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

Repost! Above all, the superposition of Göring and Shinzo Abe is the height of stupidity.

2024年09月02日 15時14分28秒 | 全般
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Even more peculiar articles discussed the results of the same general election.
It is already widely known that the Asahi Shimbun often quotes the Nazis when sending out its claims.
It is a cunning but childish labeling technique that attempts to equate readers with the political enemies they dislike in front of them, with Nazi Germany and Hitler being regarded as absolute evil.
I was disgusted that the Asahi Shimbun took out the extreme style of writing that brought out "Reichsmarschall Göring" in the same Nazi Germany and repeated it with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
It is because it is too unrealistic and distorted to hit "Abe."
Other than using this kind of thumb-marked Nazis, I wondered if he could criticize the LDP or Abe for a bit more convincing.
The classic article of the Asahi Shimbun's "Prime Minister Abe = Nazi" was a column titled "Political Fragmentary," published on the morning of October 30.
It was an article like a general election summary.
The headline was "Liberal that does not succumb to 'threat," and the author was Hideo Matsushita, editor-in-chief.
The intent is, of course, to accuse the LDP of blaming it, especially for a stream of abuse to Prime Minister Abe.
Here are the highlights of that article.
<Nazi Germany's Reichsmarschall, Göring, says: People will be at their disposal if they accuse pacifists of saying "we are under attack" and "put the country at risk." This approach works in any country, in free societies and without crazy leaders, and the techniques of working out anxiety work. Looking at the lower house election scene, I remembered this story and felt the bitterness of gastric juice flowing back. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was the first to appeal for "the threat of North Korea" on the streets. I don't remember hearing such a speech from the Prime Minister then.
Of course, he did not want to go to war but would have calculated as the number of votes increased. Finance Minister Taro Aso has revealed that the LDP's election results are "clearly thanks to North Korea."
Göring is a Nazi warrior who was a pilot of the German Empire in the First World War, ending in 1918, a hundred years ago.
Later, he joined the Nazis and became the center of the Hitler administration, but it was old anyway.
However, the Matsushita reporter refused to say that Japan's democratic Prime Minister Abe's behavior was the same as that of a nearly 100-year-old Imperial German or Nazi soldier.
The Matsushita reporter heard Prime Minister Abe's speech in the general election and remembered Göring's words, saying, "I felt bitterness that gastric juices would flow back."
Is it true?
Does he always look at Japanese politics in front of Göring's words?
Above all, the superposition of Göring and Shinzo Abe is the height of stupidity.
The era and environment are too different from Germany in the Hitler era and Japan today.
A common denominator has nothing.
Overlapping two people who have nothing to do now seems to be the obsession of "Hate Abe" at the head of Matsushita reporter.
It will result from distorting the consideration as a newspaperman that even a devil refers to if for the Abe bashing.
Moreover, Göring's words, quoted by the Matsushita reporter, mean that your country is not under attack or danger; you just want to wage a war and insist.
He suggests that Abe's "North Korean threat" does not exist.
He claims that "it will increase the vote" even though it does not exist, and is appealing the threat.
The Matsushita reporter is equivalent to saying that even though North Korea's threat to Japan does not exist, Mr. Abe is lying for the votes as if he were.
That is why "gastric juice flows back."
So, does the Matsushita reporter say that there is no threat to North Korea's nuclear weapons or long-range ballistic missiles in Japan?
Is the LDP walloping in this general election because it continued to make false claims that there was a nonexistent threat?
The Matsushita reporter's column further states that:
Whatever the aim, if the prime minister shouts "North Korea's threat," Koreans in Japan will not be viewed as enemies. Did the PM need to remember them?
<The egocentric politics of "its country priority" and "majority priority" that are similar to white supremacy spread to the world. Japan is similar. At such times, regardless of the majority or minority, we must value each person's life, freedom, and human rights! You have to be anxious and not let go! 〉
The above can only be called a confused statement of self-righteousness.
Shouldn't we talk about the "Korean crisis" approaching Japan as a whole because of the specter of being a Korean in Japan? It's not a joke.
A lot of Koreans in Japan may be of South Korean descent.
The current "North Korean nuclear threat" is a threat to all Korean descent people living in Japan.
Moreover, there is North Korean and South Korean descent in Korean descent, and just as South Korea threatens the current North Korean nuclear weapons, South Korean descent people in Japan will be concerned.
It is pretty absurd to say that personal freedom and human rights will be violated because the "majority priority similar to white supremacism" spreads to Japan.
Where is the similarity of white supremacy in Japan?
And the Matsushita reporter dismisses the principle of majority voting, which is the basis of democracy.
One can imagine that the rule of modern democracy, which is that the government and the government are run by the will of the majority of the people, automatically represses the freedom and human rights of minority individuals.
It can be argued that we ignore the majority and prioritize the minority.
This article continues.


2024/8/26 in Onomichi

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