Toshiba: A Genuine Global Enterprise the Japanese People Must Properly Recognize

This essay examines how Toshiba represents a true global enterprise with world-class technology vital to Japan’s national security and industrial foundation. It criticizes distorted media narratives and the cold treatment by financial institutions, while reaffirming Toshiba’s essential role in Japan’s national strength.

2017-03-31

The Japanese people who read today’s front page of the Nikkei must have felt keenly that Toshiba is a truly genuine major corporation, a company possessing world-class technology of which Japan can be proud.

From the outset, people who are, at best, merely second-rate players in Japan—if I speak with barely suppressed anger at the reality that they continue to inflict enormous damage upon this nation, they are nothing more than hoodlums—along with the women who sit beside them or present themselves as hosts, merely because their faces are somewhat well-arranged or they appear vaguely intelligent, presume to report on matters of the utmost importance to Japan.

Watching them, I am driven to the point of having to withdraw my own argument that “the 21st century will be the century of women.” Such is the reality. Programs like Hōdō Station present the news with faces that appear perfectly manipulated by pseudo-moralism, Asahi-style pathology, and even Chongryon.

They relentlessly criticized Microsoft and Apple products, arbitrarily denounced NTT as a monopoly, yet once they themselves became large corporations, they brazenly ignored government guidance, behaved as monopolies, and continued to broadcast commercials that mock the Japanese people.

In other words, companies like Toshiba are genuine major enterprises, possessing authentic technology—technology that is, naturally, of the utmost importance to Japan’s national defense. Yet, in order to prevent Japanese citizens from acquiring this essential knowledge, they flood the airwaves with endless commercials.

These are then gleefully broadcast by companies that are nothing more than profit-seeking enterprises.

Exploiting incidents such as the Toyonaka uproar initiated by the Asahi Shimbun—an organization of which it is no exaggeration to say that it has been taken over by Chinese and Korean Peninsula intelligence agencies—they scream in shrill voices, posing as champions of justice and guardians of democracy. There is no greater evil.

Toshiba is not merely a corporation that employs 190,000 Japanese citizens.

It is a true Japanese enterprise that has long been deeply involved in the very foundations of the nation.

The reporting by these hoodlums against Toshiba, and the attitudes of financial institutions represented by Mizuho Bank, are truly lamentable.

In stark contrast to Toshiba, a man who continuously diminished Japan’s national strength and, while Japan endured twenty years of severe decline, enriched himself to become one of the country’s top one or two asset holders, was proudly granted a one-trillion-yen loan at record speed in banking history—while Toshiba was met with an exceedingly cold response.

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