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China's Silent Slaughter of Japan

Stealing the enemy's achievements is a more "economical" way than developing it yourself.
However, these scouted people are unaware that China is using them.

2021/8/19
I found it odd that the Nihon Keizai Shimbun repeatedly published articles about China surpassing the U.S. regarding the number of academic papers submitted as if it were pure, unquestioned fact.
In the purest sense of the word, I was convinced this could not be true.
At the urging of a friend who is an accomplished reader, I have subscribed to the latest book, "China's Silent Slaughter of Japan," by Masahiro Miyazaki, whom I describe as a modern-day Tadao Umesao.
In the book, a chapter proves that my above-mentioned strange thoughts were correct.
I will introduce it in the next chapter.
It is no exaggeration to say that with the latest book mentioned above, Masahiro Miyazaki has surpassed Tadao Umesao.
This book is a must-read not only for the Japanese people but also for people worldwide.
As an intelligent person living in the 21st century, anyone who wants to know the truth about the world today must go to the nearest bookstore right now to subscribe.
I will tell the people of the world as much as I can.
I told my friend, "Masahiro Miyazaki is the best graduate of Waseda University."
My friend said, "The graduates of Waseda should be proud of his work."
It is no exaggeration to say that the Nikkei is an agent of China.
Masahiro Miyazaki's latest book proved that my odd thoughts were 100% correct.
P96
The battlefield is moving to social networking sites, even for existing media.
In 2009, China began a foreign propaganda campaign at an astronomical cost of 45 billion yuan (about 550 billion yen).
For China, "reporting" does not mean "reporting the facts" or anything else, but rather "propaganda.
Since the media are positioned as political propaganda organs, they think they can apply the same tactics to foreign countries.
In Japan, except for the Sankei and the Yomiuri Shimbun, coverage of China is as if ordered by Beijing.
China has launched a political propaganda campaign around the world.
Taking the United States as an example, the electronic billboards (LCD screens) in Times Square on 42nd Street in New York City were full of Chinese propaganda.
It formed the China Lobby in the U.S., and propaganda was spread to a diverse and wide range of areas by the bold method of inserting the China Daily (a propaganda newspaper similar to the People's Daily in English) into or on the pages of U.S. newspapers.
On October 4, 2006, Vice President Pence pointed out this invasive propaganda war in his speech.
The caging of newspaper reporters, academics, and politicians was also flamboyantly deployed.
The "Thousand Man Project," which has become well known in Japan, is an organization that scouts out outstanding scholars and researchers from Europe, the United States, and Japan and uses them conveniently for China's high-tech applications.
However, these scouted people are unaware that China is using them.
"Stealing the enemy's achievements is a more "economical" way than developing it yourself.
The total number of scientists recruited between 2008 and 2016 is 60,000.
The 'results' were seen in the number of global patent applications in 2019.
For the first time, China's applications surpassed those of the United States.
In return for supporting scientists' patent applications and entrepreneurs, the Chinese government can use them.
Many of the technologies have been converted to military use.
China has established 600 recruitment centers around the world.
There are 147 locations in the United States, 57 in Germany and Australia, and approximately 40 in the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, and France.
The recruiting company that signed the contract with the Chinese government was paid $30,000 per hire and rewarded."(Soki Watanabe, The Deception of the Democratic Party of the United States 2020-2024, PHP Institute, Inc.)
Professor Lieber of Harvard University, an authority on nanotechnology, is the first "Chinese proxies." In addition, Zheng Songguo, who was involved in developing supercomputers at the University of California, was arrested for receiving a $4.3 million research grant from China and not reporting it to the university.
Li Xiaojiang, a professor at Emory University, was fired after discovering that he failed to report $500,000 in income from China.
James Lewis, a professor at West Virginia University, was scheduled to teach at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and receive $800,000 over three years, even though he was on extended paid leave from the university.
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