It is a fact that all the colonies are the opposite of what Japan did against the Korean Peninsula
2019/2/24
Isn't he the one with the DNA of the Korean Peninsula, which is not an exaggeration at all to say that it was an outrageous slave state? It is the chapter I sent out on 2018-07-10 titled.
"Korean women didn't have names until the 20th century when the Japanese went to Korea."
I found the beginning of this section in the introduction to the latest book by Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
Witnessing the words and actions of President Lee Myung-bak in his final days, I wondered what kind of country Korea was.
I wondered what kind of country Korea was or what kind of people Koreans were, so I searched the Internet for the largest library in the history of mankind for the first time. In just one hour, I learned the history and reality of Korea, as already mentioned.
I am proud to say that I was the first person to clearly tell the world that the Yangban characterizes the Korean peninsula.
When I learned about the Yangban style, I immediately recognized it as the prototype of the Japanese yakuza "protection racket."
Almost all of Japan's Yakuza are zainichi Koreans.
They do not work for themselves but extort others for a living.
This tradition is still alive and well among the Yakuza and politicians from the Korean peninsula, essentially among the surprisingly large number of naturalized Korean opposition politicians in the Japanese opposition parties.
Last year, Kiyomi Tsujimoto of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) suspended parliamentary deliberations for 20 days without the public's permission, a clear manifestation of such memories and traditions.
A recent example is Kim Jong-un's and his delegation's attitude at the U.S.-North Korea talks in Singapore.
They had no money to fly safely to Singapore, let alone pay for lodging, yet stayed at the most luxurious hotel without shame.
They not only oppress the people, they drive them to the verge of starvation while continuing to develop nuclear weapons with impunity.
Suppose a person even mentions their dissatisfaction with the regime in a well-wisher's meeting.
In that case, they are taken to a correctional camp where they are tortured and eventually killed.
When the United Nations resolved to report and make recommendations on North Korea's gross human rights abuses last year, I was appalled when I saw the torture devices that were revealed.
I was stunned when I saw the torture devices because they were the same as those I had learned about in the past hour: tools used to bring people to their homes, lock them up, and torture them when they could not provide the money and foodstuffs they demanded.
Today, in this chapter, all Japanese citizens and people worldwide must know the absolute truth.
Until Japan annexed Korea in the 20th century, women on the Korean peninsula did not have names.
In Korea, kings and Yangban reigned, and all other citizens were the people of the oppressed class.
Even the scholars were so.
Women were the personal property of the Yangban, i.e., enslaved people.
Therefore, women did not have names.
Yangban treated women as objects.
They were not only used as sexual entertainment for their masters but were also humiliated by their masters' wives, who were jealous of them and would insert a stick into their bosoms.
Yangban is not to be blamed.
Their corpses are caught on the branches of the riverbank every time the river rises.
It was the daily life and reality of the Korean peninsula until Japan annexed it.
In other words, the Korean Peninsula is a country where the majority of the people were slaves.
On the other hand, what about Japan?
Japan is one of the few (if not the only) countries in the world that does not enslave people and has always abhorred the concept of having slaves.
A search for "Yasuke" on Wikipedia will clarify this, but here is an excerpt.
Yasuke (yasuke, date of birth and death unknown) was a black man who came to Japan during the Warring States period.
As an enslaved person owned by a missionary, he was considered a gift to the warlord Oda Nobunaga, but Nobunaga took a liking to him and took him into his service.
Omission
On February 23, Tensho 9 (March 27, 1581), Valignano was brought along as an enslaved person when he had an audience with Nobunaga.
The "Nobunaga Koki" describes him as "a black monk from Kirishitan Province." He is about 26 to 27 years old and is described as having "the strength of ten men" and "a body as black as an ox.
Nobunaga was convinced that his skin was black, showed great interest in this black man, and negotiated with Valignano to let him go for Nobunaga.
According to the Jesuit Annals of Japan, Nobunaga named him "Yasuke," gave him the official status of a samurai, and kept him close to his family.
According to Taku Kaneko, Yasuke was a member of the castle's lord's family.
Also, according to Taku Kaneko, in a manuscript (in the possession of the Sonkei Kaku Bunko), which is presumed to be a copy of an autograph handed down in the Kaga Ota family, descendants of Gyuichi Ota, the author of the "Nobunaga Koki," this black man Yasuke was given a private house and a sword at his waist, and sometimes he was a tool bearer.
It is no exaggeration to say that Japan has been a true democratic nation since ancient times in an incomprehensible way to the rest of the world.
The Japanese were rare people who did not have the sense of treating others as enslaved people.
A lawyer from Rikkyo University who held a crucial position in the Japan Federation of Bar Associations went out of his way to go to the United Nations several times to say that Japan was not a comfort woman but a sex slave and ignorant people in the US Democratic Party, represented by Hillary Clinton and others, took advantage of this to reinforce their sense of sovereignty and discrimination against Japan.
The Asahi Shimbun newspaper spread the story to the world based on Seiji Yoshida's lies, and lawyers such as Mizuho Fukushima seized it as an opportunity to attack the Japanese government and extort money from it.
The lawyers, who were blabbing in an interview with Sekai Nippo that he was the one who established them as sex slaves, were, in fact, those with DNA from the Korean Peninsula, which was an amazingly enslaved nation until Japan annexed it.
Because, without even mentioning the example of Nobunaga, no genuine Japanese would ever think of sex slavery.
Katsumi Murotani, one of the most well-informed commentators on Korea's realities, makes it clear in his column "The Shape of Our Neighborhood" in this month's issue of HANADA magazine that this attitude of enslaving others still exists in Korea.
His article is also a must-read for the Japanese people and people worldwide.
When one realizes how much evil is involved in the anti-Japanese propaganda that is being perpetrated around the world by a country of "unfathomable evil" and "deceptive lies," it is only natural that the fools who have taken it so seriously, who call themselves intellectuals, should go to hell.
Before that, they will realize how foolish they are, to the point of wanting to crawl in if there is a hole.
Katsumi Murotani's article will be presented in the next chapter and beyond.
2024/3/10 in Tokyo