What Must Be Made Visible First Is Their Own Activities
This essay argues that individuals who have worked to discredit Japan through the United Nations have operated beyond public visibility, and that the first priority must be exposing and visualizing their activities.
What must come first is the visualization of their own activities.
2017-06-11
I no longer watch news programs such as TV Asahi’s Hōdō Station.
While watching such programs in the past, I realized that reporting and activities designed to degrade Japan were being carried out in places completely unknown to most Japanese citizens.
Recently, I learned for the first time that there exists the Nagasaki Shimbun, which, like the two Okinawan papers, embodies a distorted ideology soaked in pseudo-moralism and pseudo-communism.
I first became aware of an individual named Sakamoto, born in Nagasaki, educated at Kansai University, now a professor at Doshisha University, who has been involved with the United Nations and has issued absurd human rights recommendations aimed at keeping Japan politically imprisoned on the international stage.
I learned this when the program’s host, Furutachi, proudly cited his name and title as a pillar supporting their own arguments, presenting him openly as a fellow conspirator.
These individuals later took the lead in forcing out President Murata of Doshisha University, who had consistently expressed sound and reasonable views on international politics and diplomacy.
I also encountered a scene in which Furutachi proudly introduced Ri Chisong, an elite member of Chongryon, as a foreign affairs desk editor at TV Asahi.
This morning, I learned for the first time about Sanae Fujita, another individual of the same nature.
They have continued to carry out activities to demean and disparage Japan on the stage of the United Nations, completely invisible to the Japanese public.
Their thinking is rooted in the American war propaganda narrative that Japan is an evil nation and an evil people that committed wrongs against China and the Korean Peninsula.
These individuals, along with opposition politicians and media outlets such as Asahi Shimbun, fear nothing more than the visualization of their activities.
This is why those who fear exposure demand the visualization of police and prosecutorial interrogations under the guise of counterterrorism legislation.
What should come first, however, is full disclosure of their own activities at the United Nations, particularly the financial details behind their human rights campaigns against Japan.
In other words, the visualization of their activities must precede all else.
Neither the Japanese police nor prosecutors have ever gone to the United Nations to disparage Japan or damage the honor and credibility of the Japanese people.
To be continued.
