South Korea’s Malicious Propaganda of the “Radiation Olympics”: Katsumi Murotani Exposes the Anti-Japanese Tribe’s Campaign to Sabotage the Tokyo Olympics

Based on Katsumi Murotani’s book “The Common Sense of the Anti-Japanese Tribe,” this article criticizes South Korea’s propaganda campaign branding the Tokyo Olympics as the “Radiation Olympics,” its reputational attacks on Fukushima products, its political use of the treated water issue, and the pro-Korean stance of Japanese media outlets such as the Asahi Shimbun and NHK.

March 20, 2020
Those who have read this genuine book will realize, just as I have, that newspapers such as the Asahi Shimbun and television media such as NHK are completely under South Korean operations.
The following is from “The Common Sense of the Anti-Japanese Tribe,” a book by Katsumi Murotani, a genuine journalist and one of the finest experts on South Korea.
It is a book that not only the Japanese people but also people throughout the world must read.
It is a book that reveals the reality of South Korea, which people throughout the world, like myself, will learn for the first time.
Countries of bottomless evil and plausible lies also lie about their own reality.
In other words, they conceal the reality of their own country.
Newspaper companies such as the Asahi Shimbun, television media companies such as NHK, opposition-party political operators, so-called human rights lawyers, and civic groups that have been in league with South Korea have continued to hide the reality of South Korea that this truthful book reveals.
Not only that, but those who have read this genuine book by Mr. Murotani will realize, just as I have, that newspapers such as the Asahi Shimbun and television media such as NHK are completely under South Korean operations.
When I was still watching TV Asahi’s “Hodo Station,” Furutachi was the host.
At some point after 2011, the program suddenly repeated what was clearly fake reporting of uncertain authenticity, saying something about thyroid cancer in Fukushima.
It was clearly reporting that violated the Broadcast Act, but when I read this chapter, the scales fell from my eyes, and I thought, so that was it.
Now I even find it strange that I watched such a thing every day, but at that time I was absorbed in business, so I was merely watching the news without thinking deeply.
It is no exaggeration at all to say that the above-mentioned media outlets and people are completely South Korea’s running dogs.
Malicious propaganda to the world calling it the “Radiation Olympics”
Long ago, there were people in Japan who made the strange claim that “American atomic bombs are dirty, but Soviet atomic bombs are clean.”
Radiation levels in South Korea are generally higher than those in Japan.
Yet Koreans are spreading malicious propaganda to the world about “Japan, the radiation superpower,” as if to say, “Japan’s nuclear power and radiation are frightening, but South Korea’s nuclear power plants and radiation are no problem.”
On the Korean Peninsula, there is a proverb: “When one’s cousin buys fields, one’s stomach hurts.”
They are deeply jealous.
For Koreans, the 2020 Tokyo Olympics are equivalent to “a cousin with whom they have always had a bad relationship buying fields.”
South Korea carried out dirty operations so that Tokyo would not become the host city for the 2020 Olympics.
Just before the vote at the International Olympic Committee, the IOC, to decide the host city, South Korea announced an emergency measure to “ban imports of marine products from eight prefectures, including Fukushima,” citing the danger of radioactive contamination.
It plotted to impress upon IOC members from various countries the danger of “Japan, the radiation superpower,” so that votes would not go to “host city Tokyo.”
There is less than a year until the Tokyo Olympics.
South Korea has now once again brought out “Japan’s radiation” as material with which to degrade the Tokyo Olympics.
It is calling the Tokyo Olympics the “Radiation Olympics” and is showing moves to encourage countries around the world to boycott the “Radiation Olympics.”
There is no reason why this should be allowed.
However, for Japan, there is an issue on a different level to which it should respond far more sharply.
Near Busan, about 200 kilometers from Fukuoka City, South Korea’s dangerous nuclear power plants are densely concentrated.
If something happens, disaster will fall not only upon western Japan but upon all of Japan.
Give humiliation to Japan
For more than 70 years after the war, there has never been a period when the anti-Japanese tribe’s feelings toward Japan were favorable.
At present, the anti-Japanese sentiment that rose because the Japanese government repeatedly said that the so-called wartime laborer issue had been “settled” has been further heightened by Japan’s strengthening of export controls.
When this happens, South Korean anti-Japanese forces throw in anything combustible, as if anything will do, in order to intensify the flames in the crucible of anti-Japanism.
As a result, one of the flames now burning is the anti-Japanese boycott movement discussed in “Common Sense 18.”
And another is the movement to degrade the Tokyo Olympics.
On July 5, 2019, a demand to “boycott the Tokyo Olympics” was posted on the South Korean presidential office’s national petition website.
The explanation of its purpose was as follows.
“I intend to touch Japan’s greatest Achilles’ heel and induce Japan’s surrender or give it humiliation. Japan is trying to recover its lost status through the Tokyo Olympics. However, according to many unofficial sources, not only is the radiation level in Tokyo high, but agricultural and marine products from Fukushima are being supplied to hotels and other places at low prices. Therefore, if we announce a plan to boycott the Tokyo Olympics on this basis and draw the attention of other countries, it will have considerable effect.”
In other words, seeing the radiation issue as “Japan’s Achilles’ heel,” they intend to use the radiation issue as material for harassment, humiliate Japan, and, if possible, draw other countries into a boycott.
Because South Korea has many granite regions, radiation levels there are higher than in Japan due to the influence of radon generated from them.
Of course, Seoul is higher than Tokyo.
Official figures have been made clear many times.
Even the Hankyoreh, a newspaper completely attached to the administration, reported on August 10, 2019, that radiation levels in both Tokyo and Minamisoma were within the normal range.
However, people burning with anti-Japanese feeling probably do not see “articles they do not want to read.”
Fukushima cherries remain expensive, and I know of no hotel that offers sake at a discount because it is from Fukushima.
But for them, the facts do not matter.
As long as they can spread the image of “Japan, the radiation superpower” throughout the world and throw mud at the Tokyo Olympics, that is enough.
What the South Korean government is actually doing seems as if it is following this national petition.
Perhaps this national petition may have been created by the psychological warfare group, the internet operations personnel, of the National Intelligence Service, the former KCIA.
Let us look at the movements of the South Korean government and Olympic-related officials since August 2019.
▽Announced strengthened radiation inspections of coal ash imported from Japan, a material for cement.
▽Announced strengthened radiation inspections of recyclable waste such as waste plastics imported from Japan.
▽At a meeting related to the Tokyo Olympics, a South Korean representative expressed concern about the safety of food ingredients from Fukushima.
▽The Ministry of Foreign Affairs demanded an official response from the Japanese government regarding the plan to release treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the sea.
▽The Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism stated that, in consideration of athletes’ safety, South Korea would reconsider holding training camps in Japan.
▽Regarding treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, South Korea conveyed “serious concern” to the International Atomic Energy Agency, the IAEA.
*On NHK’s watch9 the other day, Arima, exactly in line with South Korean operations, referred to Fukushima’s harmless treated water as contaminated water, repeating it three times with a serious expression and narration.*
According to the Chosun Ilbo of August 14, 2019, the reason the South Korean government took up the issue of treated water containing tritium from the nuclear power plant was the instruction of President Moon Jae-in.
*As viewers know, Arima’s outrageous reporting on NHK’s watch9 the other day was in a manner that can be said, without any exaggeration, to have been exactly in accordance with Moon Jae-in’s instructions.*
When he came to Japan for the G20, he said that he would “cooperate sincerely so that the Tokyo Olympics can be held successfully” (see Common Sense 17), but after all, behind the scenes….
That is why the South Korean government is so enthusiastic about the treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, which South Korean reports call “contaminated water,” but *not to be outdone by South Korean reporting, Arima of watch9 was not merely enthusiastic about calling it contaminated water; he repeated it three times.* On the internet media “Agora” on September 9, 2019, Toko Kawata, former director of the Nuclear Waste Management Organization of Japan, cut the matter down sharply.
“From South Korea’s Wolseong Nuclear Power Plant, which is making baseless complaints, more than eight times the total amount of tritium from Fukushima is released into the Sea of Japan.”
Even so, he says that compared with the annual radiation exposure from nature, it is at a level that is no problem at all.
Of course, bureaucrats at South Korea’s science and technology agencies cannot possibly be unaware of such facts.
However, because under the president’s “secret order” the state is running toward “harassment of the Tokyo Olympics,” the bureaucrats of that country merely remain silent.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Please enter the result of the calculation above.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.