The following is from a serialized column by Masayuki Takayama that appeared in the weekly magazine Shukan Shincho, which was released today.
This article also proves that he is the only journalist in the post-war world.
Long ago, an elderly professor from the Royal Ballet School of Monaco, highly respected by prima ballerinas worldwide, came to Japan.
At that time, she said the following about the significance of artists.
'Artists are essential because they can only shed light on hidden, concealed truths and express them.
No one would argue with her.
Not only is Masayuki Takayama the only journalist in the post-war world, but it is not an exaggeration to say that he is the only artist in the post-war world.
This thesis also beautifully proves the correctness of my statement that, in the current world, no one is more deserving of the Nobel Prize in Literature than Masayuki Takayama.
It is a must-read for not only the Japanese people but also people all over the world.
The following is from a serialized column by Masayuki Takayama that appeared in the weekly magazine Shukan Shincho, which went on sale today.
Okinawans
It is a Chinese society that shows no compassion.
In such a society, Pearl Buck's novel "The Good Earth" depicts a father who showers his disabled daughter with deep affection.
When this book was published, the United States, which was plotting to expand into China, portrayed the Chinese as simple and lovable people.
In contrast, the Japanese were portrayed as "evil people who torment and exploit them."
In that sense, it was a perfect work, and it was immediately awarded the Pulitzer Prize.
A few years later, it was also awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
However, whether Miss Buck thought the Chinese were simple and good people is doubtful.
The "daughter with a disability" in the work is her daughter Carol, and she is using a Chinese family as a pretext.
It seems that her experience of being involved in the Nanking Incident before writing the book was more significant.
This incident began when Chiang Kai-shek's army entered Nanjing in pursuit of their enemy Zhang Zongchang.
Chiang Kai-shek's army was a typical group of Chinese people, and they immediately went on a spree of looting and rape, even attacking the Japanese consulate.
They targeted foreigners and killed them if they resisted.
They even burned French missionaries to death.
The woman fled into a storeroom with her daughter, and for half a day, she continued to be frightened by the presence of Chiang's soldiers.
After the incident, she fled to Japan and stayed in Unzen for nearly a year.
She returned to China for a while but soon divorced her missionary husband and returned to the United States.
From then until her death at the age of 81, she visited Japan several times but never returned to China.
One of her works is called "New Year".
A US soldier stationed in Korea during the Korean War has a child with a local woman.
When ordered to return to the United States, he says, "I'll be back when the Japanese bush warbler sings."
This is one of the 'Amerasian' children (children born to American soldiers and Asian women) that she coined the term for.
The story goes on to tell how, ten years later, the child visits the former American soldier who is about to make his debut in the political world.
As soon as they meet, the boy says familiarly," Father."
According to her, in most Asian countries, the birth of a mixed-race child is a cause for family-wide celebration.
This means that the child can enter the United States without having to sneak in through the barbed wire from Mexico.
The child who came to Philadelphia to visit his father is a savior for his Korean family.
However, the Chinese who most admire the United States in Asia do not know about Amerasians.
It is because the US military has never been stationed in China.
So they try to sneak in from Panama with incredible difficulty.
The total number of Amerasians is said to be 300,000.
Responding to Pearl Buck's points, the US government created the "Amerasian Act of 1982" and granted them US citizenship.
However, this was not granted to children of Japanese descent.
John Dower said, "The occupation of Japan went well because of the charisma of MacArthur and the fact that the occupying US soldiers were gentlemen."
That is a lie.
The American soldiers were as wild in Japan as they were in Korea and Vietnam.
From the day they arrived, they committed murder and rape.
According to government statistics, 3,941 children were born to American soldiers, and 2,536 of them were killed.
MacArthur suppressed this information through press censorship and censorship.
Dower knows the truth, but he insists on telling a lie.
When the US government applies the 1982 law to Japan, it will expose such suppressed truths.
In addition, unlike other Asian peoples, the Japanese have no illusions about the US.
A good example is the reforms of Paul Caraway, the High Commissioner of Okinawa.
He tried to Americanize the town and the people's hearts, saying, "I will make Okinawa a more wonderful island than Hawaii."
However, no one was pleased, and they turned their backs on the High Commissioner.
If he had said the same thing on Jeju Island, the islanders would have celebrated with a big party.
He was surprised that there were people who did not want to become American, and this led to the return of administrative rights to the islanders alone, with the base remaining.
Xi Jinping said that Okinawa has always been part of China, although he went around the issue.
It's a crude lie.
Because Okinawans have spoken Japanese since ancient times, they don't know Chinese.
Above all, unlike the Chinese, they don't have the slightest desire to become American by infiltrating the US.