The following is from Themis, a monthly magazine specializing in subscriptions, which arrived at my home yesterday.
I have already mentioned that I subscribe to this magazine to read Masayuki Takayama's regular columns.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
A long time ago, an elderly female professor of the Royal Ballet School of Monaco, highly respected by prima ballerinas worldwide, visited Japan.
At that time, she spoke about the significance of an artist's existence.
She said, "Artists are important because they are the only ones who can shed light on hidden, concealed truths and express them."
No one would dispute her words.
It is no exaggeration to say that Masayuki Takayama is not only the one and only journalist in the postwar world but also the one and only artist in the postwar world.
On the other hand, Ōe, I don't want to speak ill of the deceased, but (to follow Masayuki Takayama's example below), Murakami and many others who call themselves writers or think of themselves as artists are not even worthy of the name of artists.
They have only expressed the lies the Asahi Shimbun and others created rather than shedding light on hidden truths and telling them.
Their existence is not limited to Japan but is the same in other countries worldwide.
In other words, there are only a few true artists.
This paper is another excellent proof that I am right when I say that no one in the world today deserves the Nobel Prize in Literature more than Masayuki Takayama.
It is a must-read not only for the Japanese people but for people worldwide.
Japanese Communist fighter Kantaro Ogura destroyed the Japanese airline industry.
In "The Sun That Never Sets," Kantaro Ogura is glorified as a union chairman who resisted Japan Airlines' disregard for safety.
Using Women as a Tool to Expand the Party
The Communist Party is driven by class struggle.
Every country has classes.
If there are none, they are created; if they are made, they are discriminated against; the upper class wants to exploit the lower class.
The class struggle can start at any time.
However, Japan was not suitable for the Communist Party because the class system has been vague since ancient times.
But that was not good for the Communist Party, so they brought in people like illegal immigrants, LGBT, and others who make you wonder why they make the strong look weak, so there would be no class struggle.
That is why the Japanese Communist Party has declined for 100 years.
The Communist Party has another pillar alongside the class struggle.
It is women.
They use women as a tool to expand the party.
In the Communist world, women are not allowed to be owned by others without permission.
When I was supposed to be dyed red, I was swimming in the swimming club.
Still, when I go to the co-op occasionally, the Democratic Youth League of Japan comes along.
They said there were good women there.
They catch us with women.
The Japan Revolutionary Communist League is no different.
When I followed their invitation, I found a female student waiting in a room whose bed goes unmade from week to week, probably in Building 1 of Waseda University.
The United Red Army also had many women in their hideout for the comfort of their fighters.
Women played such a role in the revolutionary games. Still, for some reason, the United Red Army was summed up by demanding a rebellious spirit from women, and all of them were killed.
Abimael Guzman's Sendero Luminoso, who was infatuated with Mao Zedong's ideology, followed Mao's example of killing one village at a time.
They would raid a village, drag out the village chief, and kill him in front of the villagers, who would watch in horror.
They terrorized the villagers and made them pay a revolutionary tax.
They also kidnapped women.
They took them to Yan'an and forced them to work as comforters and wenches for the warriors.
Sendero is no different.
They also attacked the JICA office near Lima and killed three Japanese while the staff looked on.
They took revolutionary taxes and kidnapped women.
Nearly a thousand women followed the party work to comfort the warriors and give birth to the next generation of revolutionary fighters.
While the Peruvian one-village-one-killing continued, Guzman was enjoying a sumptuous feast with his women in his hideout in Lima when Fujimori's forces raided it.
Fujimori put Guzman in a cage with iron bars and dragged him around Lima.
Never before has communism been shown so spectacularly for what it really is.
The same is true of the Japanese Communist Party.
Kenji Miyamoto, who was in charge, was a great murderer.
He stripped his comrade Tatsuo Obata naked, tied him up with wire, and assaulted him in the name of an interrogation.
He stabbed him in the penis with a cone and poured sulfuric acid on him, causing him to die of shock.
They also used women in various ways.
For this purpose, they also used party member gigolos.
The gigolo was a Tokyo University student named Kantaro Ogura.
After capitalizing on his ability at the students' union in Komaba, Kantaro infiltrated Mitsukoshi as an agent.
A handsome man entangled female clerks in a student uniform, and they were involved in the Mitsukoshi dispute.
Even the young and hopeful were corrupted.
They made Mitsukoshi look like a wealthy class of luxury goods and had the thinly paid female store clerks engage in class struggle.
The other day, "Tenseijingo," of Asahi, reported on the strike at Seibu Department Store, hiding the fact that the strike had been engineered by the Japanese Communist Party, saying that the labor union was "holding its ground against the department store side, which wanted to keep a year-end sales campaign."
Is this ignorance or just a joke by a reporter who is a secret party member?
It is a terrible sentence.
The Mitsukoshi dispute was a public sensation because it did not require much money and only the manipulation of women.
It was an unexpected success for Yoyogi.
Kantaro Gigolo was assigned to a more extensive operation and infiltrated the Japan Airlines Corporation.
Shizumao Matsuo, who had served as director general of the Air National Guard under GHQ, succeeded in establishing an all-Japanese Japan Airlines without allowing the U.S. to intervene with capital or personnel.
Matsuo had a dream.
He dreamed of restoring Japan to its former status as an aviation powerhouse when the skies returned to Japan.
He hired prewar pilots and aeronautical engineers to work for the NISA to achieve this.
GHQ destroyed the aviation industry and eliminated any connection to culture and tradition.
Among them were five regent houses.
When Matsuo created Japan Airlines, he gave them work opportunities as well.
Once the yoke of GHQ was lifted, Matsuo set about rebuilding the aviation industry, with Japan Airlines as the central pillar.
The Transport Aircraft Research Institute was established, and the YS11 soon took to the skies of Japan.
During this time, Kantaro joined the company as a cadet who had graduated from the University of Tokyo.
He had only one thing to do: he had to get the flight attendants' union, or flight attendants, to go on strike just like the female clerks at Mitsukoshi, and destroy Japan Airlines.
For this purpose, he became chairman of JAL's labor union.
Matsuo did not doubt that "labor leader" was a job that every executive would take at one time or another.
Kantaro shows his true potential.
He seduced the flight attendants and made them complain while at the same time corrupting the young, hopeful pilots.
The company is making money.
They should ask for more money.
Thus, Japan Airlines went on strike more frequently than the Japan National Railways, cutting profits in half and casting a shadow over Matsuo's dream.
Kantaro did not relent.
When Matsuo's granddaughter was dying of leukemia, Kantaro took this as an opportunity and called for an all-night collective bargaining.
When it was over, news of her death arrived.
Matsuo was unable to see his granddaughter die.
The passenger union found out.
Everyone cried and left the despicable Kantaro.
A female communist writer ignored the facts.
The agent fell for his tricks.
Kantaro offered himself to work in Tehran.
If he stayed in Japan, bungle operatives were destined to be erased.
If Kenji Miyamoto had his way, he would have been wrapped in a wire coil.
Just whose suggestion is it?
A female communist writer began writing "The Sun That Never Sets" by making him out to be "a union president who resisted Japan Airlines' disregard for safety.
Even that writer considered stopping writing the book when she was informed of one incident in which Shizumaro Matsuo was unable to meet his granddaughter's death.
However, once Kantaro had driven him mad, Japan Airlines was plagued by a series of accidents and eventually went bankrupt, leaving the company in an ugly state as it struggled to rebuild itself.
Rebuilding the airline industry was a pipe dream.
The U.S. destroyed Mitsubishi's MRJ, which was supposed to play a part in this effort, perhaps because it had lost its backing.
Kantaro, despite his failure, had still achieved what he had set out to do.