If Japan becomes a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, it will become a nuclear test site with no fear of claims.

The following is from the serial column of Masayuki Takayama, who brings the weekly Shincho released today to a successful conclusion.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
This article is in continuity with the article he published in the monthly magazine Themis, which I sent out to the Japanese people and the rest of the world yesterday.
Guevara’s Wish
The other day, the Tenseijingo (the language of the sky) reported on the air raid diary of Hisako Yoshizawa, an essayist. 
“Today is a good day for the bombing,” and “It’s time to come. There was a strange familiarity in their daily conversation. I know what you mean. 
When I was stationed in Tehran during the Iraq War, Iraqi planes flew into the city as they pleased. The B-29s that came to Tokyo was loaded with nine tons of bombs each. They came in large formations. 
The three Iraqi planes that came to Tehran dropped one 250 kg bomb each. There was no comparison.
Even so, a direct hit would have turned a four-story building into rubble in an instant, killing about 40 people. The bombs flew in like regular flights in the morning, afternoon, and evening. 
When I heard the sound of anti-aircraft guns firing in the distance, my beautiful assistant would say, “Oh, my God, it’s already noon. 
A tremendous explosion pierced my ears a few moments later, and the blast made the windowpanes shake. If we were any closer, the glass would burst, and we would die or be injured by the shards. 
I felt a strong sense of righteous indignation at the air raids that were killing innocent civilians, no matter how much they wanted to show off their control of the airspace. 
The Yoshizawa diary also describes the Tokyo Air Raid, which burned 100,000 people to death in one night.
“The view from Kanda Station was of an empty, burnt-out field. 
Curtis LeMay built a wall of flames around the downtown area to drive people to the center, where he rained incendiary bombs down on them. Charred corpses lay folded along the roadside, and the Kitajikkenn River was filled with them. 
Shinzaburo Nakajima of the 5th Division, who visited the home of his superior officer, was rendered speechless by the viciousness of the situation. He said, “No matter how long it takes if we don’t retaliate in the same amount against the U.S., no matter how many years it takes, the grudge will never disappear” (Diary of a Former Soldier). 
Yoshizawa was different. She spoke of her distrust of the government. She said it was the Japanese government that was at fault. If she wrote that, the Asahi Shimbun would publish it. So her wish came true. 
In the following day’s column, “Yoteki,” reporter Taira Hiroshi criticized Yoshihide Suga for attending the A-bomb memorial service. 
He said that although he had not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, he was “proud to be listed in the list of names signed by the Pope and other heads of state who wish for nuclear abolition. 
There is a similarity to the Yoshizawa diary. Chie Guevara also visited here. He shouted to the press, “Why isn’t Japan angry with the United States for this atrocity? 
Rafsanjani, the Iranian president, also asked the foreign ministry official accompanying him with a straight face, “Why doesn’t Japan retaliate against the United States for dropping the atomic bomb on the innocent people? 
There are more than a few such people in the book. Taira ignores them and picks and chooses what is convenient. It makes it easy for him to write a column. 
In his memoirs, W. Leahy, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who was involved in the atomic bombings, wrote that “the United States is like the barbarians of the Middle Ages who killed women and children. It was an apparent war crime. 
If only the U.S. would deeply regret it, but on the contrary, it has been putting up lies about the Nanking Massacre, the Bataan Death March, etc., and justifying the Tokyo Air Raid and the two atomic bombs. 
That is why Japan has reserved the “right of legitimate retaliation against two nuclear bombs,” whether it will exercise it or not. 
Joining the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty means turning a blind eye to U.S. war crimes, accepting their fabricated lies, and giving up its own right to retaliate. 
Besides, the area around Japan is crawling with people like LeMay. 
However, the Asahi Shimbun is too single-minded and hypocritical to appeal for the ratification of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and repeats that the air raids and the atomic bombings were the faults of the Japanese government.
The Tensei Hitongo, which dealt with Yoshizawa’s diary, also held that “politicians, except the former Democratic Party of Japan, are always at fault” and concluded that the current Corona disaster is also the fault of politicians. 
Suga could indeed do nothing. He couldn’t even quarantine the corona-carrying Chinese. It is because the GHQ Constitution stipulates that the government should not have any power. 
The only way is to change the constitution.
If Japan becomes a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, it will become a nuclear test site with no fear of claims.

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