How Japan’s Constitution Was Pushed Toward the Nobel Peace Prize — The Hidden Network Behind Asahi Shimbun and Activist Groups

The sudden campaign to nominate Japan’s Constitution for the Nobel Peace Prize reveals a hidden network of influence led by figures connected to Asahi Shimbun, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, and activist groups. While Japan is permanently restrained in the name of “peace,” other nations rapidly strengthen their military power. This essay exposes the political manipulation behind the façade of peace advocacy.

“TV Kanagawa is said to be affiliated with the Asahi Shimbun, and even at its headquarters, it is rumored that only the most unusable, biased personnel are dispatched there.

Regardless of the truth of that claim, Asahi Shimbun has the bad habit, as in this case, of using scholars to fabricate lies and turn them into ‘truth.’”

Indeed, the sudden movement to nominate the Japanese Constitution for the Nobel Peace Prize was initiated by a housewife from Kanagawa.
This constitution itself was a document hastily assembled in just two weeks—effectively in one week—by copy-pasting clauses from the constitutions of Western nations, so that Japan would be locked into permanent weakness and never again become a strong nation, in accordance with the occupying forces’ intentions.

At last, everything made sense to me.

Those who put her at the forefront, and those who paved the way toward the Nobel Peace Prize selection committee, must have been people connected to Asahi Shimbun, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, or so-called civic groups.

Under the banner of “realizing world peace,” they even mobilize the essentially meaningless Nobel Peace Prize to permanently place shackles on Japan—while, behind the scenes, other countries steadily continue to expand their own military power.
Even these stratagems can now be clearly seen through.

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