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

Japan is the only country in the world without an anti-spy law.

2023年02月09日 23時05分30秒 | 全般

This chapter had suffered a crime of search obstruction.
Its modus operandi is similar to that of other chapters today.
Re-transmission.
To Google Inc. Please file criminal charges against those who continue to perpetrate this crime of search obstruction.
You are the only ones who can protect the greatest library in human history from these criminals.

The following is a rough draft.
Japan is the only country in the world without an anti-spy law.
Japan is the only country in the world that does not have a "Spy Prevention Law" | Website for Promoting the Enactment of the "Spy Prevention Law" (spyboshi.jp)
I will say one more thing, which is probably the only one in the G7 and the only one in the world, to silence the left-wing newspapers in the West who are now criticizing Japan for such a joke as same-sex marriage.
Japan is the only G7 country that states in its Constitution that it will not have an army.
Furthermore, Japan is the only G7 country that has written the renunciation of the right of belligerency in its Constitution.
What could be more embarrassing and shameful?
It is shameful to call Japan a member of the G7.

The other day, I saw a program listing on WOWOW that convinced me this was a good movie.
Naturally, I recorded it, but it was only recently.
I was going to watch it on the same day because it started around 9 p.m., as I recall, but I felt that it might interfere with my sleep time, and I couldn't stop working on sending out this column, so I decided to watch it by recording.

It was The Ghost Writer, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Ian McGregor and Pierce Brosnan as a former prime minister.
How could it be a bad movie?
It was a film that was a world apart from the crap that Hollywood has been making since it started flirting with China, films that could not even be called films.

Now, my friends, especially those who have been with me since I became a businessman, will remember that I have told them the following from time to time.
"Genius knows genius" and "the best know the best."
Within this category, there is also the term "intuition" or "transcendence," as used by Professor Hiroshi Furuta.
This film by Roman Polanski brought a certain transcendence to me.
So, before writing this chapter, I first searched for information on the Anti-Spying Law.
I was astonished to find that I was right.

This film is a brilliant suspense film whose central theme is "why he became a politician."

The totalitarian states of Korea, China, and Russia, where propaganda (political maneuvering) is everything, both domestically and internationally, surround Japan, the only country in the world without an anti-spying law.
When Russia was the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union was the head of the Comintern, the spying that the Soviet Union was doing in Japan was exposed in the light of day.
These two incidents, which I have discussed in this column on several occasions, are clear facts.
Roman Polanski has transcended me.
The Korean Peninsula's and China's espionage activities against Japan have never been exposed to the light of day until now.
Once, when Mr. Abe was prime minister, I believe, there was a move to enact a spy bill, the spies in Japan, who had penetrated and inhabited various sectors of Japanese society, took advantage of the weakness of the only country in the world without a spy law, and collectively voiced their opposition to the bill, which was squashed.
It is a shameful and pathetic story that would not be possible in a G7 country.

For example, it engaged a female student at Waseda University in activities that would be unthinkable for a mere ordinary person.
After graduation, she joined an opposition party headed by a woman who was a Korean living in Japan and became a politician.
Some articles on the Internet say that the public security authorities have determined that she is a North Korean spy.
This woman continues to put on a big face and humiliate Japan at every turn.
The Asahi Shimbun was, until recently, strangely supportive of this woman.
NHK frequently showed images of her in its news programs.

A man named Himasoraakane came along and exposed the red network beginning to erode the government.
In the best sense of the word, he is practicing, "It all starts with one person."
A Japan without an anti-spy law is, by definition, a spy paradise.
Postwar Japan was created by the Asahi Shimbun, which is not an exaggeration to say that it is a fabricated newspaper written to discredit Japan.
The word "tax choo-choo," which symbolizes his work, will continue to shine brilliantly as a symbol that has exposed its negative aspects.

The Korean Peninsula and China's network of operatives, or spies, who have been infiltrating various fields, finally carried out Mr. Abe's assassination.
The bizarre response of the mass media since the assassination incident proves my transcendence.
The "Miyaneya" was an auspicious moment for them.

The bizarre opposition to Mr. Abe before his death also proves that my transcendence has hit the nail on the head.
Their movement was wholly misguided and unbelievable concerning Mr. Abe's achievements.
Only China and the Korean peninsula were saying things similar to them and inciting their people to do the same.

Japan is the only country in the G7 and one of the few countries in the world with an unbelievable number of Korean and Chinese spies living in various sectors of society.
There is no question that all of them are honey-trapped and money-trapped.
It says that in China, they describe honey traps as the cheapest atomic bomb.
That would be true.
As soon as it is exposed, politicians, media people, and academics instantly lose their positions, and businessmen and women see their families destroyed.
This article continues.


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