2019/7/14
"In the 20th century, until Japan went to Korea, the women there didn't have names."
It is the opening passage of an introduction to the latest book by Masayuki Takayama, who is the one and only journalist in the post-war world.
When I saw President Lee Myung-bak's sudden actions, such as landing on Takeshima at the end of his life and saying things like "the Emperor should come to Korea and apologize," I wondered what kind of country Korea was, or what kind of people Koreans were.
As I have already mentioned, I searched for the first time on the internet, which I have repeatedly referred to as the greatest library in human history, and in just one hour I understood the history and reality of Korea = the Korean Peninsula.
I am proud to be the first person to have clearly stated to the world that the thing that characterizes the Korean Peninsula is the yangban class.
Once I learned about the nature of the yangban class, I immediately realized that it was the prototype for the strange nature of the "protection money" paid by the Japanese yakuza.
Almost all Japanese gangsters are ethnic Koreans living in Japan.
They don't work but extort money from others and live off it.
This is not just a characteristic of gangsters but also of politicians on the Korean Peninsula, and it is a tradition that still exists today in the form of naturalized Korean politicians in the Japanese opposition parties, who are surprisingly similar to them.
A recent example is straightforward if you look at the behavior of Kim Jong-un and his party at the US-North Korea summit in Singapore.
Not only did they not have a plane that could safely take them to Singapore, but they didn't even have the money to pay for accommodation (but they didn't seem to mind staying in a top-class hotel).
Not only do they oppress their people, but they also continue to develop nuclear weapons while pushing them to the point of near starvation.
People who express their dissatisfaction with the government in roadside meetings are taken to correctional labor camps, tortured, and, in the end, killed.
When the United Nations reported on and made recommendations regarding these grave human rights violations in North Korea a few years ago, I was stunned when I saw the torture devices that were revealed.
The reason is that the reality of the yangban that I learned about in an hour was the same as the tools they used to bring people to their mansions, lock them up, and torture them when the people were unable to provide the money or food they demanded.
Today, in this chapter, all the people of Japan and people around the world must know the absolute truth.
Until Japan annexed Korea in the 20th century, women in the Korean Peninsula had no names.
The king and the yangban (aristocrats) reigned over the Korean Peninsula, and all other citizens were discriminated against.
Even scholars were like that.
Women were the yangban's private property or enslaved people.
That's why women had no names.
The yangban treated women as objects.
Not only were they used as objects of sexual gratification by their masters, but they were also tortured to death by their masters' jealous wives, who would insert sticks into their genitals and then throw their bodies into the Han River... The yangban had no qualms about this.
The corpses would get caught on the branches of the riverbank every time the river rose, and this was the reality of everyday life on the Korean Peninsula until Japan annexed the country.
In other words, the Korean Peninsula was a country where the majority of the people were slaves.
What about Japan?
Japan is a country that has never enslaved people, which is rare in the world (it is not an exaggeration to say that it is the only country in the world), and the Japanese people have always hated the concept of enslaving people.
If you search for 'Yasuke' on Wikipedia, it is apparent at first glance, but I will excerpt the opening.
Yasuke (unknown year of birth and death) was a black man who came to Japan during the Warring States period.
As an enslaved person owned by a missionary, he was presented to the warlord Oda Nobunaga.
Still, he was taken into the service of Nobunaga's vassals because Nobunaga liked him.
(omission)
When Valignano met with Nobunaga on February 23rd, 1581 (March 27th, 1581), he was brought along as a slave.
In the Chronicles of Lord Oda Nobunaga, it is written that "a black-haired man from the Christian country has come to visit." He is described as being around 26 or 27 years old, with "the strength of ten men" and "a body as black as an ox."
The Jesuits' annual report on Japan says that Oda Nobunaga, who was convinced that the man really did have dark skin, showed great interest in the black man, negotiated with Valignano to have him transferred to him, gave him the name "Yasuke," raised him to the status of a full-fledged samurai, and decided to keep him close to him.
According to Kaneko Taku, a manuscript (held in the Sokeikaku Library) that is thought to be a copy of the original manuscript passed down in the Kaga Ota family, descendants of Ota Goiti, the author of the "Chronicles of Lord Nobunaga," contains a description of this black man, Yasuke, being given a private residence and a short sword, and sometimes acting as a personal attendant.
It is no exaggeration to say that, from ancient times, Japan was a true democracy that was incomprehensible to the rest of the world, and the Japanese were rare people who did not have the sense of treating others as enslaved people.
A lawyer who graduated from Rikkyo University and held a crucial position in the Japan Federation of Bar Associations went to the United Nations on several occasions, and the Asahi Shimbun ran a significant story on Yoshida Seiji's lies, spreading it around the world.
Lawyers such as Fukushima Mizuho jumped on it as the perfect material for attacking the Japanese government and extorting money from it. North Korean spies in South Korea latched onto it.
Regarding the comfort women, they said, "They were not comfort women, they were sex slaves,"
and in an interview with the World Daily News, he boasted that he had established the fact that they were sex slaves.
Isn't this man with the DNA of the Korean Peninsula, which was a slave state until it was annexed by Japan, entirely out of line?
As is evident from the example of Nobunaga, a genuine Japanese person would never have the idea of sex slaves.
Murotani Katsumi, one of the most knowledgeable commentators on Korea, has clearly demonstrated in his monthly column "The Shape of the Neighboring Country" in the current issue of the magazine Hanada that this attitude of enslaving others still exists in Korea today.
His article is also a must-read for the Japanese people and people worldwide.
The fools who call themselves intellectuals and have been taken in by the anti-Japanese propaganda perpetrated by the country of "bottomless evil" and "plausible lies" around the world will wish they could crawl into a hole before they go to hell and realize how foolish they have been.
It will be introduced in the following chapters.
"In the 20th century, until Japan went to Korea, the women there didn't have names."
It is the opening passage of an introduction to the latest book by Masayuki Takayama, who is the one and only journalist in the post-war world.
When I saw President Lee Myung-bak's sudden actions, such as landing on Takeshima at the end of his life and saying things like "the Emperor should come to Korea and apologize," I wondered what kind of country Korea was, or what kind of people Koreans were.
As I have already mentioned, I searched for the first time on the internet, which I have repeatedly referred to as the greatest library in human history, and in just one hour I understood the history and reality of Korea = the Korean Peninsula.
I am proud to be the first person to have clearly stated to the world that the thing that characterizes the Korean Peninsula is the yangban class.
Once I learned about the nature of the yangban class, I immediately realized that it was the prototype for the strange nature of the "protection money" paid by the Japanese yakuza.
Almost all Japanese gangsters are ethnic Koreans living in Japan.
They don't work but extort money from others and live off it.
This is not just a characteristic of gangsters but also of politicians on the Korean Peninsula, and it is a tradition that still exists today in the form of naturalized Korean politicians in the Japanese opposition parties, who are surprisingly similar to them.
A recent example is straightforward if you look at the behavior of Kim Jong-un and his party at the US-North Korea summit in Singapore.
Not only did they not have a plane that could safely take them to Singapore, but they didn't even have the money to pay for accommodation (but they didn't seem to mind staying in a top-class hotel).
Not only do they oppress their people, but they also continue to develop nuclear weapons while pushing them to the point of near starvation.
People who express their dissatisfaction with the government in roadside meetings are taken to correctional labor camps, tortured, and, in the end, killed.
When the United Nations reported on and made recommendations regarding these grave human rights violations in North Korea a few years ago, I was stunned when I saw the torture devices that were revealed.
The reason is that the reality of the yangban that I learned about in an hour was the same as the tools they used to bring people to their mansions, lock them up, and torture them when the people were unable to provide the money or food they demanded.
Today, in this chapter, all the people of Japan and people around the world must know the absolute truth.
Until Japan annexed Korea in the 20th century, women in the Korean Peninsula had no names.
The king and the yangban (aristocrats) reigned over the Korean Peninsula, and all other citizens were discriminated against.
Even scholars were like that.
Women were the yangban's private property or enslaved people.
That's why women had no names.
The yangban treated women as objects.
Not only were they used as objects of sexual gratification by their masters, but they were also tortured to death by their masters' jealous wives, who would insert sticks into their genitals and then throw their bodies into the Han River... The yangban had no qualms about this.
The corpses would get caught on the branches of the riverbank every time the river rose, and this was the reality of everyday life on the Korean Peninsula until Japan annexed the country.
In other words, the Korean Peninsula was a country where the majority of the people were slaves.
What about Japan?
Japan is a country that has never enslaved people, which is rare in the world (it is not an exaggeration to say that it is the only country in the world), and the Japanese people have always hated the concept of enslaving people.
If you search for 'Yasuke' on Wikipedia, it is apparent at first glance, but I will excerpt the opening.
Yasuke (unknown year of birth and death) was a black man who came to Japan during the Warring States period.
As an enslaved person owned by a missionary, he was presented to the warlord Oda Nobunaga.
Still, he was taken into the service of Nobunaga's vassals because Nobunaga liked him.
(omission)
When Valignano met with Nobunaga on February 23rd, 1581 (March 27th, 1581), he was brought along as a slave.
In the Chronicles of Lord Oda Nobunaga, it is written that "a black-haired man from the Christian country has come to visit." He is described as being around 26 or 27 years old, with "the strength of ten men" and "a body as black as an ox."
The Jesuits' annual report on Japan says that Oda Nobunaga, who was convinced that the man really did have dark skin, showed great interest in the black man, negotiated with Valignano to have him transferred to him, gave him the name "Yasuke," raised him to the status of a full-fledged samurai, and decided to keep him close to him.
According to Kaneko Taku, a manuscript (held in the Sokeikaku Library) that is thought to be a copy of the original manuscript passed down in the Kaga Ota family, descendants of Ota Goiti, the author of the "Chronicles of Lord Nobunaga," contains a description of this black man, Yasuke, being given a private residence and a short sword, and sometimes acting as a personal attendant.
It is no exaggeration to say that, from ancient times, Japan was a true democracy that was incomprehensible to the rest of the world, and the Japanese were rare people who did not have the sense of treating others as enslaved people.
A lawyer who graduated from Rikkyo University and held a crucial position in the Japan Federation of Bar Associations went to the United Nations on several occasions, and the Asahi Shimbun ran a significant story on Yoshida Seiji's lies, spreading it around the world.
Lawyers such as Fukushima Mizuho jumped on it as the perfect material for attacking the Japanese government and extorting money from it. North Korean spies in South Korea latched onto it.
Regarding the comfort women, they said, "They were not comfort women, they were sex slaves,"
and in an interview with the World Daily News, he boasted that he had established the fact that they were sex slaves.
Isn't this man with the DNA of the Korean Peninsula, which was a slave state until it was annexed by Japan, entirely out of line?
As is evident from the example of Nobunaga, a genuine Japanese person would never have the idea of sex slaves.
Murotani Katsumi, one of the most knowledgeable commentators on Korea, has clearly demonstrated in his monthly column "The Shape of the Neighboring Country" in the current issue of the magazine Hanada that this attitude of enslaving others still exists in Korea today.
His article is also a must-read for the Japanese people and people worldwide.
The fools who call themselves intellectuals and have been taken in by the anti-Japanese propaganda perpetrated by the country of "bottomless evil" and "plausible lies" around the world will wish they could crawl into a hole before they go to hell and realize how foolish they have been.
It will be introduced in the following chapters.
2024/9/26 in Umeda, Osaka