Their position is to prevent the Japanese government from formulating any long-term national strategy—for the sake of China.
Entrusting Our National Fate to a Country Like China (CCP): The Reality of Globalization
August 19, 2024
The harsh truth of globalization until now is this: we had entrusted the fate of our nation and our people to China (the CCP), a regime whose true nature is utterly outrageous.
The stance of opposition politicians and television media such as Asahi Shimbun and NHK bizarrely aligns.
Their position is to prevent the Japanese government from formulating any long-term national strategy—for the sake of China.
They stir up public sentiment, harping on about governmental shortcomings and delayed responses, manipulating the foolish masses to attack the administration.
Suddenly, a proposal to shift the school year to start in September surfaced.
At first glance, it appeared to be a reasonable idea, and it gained considerable support from the National Governors’ Association.
But the dubious origin of the idea—a housewife from Suginami Ward—raises suspicion.
Kanagawa Shimbun, a subsidiary of Asahi Shimbun, once absurdly backed a movement by another “ordinary housewife” in Kanagawa calling for the Nobel Peace Prize to be awarded to Article 9 of the Constitution.
Similarly, Asahi Shimbun Digital gleefully published an article titled “Why not start in September?”—its tone reminiscent of Renhō or Tsujimoto, brimming with subversive, disingenuous intentions.
All Japanese citizens must recognize this for what it is: a devious stratagem.
It closely mirrors the maneuver during the Great East Japan Earthquake, where Masayoshi Son and Mizuho Fukushima began pushing for the immediate, complete shutdown of nuclear power plants and a shift to solar energy.
Back then too, many regional governors agreed, just as they are doing now.
Seeing the image of the governor of Miyagi Prefecture prominently displayed in the current news report, I feel all the more compelled to address the National Governors’ Association.
In the face of the greatest disaster since World War II caused by the Wuhan Virus, what Japan needs is not trivial policy shifts like a September school year, but a serious long-term national plan.
What is strange—and outrageously foolish—about this proposal is that it distracts from the core issue.
This pandemic has exposed a serious flaw in the way globalization has operated until now.
Despite this, the conversation is being diverted.
China, a one-party dictatorship under the Communist Party, is a country of unfathomable evil and plausible lies—a truth brilliantly perceived by the great postwar scholar Tadashi Umesao.
Concentrating production facilities for medical supplies and cutting-edge technologies in such a country poses a grave threat to national security.
It endangers the lives of our citizens.
Once again: we had entrusted our nation’s fate to China (CCP).
Our national and individual destinies were in the hands of the CCP.
That is the truth of globalization up to now—something that the G6 nations of the world have finally awakened to.
The housewife from Suginami who proposed the September start is no doubt a subscriber to Asahi Shimbun or someone affiliated with the opposition party—someone, in other words, aligned with Chinese sympathies.
This cannot be denied.
To the governors of the National Governors’ Association—especially the governor of Miyagi Prefecture (my hometown) and the governor of Osaka Prefecture—I urge you to recognize this:
What this unprecedented disaster caused by the Wuhan Virus demands from Japan is not some superficial globalist argument about changing the school calendar.
We must not continue to house the factories of our best companies—the backbone of our nation—in a one-party dictatorship like China.
We must bring them back home across Japan and have the government allocate the necessary budget to do so.
And when that alone isn’t enough, we should relocate to countries that are not like the CCP—or to be blunt, not China or South Korea.
Japan’s world-class companies must move their production bases accordingly.
Even in tourism, we must fundamentally revise our approach.
If we continue as a tourism-oriented nation, let us do so without relying heavily on risky nations like China and South Korea.
I firmly believe this: simply relocating these major factories to various parts of Japan will generate stable and abundant employment across the nation.
There will be no need to frantically push for a tourism-based economy.
This is the divine warning we’ve received—to stop our dangerous dependence on tourism from China and South Korea.
Think of how we have carelessly depended on Chinese investment in Hokkaido and other regions.
Think of how we have allowed China and South Korea to freely acquire Japanese real estate.
The voice of heaven is sounding in response to these missteps.
Japan, for what purpose are you allowing China to extort vast sums of money while continuing to face threats like those surrounding the Senkaku Islands?
That voice is divine—Heaven’s warning—and we must realize that it speaks to the true 100-year strategy of the Japanese nation.
Governors of Japan—
Remember how, during the Great East Japan Earthquake, you rushed to join the deceptive campaign led by Masayoshi Son and Mizuho Fukushima, abandoning any long-term strategy.
That led to a complete halt of nuclear energy, a steep rise in electricity costs, and a massive stagnation of Japan’s nuclear industry.
Even Ban Ki-moon, the then South Korean UN Secretary-General, criticized it as a mistake.
While Japan faltered, China rapidly built new nuclear plants and emerged as a nuclear superpower.
South Korea followed suit.
The difference in electricity prices between Japan and Korea only grew wider.
And Masayoshi Son—the instigator—maliciously moved his electricity-hungry data centers to South Korea.
Governors of Japan—
Do not, ever again, take part in a stratagem that jeopardizes the 100-year future of our country.
From this greatest postwar disaster—the Wuhan Virus—Japan must learn and implement policies befitting a sovereign state.
To think that “September school admissions” is the lesson to draw from this tragedy is absurd.
Surely governors are not so dimwitted as to miss such an elementary point.
If people of intelligence are so uniformly foolish, then we must realize:
This foolishness stems from the very plot to prevent people from calling the Wuhan Virus by its name.
In 2011 as well, many leaders easily fell into the trap of pseudo-moralism.
But this time, it’s even more grotesque.
Every G6 leader has declared this a “war.”
They see themselves as wartime presidents and prime ministers.
This Wuhan Virus is nothing short of a war initiated by the CCP.
The responsible individual is Shi Zhengli, a CCP operative.
The root cause is the CCP itself.
And that is why they have steadfastly concealed the truth.
Again—this is elementary.
Yet despite this being a war, the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, and other media foolishly report that Japanese education has collapsed due to two months of school closure, and that students’ academic ability has deteriorated.
It is the minds of the governors who do not find this abnormal that are truly abnormal.
A rational human being would see this as a golden opportunity—
To let children, who are usually distracted by smartphones and games, enjoy the greatest reading experience of their lives, and discover the joy of learning.
Can’t you see the absurdity—the eeriness—of how Asahi and NHK are echoing the voices of a handful of low-minded mothers?
Is it not obvious that for propaganda-based nations, this moment of crisis is their greatest opportunity—to weaken the enemy while it is down?
What kind of mind concludes that the appropriate response to the greatest crisis since the war—declared a “war” by the G6—is to change the school year to September?
While it may be expected from Tokyo Governor Koike—who shamelessly parrots English phrases for political showmanship—
Governor Yoshimura of Osaka, Governor of Miyagi—you are not the same as her, are you?
(To be continued.)