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As a student at Kyoto University at the time, I had no interest in the leftist student movement on campus. 

The monthly magazines WiLL and Hanada, published on the 26th of every month, are full of authentic articles that provide facts that those who subscribe to Asahi Shimbun and other newspapers and watch only NHK and other TV stations' news programs will never know.
Japanese citizens who can read should head to their nearest bookstore to purchase these magazines.
Those who subscribe to and read the above magazines will immediately know what is essential to living in the 21st century.
I will tell the world as much as I can.
The following is from an article by Mr. Nobuyuki Kaji published in the monthly magazine WiLL.
It is a must-read not only for the people of Japan but also for people around the world.

The " Mere Old Man" is also a member of " Dotage, a group of people who are deceived by the scent of sex appeal"?
The "Mere Old Man" is 88 years old and a dotage person. I am living my life the way I like to live it. 
However, recently, he came to know a new word.
Dotage is a group of people who are deceived by the scent of sexual appeal. Oh, my God, it's the same one. 
The person who said this was a professor at the University of Tokyo named Satoshi Ikeuchi.
The reason such a comment was made again is that he criticized the publications of a female researcher, Dr. Akari Iiyama.
When Dr. Iiyama refuted his criticism, he became emotional (I say).
It began a debate between the two researchers, and supporters of each began to emerge.
Dotage, a group of people deceived by the scent of sex appeal," was one of their comments. 
The "Mere Old Man" is from the side of Ms. Iiyama, i.e., "Dotage, a group of people who are deceived by the scent of sex appeal."
I wonder if it is honorable or disgraceful to move from "Dotage" to "Dotage, a group of people who are deceived by the scent of sex appeal." 
The Ikeuchi-Iiyama controversy reminded the "Mere Old Man" of a significant incident that took place more than 70 years ago when I was a master's course student in a graduate school.
First of all, let me tell you about it.
It was a case of abuse by a professor against a student. 
It was a long time ago, more than seventy years ago.
It sounds excellent to say that the universities of those days were conducting ideal education based on their own beliefs, but the reality was not so.
Let me tell you about that experience and the abuse it inflicted on students.
Of course, I was the one who experienced it. 
As a student at Kyoto University at the time, I had no interest in the leftist student movement on campus. 
Instead, I was too busy earning my own tuition money (tutoring students here and there) to listen to the poor speeches of the student activists. 
I was poor and moved to tears by the kindness shown to me by the parents of some students I tutored. 
One of my students later told me something that I will never forget.
He said, "When you were explaining things with a pencil, I was always looking at the cuffs of your uniform (mine), which were all frayed. They were all frayed. ......". 
Most leftist student activists believed that a socialist state would make everything that was not good go away. The model state was the Soviet Union and the Chinese socialist state.
But both were nothing more than dictatorships.
Furthermore, the enormous wealth accumulation and bribery of those in influential positions have created a corrupt country where it is common knowledge.
The most significant flaw of Marxism is its naivete toward the bizarre existence of human beings.
When I was a student, in discussions with Marxists at Kyoto University, I was never once convinced by their theory of man.
After all, that was the main reason why I have been a critic of Marxism ever since I was a student. 
When I entered the master's course at the end of my university days and was about to submit my master's thesis, I continued to have distrustful feelings toward my supervisor, Shigezawa Toshiro.
In other words, since he was a Marxist and I was a critic of Marxism, our relationship gradually became estranged, or worse. 
However, each of us should be free in thought and study.
Even though he was a professor, I had nothing to do with socialist or communist viewpoints in writing my master's thesis.
I wrote and submitted my master's thesis with a focus on humanism. 
A month later, my master's thesis was examined.
The examination was terrible.
It was full of his thorough negative criticisms.
Of course, I refuted him, but he would not listen to me at all. 
Shigezawa's examination must have lasted for an hour.
Professor Ichisada Miyazaki, a Chinese history major, took his place as a sub-examiner.
He praised my paper in several respects.
I was so grateful that I cried inside. 
Then, in late February, the announcement of the successful candidates for the doctoral course of the graduate school was made.
My name was not on the list.
He had decided not to allow me to enter the doctoral course.
According to the bylaws of the Faculty of Letters of Kyoto University, the minimum score for admission to the doctoral program was an evaluation of 80 points or higher on a master's thesis.
My score was a whopping 79 points. 
Shigezawa hid his personal grudge with the score and expelled me from the university so that no one could complain. 
I laughed when I learned the score.
What a small-minded man.
In fact, behind the drama of Kaji's expulsion, a drama of Kaji's salvation by three teachers had been going on quietly.
As a result, I was offered a full-time lecturer position at Koyasan University on December 13.
It was the anniversary of my late mother's death.
It is one month before the submission of my master's thesis. 
I will write more about this drama some other time.
This time, only the result. 
So, my request to Shigesawa to enter a doctoral course was a smoke screen, so to speak, and even if I had been accepted, the scenario was that I would kick him out and say goodbye on the grounds of employment.
It was a splendid drama with three professors protecting me. 
Anyway, I will end the story of my experience as a red professor here. 
As you can see from what I have said above, communists are slaves to communism. 
To return to the point, Mr. Ikeuchi seems to be a communist.
Then, since the methods of communists are almost the same, his party will change their hands and products and will complain persistently.
And they will continue to do so. 
So what should we do?
The answer is obvious.
Ignore them at all, no matter what they say or write. 
Ignore them - there is nothing more to respond to them.
Let me tell you why. 
I heard that Ikeuchi is a professor at the University of Tokyo.
However, he is different from the former professors at the University of Tokyo.
What would a former professor at The University of Tokyo do if he received criticism from others?
It's decided and usually ignored at all.  
Why. The answer is decided.
It is it.
If you think, "It's natural to win, but it's a shame if you lose,'' it's best to remain silent.
As the saying goes, "A rumor lasts 75 days. It is a fact of life that stories disappear in less than three months. 
It is the mainstream way of being a professor at the University of Tokyo.
Nevertheless, Ikeuchi, a professor at the University of Tokyo, is still cackling.
It is not a dignified professor of the University of Tokyo.
Don't take him seriously. If you ignore him completely, you will only cause trouble for them. 
Finally, controversy and Ⓑslander are entirely different.
A controversy is worth reading because, although we may not know as much about the specialty as the parties involved, our arguments are logical when we are in a controversy. 
Therefore, if there is a dispute, you should think carefully and express your answer.
Consider carefully and thoroughly, even if it takes five or ten years.  
However, when it comes to badmouthing, ignore it completely.
The more the wrong words are recorded, the more it shows the degree of the person's character, or dare I say, the degree of their "low" character. 
My impression. The "Mere Old Man" is 88 years old, and this dotage, Red Ikeuchi Ipparty's specific partisan group snide remarks to Ms. Iiyama, reminds me of the cheering voices at an elementary school athletic meet long ago.
It reminds me of the cackling of young children. 
I can hear and listen to the cheering voices of that time. 
In other words, they said red win, red win, long live the red, red best.
The same Ikeuchi party is not academic research, but only the voice of You're under arrest, You're under arrest, with the answer set from the beginning.

2024/1/25 in Kyoto


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