Final Warning to a Criminal and a Message to the Süddeutsche Zeitung — On Those Who Aid Anti-Japan Propaganda

This chapter delivers a final warning to a long-term cybercriminal while expressing gratitude to over one hundred overseas readers whose comments went unnoticed due to ongoing harassment. The author explains past efforts to build an official website for crowdfunding and commits to renewing it to seek justice. The second half revisits a 2018 essay on how the Süddeutsche Zeitung repeatedly published anti-Japan articles based on reporting from the Asahi Shimbun and Japan Times, questioning the ethics of journalists who amplify fabricated propaganda harmful to Japan.

If a life in prison after being convicted of fraud is easier than life in the outside world, then by all means continue committing such crimes.
August 1, 2024

I had not realized that I had received more than one hundred comments from overseas—mainly from English-speaking readers.
I sincerely apologize in this chapter.
I was unaware because I had been consumed with dealing with the persistent crimes of this man.
Please forgive me for that.

In dealing with this man’s crimes, for now I could only follow Kūkai’s clear insight: “Evil exists in this world. Evil cannot be eliminated. Then what should one do? Simply stand by? No. One must hammer in acts of good so that evil cannot slip in even through the gaps between the fingers.”

Several years ago, in order to address this problem and create a cleaner internet environment through crowdfunding, I decided that this man had to be severely punished.
So I had an official homepage for this column built, spending a considerable amount of money.
However, since I am not knowledgeable about the internet or PC technology, I was unable to complete the crowdfunding mechanism.
As a result, even though the site had been created, I used it only briefly at the beginning and then hardly touched it.

Nevertheless, despite publishing only a few chapters, more than a hundred comments had been sent.
Readers recognized this column as a truly unique blog in the postwar world.
“I want to contribute to your crowdfunding. Why is there no donation tab?”
“Within my circle, your column is constantly being discussed.”

In the near future, in order to see that this criminal is severely punished, I will improve the official homepage and properly create a donation tab.

Here, I issue a warning to the man—the criminal—who continues this persistent wrongdoing.
He seems to know well that trials in Japan take time and that internet companies rarely respond to such criminal acts.
But he must know that repeating crimes results in a heavy sentence.
Even among the evidence documents I have preserved, there are already more than 300 items.

If he immediately stops committing crimes and never repeats them, I will not proceed with filing a criminal complaint.
If a life in prison after being convicted of fraud is easier than life in the outside world, then by all means continue committing such crimes.

This is a chapter originally published on August 22, 2018, titled: “Having learned that the Süddeutsche Zeitung in Germany has been constantly publishing anti-Japanese articles using anti-Japanese content from the Japan Times and Asahi Shimbun.”

From August four years earlier, I learned that the Süddeutsche Zeitung—apparently considered a leading German newspaper—had been repeatedly publishing anti-Japanese articles using the Japan Times and Asahi Shimbun.
Soon after, I saw a statistic from a public opinion poll within Germany showing that about half of Germans held anti-Japanese views.

To the journalist who continued writing anti-Japanese articles in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, I want to say this:
If France or Poland were nations behaving like China or the Korean Peninsula—constantly engaging in anti-German propaganda and damaging Germany’s honor and international credibility around the world—
and if you believed that the Asahi Shimbun or the Japan Times represented Japan’s intelligence or were “reliable media,”
then would you, just as they do, not only join in the slander against your own country,
but also publish fabricated articles one after another to provide perfect ammunition for anti-German propaganda throughout the world?

Would you wish to be a media outlet that supports traitors who rush to the United Nations so that anti-German nations—which constantly wage anti-German propaganda—can gain control of the UN and issue human-rights “recommendations” against Germany?

Journalist of the Süddeutsche Zeitung who has continued writing anti-Japanese articles—
Are you truly the equal of the Asahi Shimbun and NHK, among the most shameful people in this world?

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