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

The Deception of the "Great Germany, Bad Japan" Stereotype

2021年05月28日 17時51分25秒 | 全般

The following book by journalist Yoshio Kisa, former Yomiuri Shimbun Berlin correspondent, is a must-read for the Japanese people and people around the world.
The Japanese people should go to their nearest bookstore and buy a copy right now.
I will do my best to make the rest of the world aware.
It is no exaggeration to say that this is one of the most important books of the 21st century.
It is no exaggeration to say that the only accurate treatise that the world needs to read every day right now is in Japan.
It is by divine providence that the turntable of civilization is turning in Japan.
I have mentioned the reasons for this several times.
For the first time in human history, Japan has created a society without class, religion, or ideology.
There was no such country anywhere else in the world but Japan.
Before Japan, the turntable of civilization was turned in the United States.
The reason was that the U.S. was the champion of freedom and democracy.
For the next 170 years, Japan and the U.S. must lead the world in parallel.
The GHQ has left a terrible mark on Japan.

When I still subscribed to the Japanese edition of Newsweek, it carried a poll on German attitudes toward Japan and the Japanese people.
I was surprised and shocked when I read it.
I was surprised and dismayed to read that about half of the German people had an anti-Japanese mindset.
I have written several times about my anger and contempt for Germans.
This book is a perfect example of how vile the Germans are for holding anti-Japanese views toward Japan.
It was only natural that such lowly people would create and sympathize with the Nazis.
They blame Hitler alone, ignore it, and condemn Japan in the manner of the Asahi Shimbun.
About half of the German people who say they harbor anti-Japanese ideology are probably still essentially Nazis.
In South Korea, the government of Syngman Rhee immediately after the end of World War II has continued Nazism in the name of anti-Japanese education to this day.
In China, Jiang Zemin started anti-Japanese education to distract the people from the Tiananmen Square massacre.
It is the reason why about half of the German people are sympathetic to the anti-Japanese propaganda of China and South Korea, whose true nature is "abysmal evil" and "plausible lies."
Read this authentic book, and you will understand everything.
Not only Japanese people but people all over the world should be able to see the scales falling from their eyes.
Almost all Japanese will be stunned to learn that Germans are such low-class people.
The Japanese media, which has never informed us of the reality of the German people, is not even a journalist.
They and the scholars and so-called cultural figures who have been sympathetic to them have been saying things like, "Learn from Germany" and other such nonsense.
They are the worst idiots in human history.
This book also proves 100% the correctness of my intuition, which has been abusing those saying, "Learn from Germany."

Preface 
The Deception of the "Great Germany, Bad Japan" Stereotype
There are serious concerns about the possibility of large-scale terrorist attacks, armed rebellion, or even a coup d'etat by far-right neo-Nazi forces in the middle of 2020 or later to overthrow the democratic system in Germany.
It is said that the members of these forces have a nationwide network and are hiding in a wide range of places, including the KSK, the special forces of the federal army, security agencies, and police organizations.
A small number of militants were seized. 
In addition to weapons such as plastic explosives and automatic weapons, many Nazi relics were seized, including pro-Nazi military songbooks.
It also came to light that about 48,000 bullets and 62 kg of explosives were unaccounted for at KSK alone.
A total of more than 600 soldiers and police officers have been interrogated on suspicion of complicity in the conspiracy, and one KSK company was ordered to be dismantled in a highly unusual move.
However, the network of forces is much more extensive, and the whole picture is unclear (based on investigative reporting by the New York Times and German media reports). 
A German poll (ARD, the first public broadcaster, July 4, 2019) has the following data. 
[I fear that the far-right will change our country] 67%. 
[The country too often allows the far-right/neo-Nazis to flourish] 66%.
[The far-right has become more socially acceptable] 65%
[Security authorities should monitor the Internet and social networking sites more.] 65% 
It is noteworthy that this survey was conducted a year before the aforementioned large-scale conspiracy came to light. 
In the international community, Germany is seen as having cleared up its "Nazi past.
Successive heads of state, starting with the first president, Heuss, have used the phrase "overcoming the past" to restore the nation's honor.
However, the far-right neo-Nazi conspiracy uncovered by the tip of the iceberg shows that "overcoming the past" is nothing more than an empty slogan.
For more details, please refer to Chapter 4, "Germany is a Victim of the Nazis," which deceived the world.  
On the other hand, in recent years, Germany, whether in the mass media, the Bundestag, academia, or the private sector, has been using Japan as a scapegoat for its war responsibility.
To offset the guilt of the "Nazi past," they forcefully try to contrast it with the "evil deeds of the former Japanese military.
It shows the distorted mechanism of the deep psychology of the mind.
The scapegoat in psychology, for example, is the infected person who is slandered on social networking sites against the background of the stress of people's self-restraint due to the new coronavirus.
After Germany's defeat in the last world war, it was condemned by the international community for the Holocaust (massacre of Jews and others).
It has become clear that the "war of worldview" that Germany waged under Hitler was a "war of extermination," a struggle to kill everyone. 
Japan was also a defeated nation, but the wars of Germany and Japan were completely different in purpose, fighting style, and brutality.
However, since the end of the 20th century, Germany has created the impression that "the Japanese army was committing atrocities equal to or greater than the German army" and accused Japan by name.
There is a deep-rooted view that Germany is a great country and Japan is the wrong country in the international community.
While Germany has faced its history sincerely and worked to "overcome the past," Japan has not done enough to reflect on and apologize for its past and is still in serious trouble with neighboring countries. 
In particular, in September 2020, a Korean anti-Japanese group installed a "girl statue" symbolizing former Japanese comfort women in a public place in the capital city of Berlin, which became an issue at the level of the foreign ministers of Japan and Germany.
While the Japanese government has called for the removal of the statues, many intellectuals and ordinary citizens in Germany support their continued installation.
The composition is that "Japan that does not reflect on the past" is evil, and "Germany that reflects on the past" is justice.
The negative image of Japan is spreading in the international community from Germany. 
Such a view is based on preconceived notions and stereotypes without knowledge of the facts, and in this book, I will refer to it as the "German-Japanese stereotype. 
In 2001, the author published a book entitled "What is 'War Responsibility'?
As the subtitle says, Germany, which is said to have cleared the past, has used two national tricks to deceive itself and the international community as if it had cleared the past, with Hitler and the Nazis as scapegoats. 
Based on various historical data and on-the-spot interviews in both the perpetrator and the victim of the war, the author proves this fact. 
The famous 1985 Weizsäcker speech was the culmination of these two tricks and established the national mythology of postwar Germany (Federal Republic).
This speech was a significant catalyst for the spread of German-Japanese stereotypes in the international community. 
However, after the trick fell apart in the late 1990s, Germany lost its scapegoat and, at the behest of anti-Japanese groups in South Korea, turned its attention to the mainland. 
Gebhard Hielscher, a former Far East correspondent for the leading German newspaper, the South German News, was once a frequent guest on T.V. Asahi's late-night discussion program, "Live T.V. till Morning! and other programs, he talked about Germany's "overcoming the past" and criticized Japan's efforts from a "look down on Japan. 
However, after reading my book, Hielscher became silent about Germany and disappeared from T.V.
People who knew him very closely took the trouble to tell the author the inside story.
His discourse was a superficial view based on "German-Japanese stereotypes."
And because he had some knowledge of the war and post-war treatment of the two countries, he realized that he could not refute my book. 
After my book was published in the book review section of the paper and Hielscher was silenced, it rarely mentioned the German-Japanese stereotype in the Japanese media. 
However, this stereotype did not originate in Germany but rather in "Japan" by our leftist media, progressive cultural figures, and those connected.
They spread the discourse, "Japan's attitude toward war and colonial victims and Japan's efforts for postwar reparations have not been made," inside and outside Japan.
Due to their distorted narcissism, they put aside their war responsibility and criticized Japan and the Japanese people. 
Because of this undercurrent, the "German-Japanese stereotype" has resurfaced like a zombie.
In particular, the Korean media keeps repeating "Japan should learn from Germany," using the famous photo of German Chancellor Brandt kneeling in front of the Ghetto Heroes Monument in Poland in 1970.
In the summer of 2020, a statue of then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe kneeling before a comfort woman became an issue.
The creator of the statue used Brandt's kneeling as a hint (see "Chapter 2: Delusions of the Anti-Japanese Japanese Poisoned by the "Tokyo Trials Historical View"). 
This article continues.


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