But the seeds of idiotic scholars are endless. For example, Waseda University's Kenichi Goto wrote a lie about Japanese troops killing 50,000 islanders in East Timor.
He was delighted by the Asahi, but he was shunned like a brute by his neighbors.
It is the chapter I sent out on 08/17/2019.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
The foolish illusion that being in the Asahi Shimbun is first class
In the past, foolish scholars believed they were top-notch if they appeared in the Asahi Shimbun.
One such scholar was Akira Fujiwara, a professor at Hitotsubashi University, who the Asahi Shimbun once approached with an offer to write an article for them.
Fujiwara is also a scholarly petty.
Poison gas was first used in World War I during trench warfare.
It was made heavier than air, crawled on the ground, and flowed into trenches to kill.
He thought it wouldn't be much of a story if it rose into the sky, but he couldn't afford to spoil Asahi's good mood.
Professor Fujiwara talked and said, "Hi, this is poison gas.
When we thought no one would challenge Asahi, Mizuho Ishikawa of Sankei Shimbun exposed the lie.
The public accused Fujiwara of being a lying professor, and he disappeared from the scene.
However, the seeds of idiotic scholars are endless.
Waseda University's Kenichi Goto wrote a lie about the Japanese killing 50,000 islanders in East Timor.
He was lauded by the Asahi but was shunned like a brute by his neighbors.
Asuka Jyusen, a professor at Tohoku University, wrote in the Asahi Shimbun as an attendual.
"China is an honor student of emission regulations. Japan is also an apprentice."
As soon as he wrote that, the PM2.5 scandal broke out, exposing his lie, and his name, Asuka, which looks legitimate, is a fake.
He was exposed as a Chinese who had changed his name to a Japanese one.
Now there is a flood of complaints to the Ministry of Education asking why they would allow such a lying gaijin to be a university professor.
Yet there are still scholars who want to write for Asahi, and now Eiji Oguma seems to have taken the place of Akira Fujiwara.
He collects and comments on the words of unheard scholars who have complied with Asahi, a faction that keeps the Constitution. ("The reason why it has not been revised" dated April 27, 2019)
Kenneth McElwain lies with a straight face about why the Constitution has gone 70 years without being amended, saying, "The flexibility to 'provide for this by law' has kept us from amending the Constitution."
What nonsense.
The Constitution was not changed because there was no referendum law to decide whether to approve or disapprove of the Constitution.
Abe created it, and it went into effect only seven years ago.
Ordinary Japanese would never like a Constitution MacArthur created on his own under the guise of "I am deeply pleased" (imperial edict) with His Majesty.
In response, Kimura Sota said, "There is nothing wrong with the content of the current Constitution. The only thing that can be attributed to it is that it was forced upon us."
He holds up the Constitution in such a way that it is a beggar's knees that says we have to live on the backs of other countries.
This sophist is said to be a graduate of Yasuo Hasebe's seminar.
I can understand why.
And then, Oguma brought up constitutionalism.
It is the Asahi Shimbun's favorite argument, which goes back to the original meaning of the Chinese character for "Constitution," which means "law that corrects (ken) the law.
However, Japanese people have never been concerned with the original meaning of kanji characters, for example, the character for "people" in the Japanese word for democracy.
The primary meaning is "People" who crushed "Ichi" in the pupil of "Gèn," which means eyes and made them blind.
In other words, people mean "a stupid group who can't see anything."
The Japanese coined the term don't care about that, with the intention of the general public, democracy.
It seems that the Chinese people saw the word and thought it was "mob politics," but they've become accustomed to the Japanese, and the Chinese imitate the Japanese.
Nowadays, 75% of the words used by the Shina people are in Japanese, and Junko Miyawaki says, "Shina now belongs to the Japanese cultural sphere."
In these times, the character for "ken" in the Constitution reads "correct the law."
I wondered who else besides the Asahi Shimbun would believe such nonsense. Still, It told me that an Irishman, the Kenneth mentioned above, is the only one who believes and promotes it.
If you enter the Japanese cultural sphere, you had better learn about the culture.
Oguma, if you continue to browbeat Asahi and talk nonsense, you will end up following in the footsteps of Akira Fujiwara.
*The Japanese people who, like me, subscribed to the Asahi Shimbun until August 2014 and watched the flagship news program of TV Asahi, a subsidiary of Asahi, "News Station," which was hosted by the highly paid and highly paid Ichiro Furutachi, without the slightest doubt.
Everyone is biting their navels, feeling regretful and annoyed.
Furutachi praised the man mentioned above, Sota Kimura as if he were the best in the constitutional law community and had him as a regular commentator.
The same was true of Eiji Oguma.
NHK, which paid Furutachi such a high fee to host such an unimportant program, expressed the same ideology as that of TV Asahi.
Japan is giving them the treatment of a state-run broadcaster. Japan gives its employees the highest annual salaries in Japan. However, the time has long come when we must abandon such a Japan.
He was delighted by the Asahi, but he was shunned like a brute by his neighbors.
It is the chapter I sent out on 08/17/2019.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
The foolish illusion that being in the Asahi Shimbun is first class
In the past, foolish scholars believed they were top-notch if they appeared in the Asahi Shimbun.
One such scholar was Akira Fujiwara, a professor at Hitotsubashi University, who the Asahi Shimbun once approached with an offer to write an article for them.
Fujiwara is also a scholarly petty.
Poison gas was first used in World War I during trench warfare.
It was made heavier than air, crawled on the ground, and flowed into trenches to kill.
He thought it wouldn't be much of a story if it rose into the sky, but he couldn't afford to spoil Asahi's good mood.
Professor Fujiwara talked and said, "Hi, this is poison gas.
When we thought no one would challenge Asahi, Mizuho Ishikawa of Sankei Shimbun exposed the lie.
The public accused Fujiwara of being a lying professor, and he disappeared from the scene.
However, the seeds of idiotic scholars are endless.
Waseda University's Kenichi Goto wrote a lie about the Japanese killing 50,000 islanders in East Timor.
He was lauded by the Asahi but was shunned like a brute by his neighbors.
Asuka Jyusen, a professor at Tohoku University, wrote in the Asahi Shimbun as an attendual.
"China is an honor student of emission regulations. Japan is also an apprentice."
As soon as he wrote that, the PM2.5 scandal broke out, exposing his lie, and his name, Asuka, which looks legitimate, is a fake.
He was exposed as a Chinese who had changed his name to a Japanese one.
Now there is a flood of complaints to the Ministry of Education asking why they would allow such a lying gaijin to be a university professor.
Yet there are still scholars who want to write for Asahi, and now Eiji Oguma seems to have taken the place of Akira Fujiwara.
He collects and comments on the words of unheard scholars who have complied with Asahi, a faction that keeps the Constitution. ("The reason why it has not been revised" dated April 27, 2019)
Kenneth McElwain lies with a straight face about why the Constitution has gone 70 years without being amended, saying, "The flexibility to 'provide for this by law' has kept us from amending the Constitution."
What nonsense.
The Constitution was not changed because there was no referendum law to decide whether to approve or disapprove of the Constitution.
Abe created it, and it went into effect only seven years ago.
Ordinary Japanese would never like a Constitution MacArthur created on his own under the guise of "I am deeply pleased" (imperial edict) with His Majesty.
In response, Kimura Sota said, "There is nothing wrong with the content of the current Constitution. The only thing that can be attributed to it is that it was forced upon us."
He holds up the Constitution in such a way that it is a beggar's knees that says we have to live on the backs of other countries.
This sophist is said to be a graduate of Yasuo Hasebe's seminar.
I can understand why.
And then, Oguma brought up constitutionalism.
It is the Asahi Shimbun's favorite argument, which goes back to the original meaning of the Chinese character for "Constitution," which means "law that corrects (ken) the law.
However, Japanese people have never been concerned with the original meaning of kanji characters, for example, the character for "people" in the Japanese word for democracy.
The primary meaning is "People" who crushed "Ichi" in the pupil of "Gèn," which means eyes and made them blind.
In other words, people mean "a stupid group who can't see anything."
The Japanese coined the term don't care about that, with the intention of the general public, democracy.
It seems that the Chinese people saw the word and thought it was "mob politics," but they've become accustomed to the Japanese, and the Chinese imitate the Japanese.
Nowadays, 75% of the words used by the Shina people are in Japanese, and Junko Miyawaki says, "Shina now belongs to the Japanese cultural sphere."
In these times, the character for "ken" in the Constitution reads "correct the law."
I wondered who else besides the Asahi Shimbun would believe such nonsense. Still, It told me that an Irishman, the Kenneth mentioned above, is the only one who believes and promotes it.
If you enter the Japanese cultural sphere, you had better learn about the culture.
Oguma, if you continue to browbeat Asahi and talk nonsense, you will end up following in the footsteps of Akira Fujiwara.
*The Japanese people who, like me, subscribed to the Asahi Shimbun until August 2014 and watched the flagship news program of TV Asahi, a subsidiary of Asahi, "News Station," which was hosted by the highly paid and highly paid Ichiro Furutachi, without the slightest doubt.
Everyone is biting their navels, feeling regretful and annoyed.
Furutachi praised the man mentioned above, Sota Kimura as if he were the best in the constitutional law community and had him as a regular commentator.
The same was true of Eiji Oguma.
NHK, which paid Furutachi such a high fee to host such an unimportant program, expressed the same ideology as that of TV Asahi.
Japan is giving them the treatment of a state-run broadcaster. Japan gives its employees the highest annual salaries in Japan. However, the time has long come when we must abandon such a Japan.