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Japan should stop its contribution to the UN, remove lawless anti-Japanese nations from the preferential treatment list, or use other diplomatic means to punish them.Japan is not a tiny country. 

The following is from the preface to Masayuki Takayama's book, "Biden is red." published on April 15, 2022.
This paper also proves him to be 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.
The UN has never been sane.
Thailand invaded French Indochina in late 1940 after seeing France surrender to the Nazis. 
They intended to take back former Thai territories, including Cambodia, which the French had taken. 
French troops in French Indochina could not expect any support from their home country.
However, the French and Indochinese forces were strong, and the Thai navy was sunk in the Gulf of Ko Chang. 
The army was surrounded by French foreign troops in Battambang and driven to the verge of destruction. 
The Japanese, one of the most powerful nations in the world, intervened.
The French and Indian forces would have been blown away in an instant. 
Representatives from both sides were summoned to Tokyo, where Japan recognized Thailand's side of the story and returned some of the territory French Indochina had taken, including Cambodia. 
Having won the war, Thai Prime Minister Phibun erected a Victory Monument in Bangkok, which still stands today, and granted the Japanese military the right to pass through Thai territory without harm. 
Japanese forces could leave Thai territory and invade British Malaya and Burma if war broke out. 
Meanwhile, Phibun had the U.S. ambassador to the United States, Seany Pramawat, set up an anti-Japanese government in exile.
It was in case Japan was defeated. 
After the war, thanks to this exile regime, Thailand survived the war without becoming a defeated country. 
Small countries have their own wisdom to survive despite being hurt. 
The same is true of Joseon Korea.
Daewongun approached Russia, and Lee Wan-yong approached Japan in case of a battle between the overwhelming white powers of Russia and Japan. 
The result was a result of a tepid balance of power, or rather, Lee Wan-yong's caution came to life. 
He saw through Japan's soft-heartedness and thought that Joseon would live in Japan's blood from now on.
It was the ingenious plan for the annexation of Japan and Korea.  
Thus, Japan was sucked alive for decades by the giant bloodsucker that is Korea. 
Moon Jae-in calls it "Japanese imperial rule."
Such sophistry is the wisdom of a small country. 
After the war, the United Nations was established, and the sun began to shine on these small countries.
It is because the Secretary-General and other important posts in the UN, which might have become complicated if held by a significant power, have become the responsibility of a small country. 
It is why Burma's U Thant and Ghana's Kofi Annan became Secretary-General.
South Korea's Ban Ki-moon also came out of that small country category. 
After Japan, which had been looking after such a small country, lost the last war, the "Japanese heart'' was torn to shreds by GHQ and the Communist Party.
Nevertheless, Japan paid wartime reparations to former colonies in the West and supported their independence.
They followed Japan's example, as seen in the Look East policy, and became independent as proper, not-embarrassed small nations. 
Japan also made efforts to rebuild the yen, which the U.S. feared, and quickly regained its position as the world's second-largest economy in terms of GDP. 
However, the hearts of the Japanese people had not yet returned.
The Asahi Shimbun had Yasuhiko Yoshida write, "A Japanese should be appointed Secretary General of the United Nations.
Yoshida was the man who insisted that North Korea had never abducted anyone. 
The Secretary General's post should still belong to a small country. 
They have been able to make their country's name known and, in the process, earn money by being associated with the post. 
Ban Ki-moon replaced all the TV sets in the UN building with Samsung ones in the name of the Secretary-General to enrich his country a little.                                            Japanese people should be aware of such a reason.
The Asahi newspaper, on the same level as Ghana and South Korea, recommends that a Japanese national take the post of UN Secretary-General. 
Does it have some corporate motto that it wants to reduce Japan to a small country? 
I was surprised to read that the Sankei Shimbun also editorialized, "Send out a person for the top post of the UN agency. 
China, which still pretends to be an underdeveloped country, not only holds the posts of ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) and four other UN agencies but UNESCO and WHO (World Health Organization) are also occupied by people tainted by Chinese money. 
As a result, the fictional Nanjing Massacre has been made a Memory of Heritage site, and the Asahi Shimbun fabricated story of sex slavery has been made a significant agenda item at the UN Human Rights Commission. 
The reason may be that they don't like it and want to bring out decent people, but has the UN ever been decent in the past? 
Japan should stop its contribution to the UN, remove lawless anti-Japanese nations from the preferential treatment list, or use other diplomatic means to punish them.
Japan is not a tiny country.                               
(December 24, 2020 issue)

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