文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

Repost! use this article to learn about accurate reporting and where the actual journalists are

2024年06月29日 18時16分37秒 | 全般

China allowed Kazuo Asami of Mainichi Shimbun, who wrote "Hundred man killing contest" in the past, to live permanently in Beijing and admitted his daughter to Peking University.
Akioka Ieshige, the Asahi correspondent who reported that Lin Biao, who died in a plane crash, is still alive, was appointed as the People's Daily's representative in Japan.
May 28, 2020
The following is from Masayuki Takayama's column in the latter part of today's issue of Weekly Shincho.
Once again, he proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
The German people must use this article to learn about accurate reporting and where the actual journalists are.
The German people must read his articles, which this column has presented so far, and reflect upon your ignorance and the unforgivable disrespect you have shown to Japan.
Japan had already proven itself to be the best country in the world during World War I by its treatment of German soldiers held at the Bando POW camp in Tokushima Prefecture,
The German idiots took advantage of the propaganda of China, a country of abysmal evil and plausible lies, which has no concept of prisoners of war and is capable of nothing more than slaughtering those it captures,
Not only did they forget their debt of gratitude for the hospitality they received at the Bando POW camp (Japan was allied with the wrong country by the Asahi Shimbun and Matsuoka) (which was inevitable due to the wrong perception of Japan by the US), but they were destined to lose the war, an unforgivable disrespect for Japan, our ally in WWII,
In other words, they have been guilty of brainwashing the Japanese people into believing that Japan is a criminal nation like the Nazis, using the reports of the Asahi Shimbun, which is no exaggeration to say that they are traitors.
There is no "gate to heaven" for Germans who have been sympathetic to them so far and as they are now.
Only Enma is waiting for them in hell.
Those who make their living from the Süddeutsche Zeitung and the state-run TV station airing John Rabe's Nanking Massacre every December should know this.
The living Nobunaga loudly announces to the world that there are no gates of heaven for you.
Because your behavior is as bad as that of China and South Korea, no, it is even worse.
Emphasis in the text other than the headline is mine.

Reporters are parachuting.
The government announced that Corona had already entered Japan from China on January 16. 
According to an article by Shuichi Dohi, a reporter for the Asahi Shimbun, the first patient in Japan is "a man in his 30s living in Kanagawa Prefecture. 
The man traveled to Wuhan at the end of the year. 
While staying with a pneumonia patient there, "he developed a fever on January 3," so he hurriedly returned to Japan and was hospitalized at a hospital in Kanagawa Prefecture.
As a result of tests, he was found to be infected. 
Of course, he became the first patient in Kanagawa Prefecture. 
A week later, the "first patient in Tokyo" was found. 
Accompanying the article, the Asahi Shimbun carried an article by Masayuki Takada, a correspondent in Beijing, praising Xi Jinping for his "decisive and decisive measures" to seal off Wuhan, a metropolis of 11 million people. 
How decisive is this? 
The last SARS outbreak was concealed for three months after the disease was confirmed, but Xi has shortened the period of concealment by one month.
That is what I call decisiveness. 
I don't know what Takada thinks when he praises this, but I'll leave that aside for now.
Three days later, the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare announced at a press conference that the number of infected persons in Japan had risen to seven and that the seventh person, a tourist bus driver in his 60s living in Nara, was the first Japanese person infected. 
I was surprised.
There had been a lot of noise about coronavirus cases, but all were Chinese. 
It meant that the man Dohi had written about as "having returned from Wuhan" was not Japanese.
He was a Chinese living in Japan. 
However, Dohi wrote "traveled" and "returned to Japan.
If he were Chinese, he would have written "returned home to Wuhan" or "re-entered Japan. 
In addition, I began to understand the viciousness of this man.
When he contracted a fever from his father in Wuhan, he decided to return to Japan, saying that a Japanese hospital was better than a Chinese hospital.
He cheated the quarantine at Narita by using antipyretics. 
Whether intended or not, this was a form of biological terrorism. 
Around the same time, the first case of the disease appeared in Chiba.
It was a female bus guide who was on a Chinese tour. 
She was also a Chinese.
We thought that her fellow countrymen infected her, but Asahi concealed her nationality and wrote that the source of infection was "the bus driver who was the first Japanese patient. 
The Asahi newspaper thoroughly hid "Shina," and even the source of the infection was made out to be Japanese.
Then, in mid-February, many infectedpeople emerged from cab drivers and others who attended a New Year's party on a houseboat on the Sumida River. 
This incident was the first cluster of such cases, and from this point on, the coronavirus epidemic in Tokyo began to spread. 
Since Chinese tourists had been playing on the yakatabune immediately before the incident, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government assumed that the infection spread from the Chinese tourists to the yakatabune employees and then to the Japanese passengers. 
There is no problem.
Two years ago, when pickpocketing was widespread, the Metropolitan Police Department made a flyer saying, "If you see a shina-jin, call 110. 
It was the same thing: a reminder to be careful of Chinese people, even in hygiene. 
However, Asahi complained that this was a problem. 
Yuki Okado and five other reporters began a large-scale project entitled "100 days after the first case of infection in Tokyo. 
The first of these was the "houseboat" issue.
When all the Chinese who had returned to Japan were investigated, not a single person was found to have contracted the disease. 
The "Chinese were the source of the infection" was a wild idea by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, which then went on to claim that the Chinese were innocent. 
Why did the Asahi reporter go to such lengths to protect the Shina people? 
The clue is in He Qing Ren's "China's Great Propaganda.
Beijing pays a lot to hire foreign journalists who have done their best for China. 
Among them, the one Beijing valued the most was Katsumi Yokobori, a former Asahi Shimbun correspondent in Beijing.
He became the head of the Japanese edition of "People's China" for his articles that continued to glorify Shina. 
Shina allowed Kazuo Asami of the Mainichi Shimbun, who had written "Hundred Cuts" in the past, to live permanently in Beijing and admitted his daughter to Peking University. 
The Asahi correspondent who reported that Lin Biao, who had died in a plane crash, was still alive, Iei Akiba, was appointed as the Japanese representative of the People's Daily. 
Asahi has a bad reputation.
It isn't easy to get another job even if you retire.
But if you serve China, they will take care of you.
They write articles with that belief. 
Don't let the Japanese people read such a paper.

 


2023/6/10 in Osaka

 

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