The following is from a paper by Masayuki Takayama, who brings the weekly Shincho released today with a successful conclusion.
This paper also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the post-war world.
This paper also brilliantly proves that China is a country of abysmal evil and plausible lie.
It is no exaggeration to say that Masayuki Takayama is one of Japan's greatest treasures.
The employees of the Asahi Shimbun may be crazy men who can no longer be repaired, but most of the NHK staff except Arima, etc. are still decent, and even if they are brainwashed a little, they can be corrected sufficiently. Let's do it.
Only after reading the book will you know what a data collection is and what a news report is.
coronal effect
Michael Blumenthal, Treasury Secretary in the Carter administration, was born in 1926 in Brandenburg, a northern suburb of Berlin.
His Jewish parents owned an upscale clothing store, but when he was ten years old, the family's circumstances took a significant turn for the worse.
The rising Nazis intensified their exclusion of the Jews, and on a moonlit night in November '38, Goebbels' assault squads demolished 267 synagogues and raided and looted 7500 Jewish shops.
His parents' shop was also destroyed, and a Hitler Jugend boy assaulted him himself.
The family abandoned their hometown and fled on a freighter from Naples for their lives.
The ship crossed Suez and made stops at Bombay, Colombo, and Singapore in British territory.
Each time, they wanted to disembark, but nowhere did they allow Jews to land.
About the same time, the family left Naples, the St. Louis, carrying 1,000 Jews, set sail from Hamburg.
However, the U.S. protectorate of Cuba refused to let them land, and they were not even allowed to come ashore in New York.
After a month's drifting, the ship returned to Europe, and although some were able to disembark in Belgium, the Nazis soon occupied it, and most of the passengers were sent to concentration camps.
But Blumenthal's ship was lucky.
At the end of the passage, in Shanghai, the Jews were able to disembark.
The Japanese concession, Hongkou, allowed them to live there without a visa.
Across the Garden Bridge from Hongkou, the Bund is lined with the buildings of Jewish conglomerates such as Sassoon and Jardine Matheson, who made their money from the opium trade.
They were the Semitic Jews of the Middle East (Sephardi) and were cold to the white Jews (Ashkenazi).
In fact, Ashkenazi, who had fled to Palestine, was refused to land and was sometimes shot dead.
The only places that accepted them were the Japanese concessions in Manchukuo and Shanghai, which were controlled by the Kwantung Army.
About 30,000 people huddled there.
Blumenthal took that much for granted and entered the former Japanese school that housed Hongkou.
Eventually, the war ended, and the family was able to leave Shanghai, but the Jews were nowhere to be found.
After two years of waiting, the U.S. finally allowed them to enter the country.
Surprisingly, in the U.S. under the Democrat administration, the Japanese who were kind were seen as worse invaders than the Chinese.
It was not an environment in which ke could say that he survived under the care of the Japanese.
The shrewd Blumenthal quickly cut good Japan from his memory and discarded it.
In fact, the U.S. Democratic Party continued to view Japan as an enemy after the war and, as before the war, continued to use the Chinese to suppress Japan, even if it became a Communist Party government.
The CPC used the false story of the Nanjing massacre that the U.S. made up to force the Japanese to redeem themselves. With the help of the ODA and technical assistance, they succeeded in half modernizing the country.
It looked like a good looking slave factory to the Americans, and companies were advancing into China one after another, and the U.S.-China ties were as strong as they were during the Chiang Kai-shek era.
Blumenthal, who has played a part in this effort and made a name for himself, visited Shanghai last year at the invitation of the Chinese Communist Party for the first time in a long time.
At the former Japanese school in Hongkou, now renamed the Shanghai Jewish Refugee Memorial Hall, he said that the Japanese army was brutal and that he would never forget the kindness of his friends in China.
He was a man who had no shame.
When the Wuhan virus went viral, Israel was as quick as the U.S. to cut off traffic with China.
Then Dai Yu-Ming, acting ambassador to Israel, denounced the callousness at a press conference: 'How dare you treat China, which embraced the Jews during the Holocaust, with such coldness.' (the bi-monthly magazine "Mirutosu").
Israel has not explicitly rejected Blumenthal-like statements in the past, but this time was different.
'What do you say? It was the Japanese who helped the Jews' and 'Shanghai was under Japanese control. Don't makeup history.' (Mirutosu)
The acting ambassador removed the fabricated part on his official website.
The corona sometimes works to verify historical distortions.