見出し画像

Japan is responsible for Shina's arrogance and high-handedness in acting.It is time to give them a good beating with a fist.

In this paper, he also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
Mar 12, 2018
Masayuki Takayama has published a series of columns that have gained fame in the latter part of the Weekly Shincho.
The following is from this week's issue.
In this article, he also proves himself to be the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
Emphasis in the text, except for the headline, is mine.

When Beating the Shina
To get to know the Shina people, it is good to analyze Xi Jinping, who salutes them with his left hand, but it might be even better to examine a man named Li Yuanhong. 
Like most Chinese, he cannot swim.
Nevertheless, he wanted to join the navy and served on the cruiser Guangjia during the Sino-Japanese War. 
In the Battle of the Yellow Sea, he faced the Japanese fleet, but the captain and Rei were scared and made an unprecedented escape before the enemy.  
After running aground alone, he escaped to the sea but realized he could not swim.  
He was rescued by his men when he was about to drown.
With this, he gave up the sea and became a brigade commander in Wuhan, a newly founded city of the Qing Dynasty.  
His job was to capture and execute revolutionary elements, such as the Revive China Society, which challenged the Qing dynasty. 
That day, he captured about 100 people and executed three of them by firing squad in the evening.
Among the 100 men, however, were many soldiers under his command. 
He wondered how far the revolutionary ideology had infiltrated the country.
It was when he went to bed feeling uneasy.
A massive explosion occurred at an arms depot in Wuchang, one of the three Wuhan towns. 
Li had a hunch that the revolutionaries were rising.
To them, he was the ringleader of a hated enemy.
He was incontinent at the thought of himself being dragged before the crowd, having his ears shaved off, his eyes gouged out, and being mutilated and killed. 
He called his men.
He begged them to find a safe house instead of ordering them to suppress the situation.

The Wuchang explosion was not the work of revolutionaries.
It was an accident when a soldier carrying a barrel of gunpowder lost it, but the revolutionaries were under the same illusion as Li Yuanhong.
"One of us has risen." 
When the night dawned, Wuhan was a bustling place, swarming with revolutionaries and frenzied revolutionaries. 
The Japanese group that brought them together included Takeyoshi Ohara, a retired military officer, and Nagatomo Kayano, a prewar Japanese political activist in mainland China who was an acquaintance of Sun Yat-sen. 
On the other hand, the German Military Advisory Group organized the Qing dynasty's army.
The revolutionary games began to resemble a proxy war between Germany and Japan, but then Li Yuanhong, who had been hiding in a safe house, was found. 
Should they make a bloodbath of him?
But the revolutionaries had no leader.
Sun Yat-sen had fled to the United States after his embezzlement was exposed.
What do you think? How about putting the enemy but well-known Li Yuan Hong at the head of the revolutionary faction for the time being? 
The Xinhai Revolution originally started with an illusion.
That much flexibility is possible.
Li became the leader of the revolutionary faction for the time being.
It was the reason why it was called the "outrageous revolution." 
Meanwhile, Sun Yat-sen was in Denver.
The funds for the uprising came from a good-natured Japanese, Shokichi Umeya. 
When he learned of the Wuchang Uprising in an American newspaper, he did not immediately return to China.
He flew to New York in the opposite direction and then to London, where he ran around raising funds under the guise of a new Chinese leader. 
He had risen ten times and failed ten times but sought out investors each time and prospered after a fire. 
He would probably fail again, but Sun Yat-sen thought that it did not matter as long as the money was raised.
In his book, George Bronson Lee, an American journalist who knew Sun Yat-sen well, wrote that he was the kind of man Sun Yat-sen was.
When Sun Yat-sen returned home, the revolution had unexpectedly succeeded.
Li Yuanhong looked great, and Yuan Shikai came out.
There was no room for the impostor Sun Yat-sen. 
The only thing was that he changed the name of the Wuchang Uprising, which the Chinese called "Xinhai Revolt," to "Xinhai Revolution" in the Japanese style.
It was the only thing that the Shina people followed.
Since then, political table-turnings have been called "revolutions" by the Shina people. 
At first, it was used to revise unequal treaties.
Japan negotiated with other countries and revised the treaties, but Shina called it revolutionary diplomacy and declared all unequal treaties null and void. 
The same thing happened with Japan's Manchurian interests, and Shina erased the past and returned the tablecloth. 
Since then, Shina has followed a single line of revolutionary diplomacy, ignoring international rules. 
Even when the international court ruled that you have no rights and interests in the Spratly Islands, China revolutionarily ignored the court's ruling.
Even in Hong Kong, which has been "one country, two systems'' for 50 years, they are switching to one system on their own.
And our Senkaku Islands are being made a core territory of China with a revolutionary view of history. 
Japan is responsible for Shina's arrogance and high-handedness in acting.
It is time to give them a good beating with a fist.

2024/3/10 in Tokyo

 

この記事が気に入ったらサポートをしてみませんか?