The following is from the latest book by Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the postwar world, published on 6/30/2019 by Tokuma Shoten under the title "Korea and the Media Shamelessly Lie."
It is a must-read for all Japanese citizens, and you must head to your nearest bookstore now to subscribe.
It is also a must-read for people all over the world, about which I would like to make it known to the world as much as possible with my poor English skills.
It is Korea, which has EVOLUTIONARY come back to ancient times.
William Arson Grebst, a Swede who was only 18 years old, walked around Korea at the end of the 19th century and wrote a book titled "Tragic Korea.
A Japanese translation of the book is available, but since the translator is a Korean, there are many mistranslations; for example, "These lazy people" is translated as "These optimistic people.
Even so, it cannot disguise the scene of the public execution.
The condemned criminal's hands and feet are tightly bound with ropes, and "a stick is twisted between both legs, and one leg is crushed with full force, and finally there is a dull sound of bones being shattered and crushed. ......" "If he faints, sprinkle water on it to restore it to sanity" It is described how he crushes the other leg, in the same way, then "crushes the bones of the arm, breaks the ribs," and finally "strangles him to death with a silk cord.
The young man expresses his surprise and despair that "such a country still exists on earth" and concludes, "Only the Japanese can make it stop."
The book was published in 1894.
In the same year, an assassin released by Empress Myeongseong shot and killed Kim Ok-gyun, an open-minded person, in Shanghai. His body was sentenced to lingchi in Gyeongseong and then dismembered; his head was exposed in Gyeonggi-do, and his limbs in Gyeongsang-do and Hamgyeong-do.
Kim Ok-gyun studied at Keio University under Fukuzawa Yukichi.
Shibasaburo Kitasato, who established a medical school at Keio, went to Hong Kong to help the plague victims when Kim Ok-gyun's head was exposed.
In just three days, he discovered the plague bacillus, which the European medical community had been chasing with all its eyes since the Black Death of the 14th century, and found that rats carried it.
This episode shows the sad gap between the two countries, which the Sino-Japanese War followed in the same year.
Japan won the war with 30,000 casualties, eliminating Chinese influence from the peninsula and forcing Joseon to recognize its independence.
However, Korea was like Clara in "The Girl from the Alps.
Fearful of being on her own, she clung to Russia and ultimately drove Japan into war with Russia.
Disgusted by Clara's horrifying appearance, Theodore Roosevelt closed all U.S. diplomatic missions, including the U.S. legation, and ordered all diplomats to leave the country.
He closed all U.S. diplomatic missions, including the U.S. legation, and withdrew all diplomats from the country.
The world followed suit.
Let Japan take care of you as Grebst predicted.
It will cost Japan dearly.
It was also Theodore's aim, as he saw Japan as a threat.
Japan would grudgingly accept Japanese rule.
But once accepted, the Japanese would take care of them diligently. They ended that cruel punishment abolished the status system that bound them, and freed the servants.
There was no name for women in this country.
Even Empress Myeongseong means "Queen of the Min clan," not her name.
So they made her create a name, but there was no such tradition.
So they gave many names in Japanese styles, such as Yoshiko or Ikue.
Japan spent nearly 20% of its national budget every year to build a railroad line, a power plant, and lights in former houses in a country without even a cart.
The ancient society, which had been unregenerate and filthy, was reborn as a modern society over a thousand years.
However, the hearts of people did not change.
As soon as Japan was defeated in the last war, they returned to ancient times.
Korean officers came to 11-year-old Yoko's house and took away everything from precious metals to her mother's glasses.
On the way back to Japan, the Japanese were attacked, looted, and slaughtered by the Koreans. Some bodies had their mouths crushed, and gold teeth pulled out.
Japanese women were also attacked in Seoul, where they arrived (Watkins, Yoko, "Bamboo Grove Far Away").
Then, following the massacre of 60,000 people on Jeju Island and the murder of 100,000 people by the Hodo League, the first anti-Japanese line, the Syngman Rhee line, was drawn.
He called the Takeshima area "Uli's Sea" and shot and captured Japanese fishing boats.
Forty-four people were killed, 4,000 were captured, and "20 people were crammed into a 6-tatami-mat jail," just as Grebst had seen a Korean prison.
Anti-Japanese is on a rampage, blowing Asahi Shimbun's fabricated comfort women to the world, picking a fight with the rising sun flag of the Maritime Self-Defense Force vessels, and cursing "Japanese are monkeys" when they look more like them.
Now they are happy to vandalize and defile Japanese shrines and temples.
The U.S. operation to behead Kim Jong-un is inevitable.
Katsuhiro Kuroda, a correspondent of Sankei, points out the lack of a sense of crisis: "A Japanese school, which was supposed to be a shelter for Japanese residents in Japan, has been newly built across the Han River (where the bridge will be dropped).
So what will happen in the event of an attack on Seoul?
For the time being, the Japanese should evacuate along with South Korean citizens to a nearby underground shelter.
Moon Jae-in, who danced and sang like Shoko Asahara in his election campaign, even rejected the approach of a Japanese Self-Defense Force ship to rescue Japanese citizens because it was wearing the flag of the Rising Sun.
It is even more ridiculous to think that the citizens of South Korea, who until yesterday were holding candles to protect the comfort women statue, would allow Japanese nationals into their shelters.
This article continues.
It is a must-read for all Japanese citizens, and you must head to your nearest bookstore now to subscribe.
It is also a must-read for people all over the world, about which I would like to make it known to the world as much as possible with my poor English skills.
It is Korea, which has EVOLUTIONARY come back to ancient times.
William Arson Grebst, a Swede who was only 18 years old, walked around Korea at the end of the 19th century and wrote a book titled "Tragic Korea.
A Japanese translation of the book is available, but since the translator is a Korean, there are many mistranslations; for example, "These lazy people" is translated as "These optimistic people.
Even so, it cannot disguise the scene of the public execution.
The condemned criminal's hands and feet are tightly bound with ropes, and "a stick is twisted between both legs, and one leg is crushed with full force, and finally there is a dull sound of bones being shattered and crushed. ......" "If he faints, sprinkle water on it to restore it to sanity" It is described how he crushes the other leg, in the same way, then "crushes the bones of the arm, breaks the ribs," and finally "strangles him to death with a silk cord.
The young man expresses his surprise and despair that "such a country still exists on earth" and concludes, "Only the Japanese can make it stop."
The book was published in 1894.
In the same year, an assassin released by Empress Myeongseong shot and killed Kim Ok-gyun, an open-minded person, in Shanghai. His body was sentenced to lingchi in Gyeongseong and then dismembered; his head was exposed in Gyeonggi-do, and his limbs in Gyeongsang-do and Hamgyeong-do.
Kim Ok-gyun studied at Keio University under Fukuzawa Yukichi.
Shibasaburo Kitasato, who established a medical school at Keio, went to Hong Kong to help the plague victims when Kim Ok-gyun's head was exposed.
In just three days, he discovered the plague bacillus, which the European medical community had been chasing with all its eyes since the Black Death of the 14th century, and found that rats carried it.
This episode shows the sad gap between the two countries, which the Sino-Japanese War followed in the same year.
Japan won the war with 30,000 casualties, eliminating Chinese influence from the peninsula and forcing Joseon to recognize its independence.
However, Korea was like Clara in "The Girl from the Alps.
Fearful of being on her own, she clung to Russia and ultimately drove Japan into war with Russia.
Disgusted by Clara's horrifying appearance, Theodore Roosevelt closed all U.S. diplomatic missions, including the U.S. legation, and ordered all diplomats to leave the country.
He closed all U.S. diplomatic missions, including the U.S. legation, and withdrew all diplomats from the country.
The world followed suit.
Let Japan take care of you as Grebst predicted.
It will cost Japan dearly.
It was also Theodore's aim, as he saw Japan as a threat.
Japan would grudgingly accept Japanese rule.
But once accepted, the Japanese would take care of them diligently. They ended that cruel punishment abolished the status system that bound them, and freed the servants.
There was no name for women in this country.
Even Empress Myeongseong means "Queen of the Min clan," not her name.
So they made her create a name, but there was no such tradition.
So they gave many names in Japanese styles, such as Yoshiko or Ikue.
Japan spent nearly 20% of its national budget every year to build a railroad line, a power plant, and lights in former houses in a country without even a cart.
The ancient society, which had been unregenerate and filthy, was reborn as a modern society over a thousand years.
However, the hearts of people did not change.
As soon as Japan was defeated in the last war, they returned to ancient times.
Korean officers came to 11-year-old Yoko's house and took away everything from precious metals to her mother's glasses.
On the way back to Japan, the Japanese were attacked, looted, and slaughtered by the Koreans. Some bodies had their mouths crushed, and gold teeth pulled out.
Japanese women were also attacked in Seoul, where they arrived (Watkins, Yoko, "Bamboo Grove Far Away").
Then, following the massacre of 60,000 people on Jeju Island and the murder of 100,000 people by the Hodo League, the first anti-Japanese line, the Syngman Rhee line, was drawn.
He called the Takeshima area "Uli's Sea" and shot and captured Japanese fishing boats.
Forty-four people were killed, 4,000 were captured, and "20 people were crammed into a 6-tatami-mat jail," just as Grebst had seen a Korean prison.
Anti-Japanese is on a rampage, blowing Asahi Shimbun's fabricated comfort women to the world, picking a fight with the rising sun flag of the Maritime Self-Defense Force vessels, and cursing "Japanese are monkeys" when they look more like them.
Now they are happy to vandalize and defile Japanese shrines and temples.
The U.S. operation to behead Kim Jong-un is inevitable.
Katsuhiro Kuroda, a correspondent of Sankei, points out the lack of a sense of crisis: "A Japanese school, which was supposed to be a shelter for Japanese residents in Japan, has been newly built across the Han River (where the bridge will be dropped).
So what will happen in the event of an attack on Seoul?
For the time being, the Japanese should evacuate along with South Korean citizens to a nearby underground shelter.
Moon Jae-in, who danced and sang like Shoko Asahara in his election campaign, even rejected the approach of a Japanese Self-Defense Force ship to rescue Japanese citizens because it was wearing the flag of the Rising Sun.
It is even more ridiculous to think that the citizens of South Korea, who until yesterday were holding candles to protect the comfort women statue, would allow Japanese nationals into their shelters.
This article continues.