The following essay is one of the best of the 21st century, but to save time, I will write it in the style of a haiku or a poem interspersed with aphorisms, like Ryunosuke Akutagawa's "The Words of the Dwarf."
Kyoto is the essence of the beautiful scenery of Japan.
For several months, I have been making repeated day trips to photograph Japan's beauty, which is the essence of Kyoto.
There is a saying that I have been saying from time to time to the people around me and my friends.
"Geniuses have flashes of brilliance, but ordinary people do not."
The real scholar Hiroshi Furuta defined and transmitted this as "viewing" and "transcendence."
I first learned of him in August 2014.
In other words, it was after the true nature of the Asahi Shimbun was finally exposed to the whole world.
As readers know, I had been a subscriber and a regular paper reader for a long time without realizing it, but I stopped subscribing.
It was after that that I learned of him.
The same goes for Masayuki Takayama.
What is the Asahi Shimbun?
Soon after the war, the Asahi Shimbun published an article by Hatoyama Ichiro criticizing the United States for dropping the atomic bomb.
GHQ (MacArthur) threatened to shut down the Asahi.
Immediately, the Asahi transformed into a super-honor student of GHQ's policy of brainwashing the Japanese people.
One of the stupid employees of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper sent his hatred of Mr. Abe out to the world.
He said that Shinzo Abe was Hitler.
As I write this manuscript, I also have a "view" and "transcendence" about why they came up with this idea.
GHQ turned Japan into a prison camp archipelago called "brainwashing."
The best students of this system were the Asahi Shimbun and NHK.
It was only natural that the Nikkei Shimbun, which also strongly desired to become the Asahi Shimbun, would join the ranks.
The supreme sound created by Beethoven is the sound of the first movement of the Ninth Symphony, in which the rising melody is repeated.
It is Beethoven's greatest masterpiece and has reached its highest point.
I have also expressed this idea to my friends from time to time.
The seeds of this musical style can be found in the 7th and 8th symphonies, perfected in the 9th.
The "Classical Concert by Natsuho Murata and the Gunma Symphony Orchestra for High School Girls" held by Gunma Prefecture at the Takasaki Arts Theatre had all the first floor reserved for high school girls.
General admission was only available for the second floor.
Thanks to this concert, I could finally visit two places I had always wanted to see in beautiful parts of Japan.
I could also do so in a series of bullet trains, which are the pinnacle of the world's most advanced technology.
I stayed in the Kurobe/Unazuki hot spring resort, and the next day, I visited Kenrokuen Garden and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa.
As for the Kurobe/Unazuki hot spring resort,
the film "Tsuribaka nishi: Kurobe/Unazuki hen" proved that Kyoka Suzuki, who made her dashing debut as an actress while a student at Tohoku Gakuin University and is from my hometown of Sendai, had gone on to become a great actress.
However, after checking the itinerary, I felt it was too far from Osaka = it would take too long (the train ride would be too long), so I immediately canceled it.
As for Kanazawa, I had a stuffy impression of the Thunderbird, frequently sitting opposite the platform heading to Kyoto, so I canceled it.
Needless to say, when I got on board, I realized that this express train was also the height of the world's best technology.
I was astounded by Kenrokuen Garden, Kanazawa Castle, and Oyama Shrine.
I was overwhelmed by the richness and power of Kaga, which yielded one million koku of rice.
I immediately thought:
That's why the lord of the Kaga clan built Kenrokuen.
He put his energy into culture, not military might.
I returned to Kanazawa the following week to complete and take photographs of the Kenrokuen and 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art.
When I searched for accommodation previously, I chose this place.
It was an inn with a natural hot spring in Kanazawa City.
The atmosphere and interior design of the first floor itself embodied the cultural city of Kanazawa.
There was one item that caught my eye in the gift shop there.
It was a ballpoint pen with a stunning gold leaf design, "only possible in Kanazawa, the city of the gold leaf."
It was a masterpiece that expressed only the noble beauty of gold leaf.
What's more, it was reasonably priced.
If it had the name of a luxury brand from overseas, it would be worth several hundred thousand yen.
It is always in front of me now.
I went to the Korakuen Garden because Kenrokuen Garden is so wonderful.
Thanks to that, I have come to love Okayama completely.
After all, it only takes 44 minutes to get from Shin-Osaka Station to Okayama Station on the Shinkansen, the pinnacle of the world's No.1 technology.
It's even closer than going to Nara!
I may have come to like Korakuen and Okayama Castle more than Kenrokuen.
That's why I visited them twice in a row.
In pre-war textbooks, the Ritsurin Garden in Takamatsu was described as superior to the three famous gardens in Japan, Korakuen and Kenrokuen.
So I visited it.
What fascinated me the most was the turtles, especially the soft-shelled turtles scattered around the ponds.
They were more friendly than anything else.
It was boiling on my first and second visits, with temperatures reaching 37℃.
When I visited again, the soft-shelled turtle king fascinated me.
We forgot about the time and were having a conversation with them.
It was a truly magical time.
My friend said, "As the saying goes, cranes live for a thousand years, and turtles live for ten thousand years. They have lived for hundreds of years and have seen lords."
At the same time, she mentioned her father's name, Kiyoshi, who was from Takamatsu, and muttered, "So you know I'm a child of my father."
Then, I finally started taking pictures of the beauty of the many islands of the Seto Inland Sea.
Once I have written about the transcendence of these "views," I will put down my pen.
To the Chinese and Koreans, I would say, "If you want to see the beauty and splendor of Japan, which is not an exaggeration to call the best in the world, then stop the anti-Japanese education in the name of Nazism. Until you do, we will restrict their sightseeing."
You are a genuine Japanese elite only when you can make such a declaration.
It is also a two-in-one solution to prevent tourism pollution.
Politicians and the mass media who cannot say such things are not the true elites of Japan.
The Asahi Shimbun and the things that the honor students who grew up reading it and entered the University of Tokyo's Faculty of Law with the supreme mission of getting a job at the Ministry of Finance or the Bank of Japan are doing are an ineradicable propensity to brainwash the Japanese people.
Having been brainwashed by GHQ, they have made it their own habit and supreme mission to brainwash the Japanese people.
That is why they make foolish decisions that mislead the country at a critical juncture.
What did the Asahi Shimbun reporter say at the press conference where Sanae Takaichi made her stunning announcement of her candidacy?/
"Even if you become prime minister, will you visit Yasukuni Shrine?"
Most people who make their living from the Asahi Shimbun newspaper were exposing to the world that they only have the mindset and disposition to brainwash, not report.
The employees of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper will probably never realize this.
GHQ brainwashed the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, and it has been brainwashing the Japanese people in the same way.
This disposition has yet to be cured.
The time has come for the Japanese government and people not only to shut down this newspaper but also to make it pay for the enormous damage it has caused to the Japanese government and people.
This article continues.
2024/9/13 in Miyajima, Hiroshima