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

I wonder if they have a company motto that they want to reduce Japan to a small country.

2023年03月11日 00時02分10秒 | 全般

China, which is still pretending to be an underdeveloped country, not only holds posts in four UN organizations such as ICAO,
It is the chapter I posted on December 17, 2020.
Not only Japanese people but people worldwide need to reread it.
The following is from Masayuki Takayama's serialized column that marks the end of Weekly Shincho, which was released today.
A friend of mine, one of the leading readers who subscribe to Weekly Shincho on the day it goes on sale to read his serialized column with Yoshiko Sakurai every week like me, called me and said, "You and Masayuki Takayama are in harmony." I donated
I replied, "Sure."
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.

Is Japan a small country?
Thailand invaded French Indochina in the late 1940s after France succumbed to the Nazis.  
He intended to take back former Thai territories, such as Cambodia, which France had taken.  
They cannot expect support from their home country.
It could trounce them, but the French Indochina army was strong.
The Thai navy was sunk in Koh Chang Bay, and the Thai army was surrounded by French foreign troops in Battambang and was on the verge of destruction.  
Japan, one of the world's leading powers, broke in there.
The French Indochina army would have blown away instantly with a touch of armor sleeves.  
Representatives from both sides were summoned to Tokyo, where Japan accepted Thailand's case and forced it to return some of the territories seized by French Indochina.  
Prime Minister Phibun of Thailand, who was allowed to win, built a victory monument in Bangkok and gave the Japanese army the right of harmless passage in Thai territory.  
If war broke out, the Japanese army could pass through Thai territory and invade British Malaya and Burma.  
Phibun, on the other hand, had his ambassador to the United States, Senee Pramoth, establish an anti-Japanese government in exile.
It is in case Japan loses.  
Thanks to this regime in exile, Thailand survived the war without becoming a defeated country.  
A small country has the wisdom of a small country that survives while being hurt.  
The same goes for Joeseon.
Before the battle between Japan and Russia, an overwhelming white power, Daewongun, approached Russia, and Lee Wanyong came to Japan in case of emergency.  
The result was the result of two sly alternatives, or rather, Lee Wanyong's caution came into play.
He saw through Japan's soft-heartedness and thought that Korea would live on its blood from now on.
It is a strange plan for Japan-Korea annexation.  
In this way, Japan continued to have its blood sucked for many years by a giant schistosome named Korea.  
Moon Jae-in calls it "Japanese imperial rule."
Such sophistry is the wisdom of a small country.  
After the war, the United Nations was established, and the sun began to shine on such small countries.
It has become a form of leaving important UN posts, such as the secretary-general, which is complicated for a large country to hold, to a small country.
So U Thant of Burma and Annan of Ghana became secretary-general.
South Korea's Ban Ki-moon also came out in the small country frame.  
Japan, which had taken care of such a small country, was torn to shreds by GHQ and the Communist Party after losing the previous war.  
Nevertheless, Japan paid wartime reparations to the former colonies of the West and supported their independence.
As seen in the Look East policy, they emulated Japan and became self-reliant as a small country that was not ashamed.  
Japan also worked hard to restore the yen, which the United States feared, and quickly returned to being an economic superpower boasting the world's second-largest GDP.  
However, the hearts of the Japanese people had not returned yet.
The Asahi Shimbun had Yasuhiko Yoshida write "Japanese people for the UN Secretary-General."
He is the man who insisted, "North Korea will not abduct you."  
That post should still belong to a small country.  
They made the name of their homeland known by doing so and made money by working with posts.  
For example, Ban Ki-moon replaced all TVs in the United Nations building with Samsung products under his secretary-general name.  
Even though Japanese people should know that reasoning, the Asahi recommends, on the same level as Ghana and South Korea, that "the Japanese should take the post of UN Secretary-General."  
I wonder if they have a company motto that they want to reduce Japan to a small country.  
If that surprised me,
The Sankei Shimbun also ran an editorial saying, "Send human resources to the top positions of UN agencies."  
China, which still pretends to be an underdeveloped country, not only holds posts in four UN organizations such as ICAO, but also UNESCO and WHO are occupied by people stained with Chinese money.  
As a result, the fictional Nanjing Massacre became a memory heritage, and the sex slaves fabricated by the Asahi Shimbun became the subject of the United Nations Human Rights Commission.  
The Sankei Shimbun may not like that and wants to produce decent human resources, but has the United Nations been decent?  
Japan should scold by other diplomatic measures such as stopping contributions or removing them from the whitelisted country.
Japan is not a tiny country.

2023/3/9, in Kyoto


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