The Dam Lakes NHK Never Explains: An Inconvenient Historical Truth

The dam lakes on the Korean Peninsula were built with Japanese taxpayers’ money before 1945. Their origins remain unspoken because they expose postwar historical manipulation and Japan’s status as a political prisoner.

2016-02-20

Having the origins of that dam lake explained by NHK would be extremely inconvenient for South Korea.

That is because those structures were built with enormous sums of Japanese taxpayers’ money at the time.

The Korean Peninsula obtained all of them for free—not only by taking advantage of Japan’s defeat, but also by exploiting the occupation policies initiated by the United States, a country burdened with its own original sin.

It is now a clearly established fact that the U.S. occupation policy aimed to portray Japan thoroughly as the villain in order to conceal America’s own original sin.

The Korean Peninsula exploited that ideology, resorted to every conceivable sophistry, and ultimately obtained those assets without cost.

In order to erase that past, they even falsified and fabricated their constitution, and for seventy years after the war have continued anti-Japanese education.

NHK employees, who are in substance spies for South Korea and fully aware of these facts, therefore never broadcast the origins of that dam lake.
That is the true nature of the matter.

It is an undeniable fact that before the annexation of Korea (1910–1945), the Korean Peninsula was one of the poorest regions in the world.

Yet in just those thirty-five years, more than twenty percent of Japanese national tax revenue was invested annually into the peninsula, rapidly constructing and developing dams and other infrastructure.

This demonstrates the world’s highest level of excellence of the Japanese people at the time—their superhuman diligence and perfection in work—which I am convinced was the pure manifestation of the bushidō spirit that formed the core of the Japanese people.

The attitude of Japan’s media, which has never conveyed these historical facts and instead has continued to publish only narratives claiming that Japan was evil in the past, itself proves that Japan remained a “political prisoner” in the international community for seventy years after the war.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Please enter the result of the calculation above.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.