見出し画像

The Chinese government invited him to stay in China for more than a month, even neglecting the shareholders' meeting.After he returned to Japan, the Asahi Shimbun turned unbelievably pro-China.

Aiming to become a "nuclear powerhouse," construction is picking up pace to meet domestic energy needs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
May 05, 2018
Tomoo Hirooka, president of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, was giving his closing speech on the closing day of the midsummer Koshien, that unusually gloomy-looking day.
It may be an apt analogy, considering that high school baseball at that time was in its gutsy baseball era, when baseball schools were in full swing.

The Chinese government invited him to stay in China for more than a month, even neglecting the shareholders' meeting.
After he returned to Japan, the Asahi Shimbun turned unbelievably pro-China.
It was the most unambiguous indication that Asahi had become the advance guard of China's propaganda campaign against Japan.
The Asahi then proceeded to discredit the Japanese nation and its people further.
The Asahi Shimbun has had astronomical amounts of our tax dollars funneled to China through ODA.
It is now an obvious fact that one of the triggers that led to the growth of the communist one-party dictatorship and its impossible task is Honda Katsuichi's "China Trip.
Since the Hirooka line, all the current editorialists must have visited China.
The other day, I realized that many of them must have visited China in close connection with the Chinese Communist Party.
At the same time, I was suddenly convinced that there was a near 100% chance that all of them had been honey-trapped in the first place.

I am the world's most frequent visitor to Kyoto.
Osaka, not to mention Kyoto, has been flooded with Chinese tourists in the past few years.
It is a well-known fact that Koreans are pretty ugly in their original faces without plastic surgery.
However, there are many beautiful Chinese women like Japanese women.
It is no exaggeration to say that the atmosphere that women exude is close to that of the Japanese.
After all, this is a country of 1.4 billion people.
Finding a beautiful woman should not be too much of a challenge, even from a probability standpoint.
When I told this story to my bookish friend,
"Yes, that is true. China is a country of mixed blood. In ancient times, neighboring countries presented princesses to China from the Korean peninsula, and China was conquered by different ethnic groups every few hundred years." He replied.
In addition, Japan had a tradition of saying, "Shameful is he who spurns a woman's invitation," especially among the elite class.

Today's Yomiuri Shimbun carried a giant headline on page 8: "Nuclear power plants and railroads to be exported...Pillars of "One Road, One Country" infrastructure...Improvement of technological capabilities; Domestic production to advance. It must be a series of articles.
It was part 2 of 40 Years of Reform and Opening-Up, "Science Powerhouse.
My immediate thought was, "What is this?"
Like all the other guesses I have made so far, my guess is almost 100% correct.
The anti-nuclear movement, championed by Mizuho Fukushima, Naoto Kan, and Masayoshi Son and spearheaded by the Asahi Shimbun, has been a significant factor in China's nuclear power and railway export strategy.
It is indisputable that China's most formidable rival for nuclear power and railroads is Japan, not only as an eye sore but also as a pillar of its export strategy.
Japan, or rather the Asahi Shimbun, wants nuclear technology to decline with the pseudo-moralism of a kindergartener.
If this happens, it will be a great success in every sense of the word, and the first is China, and the second is the Korean peninsula.
Since China's manipulation has spread to every corner of the world, most of the mass media do not report on the frequent PM2.5 pollution that has occurred in recent years.
I can see it by looking at the sky over Umeda from my house.
If I search China just to be sure, I find scattered points marked in black with unbelievable numbers of PM2.5 pollution.
Even PM2.5 is frequently carried by the winds in the sky.
China, our neighbor, is implementing a plan to rival the U.S. by operating more than 100 nuclear power plants by the year 30.
My guess is that all of the Asahi Shimbun's editorialists, who are relentless in their opposition to nuclear power, have fallen into some Chinese trap and must have hit the nail on the head 100%.

The following is from the Yomiuri Shimbun article
Nuclear Power Plant and Railway Export Offensive
Trucks come and go, billowing clouds of smoke along the seaside road lined with straw-roofed houses.
The trucks are on their way to the Shidangwan Nuclear Power Plant (Rongcheng, Shandong Province), near this port town, where seafood farming is thriving.
On the plant's grounds, several cranes can be seen, and construction is underway on a demonstration "high-temperature gas-cooled reactor," which is expected to be a next-generation nuclear reactor. 
Japan has research reactors for basic experiments, but this is the first demonstration reactor in the world to test power generation.
Liu Xugang, 42, a deputy researcher at Tsinghua University familiar with nuclear power plants, said, "The reactor will be operational by the end of this year. We expect to gain a variety of new findings. 
In China, which had lagged behind Japan, the U.S., and Europe in constructing nuclear power plants, the Kanashan Nuclear Power Plant in Zhejiang Province finally began transmitting electricity in 1991.
A delegation from a Japanese electric power industry organization sometimes visited the plant to help tighten the bolts on the pipes. 
However, the company has also introduced technology from the United States, France, Russia, and other countries and has focused on human resource development.
According to the Japan Atomic Energy Industries Association, as of January 2018, 37 nuclear power plants were in operation, ranking third in the world after the United States and France. This is except for Japan, where most are shut down due to tightened regulations following the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident.  
Aiming to become a "nuclear powerhouse," the country is increasing the pace of construction to meet domestic energy demand and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
It plans to have more than 100 nuclear reactors in operation by 2030, putting it on par with the United States.
This article continues.

この記事が気に入ったらサポートをしてみませんか?