The following is a rough draft.
Today I changed my plans and watched NHK's coverage of the national funeral.
And now I am watching the 19:00 news.
The government and the public must thoroughly examine the reality of public opinion polls conducted by Asahi, NHK, and other mass media outlets.
The way NHK started to broadcast the cost of the funeral with a message before the funeral ceremony started!
My friend who was watching the program with me was deeply offended.
Where is anyone to say anything about the cost of a funeral?
The news at 19:00 was even worse.
It was evident that the overwhelming number of people lined up to pay their respects was nothing compared to those who opposed the state funeral, who were communists and activists.
NHK showed the footage as if the numbers were almost the same.
It broadcast an interview with a female reporter from BBC World News, who had a Korean face, and a report from a TV station that is a symbol of the left wing in the U.S., saying that Japan is divided, etc.
The report also said that the massive number of people who came to offer flowers to Mr. Abe, the enormous line in history, had created a safety problem for the people because the line extended into the path of a junior high school student.
The broadcast made it sound as if the students' departure from school was more important than the national funeral for Mr. Abe, who was not only the greatest politician of the postwar era but also a rare politician in his vision, philosophy, and humanity, and a true national treasure of Japan.
Besides, the broadcast had a 28-year-old former SEALDs activist speak at length from among a small group of opponents who could not even compare to the actual lineup for the floral tribute.
NHK's news department broadcasted a speech by Yuko Tanaka, the infamous former president of Hosei University, which was not only "red" but also the height of ridiculousness as if it were correct.
Has a more blatant demonstration of the labor union control of NHK's news department?
The government and the majority of decent Japanese citizens can no longer tolerate the outrageous media bias of Japan's state-run broadcaster, NHK.
Since Abe's assassination, the near destruction of Japan has been happening by the most despicable low-life and anti-Japanese forces.
They no longer have any semblance of journalism.
The most extensive ever public offering of flowers to the Japanese people today brought to light how the polls conducted by Asahi, Mainichi, Tokyo, and other newspapers and labor union-controlled NHK and its subsidiary TV stations since Abe's assassination were all a bunch of nonsense.
The people who controlled NHK's news department were in a panic.
The resulting broadcast content was so harmful that it was no exaggeration to say that they were going insane.
The right thing to do is to be the voice without a voice.
I was reminded of what the late Nobusuke Kishi said in response to the Anpo protests widely reported by the media at the time of revising the Security Treaty (which saved Japan).
That is not the voice of the people; the correct answer is "the voice of the voiceless."
Sixty years have passed, and this saying has been proven correct again.
The leftist-controlled media is not correct.
The majority of the voiceless voice, the general public, is correct.
To be continued.
Today I changed my plans and watched NHK's coverage of the national funeral.
And now I am watching the 19:00 news.
The government and the public must thoroughly examine the reality of public opinion polls conducted by Asahi, NHK, and other mass media outlets.
The way NHK started to broadcast the cost of the funeral with a message before the funeral ceremony started!
My friend who was watching the program with me was deeply offended.
Where is anyone to say anything about the cost of a funeral?
The news at 19:00 was even worse.
It was evident that the overwhelming number of people lined up to pay their respects was nothing compared to those who opposed the state funeral, who were communists and activists.
NHK showed the footage as if the numbers were almost the same.
It broadcast an interview with a female reporter from BBC World News, who had a Korean face, and a report from a TV station that is a symbol of the left wing in the U.S., saying that Japan is divided, etc.
The report also said that the massive number of people who came to offer flowers to Mr. Abe, the enormous line in history, had created a safety problem for the people because the line extended into the path of a junior high school student.
The broadcast made it sound as if the students' departure from school was more important than the national funeral for Mr. Abe, who was not only the greatest politician of the postwar era but also a rare politician in his vision, philosophy, and humanity, and a true national treasure of Japan.
Besides, the broadcast had a 28-year-old former SEALDs activist speak at length from among a small group of opponents who could not even compare to the actual lineup for the floral tribute.
NHK's news department broadcasted a speech by Yuko Tanaka, the infamous former president of Hosei University, which was not only "red" but also the height of ridiculousness as if it were correct.
Has a more blatant demonstration of the labor union control of NHK's news department?
The government and the majority of decent Japanese citizens can no longer tolerate the outrageous media bias of Japan's state-run broadcaster, NHK.
Since Abe's assassination, the near destruction of Japan has been happening by the most despicable low-life and anti-Japanese forces.
They no longer have any semblance of journalism.
The most extensive ever public offering of flowers to the Japanese people today brought to light how the polls conducted by Asahi, Mainichi, Tokyo, and other newspapers and labor union-controlled NHK and its subsidiary TV stations since Abe's assassination were all a bunch of nonsense.
The people who controlled NHK's news department were in a panic.
The resulting broadcast content was so harmful that it was no exaggeration to say that they were going insane.
The right thing to do is to be the voice without a voice.
I was reminded of what the late Nobusuke Kishi said in response to the Anpo protests widely reported by the media at the time of revising the Security Treaty (which saved Japan).
That is not the voice of the people; the correct answer is "the voice of the voiceless."
Sixty years have passed, and this saying has been proven correct again.
The leftist-controlled media is not correct.
The majority of the voiceless voice, the general public, is correct.
To be continued.