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

Even though the university was famous as a left-wing university, leftists surrounded me.

2022年05月18日 09時23分27秒 | 全般
What follows is a reminder of a paper I will write at a later date.
That paper is one of the most important papers of the postwar era, as is my July 16, 2010, appearance on the Turntable of Civilization.

The paper is being written because intuition and transcendence, as defined by Hiroshi Furuta, a rare real scholar or university scholar in the postwar world, appeared in my brain this morning as a revelation.
Yesterday, Kumiko Takeuchi, who studied and graduated from Kyoto University, published one of the most important papers of the postwar era in the "Sound Arguments" column of the Sankei Shimbun.
Not a single person noticed that her paper was one of the most important papers of the postwar period.
Why did I notice?

The elite are those who exist on mastering academia.
They cannot possibly exist to dominate universities and spread ideology.
In her article, however, she reveals in a single line that this was the case in postwar Japan.

She was able to write it because she studied and graduated from Kyoto University.
As serious readers know, I was born in Miyagi Prefecture, achieved unprecedented grades at Yuriage Junior High School in Natori City, and studied at Sendai Niko High School, where the elite minds of Miyagi Prefecture went.
At Sendai Niko High School, there was a world history professor who must have seen right through me. I will always love Sendai Niko as much as I loved Yuriage Elementary and Middle School.
The world history professor, who was loved by all, went from Niko to Tohoku University and taught at my alma mater.
He wanted to study at Kyoto University for what he thought was something, but family circumstances prevented him from doing so, so he learned at his hometown, Tohoku University.
I suppose it was because of his background.
He must have intuitively transcended my true nature, family troubles, and those things.
One day, he stopped me as I passed him in the hallway and said, "You are going to Kyoto University.
You must go to Kyoto University and carry that university on your shoulders.
As serious readers know, my family troubles were more profound than his intuition and transcendence, and I lived my life according to J.M.G. Le Clézio's famous work, "The Book of Fugitives.
Contrary to my mentor's strict orders, I did not go to Kyoto University.
Somehow or other, I made it to Kyoto.
I guess it was because Kyoto University was sealed off with a big sign on the wall that said, "there are no rebels without reasons.
Again, a revelation came to me.
I don't need a university.
Soon after, I chose Osaka as the stage of my life and founded my own business, literally from scratch.
Although it was a small business, completely unknown in Japan, it paid over 17 billion yen in taxes to Japan in just ten years at its peak.

Ms. Kumiko Takeuchi, one of the most critical thinkers in postwar Japan, studied at Kyoto University.
It is no exaggeration to say that no one, except me, has ever noticed that the following line, which she wrote so casually, is the most crucial line of the postwar era.

Even though the university was famous as a left-wing university, leftists surrounded me.

Chizuko Ueno studied at Kyoto University as she did, but she was not gifted with the brains of a true elite.
She is an idiot, and it is not an exaggeration to say that she has not only been spreading editorials that benefit the propaganda of China and other countries, but she has also dominated the humanities at the University of Tokyo.
A group of foolish men calls themselves scholars who worship her.
It is also a symbol of the existence of a camp that plays with the foolishness and idiotic editorials of postwar Japan and today's Japan.

Some of TV Tokyo's programs are interesting. I continue to watch them.
But the people in the news department who control TV Tokyo's BS nightly news program, with Naomi Trauden as the anchor, are the worst journalists I have ever seen.
Now, as a note, her parents are professors at the "famous leftist university" Kyoto University. Her father is German, and her mother is Japanese.

There is a path leading to the Kyoto State Guest House wall.
There is a place where I take pictures every year because I find the most beautiful autumn leaves in the forest of the Kyoto Imperial Palace facing there.
I visited this place a few years ago because I had an irresistible desire to photograph there while listening to Otis Redding's "White Christmas."
John Lennon and Yoko Ono have an LP with a photo of the two of them sitting under the tree as the jacket.
Under the tree above, there was a couple, a foreign man and a Japanese woman, sitting in an identical pose, as if they must have been aware of the photo.
They had the air of university professors. The man posed, reading a book, and I think the woman was.
Since Doshisha University is located next to the Kyoto Imperial Palace, I assumed that the couple must be a couple of Doshisha professors.
When I was stunned to see Naomi Trauden on a TV Tokyo news program, I intuited that this couple was her parents.
Last year, I ran into them again at a plum grove location when I visited there for a photoshoot during the plum season.
As I walked on the pavement next to the Kyoto Imperial Palace in Doshisha, I passed Naomi Trauden, and our gazes met.

My parents embody everything about the Japanese nation that has been continuous since the Jomon.
It would be no exaggeration to say that Naomi Trauden and her parents embody the postwar era.
Her parents are inevitably professors at Kyoto University, a university well-known for its left-wing agenda. The left-wing-controlled TV Tokyo news department heavily employs her.

It is also inevitable that I would encounter them as described above.
A true scholar, Mr. Hiroshi Furuta, would know this without saying anything.
This article continues.
















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