The Content Was Truly Astonishing: It Claimed That Japan’s Aid to Africa Was Causing Trouble for Local People.

Published on September 18, 2019.
This essay criticizes TBS, News 23, Takako Zenba, NHK, TV Asahi, Hodo Station, Kyoto University’s signboard controversy, and NHK Osaka’s reporting, arguing that Japanese mass media distort Japan’s economic cooperation and domestic administrative decisions through an anti-Japanese lens.

September 18, 2019.
The content was truly astonishing: it claimed that Japan’s aid to Africa was causing trouble for local people, and that black water had gushed out in an area developed through Japanese economic cooperation.
This is a chapter I published on this day last year, under the title, “If You Read the Article Sent Out by a TBS Employee under the Title ‘Soliloquy,’ You Will Understand Why the Anti-Japanese Reporting Was So Astonishing When Zenba Was Hosting News 23.”
September 18, 2018.
If you read the article sent out by a TBS employee under the title “Soliloquy,” you will understand why the anti-Japanese reporting was so astonishing when Zenba was hosting News 23.
So-called citizens’ groups whose principle is anti-Japanese propaganda—groups that are now clearly under the operations of the Korean Peninsula and China through money traps, honey traps, and the like, as is already evident from official records of organizations run by the South Korean government—bring one farmer from Mozambique in Africa and have him protest to the relevant Japanese government agency.
The content was truly astonishing: it claimed that Japan’s aid to Africa was causing trouble for local people, and that black water had gushed out in an area developed through Japanese economic cooperation.
No decent Japanese person would spend a long segment of a news program reporting something that does not even rise to the level of commentary.
In this case,
For China, which wants to colonize Africa politically and economically, Japan, which provides proper economic assistance, is a thorn in its side.
It was a poor piece of nonsense that people from China or the Korean Peninsula would think up.
Zenba, who calmly reported it without the slightest doubt and criticized the government, is a graduate of the University of Tokyo and a former NHK employee.
Her conduct clearly shows that the University of Tokyo is politically contaminated, that as a result people such as Ōkoshi and Zenba, whose intellectual level is problematic, are being mass-produced, and that NHK is completely under the operations of Chongryon-related forces, China, and the Korean Peninsula.
They bring in an elderly man from Northern Europe whom no Japanese person knows, and together with TV Asahi’s Hodo Station, they provide supporting fire for the anti-base movement in Okinawa, that is, the anti-American struggle.
A TBS employee described them as worms inside the lion’s body and wrote, “Do they not understand that if they devour it, the lion too will die?”
That is entirely correct.
For example, I now do not watch TBS news programs at all.
It is no exaggeration to say that I tune to TBS only when watching sports programs.
What decent Japanese person could watch their terrible anti-Japanese propaganda news programs!
Some time ago, because the channel had been left as it was after the Asian Games or something similar,
a program on Mainichi Broadcasting called Chichin Puipui appeared, and the terrible editing when it reported on the Liberal Democratic Party presidential election also showed the reason.
NHK Osaka’s evening news program, NHK Osaka, persistently continued to report critically on Kyoto City’s decision, with the air of being an ally of justice.
Kyoto City had faced a large signboard standing prominently at the Hyakumanben intersection, at a time when the number of tourists was increasing even further.
The ugly Kyoto University signboards were a lump of childish self-abasing historical views and the anti-Japanese ideology arising from them, created by students who had forgotten their sole duty as students, which is to pursue learning.
Kyoto City decided to remove them forcibly because they severely damaged Kyoto’s dignity and appearance.
They were also things that violated the Road Traffic Act and other laws.
NHK Osaka persistently reported this again and again, critically portraying Kyoto City’s decision with the air of being an ally of justice.
The time has long since come for the Japanese people and the world to know who on earth is making such programs.

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