You should subscribe to read his articles. This paper proves that it is worth it.
November 30, 2020
Recently, I have been subscribing to Themis, a monthly magazine not sold at bookstores and only published by subscription.
It would be no exaggeration to say that I was there to read Masayuki Takayama's essay titled "Nippon Keisei.''
He is the one and only journalist in the post-war world.
If you think this is true, you should subscribe to read his articles.
This paper proves that it is worth it.
His article in this month's issue, which arrived today, is truly eye-opening. It is a genuine article.
I take pride in doing the work of 120 million people, or 6.5 billion people, and Masayuki Takayama has the same pride and determination as me.
Sincerity is not needed in South Korea, which repays kindness with revenge.
If they will force their grudges on us, let's think about an Olympics without Koreans.
Independence Day stirs up resentment
Korea gained independence from the United States.
MacArthur could have chosen any date, but he purposely made Korea independent on August 15, 1948, the day Japan surrendered.
Everything this man did was insidious, and he did not attempt to hide his racial prejudice and desire for revenge.
An excellent example of this is the indictment of class A war criminals on the birthday of Emperor Showa and the execution of the death penalty on the birthday of His Majesty the Emperor, who was the crown prince.
South Korea's Independence Day coincided with the anniversary of the end of the war in Japan to remind South Koreans of Japanese rule every year, to stir up resentment in their national character, and to stir up hatred for Japan.
Koreans have fallen into this plan and are still making a fuss with renewed hatred.
The first Korean to go crazy with resentment was the first president, Syngman Rhee.
Until his return, Japan took care of the peninsula.
Japan built roads and railways and created a sanitary environment, such as the K-epidemic prevention measures that it is now proud of.
However, with Japan's defeat in the war, no one could afford to make any more money.
Up to 80% of national assets were publicly owned and privately owned assets left by Japan.
In that case, you should work like the Japanese taught you, but Syngman Rhee, just like before the war, only thought about extorting to Japan.
His idea was to participate in the peace conference against Japan as a member of the Allied Powers and collect money in the name of war reparations.
However, MacArthur rebuffed them, saying, "You are neither a victorious nor a defeated nation. You are just people from third countries.''
So, Syngman Rhee decided to extort Japan on his own.
The Syngman Rhee Line was established on February 8, 1951, expanding South Korea's territorial waters without permission.
With this, they took Takeshima, seized Japanese fishing boats that had come to fish, and began detaining their crews.
Using this as a basis for extortion, Syngman Rhee visited Japan on January 6 of the following year and demanded that Shigeru Yoshida pay ransom for the fishing crew and compensation for colonial rule. Yoshida accused Lee of his outrageous behavior and drove him away, and even refused him a visit to South Korea in return for the president's visit to Japan.
Angered, Lee carried out a complete seizure of fishing boats, with 233 boats and 2,791 fishermen detained.
474 Korean criminals living in Japan released
The detention facilities were so poor that five fishing crew members died.
When Yoshida learned of this, he was furious.
He decided to take the first step toward severing diplomatic relations by closing the Korean legation in Japan, retaliating arrests of Koreans illegally residing in Japan, and using force to eliminate the Korean ships that had gone out to seize the Japanese fishing boats.
Japan informed it to the Korean side.
Syngman Rhee was horrified and cried to the United States and hurriedly drafted the Japan-U.S.-Korea Treaty of Friendship and Security, forcing the United States to keep Japan in check.
The Ichiro Hatoyama cabinet that replaced Yoshida was incompetent and focused on friendship.
Believing that it was important to be considerate of the other country, he withdrew Yoshida's hard-line policies and accepted South Korea's mutual prisoner exchange agreement.
It was a one-sided concession to Japan, in which the South Koreans released detained Japanese fishermen, while the Japanese side released all smuggled Koreans currently detained at the Omura Detention Center and 474 Korean zainichi criminals serving time for murder and other crimes with permission to remain in Japan.
The Japanese side not only accepted this but also added the consideration of abandoning all national and private property left on the peninsula.
The money at that time was 7 trillion yen.
The amount was enough to start a country and was more significant than Israel's national finances at its founding.
South Korea suddenly became a prosperous nation.
South Korea, which had made such an unfair profit, still needed to be satisfied.
Park Chung-hee, who became president in the 1960s, had a natural talent for taking advantage of the good-natured nature of the Japanese people.
He could go from elementary school to normal school for free thanks to the kindness of the Japanese people.
That was enough for him, but when he turned 30, he applied in his blood to attend a military academy.
Japanese people are weak against such false enthusiasm.
Japan was utterly fooled and admitted them to the Manchuria Military Academy.
When he became president after the Korean War, he demonstrated his Japanese maneuvering skills to the fullest.
At the time, Japan refused to rearm under the U.S.-made Constitution and did not even cooperate in the Vietnam War.
Park then announced that she would dispatch 300,000 South Korean troops "on behalf of Japan,'' hoping to obtain aid from the United States while also extracting compensation from Japan.
Welfare assistance and tax exemption privileges for Korean residents in Japan
So Reischauer pushed for a Japan-Korea treaty that forced Japan to pay $500 million and then had the Japanese perform the "Miracle on the Han River," from steel manufacturing to shipbuilding to power plants.
After that, Japan continued to show compassion towards South Korea.
Japan gave Roh Tae-woo Kim Hyon-hui, the Korean jet bomber captured by Japanese embassy staff in Bahrain.
She gave a detailed statement about the abduction of Megumi and others to North Korea.
Still, Roh Tae-woo was reluctant to share it, and the investigation into the abduction was delayed for more than ten years.
Out of compassion, Japan provided welfare benefits and tax exemption privileges to Korean residents who had settled in Japan without permission.
However, Japan had the right to deport murderers, but Roh Tae-woo had Toshiki Kaifu promise not to "deport" Korean murderers living in Japan as well.
Kiichi Miyazawa was also considerate and made Japan and South Korea co-host the Japan Soccer World Cup.
The tournament was stigmatized as the "world's filthiest World Cup'' due to South Korea's dirty referee bribery and rough play.
Taro Aso sympathized with South Korea, which the international community ridiculed, and recommended Ban Ki-moon for the United Nations Secretary-General position.
In response, Ban urged the United Nations to call the Sea of Japan the "East Sea.''
He also expressed his anti-Japanese stance by participating in an event commemorating the 70th anniversary of the victory against Japan in Beijing.
Junichiro Koizumi gave South Korea the white country treatment that is only given to clean countries.
South Koreans took advantage of this and resold hydrogen fluoride and other products to terrorist countries such as North Korea.
Blaming South Korea for its betrayal, the Abe administration removed South Korea from the White Country status and shifted its compassionate policy for the first time.
Koreans, who had always taken compassion for granted, were so shocked that their world was turned upside down.
Messengers are coming from Korea one after another.
On top of their demands for "compensation for fake conscripted laborers'' and "return to being treated as a white country,'' they are trying to be kind by saying, "We will make the Tokyo Olympics the perfect stage for the unification of the peninsula.''
Even the good-natured Japanese people are disgusted by his lack of remorse and self-centeredness.
On the other hand, it may be time to think about the Olympics without Koreans.
2024/5/22 in Kyoto