The following is from Masayuki Takayama's book "America and China Lie Selfimportantly," published on 2/28/2015.
This paper also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
A long time ago, an elderly female professor of the Royal Ballet School of Monaco, highly respected by prima ballerinas worldwide, visited Japan.
At that time, she spoke about the significance of an artist's existence.
She said, "Artists are important because they are the only ones who can shed light on hidden, concealed truths and express them."
No one would dispute her words.
It is no exaggeration to say that Masayuki Takayama is not only the one and only journalist in the postwar world but also the one and only artist in the postwar world.
On the other hand, Ōe, I don't want to speak ill of the deceased, but Murakami and many others who call themselves writers or think of themselves as artists are not even worthy of the name of artists.
They have only expressed the lies the Asahi Shimbun and others created rather than shedding light on hidden truths and telling them.
Their existence is not limited to Japan but is the same in other countries worldwide.
In other words, there are only a few true artists.
This paper is another excellent proof that I am right when I say that no one in the world today deserves the Nobel Prize in Literature more than Masayuki Takayama.
It is a must-read not only for the people of Japan but for people all over the world.
Why I don't drink Ceylon tea
Very personal feelings determine the impression of a country.
For example, if you look into the mind of a person who fell in love with Brazil, the memories of the dancer at the Escola de Samba (samba school) with whom he had a relationship form the core, and the bright coastal scenery of Ipanema, where he met her, frames it.
When I got lost and asked a police car to give me a lift, the policeman demanded three times the cab fare, but I can forgive that too with the words, "I am out of the article."
But I hate Sri Lanka.
The reason is Kumaraswamy.
This woman investigated Japan and South Korea under the United Nations Human Rights Commission title and issued a report in January 1996.
The report contained nothing more than a combination of an article in the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, a story by Seiji Yoshida, and the "sex slavery" of the anti-Japanese Australian tycoon George Hicks.
There was not a shred of fact in it.
She also treated as truth the Korean fiction that the Japanese military massacred 70 comfort women in Micronesia.
This woman did the worst job in the only situation where an international organization could verify the truth.
That is why I don't even want to go to Sri Lanka.
I don't even drink Ceylon tea.
Kagoshima black tea received the highest honor in England.
That is enough for me.
Then, how about Assam black tea India?
This country became independent after the Japanese war.
It is still grateful to Japan.
When China invaded Tibet, they condemned it as an act of aggression.
It even helped Tibet and opened Dharamsala as a transmitting base for Tibetans in exile.
It is admirable behavior, but India also has an Indian version of Tibet.
When it became independent, it secretly included the seven northeastern states the British took from Burma into its territory.
The ancient battlefield of Imphal, known to the Japanese, is the capital of Manipur, one of these states.
Other states include Naga and Assam.
It produces oil and rare earths and is best known for its Assam and Darjeeling teas.
However, in the central city of Gohati, bougainvillea is called sainbine (stone flower).
It is a Burmese word.
The face is also of Burmese origin.
Typically, this land should be returned to Burma or made independent, but Nehru was dazzled by the tea and its underground resources.
The pretext was to follow the old British colonial version of the territory.
It is the same pretext as when China took Tibet and Uyghur based on the Manchu dynasty's territory.
Now, martial law is always in effect, and the people who want independence are oppressed more than in Tibet.
I don't like India for this one thing.
In addition, what is conspicuous these days is that Indian commentators are spreading malicious anti-Japanese falsehoods in the wake of the anti-Japanese frenzy in China and Korea.
Rana Mittal, a professor at Oxford University, is one of them.
In the last war, China withstood the carnage and kept the Japanese forces on the Chinese mainland.
"In the last war, China withstood great slaughter and kept the Japanese army on the mainland. The world could win with that. Now is the time for Senkaku and Ryukyu to repay their debt to China." he wrote in the New York Times.
He also advocates the "reward China" and "Asian countries are turning their backs on Japan" in the Bloompark News.
Rashim Thakur, former vice president of the United Nations University in Aoyama, Japan, commented here and there that "Japan refuses to honestly acknowledge its past acts of aggression and atrocities committed in various parts of the world."
It is precisely what the white prosecutors at the Tokyo Trials claimed.
He does not verify the claims and ignores the claims of his fellow senior PALs.
The biased argument on one side concludes, "Abe should follow the example of Germany's Brandt and apologize in Nanking."
His story never mentions the behavior of the other actors in the Great War, the British and Americans who ruled Asia.
He does not even mention why India became independent but only discusses the "invading nation, Japan," created by the West.
If he honestly talked about Japan's position, he would not be in the position he is in today.
He is still flattering whites and blaming Japan.
That is why I do not drink Assam tea or go to Indian curry shops.
Why is the Kuniya anchor who witnessed it keeping quiet?
NHK stands for Japan Broadcasting Corporation.
DNK, the predecessor of Japan Airlines, was also DNK.
It was a time when Japan had confidence.
After the war, GHQ shattered that confidence, and JAL became JAL.
Broadcasting stations also changed their name to TBS without Japanese names, and many Koreans in Japan were brought in as staff under the pretext of internationalization.
Shintaro Ishihara said, "I do not intend to justify the history of the Japan-Korea annexation 100% ......."
This kind of phrase ends in denial. Shintaro also concluded with, "I have no intention."
However, TBS has many Koreans in Japan who don't know Japanese.
No one would think it strange if they wrote in the subtitle, "I intend to justify it 100%.''
The Koreans in Japan commentators made a big fuss about it, and former Mainichi reporter Shigetada Kishii also made a fuss because of his lack of knowledge of Japanese.
Not long ago, the same thing happened in Davos.
Prime Minister Abe was asked about the strained Japan-China relations in a round-table discussion.
He cited the example of the First World War, which occurred due to strained relations between the UK and Germany, and said, "I want to prevent that from happening."
The exact opposite was true: "Abe said that Japan and China have the same tensions as Britain and Germany did at that time," which was erroneously reported to the world, giving the impression that "Abe is belligerent."
The mistranslation by the interpreter was the cause.
For a moment, I thought it was TBS again.
But TBS only speaks Korean.
No English.
There was an Asahi Shimbun reporter.
He pretended unaware of it and went along with Abe's accusations.
What a newspaper.
Hiroko Kuniya of NHK was also there.
Right in front of her, a smear campaign against Japan was in motion.
She would have picked it up on "Close-Up Today " if she were a serious journalist.
"I have seen. Why is the world criticizing Japan now, and why did Asahi write a lie?"
I think NHK management committee member Hyaluta had high hopes for her, but she remained tight-lipped.
She's a disgusting woman.