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

it's time to stop this pseudo-moralism.

2020年09月01日 10時25分02秒 | 全般

I am convinced that Japan's true strength lies in the fact that there are four monthly magazines that are required reading not only by the Japanese people but also by people around the world.
For example, in this month's issue of WILL, a monthly magazine, there is an article by Mr. Toshiyuki Hayakawa entitled, 'Movements of the Communist Revolution stirring in the U.S.,' on p. 100 to p. 105 of this month's issue of WILL, which is a must-read, not only for the people of Japan but especially for the people of the United States.
Anyone who has read it will know that what is happening in the U.S. today is what Mr. Hayakawa exerts.
I don't have a wrong impression of Naomi Osaka at all; I think that political statements should not be made lightly.
Judging a single incident based on its external appearance without investigating the truth will only make it harder for future generations to believe that they were complicit in the plot if the horrendous events that Mr. Hayakawa's exertions reveal are happening. It's a consequence, and there's a great possibility that they will decide.
If blacks are really discriminated against in the United States today, you wouldn't have so many blacks in various fields, especially in sports and music, where countless blacks have become millionaires.
Most importantly, there is no such thing as a black president elected to two terms.
The U.S., the U.S. mass media, or the world's mass media, it's time to stop this pseudo-moralism.
The only people who are happy with your pseudo-moralism are people like Xi Jinping, for example.
Only the communists and totalitarians love the pseudo-moralism and political correctness prevailing in the liberal camp.
Now is not the time to be doing that in the first place.
I am convinced that the best part of American society is the atmosphere created by spectators at major league ballparks.
It is a ballpark that embodies the fact that baseball is a national pastime.
Now, its appeal is ruined.
For fans like me, the atmosphere in Japan's ballparks now is very welcome, and I look forward to watching a live professional baseball game more than ever before.
I can't wait for the night game to start at 6 o'clock.
I've never been a fan of the cheering squad that dominates Japanese stadiums.
Their loud noises were a distraction.
So, after Ichiro moved to the United States, I liked watching Major League Baseball more than watching Japanese baseball.
This year, however, the situation was completely reversed.
Each stadium was filled with 5,000 spectators in Japan, no shouting, only applause, just like a major league game.
In the United States, on the other hand, the situation is the exact opposite.
There was no audience in the stands, but they played a sound effect of the crowd, which was annoying, and it made me feel that the United States' best atmosphere was missing.
The atmosphere of National Pastime, the atmosphere of packed crowds for various sports, the atmosphere of a concert, the atmosphere of a theater
These are entirely unnecessary for the totalitarians and dictators of China's communist one-party dictatorship and the anti-Japanese of South Korea.
The Wuhan virus that China has spread worldwide has deprived the free world of many of the pleasures that used to be taken for granted in the camp of free nations outside of China and other countries.
And who is depriving them of the pleasures that were once natural in the free nations' camps, outside of China and the rest of the world?
Oddly enough, our enjoyment, a value that is necessary to us, was taken away from us by Xi Jinping, the master of China, a country that does not recognize it as a value.
And yet, the fools in the U.S. are following Xi Jinping's machinations and making a lot of noise in the U.S., the country where you enjoy your freedom.
They are repeatedly attacking the Trump administration.
Think about who you are working for.
Your flaw is that you don't even know where Beijing and Tokyo are located in the first place.
You don't know the difference between China and Japan.
You don't know the realities of China or Korea, and you blame Japan.
That kind of sketchiness, in the wrong way, is your downfall, though.
I think Black Lives Matter has gone too far this time, don't you?
Isn't that too stupid?
I think the billionaires in sports and music in the U.S. are overwhelmingly black.
For the most part, have you looked into and sympathized with the funding sources of the groups leading Black Lives Matter, or the realities of their activists?
If you're just an idiot who doesn't know anything and is part of the racket, you can't be much of a person, white or black.
And you won't be well paid.
No wonder such a man is a looser, to use your words.
Things should be judged by knowing the truth.
That is the natural way of those who are intelligent and live in the 21st century.
Was it President Trump, who took away our fun?
I don't think so. The fact that it was China is self-evident.
Or is the U.S., like Japan's Asahi Shimbun and NHK and other T.V. media, disciplined by China to hide the story of the Wuhan virus and only promote the virus's threat?
I don't think so.
President Trump has stated, I believe, that it is the China virus.
None other than Obama emboldened this China and turned the South China Sea into a military base.
He was essentially the one who was unfit to be the President of the United States.
Obama has encouraged Xi Jinping, and the result is the current plight of the world.
When he had to slam China, he took advantage of his presidential prerogative to hold a concert at the White House with the biggest names in rock music.
At one time, he invited Paul McCartney, at another time Bruce Springsteen and others, projecting his image as a man who understands music.
Obama is a black man. Who is to say he was discriminating against him?
Needless to say, he wasn't arrested because holding a rock concert at the White House wasn't a crime or anything.
He wasn't arrested or detained by the cops because he wasn't a criminal.
Is cracking down on criminals a form of discrimination in the U.S. today?


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