Governor Denny also flatters Xi Jinping, but you’re an American half-cas.
The following is from Masayuki Takayama’s serialized column that marks the end of Weekly Shincho, which was released yesterday.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
A long time ago, an elderly female professor of the Royal Ballet School of Monaco, highly respected by prima ballerinas worldwide, visited Japan.
At that time, she spoke about the significance of an artist’s existence.
She said, “Artists are important because they are the only ones who can shed light on hidden, concealed truths and express them.”
No one would dispute her words.
It is no exaggeration to say that Masayuki Takayama is not only the one and only journalist in the postwar world but also the one and only artist in the postwar world.
On the other hand, Oe, I don’t want to speak ill of the deceased, but (to follow Masayuki Takayama’s example below), Murakami and many others who call themselves writers or think of themselves as artists are not even worthy of the name of artists.
They have only expressed the lies the Asahi Shimbun and others created rather than shedding light on hidden truths and telling them.
Their existence is not limited to Japan but is the same in other countries worldwide.
In other words, there are only a few true artists.
This paper is another excellent proof that I am right when I say that no one in the world today deserves the Nobel Prize in Literature more than Masayuki Takayama.
It is a must-read not only for the people of Japan but for people all over the world.
Xi Jinping’s mixed-race child
Portugal took East Timor and used it as a center for the spice trade.
Sandalwood and nutmeg fetched higher prices than gold.
As a result, there were many enemies. The rivals, England and Orchid, were attacking, and the natives were also dangerous, but there was no army to send additional troops to the home country with a small population.
However, the Portuguese, who had established many colonies, had a solution. The following is a passage from British travel writer Norman Lewis’s experiences in East Timor.
“Although the soldiers are all black, their features remind us of white people, indicating that Portuguese soldiers left their descendants here.
It resulted from their obedience to orders to marry local women to use their sons to provide the troops needed to defend the new colony.”
The woman is of Melanesian descent, black, and has a strong body odor.
When Norman says that he consented, they didn’t enjoy committing the crime.
The child she gave birth to was called Halfkas.
The term initially meant mixed-race British-Indian children, but it is now a general term for mixed-race children born to Asian women by white people.
The East Timorese half-cas becomes a soldier, and his father gives him a gun, a white face, and a Portuguese name. Like Xanana Guzmán or Ramos Horta.
Therefore, if foreign enemies came, he would fight them, and if the natives made a fuss, he would mercilessly shoot them to death, even if they were his mother’s relatives.
Half-cas was given the status of semi-ruler.
However, in the 1970s, it was no longer a fragrance.
Portugal abandoned the island along with its 700,000 inhabitants due to lack of funds.
There are no roads, no schools, and no unified language.
A unique person was willing to take care of such a situation.
It is Suharto of Indonesia who even ruled neighboring West Timor.
Just like when Japan took care of the island for three years, this country gave the islanders the Indonesian language, built a school, and provided them with roads and electricity.
The islanders were happy, but the half-bastards were different.
When they said, “We’re half-white,” Suharto didn’t care; he didn’t do it to them. He treated them the same as the natives out there.
At that time, an offshore oil field was discovered offshore.
The Halfcas asked Australia to support East Timor’s independence because of their white blood.
How about 10% of the interest in the offshore oil field as a reward?
Thus, an independence movement sprang up with lies such as “Indonesia is abusing the islanders,” and it was a success.
Everyone under President Xanana Guzman was a half-cas.
It’s an absurd story, but something even more ridiculous happens in Okinawa. The starting point for this was sulfur, not perfume.
It dates back to Zhu Yuanzhang of the Ming Dynasty.
He acquired many bronze guns for national defense but lacked the essential gunpowder.
Although there is charcoal saltpeter, there are no volcanoes in China.
That means no sulfur.
He can ask Japan, but Japan is the biggest imaginary enemy.
It was uncomfortable to rely on the key to national defense.
So Zhu Yuanzhang set his sights on Japan’s extraterritorial territory, the Ryukyus.
There is Iwo Torishima Island, which spews out a lot of sulfur.
He sent 36 Chinese to the Ryukyus and had them order tribute goods containing sulfur.
Chu Gensho was delighted and gave the King of Ryukyu a luxurious return gift.
The Ryukyu king became very rich.
Thirty-six of his intermediaries he was ranked above the nobility and attained the rank of associate rulers.
Because they lived in the Kume district near Naha, they were called the Kume people Kninder and became synonymous with the privileged class.
Even after the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Io was still critical, and the 36 people were as influential as the overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia.
Still, in the Meiji period, Japan stopped using Ryukyu block addresses and established Okinawa Prefecture under the direct control of the government.
In East Timor, it was like the annexation of Indonesia, and the Chinese half-cas people lost their status.
They asked Qing to seize Ryukyu, but Qing was sane and did not move.
But today’s Xi Jinping is different.
He supports Chinese half-cas such as Nakaima to promote Okinawa’s independence and even considers annexing it.
Governor Denny also flatters Xi Jinping, but you’re an American half-cas.