The Foreign Correspondents’ Club, NHK, and the Asahi Shimbun | The Reality That an Organization Can Be Controlled Once Five Percent Become Sympathizers
Published on October 17, 2019.
This essay examines NHK commentators, the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, the Asahi Shimbun, Atsushi Yamada, and the Takashi Uemura lawsuit, criticizing the postwar structure of Japan’s media, pseudo-moralism, anti-Japanese reporting, and the problem of information operations by foreign forces.
October 17, 2019.
It is probably now an indisputable fact that the Asahi Shimbun, and the intelligence agencies of China and the Korean Peninsula, are controlling the strange people at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan.
I am republishing the chapter I sent out on April 17, 2019, under the title: It vividly showed the principle that if one can create five percent sympathizers inside an organization targeted for subversion, that organization can be completely controlled.
This is the chapter I sent out on January 5, 2019, under the title: It is probably now an indisputable fact that the Asahi Shimbun, and the intelligence agencies of China and the Korean Peninsula, are controlling the strange people at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, such as this Italian.
In the top fifty search results on goo the day before yesterday, at number forty-five, there was the chapter I sent out on August 6, 2018, under the title: As for NHK commentator Noriyuki Mizuno, he went so far as to denounce Japan by saying, “China and North Korea named Japan and pointed out the possibility of nuclear development” in the August 1 broadcast of “Jiron Kōron.”
I understood it immediately when I saw this.
From 11 p.m. the day before yesterday, there was a two-hour special program by NHK featuring nearly all of its commentators.
All discerning people who watched that program must have thought that Noriyuki Mizuno was suspicious… that he was nothing other than an agent of China… and searched for the chapter mentioned at the beginning.
Or perhaps, when they searched for Noriyuki Mizuno, my chapter appeared.
All discerning people among those who watched the program the day before yesterday must have thought the same thing.
They must have vividly seen the conviction held by the Communist Party or by communists: if one can create five percent sympathizers inside an organization targeted for subversion, that organization can be completely controlled.
Needless to say, there are, of course, people who sincerely and quite naturally love Japan and devote themselves to improving their work.
But in any case, people of that level are, as Japan’s de facto national broadcaster, shaping Japanese public opinion as they please.
They thoroughly criticize the policies made by politicians elected through elections… especially politicians entrusted with government… policies created with the national interest in mind.
Worse still, as the Moritomo and Kake uproars demonstrated, they carry out fake reporting, disturb and paralyze national politics, and weaken Japan’s national power.
Their evil is one thing, but the foolishness of Japan as a state, or rather its state of being full of openings, has also reached an extreme.
The pseudo-moralism that dominated the Japanese media until August four years ago,
precisely because that is the target of propaganda operations by one-party Communist dictatorships and Nazism states, has allowed such foolishness to prevail.
Japan thus passed through the thirty years of Heisei as an age of defeat, reducing its economic growth by as much as one-third compared with the United States and weakening its national power.
As I have already written, the person who created the beginning of that was Atsushi Yamada, who was an economic affairs reporter at the Asahi Shimbun.
What I truly cannot forgive is that this man, far from showing even the slightest sign of reflection… on “Asa made Nama TV,” which I happened to be watching, behaved with the utmost arrogance, and, if I remember correctly, intimidated a politician of the Liberal Democratic Party.
Nor is that all.
At places such as the Prime Minister’s Office press conference, he continues to behave as if he were a heavyweight of Japan’s press club world, saying things like, “I am Yamada, a journalist.”
Recently, in the lawsuit in which Takashi Uemura lashed out and sued Yoshiko Sakurai, he naturally suffered a complete defeat.
The very fact that a large number of lawyers joined this man’s defense team shows that the corruption… the reddening… of Japan’s legal world is in a state so disastrous that one can hardly bear to look at it.
For some reason, the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan then invited both of them and held a press conference on this matter.
Judging from the contents of the questions and answers, it is surely an unmistakable fact that the power behind that press conference was Atsushi Yamada and the Asahi Shimbun.
As for the appalling conduct at that press conference of the Italian who calls himself a reporter,
as I, who love Italy more than anyone else, wrote to Italy in Italian: please immediately recall this disgrace to Italy back to his home country.
It is probably now an indisputable fact that the Asahi Shimbun, and the intelligence agencies of China and the Korean Peninsula, are controlling the strange people at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan, such as this Italian.
