The following is a rough draft.
You know that Japan is truly a wonderful country when you are sick.
The only people who do not know that Japan's health care and insurance systems are the most wonderful in the world are the Asahi Shimbun and other newspapers and the TV media such as NHK.
No, they know this, but they are reporting the opposite to attack the government and undermine the nation of Japan.
They are genuinely vicious people.
NHK, in particular, is a national public servant, earning the highest salary in Japan and making a living attacking the government and Japan.
As soon as I watched the 7 o'clock news last night, I thought to myself.
"Hayashida has lost her looks."
When I first saw her on Bratamori, I thought she was lovely and even mentioned her in this column.
It is no exaggeration to say that back then, she still had the air of a Japanese schoolgirl with the most beautiful heart in the world.
Now, it has become soaked in "Minsei" and "Rikken," so to speak, day and night, and has turned into the unbearable evil of the Communist Party itself, the evilest thing in the world, a sin that cannot be seen.
The viciousness of those who make their living at NHK and other TV stations that monopolize the airwaves under the conditions that it's perfect and couldn't be better is extreme.
The way these people, who are not even called reporters, call themselves newscasters and criticize real and great politicians, which is rare not only in Japan but also in the world.
There is nothing uglier than the way people who, after work, are only interested in going on blind dates and getting celebrities to criticize Shinzo Abe.
It is the Chinese equivalent of "forgetting who one is.
Most news program producers and actors must have visited China as if the Chinese government had invited them.
The more important and famous they are, the more often they visit China.
There is no way that the Chinese would not try to honey trap them.
Therefore, most of them are not only unable to criticize China but are easily manipulated by China.
This article continues.