The Female-Line Emperor Argument and the Y-Chromosome Imperial Line | Masayuki Takayama Questions Asahi Shimbun’s Ignorance and Malice
Published on October 29, 2019. Citing Masayuki Takayama’s serialized column in Shukan Shincho, this essay discusses the Y chromosome, the male-line imperial succession, the continuity between modern Japanese and Jomon people, criticism of the horse-rider theory, and the issue of the female-line emperor argument promoted by the Communist Party and Asahi Shimbun.
October 29, 2019.
Now the Communist Party and the Asahi Shimbun recommend a female-line Emperor.
They think that this is the best way to defile the Japanese people.
Do not ignorance and malice rise like a smell from Asahi?
I am republishing the chapter I published on July 11, 2019, under the title “Do Not Ignorance and Malice Rise Like a Smell from Asahi?”
The reason goes without saying.
It is because this is a truth that every Japanese citizen must know.
As I have already written, I buy Shukan Shincho every week in order to read the serialized columns of Masayuki Takayama and Yoshiko Sakurai.
In this week’s issue as well, Masayuki Takayama fully proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
Everyone who read it must have thought that he is extraordinary.
Yoshiko Sakurai is also a person worthy of the People’s Honor Award.
Together with the late Shoichi Watanabe, from the age when the Asahi Shimbun ruled Japan until now, she has truly fought alone, correcting the abnormality of this newspaper and its many fabricated reports born of anti-Japanese ideology, and continuing to criticize the reality that it has continued to side with anti-Japanese propaganda from China and the Korean Peninsula.
First, I will deliver Masayuki Takayama’s splendid essay to all Japanese citizens and to people all over the world.
*~* indicates my own comments.
A Smell Rising from Asahi.
Masayuki Takayama.
Even if she is a bad wife, when she dies first, the husband somehow loses his vitality and dies as if following after his wife.
Conversely, however, even when the husband dies, most wives rather become full of vitality and absolutely do not follow after their husbands.
The average life expectancy of Japanese men is 80, and that of women is 87.
This shows that wives spend seven peaceful years after their troublesome husbands have departed.
Why do men die early?
It is because they are men, that is, because they possess the Y chromosome.
It has been so determined.
It is sad, but that is their fate.
The following is something I learned in interviews with Kumiko Takeuchi and Mary Batten: at the stage of the fertilized egg, everyone was “female.”
The proof is the nipples on a man’s chest.
They produce no milk and are not an erogenous zone.
They are things of no use, but they are proof that before becoming male, one was female.
Then when does a male become male?
Six weeks after fertilization, when cell division has begun, the sex-determining factor on the Y chromosome causes the seminal vesicles to begin functioning, and they emit a large amount of the male hormone testosterone.
Like a shower, it soaks everything from the brain to every corner of the body in testosterone and tells it, “You are male.”
The male genitals also develop because of this.
However, the genitals of congenital homosexual men become one size larger than those of normal men.
Why God made such a waste is not yet known.
Those who are born male in both mind and body are constantly scolded by the brain: you are male, behave more manfully.
They grow beards and body hair that women do not have, and their muscles become strong and swelling.
MacArthur was mocked by his first wife, who said, “You may be a general by day, but aren’t you a private at night?”
Men are thus required to exert themselves night and day.
In fact, it is also the Y chromosome that supports that exertion.
It prevents cells from becoming cancerous, prevents arteriosclerosis, and also removes amyloid plaques that attach to the brain.
Thanks to this, men can keep striving without falling ill, take beautiful wives, and produce children.
However, once the suitable reproductive age has passed, the Y chromosome gradually lowers its function.
As a result, hardening of the arteries begins.
Plaques accumulate in the brain and dementia begins, and cancer cells begin to swagger.
The fatigue of having continued to exert oneself also accumulates.
“Pinpin-korori” refers to the ideal way of living: to live vigorously and then suddenly die before becoming oversized household garbage in the home.
The decline of the Y chromosome seems to be precisely the law of nature for realizing that.
Japanese men compared to cherry blossoms the fleeting way of life in which one continues to strive as a man, does one’s best, and yet, once one’s role is over, is swiftly scattered.
Motoori Norinaga, who lived sufficiently and reached the age of sixty, wrote: “If one asks what the Yamato spirit of Shikishima is, it is the mountain cherry blossoms fragrant in the morning sun.”
Saigyo also wrote: “If it is granted, I wish to die in spring beneath the blossoms, around the full moon of Kisaragi.”
The sadness of men is well expressed.
As for that Y chromosome, it has in fact come to be understood that the base sequence of its genes differs by ethnic group.
According to the Y-chromosome sequence map recently published by graduate students of the Faculty of Science at the University of Tokyo, present-day Japanese and Jomon people are the same.
In other words, from the days of the Sannai-Maruyama site, for more than ten thousand years, the Japanese have remained Japanese.
When this Jomon factor was compared with that of Chinese and Koreans, there was almost nothing in common.
This must be a great discovery.
Shiba Ryotaro said that the Japanese and Koreans had the same ancestors.
Egami Namio also said that “horse-riding peoples came over and created the Yamato court,” but that turned out to be a complete lie.
In Japanese history, it is taught that Yayoi culture was due to immigrants, but there were no such immigrants.
Regarding ethnic identity, Hiroaki Nagahama also writes in The Birth of Japan that, conventionally, “it was verified based on female mitochondria, but that is childish deception.
The Y chromosome is the decisive factor.”
Even so, the Japanese are extraordinary.
They quickly understood the sadness of the Y chromosome, and therefore not only cherished cherry blossoms, but also made the imperial line male-line succession connected by the Y chromosome, as a means of preserving the purity of the people.
*The other day, in a special dialogue between Kumiko Takeuchi and Moe Fukada, both of whom became splendid scholars worthy of being graduates of Kyoto University, I learned this, and I had exactly the same feeling as Masayuki Takayama: even so, the Japanese are extraordinary.*
Now the Communist Party and the Asahi Shimbun recommend a female-line Emperor.
They think that this is the best way to defile the Japanese people.
Do not ignorance and malice rise like a smell from Asahi?
