Pseudo-Moralism and Pseudo-Market Fundamentalism Destroy Japan — The Toshiba Crisis and the Responsibility of the State and Justice (2017-02-17)
Japan’s major media organizations and their affiliated television networks have been trapped in pseudo-moralism and pseudo-market fundamentalism, casually condemning Toshiba, one of Japan’s most representative corporations.
Yet Toshiba is a national enterprise that continues to employ 190,000 people and is a company the state must protect.
The wrongdoing surrounding Westinghouse and its hidden power structures must be fully exposed, and Japan must never allow its semiconductor technology to be sold off to foreign powers.
The time has come for Japan’s judiciary and political leadership to awaken and confront evil head-on.
Pseudo-moralism and pseudo-market fundamentalism serve only to play directly into the hands of evil.
2017-02-17.
It is no exaggeration to say that television networks that are subsidiaries of Japan’s major newspaper companies are merely companies that produce programs by using talents from major entertainment agencies.
There is no reason why Japan’s finest minds would ever go to such places.
Beautiful female students from Japan might go, but that is another matter.
For third-rate employees of such television stations to speak down to Toshiba, a company that has unquestionably represented Japan, is an outrageous matter.
Even more outrageous is speaking as if Toshiba were a hopeless company beyond saving.
Toshiba still employs 190,000 Japanese citizens today.
If you compare that number with how many people your own companies employ, you should immediately understand the difference.
All you have done is to pay enormous sums of money—completely unrelated to the lives of most Japanese citizens—to utterly worthless celebrities.
An aside.
That Toshiba is a matter the state must rescue is something President Trump would understand without being told.
It is a major enterprise that has continued to employ 190,000 citizens.
First, it must be investigated which company mediated the introduction of Westinghouse to Toshiba, and whether Westinghouse’s financial statements at the time were accurate.
With regard to the current wrongdoing, preparations should already be underway to file criminal complaints against the American executives of Westinghouse.
In the March issue of the monthly magazine WiLL, in Moe Fukada’s substantial work “Ms. Renho, Who on Earth Are You!?,” there was a passage stating that Foxconn chairman Terry Gou, who is close to him, acquired Sharp, and that companies connected to the Green Gang now appear to be aiming to weaken Japan’s electronics industry.
What exactly was taking place behind the scenes at Westinghouse in the United States—something completely invisible from Japan—must be made clear by Japanese prosecutors.
Toshiba is not a company whose executives contributed to Japan’s deflation, watched as many citizens suffered, and then suddenly rose to become one of the richest individuals in Japan.
In particular, Mr. Sato, CEO of Mizuho Financial Group, must decide on a one-trillion-yen loan to Toshiba at the fastest speed in Mizuho’s history.
Under no circumstances should Japan or the Japanese people allow Toshiba’s semiconductor division to be sold off to another country.
Japan, the Japanese people, the Japanese judiciary, and Japanese politicians must realize that the moment for Japan to defeat evil has now arrived.
Pseudo-moralism and pseudo-market fundamentalism serve only to play directly into the hands of evil.
Immediately begin investigations into the American management and set the record straight regarding the forces behind them.
Only then will Japan be recognized as a leader of the world.
