, Okinawa, and NHK Reporting Share the Same Roots|The GHQ Yoke and Left-Wing Totalitarian Thought Still Lingering in Postwar Japan
Published on July 17, 2019.
This essay discusses Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory, Song Du-hoe, the comfort women issue, Okinawan independence theory, the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, Tsujimoto Kiyomi, Fukushima Mizuho, and others, examining the continuing influence of GHQ occupation policy and the problem of left-wing totalitarian thought in postwar Japan.
July 17, 2019.
Those who have infiltrated Okinawa in order to weaken it by propagandizing such things as Okinawan independence are precisely people from the Korean Peninsula and people under the influence of China.
The chapter I published yesterday, titled “They report it as though praising it as the correct action of criticizing power as evil,” entered the official hashtag ranking at No. 8 for Kyoto University.
This is the chapter I published on May 15, 2018, under the title “A man named Song Du-hoe, who had nothing whatsoever to do with Kyoto University, had lived for many years for free in Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory.”
Kyoto University is a national university.
Its facilities and other assets are national property.
To begin with, the outrageous plot called the so-called comfort women issue began at Kyoto University.
A man named Song Du-hoe, who had nothing whatsoever to do with Kyoto University, had lived for many years for free in Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory.
At the end of the war, GHQ issued an order that people from the Korean Peninsula should return to the Korean Peninsula.
Song ignored that order.
He must have had no wish to return to the Korean Peninsula, where the worst kind of status-discrimination system had existed.
Song did not return.
He even filed lawsuits claiming that he was a Japanese person possessing Japanese nationality and should be treated as Japanese.
While doing such things, he seduced Aoyagi Atsuko, a housewife married to a doctor and herself a graduate of Kyushu University, and caused her to launch a certain movement.
At the time, Song had Aoyagi serve as office manager and repeatedly place advertisements in the Asahi Journal.
The Asahi Journal was the bible of leftists, activists, and readers who blindly believed in the Asahi Shimbun.
Those people embodied the Asahi Shimbun, which, in these past one or two years, has conspicuously proved itself to be in fact a sympathizer with totalitarian states and their den—a headquarters of mini-Goebbelses.
It should now be easy to infer where the funds for this came from.
Those who leapt at this were Yoon Mee-hyang, founder of the Korean Council and a person whose reputation as virtually a North Korean spy has become firmly established, Fukushima Mizuho, who was then a lawyer, Takagi Kenichi, and the Asahi Shimbun, especially reporters in its Osaka Social Affairs Department.
By using this plot begun by Song Du-hoe as an attack against Japan, the above-mentioned people have continued to damage the honor and credibility of Japan and the Japanese people to an extent that cannot be converted into money.
Together with the actual financial damage, the Japanese government—that is, we ourselves—should originally have made all of the above-mentioned people compensate for the damage.
That damage continues throughout the world even now.
The movements to erect comfort women statues and forced-laborer statues around the world by totalitarians raised under the anti-Japanese education begun by Syngman Rhee are anti-Japanese propaganda.
It is a plot to keep Japan permanently in the position of a political prisoner in the international community.
Its purpose is to reduce Japan’s national strength.
It is a plot to extort large amounts of money from Japan at every opportunity—that is, to defraud the Japanese people of their taxes.
It is now an unmistakable fact that the Asahi Shimbun and NHK made the greatest contribution to this.
Five years ago in August, when the Asahi Shimbun officially apologized inside Japan over this matter, though it has still made no statement overseas, and when its president resigned, we Japanese people committed a grave error.
We should have forced the Asahi Shimbun to cease publication.
We should have made the Asahi Shimbun Company compensate Japan and the Japanese people for the astronomical damage they suffered from the many fabricated reports it had continued to publish in order to degrade Japan.
The origin of this plot, which has injured the honor and credibility of Japan and the Japanese people to an extent that cannot be converted into money, was Kyoto University, a Japanese national university that for many years allowed Song Du-hoe, a person with no connection whatsoever to Kyoto University, to live for free in Kumano Dormitory.
Why did such a thing happen?
Readers of the Asahi Shimbun unquestioningly accepted editorials that praised Kyoto University as a bastion of academic freedom, citing such things as the Takigawa Incident.
However, Takigawa Yukitoki, the central figure in that incident, had before the war been purged as a communist who harmed Japan.
In other words, he was in fact a worthless communist, but as a result of GHQ’s occupation policy, truly capable people in every field were purged from public office, and Communist Party members, Koreans in Japan, and others slipped into the vacuum.
One of them was Takigawa Yukitoki.
That this was the truth was taught to us by Watanabe Shoichi, a true and genuine scholar in postwar Japan and the greatest figure produced by Yamagata Prefecture, in what may be called his posthumous work, From the Age of Postwar Confusion.
It was an age in which a man who was in fact a communist could rise all the way to become president of Kyoto University.
When I learned that from his book, I finally understood why Song Du-hoe had been living in Kumano Dormitory for free.
As a key point in the defense of Japan, GHQ naturally placed bases in Okinawa.
After the war, in exchange for various painful concessions in the economic field, the Japanese government persistently continued negotiations with the United States for the return of Okinawa Prefecture, and as a result restored administrative rights.
However, the age had already entered the Cold War between East and West.
It was only after the war that the United States, as the leader of the liberal camp, first realized that communist states were not merely enemies of freedom and democracy, but were states that constantly waged propaganda, spread their doctrines and claims throughout the world, and at the same time constantly harbored ambitions for territorial expansion.
That is why the United States did not relinquish only the bases it had established in Okinawa as the most important defensive line for freedom and democracy in Asia.
Of course it did not.
The Roosevelt administration, which was utterly ignorant of Japan and had been poisoned by the Comintern—indeed, had also been worked upon by it—and which it would not be an exaggeration to call evil, launched war propaganda against Japan and maneuvered Japan into the opening of war with the United States.
In the same evil spirit, in order to keep Japan forever a weak country, it gave Japan a constitution saying that Japan would have no armed forces whatsoever and would trust in the peoples of other countries and so forth, thereby making Japan a completely defenseless country.
If the bases in Okinawa had also been returned and removed, Japan would have been immediately invaded by communist states.
Those who are now infiltrating Okinawa in order to weaken it by propagandizing such things as Okinawan independence are precisely people from the Korean Peninsula and people under the influence of China.
That is because China and the Korean Peninsula, countries of “bottomless evil” and “plausible lies,” and the only two anti-Japanese states in the world, know full well that Okinawa is the most important base and front line in Asia not only for Japan but also for the camp of freedom and democracy.
That is why they want the bases in Okinawa removed, want Okinawa Prefecture made independent, and are scheming and acting day and night to pull it over to their side.
The tragedy is that those cooperating with this are media such as the Asahi Shimbun, groups such as Kansai Concrete, North Korea sympathizers such as Fukushima Mizuho and Tsujimoto Kiyomi—who, it goes without saying, would be defined as spies in any advanced country other than Japan—and the Japan Teachers’ Union and labor unions that remain infected with communism.
Japan’s defeat has not ended even seventy-four years after the war.
That is also the reality of Kyoto University’s Kumano Dormitory.
There is nothing more tragic than the existence of Kyoto University students who do not even notice such a thing.
The tragedy of the Asahi Shimbun and others, and the tragedy of Kumano Dormitory, have the same root.
Recently, I happened to watch a Kansai commercial television station broadcast a program featuring a comedian, saying that television cameras had entered Kumano Dormitory for the first time.
I also realized that the program was meant to support this lawsuit.
The time has long since come for the Japanese people to realize that the Japanese media are truly陰湿 and malicious.
As a result of the largest local allocation tax among all prefectures being poured into Okinawa, and as a result of continuous infrastructure investment, Okinawa has become, without exaggeration, the wealthiest prefecture among Japan’s regions.
Its solid reinforced-concrete buildings would not budge even if an earthquake on the scale of the Great East Japan Earthquake struck.
By contrast, Kumano Dormitory would unquestionably collapse in an instant.
Not only would those living there, whether alive or dead, one hundred percent become disaster victims, but it has also become the kind of inferior building that would certainly cause secondary disasters such as fires in the surrounding area.
Yet Kyoto University had continued to leave it neglected all this time.
In Kyoto, a city of which it is no exaggeration to say that the whole town is a World Heritage site, it is only now that Kyoto University has finally reached the level of understanding the foolishness of a national university continuing to maintain such a building.
After seventy-four years since the war, it has finally begun to become normal.
After seventy-four years since the war, Kyoto University has finally reached the level at which it can cast off the yoke of GHQ, a group utterly ignorant of Japan.
The folly of still employing as a faculty member a person who made a major contribution to North Korea’s nuclear development remains uncured, however.
The other day, I saw news that students had filed a lawsuit opposing the university’s decision to dismantle this Kumano Dormitory.
The childishness and self-righteousness of those students’ claims are the very cause of the incidents involving well-born young men that have recently been stirring up society.
A Kyoto University student said something of the sort that the university has an obligation to support poor students.
They claim that as their right, without even feeling ashamed.
Unlike people who enter and graduate from Kyoto University like them, and who come out as left-wing infantilism patients making this kind of claim and becoming people who harm the country, I was a person endowed with an intellect such that, when I was in my second year of high school, my teacher told me, “You should remain at Kyoto University and stand with Kyoto University on both your shoulders.”
Yet my life was one in which God gave me family misfortune as a trial.
As is often the case, that misfortune resulted in a lack of money.
It was a life that lived out Le Clézio’s The Book of Flights.
When I somehow reached Kyoto, for some reason I thought, “I do not need university.”
Starting with nothing, I founded a real estate company in Osaka.
As an unknown small-to-medium-sized company in Japan, I accomplished work that may well have been the best in the country, and in only the ten years of its peak period, I brought more than 17 billion yen in tax payments to the nation.
The other day, I happened to watch a television program hosted by a comedian, amusingly stirring up a “University of Tokyo versus Kyoto University” contest.
They said that Kyoto University students are poor.
They said the reason is that, compared with the University of Tokyo, there are overwhelmingly fewer companies around where they can work part-time.
But that is only something television stations, which themselves continue to enjoy the springtime of their lives, say for amusement.
Most Kyoto University students have properly fulfilled their studies.
I declare that people of the kind who file such lawsuits will never become people useful to the country or to us.
Even if they become parents, they will only be able to raise people who attack police officers.
That is because nowhere in that endlessly spoiled attitude can one see even a fragment of a noble spirit.
From the very beginning, they lack the qualifications, as human beings, to be students of Kyoto University, a university representing Japan and the world.
They are people who do not even understand such a thing.
If they are so poor that they cannot even complete their studies, then there is no help for it.
They have no choice but to withdraw.
In any case, since they possess the intellect to enter Kyoto University, they can do anything.
Moreover, today, no money is needed to start a business.
A company can be established with one yen.
With your intellect and PC skills, you should be able to achieve crowdfunding as much as you wish with ease.
You are not only mistaken.
If you have time to file a lawsuit that is the lowest thing a human being can do, withdraw from school immediately, cooperate with one another, and start a business.
If you do that, you can create a company that will not lose to Google.
I am a person who is convinced that Kyoto University is above Stanford University in the excellence and intellectual level of its students.
Do it by uniting together.
Your present unity is completely mistaken.
So long as you continue doing such things, you may become so-called human-rights lawyers such as Fukushima Mizuho, who harm Japan and the Japanese people.
You may become parents who raise children who kill others.
But you will not become people who live their lives for the sake of the world and for the sake of others.
The female student who, in a newspaper interview, said that “Kyoto University has lost its Kyoto University-ness” in response to the removal of the childish and malicious signboards that had done nothing but continue to defile the scenery of Kyoto, the world’s greatest city, should read this essay of mine before calling herself a Kyoto University student.
Kyoto is a city that was created by numerous great people long before Kyoto University came into existence.
There was an article saying that NHK, with an air of pride, reported that new signboards had been put up protesting the removal of these signboards, as though praising it as the correct action of criticizing power as evil.
The very fact that NHK makes such reports is the same as Song Du-hoe infiltrating Kyoto University and inciting a housewife who had graduated from Kyushu University.
In the confusion at the end of the war, many Koreans in Japan and others slipped into NHK.
NHK became an organizer and supporter of the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal.
Even now, with Watch 9 as its main battlefield, NHK continues to report on the Moritomo and Kake issues in alignment with the Asahi Shimbun.
NHK continued day after day to show Tsujimoto Kiyomi in large close-ups.
She has a de facto husband who is a former criminal of the Red Army faction, and who has presumably not converted even now and is plainly still an activist.
She herself was arrested and indicted for the crime of defrauding the salary of a Diet member paid from the taxes of the Japanese people, received a final guilty verdict, and resigned as a Diet member.
It would be no exaggeration at all to say that in any advanced country other than Japan, she would be defined as a spy for the Korean Peninsula.
Among all this, what I truly thought was the lowest and worst was the content of her remarks when Prime Minister Abe and his wife departed to represent Japan and the Japanese people at the recent Japan-U.S. summit meeting, which was vitally important for Japan and the Japanese people.
NHK’s Watch 9 prominently reported, as though it were proper behavior, the sight of the politicians of the Constitutional Democratic Party, who can only be described as fools beyond compare—or rather, as all being agents of the Korean Peninsula—raising foolish voices of “Oh!” in response to her remarks about Mrs. Akie accompanying him.
What president of any advanced country would welcome with an open heart a woman who has as her husband a leading figure of the Japanese Red Army faction, which not only committed grave crimes against Japan and the world but also has close relations with North Korea, and who herself has a history of being arrested for defrauding salaries paid from the taxes of the people and resigning as a Diet member?
Has NHK’s news department ever thought about that even once?

