In 1990, the U.S. GDP was about 750 trillion yen, and Japan’s was about 550 trillion yen. The U.S. GDP is now about three times larger than it was then. On the other hand, Japan’s GDP has finally stopped declining and is about to increase, thanks to the arrival of Shinzo Abe.
It was a popular page yesterday, 5/2/2016.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
In 1990, the U.S. GDP was about 750 trillion yen, and Japan’s was about 550 trillion yen.
The U.S. GDP is now about three times larger than it was then.
On the other hand, Japan’s GDP has finally stopped declining and is about to increase, thanks to the arrival of Shinzo Abe.
The media, represented by the individuals mentioned above, has caused a total of ¥1,400 trillion in losses to the nation and its people, including approximately ¥700 trillion in government bonds increased to compensate for the stagnant economy.
I knew one individual symbolically, Atsushi Yamada, a reporter in the economics department of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, as a living witness from the real estate business, which I had chosen as my life’s profession.
Surprisingly, it proved that they had not reflected on anything to the whole world this time.
At the same time, they also proved how childish Asahi and Nikkei’s articles on the economy are.
The president of Mitsubishi UFJ Bank, who is like my senior, classmate, and junior, always makes the same childish mistakes due to having grown up subscribing to Asahi and other newspapers.
In August of the year before last, the Asahi Shimbun was exposed as a newspaper that relentlessly writes editorials to realize its distorted ideology rather than a newspaper that conveys the facts.
Despite this, they were the same as they were 26 years ago, and they were in sync with the editorials of the Asahi and other newspapers.
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For a long time, I spent my evenings watching NHK’s 9:00 news, T.V. Asahi’s 10:00 news station, TBS’s News 23, and then going to sleep.
Last year, I was stunned at how badly TBS and T.V. Asahi reported the news.
Prime Minister Abe has begun to take a global view of diplomacy.
He began to implement policies as a country that should lead the world alongside the United States.
China’s aid to Africa, sweeping the world, has been conducted explicitly for its benefit.
I have mentioned many times that part of the massive 30 trillion yen ODA to China (as I have said many times that the Asahi Shimbun made Japan carry out this ODA) must have flowed as Chinese aid money to Africa.
As soon as Prime Minister Abe started resuming Japanese aid to Africa, TBS reported on a Mozambican farmer who said that his land would be taken away from him because of Japanese aid, that he did not want Japanese aid money, and that he was against it.
TBS showed a video of several local people saying that black water came out of their land, which was unverified, as was the reality of the Chinese aid.
They were working together with the NGO that brought these people to Japan.
As I have already mentioned, I was not only stunned that TBS was out of its mind but also continued to criticize the unacceptable attitude of TBS.
I was also appalled that TBS and the news station TV Asahi had an older man from Norway, whom 99.9% of the world does not know, come to Japan to support Okinawa Governor Onaga and advocate anti-nuclear power.
I have continued to criticize this.
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Before the April 27-28 BOJ policy meeting, the Asahi and Nikkei newspapers, to which I subscribe, had been publishing editorials against further monetary easing, which the stock market had been urging.
It was supported by those at the top of financial institutions, such as the president of Mitsubishi UFJ Bank, who had grown up subscribing to the Asahi and Nikkei newspapers with a similar tone.
The BOJ, which had been executing its policies without listening to their foolish opinions, may have lost confidence in the violent stock market plunge since the beginning of the year when global concerns about China’s economic collapse suddenly became apparent. Still, it ignored the market’s urging and followed their foolish opinions. They did as they were told.
In other words, it took no action.
However, as I pointed out in the Bloomberg article, this crash was also an anomaly in that the rate of decline in Shanghai was the same as that of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, and it was the largest among the world’s major markets.
I was the first in the world to write that Chinese government sources must have made huge profits on the TSE, which they could kill by the simple rule of a strong yen and weak stock prices while bringing Japan to the brink of collapse with them.
What was the result of the Bank of Japan’s decision?
It is no exaggeration to say that it was a catastrophe.
In one day, the yen appreciated by more than 5 yen, and stocks plummeted.
In short, not only have the Asahi and Nikkei editorial writers and the heads of financial institutions who still read them in a vacuum proved to the world that they are no better than kindergartners, but they have yet to learn a single lesson from 26 years ago.
I am here to tell you that no one in Japan or the world has realized this, and I blister them. I despise them for their lowered ability.
They are doing the same thing they did and said in March 1990, when the restrictions on total lending were imposed, which led to “Japan’s lost 20 years” and the actions that followed.
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Is the reporter who wrote the article on the front page of the Nikkei Shimbun’s evening edition a pure Japanese?
He wrote an article on the front page of the evening edition as if the U.S. Treasury Department had designated Japan as a currency-inducing nation.
However, NHK news on the same day duly reported that this was not the case.
Japan’s exports to the U.S. were listed along with other nations that are inducing currency depreciation because of their large surpluses, even though the article clearly stated that Japan has not been generating currency depreciation for the past four years.
Nikkei does not mention this at all.
I am convinced that this is intentional.
One, to cover up the fact that their kindergarten-like economic sense was wrong, and two, because the writer of this editorial is not a purely Japanese but a Korean or Chinese zainichi who took advantage of the GHQ occupation policy and entered the Japanese media.
Their hearts and minds are obsessed with convincing the Japanese people that Japan is a currency-inducing country just like them.
There is a reason why I write so.
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Some argue that newspapers and T.V. news should be read upside down.
The Chinese government is suddenly tightening its control over NGOs in China because they are bringing in Western ideas.
I read this news as meaning that the Chinese government “has been providing financial support to NGOs and NPOs in Japan.”
Furthermore, China is a one-party communist dictatorship where propaganda strategy is everything.
It is also indisputable that the strategy against Japan is to divide the Japanese people, weaken Japan’s national strength, and discredit Japan externally.
The same is true of South Korea, a country that has continued anti-Japanese propaganda and anti-Japanese education as its national policy for 70 years since the end of World War II.
In addition, Japan has neither the CIA nor the FBI, while South Korea has both.
The only people who think that their CIA, which makes anti-Japanese propaganda its national policy, is not active in Japan are those who cannot even think.
Their country’s CIA must be active in Japan.
On the contrary, it is natural for the organization to continue its activities day and night.
I mentioned that the expenses for inviting Mozambican farmers to Japan or inviting a Norwegian grandfather to lecture from Okinawa to the mainland were paid by whom?
Or, who was paying for the frequent trips to Switzerland to make speeches to the U.N. (UNESCO) Human Rights Commission and other such nonsense?
That is a question that an elementary school student could solve.
The Chinese government has begun to restrict the activities of domestic NGOs because of what they have been doing to other countries, especially Japan.
Why is it that the Japanese opposition parties, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, the Asahi Shimbun, and others have not even raised a voice of protest, let alone criticism, against the fact that China, the world’s largest suppressor of human rights, is now stepping up its pressure?
May 01, 2016
The following is a continuation of the previous section.
This article should make sense to anyone with a sane brain who has ever felt something wrong with their reporting.
I was also astonished to learn that Tetsuya Chikushi is a person who has a Korean name.
As for Shoichi Honda, I can only agree with him, but even so, what Japan has suffered from these people is a significant loss.
As I have mentioned many times, there is not only no expression of gratitude, but also the 30 trillion yen ODA from Japan to China, which is entirely unknown to the people of China and South Korea, or the miracle of the Han River to South Korea. It was tremendous aid, more than double South Korea’s national budget.
If these had been used to rebuild old buildings and wooden houses built before 1983 or to relocate homes built on the side of cliffs or active fault lines, not a single Japanese citizen would have died in any of the previous significant earthquakes.
Like the Chinese, the Koreans are entirely unaware of the Japanese aid.
Subscribers to Asahi and Nikkei should know that neither has ever criticized these countries for this or forced them to rectify the situation.
The person we previously wrote about the abnormality of his appearances on the news station died suddenly in Beijing the other day.
He was Wakamiya Yoshibumi, one of the most unusual reporters in the history of Asahi Shimbun.
I could not take the news at face value: he had died in the Beijing bathroom where he was staying, apparently from illness.
My friends and readers know that I am not a naive person at all.
As I did, many of you must have wondered if he had been erased.
Kazuo Asami, a reporter for the Mainichi Shimbun, was the first person to make China grow impudent to this extent or to absolve China of its lies.
When it was becoming clear that the articles he wrote were fabricated, China sent his entire family, who had lost their place in the company and could no longer stay in Japan, to live in Beijing, China, where they had nothing to lack.
China enrolled his daughter at Peking University, and after her graduation, China gave her a government-supported business to enjoy an affluent life.
The Chinese government ensured he would never say the story was fabricated.
Since August two years ago, the Asahi Shimbun has not changed its attitude toward South Korea, equivalent to not criticizing at all, but its tone toward China has been different.
To a certain extent, it has written articles that are critical of China.
This attitude coincided with Xi Jinping’s tightening of his control over speech.
Or perhaps Wakamiya knew something crucial about the relationship between the Chinese government and the Asahi Shimbun and was a party to it. China had to prevent him from confessing or writing a book about it at any moment.
That would be not good for the Chinese government.
Or, the Chinese CIA and FBI had already caught on to the fact that Wakamiya had said something.
The truth is that the Asahi editorial board members instantly knew what was going on and threatened Asahi when it started writing criticism of China.
I could only read the news in that way, upside down.
For example, the Asahi Shimbun, which has been advocating a strong yen for a long time, has continued to ignore even the super-strong yen.
All subscribers to the Asahi Shimbun know that at that time, they were always saying, “Let the market do the market’s job and listen to the market.
But how was their editorial this time?
They tell us to listen to the market when it suits their distorted ideology (including the “trivialization of Japan” argument).
As a country where the turntable of civilization has turned, and as a world leader on a par with the United States, whenever Japan tries to build a strong economy or take the proper economic measures, the Asahi Shimbun and other newspapers always raise voices of opposition.
The markets have been urging the BOJ to take more monetary easing measures to deal with the current global economic situation, but the BOJ has, of course, listened to the voices of those who are even more foolish than they are.
Instead of listening to the market, which is formed by the enormous amount of global economic activity that flows through it in a single day, the BOJ has made a fool of itself by taking seriously the editorials of reporters who are not only below kindergarten age but, as the article below clearly shows, are not even genuinely Japanese.
The following article is a continuation of this article.
This article continues.