Lies Spoken in Parliament While China’s Espionage Is Ignored
A single scholar revealed the truth about China’s espionage against Japan.
Meanwhile, Japanese media and opposition figures distorted facts, even lying openly during televised parliamentary sessions.
This text exposes a fundamental inversion of truth and danger in postwar Japan.
2017-03-08
Thanks to the fact that Mr. Tetsuhide Yamaoka published a genuine and truly rare scholarly work spanning eight pages in three-column format in the latest issue of the monthly magazine Seiron, we have now come to know the true nature of China’s espionage activities with precision.
Mr. Yamaoka, a single individual who is not even an employee of media organizations such as the Asahi Shimbun, is conveying the most important truths that Japan must know.
On the other hand, Japan’s media, opposition parties, and so-called cultural figures have behaved in a completely different manner.
A certain Democratic Party lawmaker, a veritable political shyster, went so far as to claim—astonishingly, during a televised parliamentary committee session—that land located in Noda, Toyonaka City, right beside the Meishin Expressway interchange and directly facing the expressway itself, was a “good residential area,” calmly uttering a lie of the most outrageous kind.
They then treated as if it were a major national scandal the story of a man who sought to purchase land contaminated with massive amounts of polluted soil underground and build a private elementary school there, with TBS’s News 23 and TV Asahi’s Hōdō Station in particular reporting on it incessantly.
They regarded this as more important news than the fact that North Korea had launched four missiles aimed at Japan.
As already noted, a TBS employee has published on the internet a valuable paper titled “How TBS Was Taken Over by Chongryon,” detailing the circumstances of that takeover.
Japan and the Japanese people should have shut down the Asahi Shimbun three years ago, in August.
This article continues.
