The Taxpayer-Funded Interests and “Divide Japan” Operation Behind the Ainu Issue

Published on November 3, 2019.
Based on Otaka Miki’s essay, this article discusses the current movement surrounding the Ainu issue from two perspectives: a vested-interest structure feeding on Japanese taxpayers’ money, and a “Divide Japan” operation carried out by anti-Japanese states such as China and the Korean Peninsula, together with their agents.
It argues that facts never revealed by the Asahi Shimbun, commercial TV news programs, or NHK are being exposed by the monthly magazines WiLL, Hanada, and Sound Argument, and urges readers to subscribe to them.

November 3, 2019.
One is to feed on the tax money of the Japanese people.
The other is a “Divide Japan” operation by the above-mentioned anti-Japanese states and the people who are their agents.
Today, there is not a single person in Japan who discriminates against the Ainu.
Not only that, to begin with, there are no people who even speak of this or that about the Ainu, and there are no people who say they have met an Ainu.
In other words, the only ones speaking of this or that about the Ainu are China and the Korean Peninsula, the only two anti-Japanese states in this world.
They are, in reality, totalitarian states that have continued Nazism under the name of anti-Japanese education for seventy-four years after the war in order to maintain their own regimes.
Apart from Japanese whose authenticity as true Japanese is even doubtful, who go along with their anti-Japanese propaganda, Koreans residing in Japan, and the so-called human-rights lawyers who always side with them, there is no one anywhere who does so.
What is their purpose?
One is to feed on the tax money of the Japanese people.
The other is a “Divide Japan” operation by the above-mentioned anti-Japanese states and the people who are their agents.
The painstaking work of Otaka Miki, one of the few genuine journalists, has brilliantly made this clear.
Otaka Miki has revealed facts that can absolutely never be understood merely by paying a monthly subscription fee of 5,000 yen to read the Asahi Shimbun and the like, or by watching news programs on their subsidiary commercial television stations and NHK news programs.
Everyone who believes he possesses intelligence must go immediately to the nearest bookstore and purchase the December issue of the monthly magazine WiLL, priced at 900 yen including tax.
Needless to say, at that time one must also purchase the monthly magazines Hanada and Sound Argument.
After all, the total cost is only 2,700 yen.

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