Revolution from the motherland defeat
  1. Sino-Japanese war
  2. Information company having gaved soviet founding
  3. untranslated
  4. World War I
  5. Japan-Soviet diplomatic relations restored
  6. Zhang Zuolin's bombing
  7. "Revolution from the motherland defeat" Thesis
  8. Icebreaker Thesis
  9. First Konoe Cabinet
  10. President of NHK
  11. Soviet invasion
  12. Meaning of masochistic view of history
  13. Postwar Case Files
  14. What the war brought
  15. Transition of Power (United Nations Transformation)
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  25. Formation and process of collapse of nations that violate human rights

Japanese version
  1. Sino-Japanese war
  2. Information company having gaved soviet founding
  3. Konoe connections
  4. World War I
  5. Japan-Soviet diplomatic relations restored
  6. Zhang Zuolin's bombing
  7. "Revolution from the motherland defeat" Thesis
  8. Icebreaker Thesis
  9. First Konoe Cabinet
  10. President of NHK
  11. Soviet invasion
  12. Meaning of masochistic view of history
  13. Postwar Case Files
  14. What the war brought
  15. Transition of Power (United Nations Transformation)
  16. From Class Struggle to Minorities' Revolution
  17. Thucydides' Trap
  18. coronavirus turmoil
  19. Sanae Takaichi candidacy for presidential election
  20. the epoch
  21. historical warfare
  22. Russian attack on Ukraine
  23. terrorism
  24. Perversion that does not choose any means for the sake of revolution
  25. Formation and process of collapse of nations that violate human rights

Sino-Japanese war
   July 1882 _ Due to the power struggle between King Gojong's father (Heungseon Daewongun) and Queen Gojong (Empress Myeongseong = Princess Min), the old-fashioned Korean army rebelled and attacked Princess Min, gained political power for Heungseon Daewongun.
   When her Consort Min fled to the Qing army camp, she had a priestess who predicted that Consort Min would return to her palace in August.
   As she had predicted, the Qing army quelled the rebellion, seized Heungseon Daewongun, and took him to Tianjin.
   Consort Min came to rely on the Qing state for politics and believed in the prophecies of her priestess. Her finances became tight and bribery increased among her officials as she began to spend huge sums of money trying to follow the prophecies of her priestesses.
   The status of the privileged class called yangban was able to be bought with bribes, and the yangban, which was only 3% of the population in the early days of Joseon Dynasty, increased more than 10 times.
   December 1884_Kim Ok-gyun and others attacked the royal palace of the Joseon Dynasty. Kim Ok Gyun and others made a plan to conduct modern politics without relying on the Qing Dynasty and explained it to Gojong and Queen Min.
   Two days later, the Qing army entered the palace and rescued Gojong and Consort Min, while Kim Ok-gyun and others fled the palace.
   Many of the Japanese involved in this turmoil were killed, so Japan and Qing withdrew their troops from Korea, and promised to contact each other before sending troops to Korea next time.
   January 1894: A peasant uprising broke out in Jeolla-do in Joseon, and in May, Jeonju, the largest city in Jeolla-do, was brought under control.
   Consort Min asked the Qing army to send troops to Korea, so Japan also sent troops to Korea.
   August 1894: Sino-Japanese War begins
   April 1895 _ A meeting was held to end the Sino-Japanese War, and the following 11 articles were decided.
   Article 1: Qing confirms that Korea is a completely independent and independent country, and will forever abolish contributions, offerings, ceremonies, etc. from Korea to China that would damage its independence and independence.
   Articles 2-3: The Qing Dynasty permanently cedes sovereignty over the Liaodong Peninsula, Taiwan, the Pescadores and other affiliated islands, as well as the fortifications, munitions factories and state property in these regions to Japan.
   Article 4: Qing pays reparations of 200 million tails to Japan
   Article 5: Residents of the allotted land can freely sell their real estate and choose their place of residence, and residents who live on the allotted land even after two years after the ratification of the treaty are Japanese citizens can be regarded as
   Article 6: Qing will open Shashi, Chongqing, Suzhou and Hangzhou to Japan. Japanese subjects may freely engage in manufacturing in each open market and port of Qing. In addition, the Qing Dynasty grants Japan most-favoured-nation treatment.
   Article 7: Japan will withdraw Japanese forces within Qing territory within three months.
   Article 8: The Qing Dynasty recognizes the temporary occupation of Weihaiwei in Shandong Province by the Japanese Army. The Japanese army will not withdraw if there is a problem with the payment of reparations.
   Article 9: Japanese prisoners of war in Qing should not be returned, mistreated or executed.
   The Qing people who cooperated with the Japanese army must not be executed in any way, and must not be allowed to be executed.
   Article 10: Cease fighting from the date of ratification of the treaty
   Article 11: The treaty shall be ratified by the Emperor of Japan and the Emperor of Great Qing, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at Zhifu, Shandong Province, on May 8, 1895, i.e., April 14, 1909.
   Consort Min, who lost the backing of Qing, came to rely on Russia.
   October 8, 1895 _ Thinking that Queen Min's reliance on Russia would cause her country to fall, Woo Beom-sun, commander of the 2nd Battalion of the Lee Dynasty Korean Training Corps, stormed the royal palace and killed her.
   1896_ Yeongeunmun was demolished and construction of Independence Gate began. Yeongeunmun Gate was the place where the king of Korea would greet the imperial envoys of the Ming or Qing emperors who visited Seoul through the Joseon Dynasty and kowtow nine times to the envoys.
    [Independence Newspaper] published the following assertion in an [article] dated July 4, 1896:
    Korea was a vassal state of Qing for many years, but thanks to the grace of God, it became independent, and His Majesty the Great Monarch of Korea now stands on a par with world leaders, and the Korean people have become free people.
   Therefore, it is unreasonable to ignore such auspicious events. Symbols are necessary to let the world know that Korea is independent, and to tell future generations of Korea that Korea is forever independent from this time on, should exercise in a scenic and quiet place. It is my intention to build a new independence gate in Mohwagwan and turn the surrounding area into a park, saying that it is an independent and independent park.
   On October 12, 1897, Gojong became the first emperor of Korea, and on the 14th, he changed the name of the country to Daehan Empire and changed the era name to Gwangmu. To become independent from the Qing Dynasty would be to emulate Japan, which had achieved Western-style modernization based on liberty and equality, and would mean the loss of the old-fashioned privileges of the yangban. Unable to resist the momentum, he reluctantly assumed the throne.
   1900 _ In Qing Dynasty, dissatisfaction with Christian missionary activities increased, and dissatisfied Chinese people attacked Christian churches in various places and killed Christians.
   The Qing dynasty took pity on the Chinese people and declared war on the nations.
   Eight of the countries declared war sent troops to protect the Christians.
   At that time, Yuan Shikai, who had reorganized the Qing army into a Western style and commanded it, calmed down the Boxers without clashing with the armies of the allied powers. Nobuzumi Aoki, military attaché to the Japanese legation, taught me how to organize the army in a Western style.
Information company having gaved soviet founding
   1902: Motojiro Akashi, who became an army attaché to the Russian legation, went to St. Petersburg, where he met with activists who were resisting the Russian government, promised to help them with their activities, and gave them money and exchanged information.
   Akashi had met with the Finnish anti-Russian resistance movement [Kastrain, Konni Sirjaks], the Swedish army officer Aminov, the Polish National League [Dmowski, Baritski], the Socialist Revolutionary Party Tchaikovsky,...
   the Georgian Party Decanozy, the Polish Socialist Party and the Russian society, Revolutionary Party Evno Azef.
   November, 1903 As the Russo-Japanese War was about to begin, Yuan Shikai offered Nobuzumi Aoki his cooperation. And he let his trusted men live near the Russian-Chinese border as spies.
   1904_The Russo-Japanese War begins, and the Japanese legation in Russia moves to Stockholm, a neutral country in Sweden.
   1905 _ When the Baltic Fleet was sunk in the Battle of Tsushima, Shimei Futabatei, an exclusive writer for the Tokyo Asahi Shimbun, was overjoyed and said,"Miracle!". At that time, what Futabatei Shimei had in mind was that the communist revolution comrades would win, not the Japanese army.
   When the Japan-Russia Peace Conference began in Portsmouth, the U.S.A., the Asahi Shimbun published an article dated September 1 stating, "I have ordered His Majesty the Emperor to abolish the Peace Agreement," in order to hinder peace and help the revolutionary forces in Russia.
   The Asahi Shimbun instigated the Hibiya Burnout Riot, which caused many police officers to attack and worsened public security.
   1908: Emperor Guangxu of Qing and the most powerful Empress Dowager Cixi die one after another.
   October 26, 1909 _ An Jung-geun shot and killed Ito Hirobumi in Harbin, Manchuria.
   December 4, 1909 _Ilshinkai, a private association of the Korean Empire, sent a "statement demanding the union of Korea and Japan" to the Emperor Sunjong of the Korean Empire, Prime Minister Lee Wanyong, and Korean Superintendent Sone Arasuke.
   August 29, 1910_Japan annexed Korea based on the Treaty Concerning the Annexation of Korea. The Governor-General of Korea was established in Gyeongseong. The yangban lost their privileges and resented Japan. Life became easier for the peasants who had suffered from exploitation
   1912 _ The Qing emperor (Pu Yi Aishin Gua Luo) abdicated, the Qing dynasty was abolished, and the Republic of China (Nanjing government. The second republic in Asia after the Philippines) was established, and Yuan Shikai was appointed as the provisional president.
   At this time, the Qing dynasty and the Republic of China made the following promise, and Pu Yi was able to live the same life as emperor in the Forbidden City after his abdication.
   -Even after abdicating, the emperor will retain the title of "Emperor of the Great Qing", and the government of the Republic of China will treat him with the same respect as foreign heads of state.
   ・Pu Yi continues to live in the Forbidden City (and Summer Palace)
   ・The government of the Republic of China will pay the Qing imperial family 4 million ryo every year to permanently protect the Qing dynasty tombs.
World War I
   June 1914: The Austrian Archduke and his wife were killed by Serbian terrorists, and the war between Austria and Serbia began. Germany sided with Austria, Russia sided with Serbia
   As the war spread, Germany turned against France, England, and even Japan.
   1916 Hajime Kawakami wrote the serialized novel "Binbo Monogatari" for the Asahi Shimbun and published it as a book in March of the following year.
   The book "Binbo Monogatari", which was written based on economic knowledge about [poverty], sold like hot cakes in the free atmosphere of the Taisho era.
   February 1917_The Russian Revolution broke out. In October, revolutionary upheavals in Munich and Berlin, Germany, were quelled by the German army.
   Jan. 1918_ [Proclamation of the establishment of the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic] was issued.
   The Soviet Union surrendered to Germany and all members of the Russian royal family were killed by the Soviet government.
   Troops from many countries were sent to Siberia to rescue Czech military personnel stranded in Soviet territory, a traitor on the part of the Allies.
   In 1918, the price of rice rose in Japan, and ordinary people could no longer afford to buy it. The Asahi Shimbun reported false that Suzuki Shoten was buying up rice in revenge for being denied an advertisement.
   On August 12, angry people stormed Suzuki Shoten, razing the building and setting it on fire. The Asahi Shimbun published an article teasing Yone Suzuki, the owner of the Suzuki shop, running away for his life.
   January 18, 1919 _ Germany surrendered and a conference was held in Paris to end the war.
   Japan's proposal to abolish racial discrimination made the white nations resent Japan.
   The United States made Protestant missionaries who were working to increase believers in China spread the image of "bad Japan."
   January 21, 1919_Sudden death of King Gojong of Yi Dynasty Korea
   March 01, 1919 _ The yangban and anti-Japanese activists, who lost their privileges due to the annexation of Korea, spread the false rumor that "Gojong was poisoned by Japan," and marched on a demonstration shouting "Long live independence."
   The agitators deceived them by saying, "If you chant Mansae, Mansae, you won't die," they pretended that the people who had gathered for Gojong's state funeral were participating in the demonstration.
   Against the threat of blank guns, they tried to get people to act boldly, saying, "Look at that. You won't get hit."
   When the security forces fired bullets at the front of the demonstration, they fled like spiders and the commotion subsided.
   About 200 Japanese people were killed or injured in this riot, and about 300 buildings were burned or destroyed.
   June, 1919 — The revolutionary government established in Budapest, Hungary, was crushed within a few months. Lukács Györgyi defected to the Soviet Union and wondered why the revolution was not successful.
   His conclusion was that "traditional culture and Christian beliefs are preventing the people from awakening to class consciousness. Unless we destroy traditional culture and Christian beliefs, there will be no revolution." He would later create the "Frankfurt School".
   October 10, 1919 Sun Yat-sen founded the Nationalist Party of China
Japan-Soviet diplomatic relations restored
   Jul. 1921 Activists from all over gather in Shanghai to form the Communist Party of China.
   1922_Lenin's health deteriorates
   April 03, 1922 _ Lenin created the post of General Secretary of the Central Committee in the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to counter Trotsky, and appointed Stalin as the first general secretary.
   October 25, 1922_The Japanese army withdrew from Siberia.
   In 1923, Lukács founded the "Marxist Institute" at the University of Frankfurt, Germany.
   The group of scholars working at the "Marxist Institute" is called the "Frankfurt School".
   Max Horkheimer of the Frankfurt School presented a "critical theory" that replaced the working-class theory of revolution. Rather than starting a violent revolution, it was easier to overthrow the government by slowly eating Western culture (Christian spirit) over a long period of time.
   Jewish scholars of this school (M. Horkheimer, T. W. Adorno, W. Benjamin, H. Marcuse, E. Fromm, Neumann, J. Habermas, Schmidt, etc.) moved to the United States, reluctant to strengthen the Nazi power. In exile, he founded the Frankfurt School in America with the help of Columbia University. It is said that the Frankfurt School's emphasis on "minorities" is influenced by the fact that Jews feel that they are a "minority."
   The Frankfurt School pretended to have nothing to do with Marxism, so the ideas were accepted and spread among intellectuals in America.
   January 20, 1924: The Kuomintang and the Communist Party joined hands in the form of a member of the Chinese Communist Party joining the Kuomintang as an individual.
   November 1924: The first president of the Tokyo Radio Broadcasting Station at the time of its inauguration was a person known as the "red baron" for his efforts to restore diplomatic relations between Japan and the Soviet Union.
   And then he created the conditions to turn Japan into an "icebreaker" into a quagmire war with the Kuomintang of China and the United States.
   January 20, 1925 _ Japan-Soviet Basic Treaty signed
   After the Basic Treaty between Japan and the Soviet Union was signed, spies from the Soviet embassy worked on Japanese publishing and academic circles, and a large number of translations of Marx and Lenin began to be published.
   Japanese people's interest in anti-poverty measures increased, and Kenji Miyazawa began writing "To the Students", praising Karl Marx as a genius.
   Mar. 1925_Tokyo Broadcasting Station (first president: Shinpei Goto, chairman: Kenzo Iwahara) Radio broadcasting started.
   1925_After Sun Yat-sen (founding father of the Republic of China) died of cancer, Chiang Kai-shek marched Kuomintang forces from Guangzhou toward Beijing.
   August 1926_Tokyo Broadcasting Station + Osaka Radio + Nagoya Radio -> NHK (President position is vacant).
   In 1926, Antonio Gramsci, General Secretary of the Italian Communist Party, was arrested under the Mussolini regime and wrote "Theory of Hegemony" in his "Prison Notebooks."
   The content of the theory of hegemony is as follows.
   "When comrades can control art, film, theater, education, newspapers, magazines, radio, and change people's thinking, and make them lose interest in traditional culture and Christianity, the regime will naturally collapse. Then the revolutionary government will be born."
   "The point is to replace the working class as the main force working for the revolution with minorities. The point is that women are against men, minorities against the majority, criminals against the general public, etc. It is not the criminal who is at fault, but the society that caused the crime to be at fault. Victims needless protection should be the conservative class who have lived in the comfort of their own homes. New generations of young people are struggling with alienation and are turning to crime. Blacks, the poor, the world. The losers and dropouts of the war are the heroes who can start a revolution."
Zhang Zuolin's bombing
   April 06, 1927 _ Beijing government president Zhang Zuolin arrested Communist Party member Li Dazhao and others on suspicion of rebellion. Three weeks later, Li Dazhao and others were executed, and the Communist Party held a grudge against Zhang Zuolin.
   In the 1920s, after the decline of the European film industry due to the effects of World War I, the American film industry enjoyed prosperity.
   However, Hollywood became a city of immorality, unbound by Christian morality, and scandals abounded.
   On May 11, 1927, the film industry established AMPAS (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) with the aim of fending off criticism and preemptively resolving labor disputes.
   The film industry set up the Academy Awards with the aim of "developing art and science in cinema" and tried to promote works that conformed to Christian morality, but the staff and actors did not approve of thoes works. While criticizing the selection, he took the initiative by using measures such as boycotts.
   Each company stopped supporting the academy, and the academy became independent by selling the broadcast rights of the Academy Award ceremony to a television station.
   Jul. 1927 _ The Communist Party, which had fallen out of favor with the Kuomintang, rebelled in various places, but was put down by the Kuomintang forces.
   February 1928 — The first general election was held in Japan. The Giichi Tanaka Cabinet cracked down on violators of the Peace Preservation Law.
   About 1,600 people related to the Japanese Communist Party, Labor and Peasant Party, etc. were interrogated, and 484 people were indicted (March 15 Incident). 148 elite students from Tokyo Imperial University, etc. were also interrogated as communists.
   May 1928 _ The Kuomintang army, which had attacked up to Jinan in Shandong Province in an attempt to overthrow the Beijing government, clashed with the Japanese army, which was trying to protect the residents.
   Kuomintang forces circumvented a confrontation with Japanese forces and headed for Beijing.
   June 03, 1928 _ Zhang Zuolin, who had a good relationship with Japan, tried to intercept the Kuomintang army in Beijing, but was defeated and escaped from Beijing. The next day, Zhang Zuolin died when the train he was on suddenly exploded on the railway bridge on the way to Shenyang Station.
   Zhang Zuolin's eldest son, Zhang Xueliang, believed the lie that " the Kwantung Army had killed Zhang Zuolin with a bomb", and became furious with Japan.
   June 08, 1928 _ Kuomintang forces entered Beijing and declared national unification on the 15th.
"Revolution from the motherland defeat" Thesis
   In July 1928, at the 6th Congress of the Comintern, Stalin (the supreme leader of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union) said that the communists had to make the revolution successful. All comrades need to do are
   (1) Voluntarily enlist in the army, then betray the motherland and lose the war
   (2) Do not obey laws that are made for the convenience of the rich, create many secret organizations, and use lies and deception to confuse the leaders of the homeland.
   December 29, 1928 _ Zhang Xueliang made Manchuria raise the blue sky white sun flag all at once to show his willingness to support the government of the Republic of China.
   April 16, 1929_In Japan, 339 communists were interrogated.
   With the Great Depression caused by the stock market crash in the United States that began on October 24, 1929, the following year in 1930, Japan absolutely believed in the myth that "only a Soviet-style planned economy can save the Japanese economy."
   Many books explaining the Soviet-style planned economy sold well, and many bureaucrats and military personnel began to read them, not only in academia.
   September 18, 1931: A railroad track on the South Manchurian Railway was blown up (the Liutiao Lake Incident). In order to restore public order, the Kwantung Army embarked on the control of all of Manchuria.
   March 01, 1932 _ Influential people who did not ally with Zhang Xueliang gathered in Changchun and declared the founding of Manchukuo.
   May 15, 1932_Young officers who adhere to Shumei Okawa's National Socialist thought tried to carry out [Revolutionary Thesis for defeating the war] and committed terrorism, including the murder of the Prime Minister.
   After the crime, the perpetrators turned themselves in and a trial was held.
   A lawyer's claim that the crime was done to improve politics was reported in the newspapers.
   "Abusive Lieutenant Koga's insatiable self-interested political party of the zaibatsu" "Strongly speaking about the spirit of the national reform movement" "Lieutenant Mikami attacks the privileged society and resents the corruption of the political party" "Impressed by the revolutionary song, Nishikawa's impassioned speech", " People who read newspaper articles such as "Crying at the Tachibana Court for Starving Farmers" sympathized with the perpetrators.
   The newspaper company, which felt a response to the growing sympathy, said, "Indignant at the current situation, seppuku at the Prime Minister's official residence," "9 little fingers of fresh blood in response to the defendant's request for a reduced sentence," "Over 60,000 petitions for reduced sentence," and "7. Among the 10,000 petitions, 5 regular first-year students,” and "Over 60,000 letters written in blood petitions for reduced sentences," etc.
   The ruling was changed as a result of public opinion. The ringleader had been the dead person and the others were reduced to 15 years in prison.
   March 27, 1933 _ The General Assembly of the League of Nations denied the independence of Manchukuo and recognized the sovereignty of Kuomintang China. Japan, who opposed this, notified the League of Nations of its withdrawal.
   July, 1934 — The Communist army, having lost the battle with the Kuomintang army, fled west and north. At that time, the communist army was led by three people: Soviet student Konenori Qin, military adviser Otto Braun, and Zhou Enlai.
   1935.01_The party arrived in Guizhou Province and held a meeting (Zunyi Conference) to decide on a policy. Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping argued that "since we lost to the Kuomintang army because of Qin Kunxian and Otto Braun, we should take an independent line away from the Comintern." Zhou Enlai became the supreme military leader. Zhou Enlai then surrendered the post of supreme military leader to Mao Zedong, who was backed by military mighty Zhu De.
   June 01, 1935_NHK overseas broadcasting [Tokyo Rose information advertisement] started.
Icebreaker Thesis
   Stalin's speech at the 7th Congress of the Comintern in Moscow, Russia, July 25, 1935
   "Let Germany and Japan go out of control!
   But don't let them point their brunts at their homeland, Russia. Germany's brunts should be directed at France and England, while Japan's brunts should be directed at Chiang Kai-shek's China.
   Then, let the United States which finally entered the war stand before the exhausted Germany and Japan.
   The defeat of Japan and Germany is inevitable.
   Therefore, the devastated areas where Germany and Japan devastated, namely, the areas where the Japanese and German icebreakers broke through, and the impoverished Japan and Germany will be given to the communist camp."
   August 12, 1935 _ Lieutenant Colonel Saburo Aizawa, who broke into the office of the Chief of the Military Affairs Bureau of the Ministry of War, cut Tetsuzan Nagata, who was in office, with a sword.
   Like the May 15 Incident, which killed Prime Minister Inukai three years ago, it was a crime based on the idea of National Socialism.
   If Director Tetsuzan Nagata had not been killed, Fumimaro Konoe would have been unable to become the president of NHK and start broadcasting lies based on the national socialist way of thinking, and indulge Japan in the Greater East Asia War and the Pacific War.
   February 26, 1936 _ Young army officers who advocated "respect for the emperor" to kill the capitalists attempted a coup d'état with nearly 1,500 non-commissioned officers. Finance Minister Korekiyo Takahashi, Minister of Home Affairs Minoru Saito, and Watanabe He killed General Jotaro and Colonel Denzo Matsuo, and seriously injured Grand Chamberlain Kantaro Suzuki.
   September 1936 Fumimaro Konoe was appointed as the president of NHK, which had been vacant for ten years, and began broadcasting lies based on a national socialist way of thinking.
   October 1936: Chinese Communist forces reach Shaanxi province in northwestern China.
   Communist Party leaders in Shaanxi were pro-Soviet.
   The Mao Zedong faction, who had seized power from the Soviet faction at the Zunyi Conference the previous year, feared that it would be taken back, and assassinated Liu Zhidan, a local hero and Soviet faction, under the pretense of the Kuomintang forces.
   Local Communist Party cadres (Xi Zhongxun, Gao Gang, etc.), who had lost their heroes, followed the Maoists. Many of the locals were illiterate, so they set up propaganda using folk songs.
   November, 1936_“Showa Kenkyukai" was officially launched.
   Showa Kenkyukai was a den of newspaper reporters and communists, and its leader was Konoe's brain, Ryunosuke Goto.
   December 12, 1936 — Chiang Kai-shek came to Xi'an to encourage the Kuomintang army, which continued to face off against the communist army.
   Zhang Xue-liang imprisoned Chiang Kai-shek and demanded eight items (end of the civil war, reorganization of the Nanking government, release of political prisoners, lifting of the ban on popular patriotic movements, etc.).
   Chiang Kai-shek was persuaded by Zhou En-lai (former subordinate) and Song Mei-ling (wife) to agree on eight items and was released. The cornered Communist Party was able to survive thanks to Zhang Xueliang.
   Zhang Xueliang, hoping to be court-martialed, accompanied Chiang Kai-shek and was placed under Kuomintang surveillance.
   As a result, it was the Chinese Communist Party that benefited from the Zhang Zuolin bombing.
First Konoe Cabinet
   June 4, 1937 _ 1st Konoe Cabinet (Asahi Shimbun reporter Akira Kazami appointed Chief Secretary of the Cabinet. Under the pretext of promoting domestic reconciliation, violators of the Security Preservation Law, members of the Communist Party, and the 226 Incident. claiming amnesty).
   One month later, the Marco Polo Bridge Incident broke out -> Troops were dispatched under the pretext of protecting North China residents -> Negotiations for the Second Shanghai Incident broke down -> The Sino-Japanese War (China Incident) expanded -> It was announced that "we will no longer deal with the Kuomintang Government."
   They closed the road to peace.
   July 07, 1937 — In the middle of the night, live ammunition was heard at the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing. The Japanese army did not use any live ammunition during the exercises, and had informed the Kuomintang army of the implementation of the exercise in advance. A ceasefire agreement was signed between them, and the gunfight ended (Marco Polo Bridge Incident.)
   The area around the Marco Polo Bridge was in a state of chaos, with Kuomintang, Communist Party, bandits, and horse bandits intermingling. Armed clashes broke out across the country as the ceasefire agreement was not honored. The Kuomintang then teamed up with the Communist Party to fight against the Kwantung Army.
   As a result, it was the Chinese Communist Party that benefited from the Marco Polo Bridge Incident.
   July 12, 1937 _ Picasso's Guernica was unveiled at the Paris Exposition. This was to arouse public opinion to condemn the attack by the Luftwaffe that killed the citizens of Guernica. The political intent behind high prices for works of art is often hidden.
   July 29, 1937_Chinese security forces under the Chinese Autonomous Government of Jidong Anticommunist China seize the chairman of the autonomous government and stage a rebellion. (Tongzhou Incident)
   The conflict between the Kuomintang and the Kwantung Army deepened, and the unity between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party became stronger.
   As a result, it was the Chinese Communist Party that profited from the Tongzhou Incident.
   November 20, 1937_Imperial General Headquarters Government Liaison Conference established
   Members of the council are the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Minister of Finance, the Minister of War, the Minister of the Navy, the President of the Planning Board, the Chief of the General Staff, and the Chief of the General Staff. Chaired by Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe.
   December 18, 1937_Nanjing entrance ceremony
   People were killed by Chinese bandits, children were kidnapped, and there was the idea that soldiers would do bad things.
   However, the residents were relieved by the discipline of the Japanese soldiers and began to welcome the marchers.
   March 1938 Eighteen Jews fled to the border between the Soviet Union and Manchuria, but Manchukuo did not allow them to enter.
   Major General Kiichiro Higuchi, who learned of the plight of the Jews, gave them food, clothing, fuel, etc., and let them escape to Shanghai on a special train of the Manchurian Railway.
   Thousands (some say tens of thousands) of refugees were saved through this escape route, later called the Higuchi Route.
   There were many protests from Germany, but Lieutenant General Hideki Tojo, Chief of the General Staff of the Kwantung Army, ignored them. He supported Higuchi's bushido spirit.
   April 1938: The Konoe Cabinet enacted the National Mobilization Law to establish a wartime regime, and in November of the same year, issued a statement stating "construction of a new order in East Asia" as the purpose of the war.
   Communists were interrogated, but those who simply admired the Soviet Union were not condemned.
   December 1938 _ Actress Yoshiko Okada, longing for the Soviet Union, defected from Sakhalin to the Soviet Union with director Ryokichi Sugimoto. However, when they reached the Soviet Union, they were arrested and severely interrogated, and Sugimoto was executed by firing squad on suspicion of being a spy.
   Just as the post-war mass media reported that it was a paradise on earth and sent many Japanese to North Korea, the mass media at the time had advertised the Soviet Union as a paradise on earth.
President of NHK
   January 1939 The Konoe Cabinet resigned en masse after advocating the formation of the New Organization Movement and the Greater Japan Party.
   However, Konoe did not give up his position as president of NHK and continued to hold the real power of radio broadcasting.
   1939 Seigo Nakano, a member of the House of Representatives (former reporter for the Asahi Shimbun), supported the theory of advancing southward and the Tripartite Pact of Japan, Germany, and Italy, and hosted the East Asian National Conference.
   May-September 1939_Disputes over the border between Manchukuo and the People's Republic of Mongolia (Nomonhan Incident)
   July 22, 1940_Second Konoe Cabinet established. On September 27th of the same year, the Tripartite Pact between Japan, Germany and Italy was signed. In October of the same year, former Chief of the General Staff Sugiyama was placed in charge of the Imperial General Headquarters, and the Imperial Rule Assistance Association was established (Asahi Shimbun reporter Seigo Nakano was appointed general affairs manager, and national socialist activist Katsumaro Akamatsu was appointed planning manager.)
   April 13, 1941_Japan-Soviet Neutrality Pact concluded. On July 28 of the same year, the Japanese government entered southern French Indochina.
   September 1941 to April 1942_Soviet spies (Fumimaro Konoe's brains, etc.) who were conducting intelligence conspiracy activities in Japan were arrested. Asahi Shimbun editorial writer Hiroo Sasa and others destroyed related records
   From December 8, 1941 (the outbreak of war between Japan and the United States), 12 times every day, NHK radio broadcasted "History of Aggression of the United States, Great Britain and East Asia". On January 28, 1942, the first printing of 20,000 copies of the contents was published as a book.
   June 5-7, 1942 _ Japan lost 4 aircraft carriers and 300 planes in the Battle of Midway.
   Triggered by the crushing defeat in the Battle of Midway, NHK and the Asahi Shimbun took advantage of the confrontation between the operational staff and intelligence staff that made up the Imperial General Headquarters to find a way to hide the unfavorable war situation from the public (the purpose of this false broadcast was to lead Japan to defeat and create the conditions for the Soviet army to liberate the nation in Japan.)
   March 1, 1944_Asahi Graph published "Shoot! This devilish American!"
   Marx and Engels wrote in The Communist Manifesto that "the goal of communism can only be achieved through the violent overthrow of the social order."
   This mindset makes people not afraid of vandalism.
   In the early Showa period, Marxism spread among Japanese soldiers, and if there were more than a few soldiers who gave priority to cooperating with Soviet maneuvers rather than military orders, leaked information about the Japanese military, and acted on instructions from the Comintern, they would have tried to make the revolution successful by bringing it in the direction of prolonging the war rather than ending it.
   The common historical theory states that the military in the early Showa period ignored government orders and went out of control.
   Another theory is that the Comintern worked them going out of control.
   In the Nomonhan incident, the fierce battle of Port Moresby, the fierce battle of Guadalcanal Island, the battle of Imphal, etc., Masanobu Tsuji used a number of intrigues to fabricate reckless operations to be carried out, under the plan of driving a huge number of Japanese soldiers to their deaths.
   He practiced the defeated revolution theory in a divine spirit.
   After the war, Masanobu Tsuji published his book "Senko Sansenri" and claimed that the comfort women were civilian employees of the military.
Soviet invasion
   August 6, 1945_Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, August 8 atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Soviet Union declared war on Japan on the same day
   On August 14, 1945, Japan accepted the Potsdam Declaration, and on the following day, on the 15th, Emperor Hirohito broadcast the "Edict of Acceptance of Defeat" nationwide. Chiang Kai-shek gave an anti-Japanese victory speech
   However, the revolutionaries worked to delay the end of the war (Miyagi Incident).
   As if in response to this, on the 20th of the same month, the Soviet army massacred hundreds of thousands of Karafuto residents, and on the 25th of the same month, the Soviet army occupied all of Karafuto.
   August 1945 Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi resisted the Soviet army, so the Soviet army could not advance to Hokkaido. Stalin insisted that Higuchi be executed as a "war criminal" at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, and NHK also criticized Lieutenant General Higuchi for resisting the Soviet army. However, Higuchi was acquitted because the Jewish community around the world campaigned to save Higuchi.
Meaning of masochistic view of history
   The journalists plotted their own country's defeat in the war and instigated the war against the United States by voicing the liberation of Asian colonies.
   The reason why the media are inciting China, Korea and South Korea to call themselves victorious nations and demand an apology and compensation is because they have not given up on the defeat revolution.
   Imprinting a masochistic view of history as the result of GHQ psychological operations is also a method of brainwashing hatred of the United States.
   The Asahi Shimbun and NHK denounce Japan's militarism and inhumane acts in a "sayoku" tone.
   The modus operandi is similar to that of Fumimaro Konoe, who quickly approached General MacArthur in order to take the initiative in post-war politics, pushed all responsibility onto the military, and refused to blame the members of the Showa Kenkyukai, who were the culprits.
   Asahi Shimbun's heavyweights are listed as members of the Showa Kenkyukai, which is the culprit, but they falsified history as if the imperial system, the military, and monopoly capitalism were the culprits of militarization and aggressive wars.
   Katsuichi Honda fabricated the "Nanjing Massacre" photo.
   WGIP (War Guilt Information Program) is said to be a word that means a GHQ psychological operation to embed the following masochistic view of history into the Japanese consciousness.
   ・Japan has surrendered unconditionally, so it has no right to object to anything.
   ・The Japanese must repent and atone for the atrocities they committed in Asian countries.
   The dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki hastened the end of the war and reduced casualties among American soldiers.
   However, as you can see from the story that the brainwashing operation was carried out in absolute secrecy by the "WGIP = Japanese brainwashing operation of the US occupation forces'', this is nothing more than an urban legend that lacks credibility.
   For journalists such as NHK, Asahi, and Mainichi, who once advocated the decolonization of Asia and plotted a defeat revolution in their own country to inflame the war against the United States, the masochistic view of history that places all responsibility for the war on the military is very convenient.
   There is no denying that it is a powerful tool.
   False dramas that include some scene in which special police officers and military police use the word "non-citizens" to obstruct the freedom of the common people is broadcast persistently, and a "dark view of history" full of misunderstandings.
   Then prejudices is conveyed to the subconscious of viewers.
   The intention of broadcasting that "the whole nation should reflect" is also on that flow.
   The Potsdam Declaration, which Japan accepted in August 1945, was issued in the names of the Prime Minister of Great Britain, the President of the United States of America, and the President of the Republic of China. The Soviet Union later joined and ratified. The CCP was not an opponent to fight against. Moreover, it goes without saying that the inhabitants of the Korean Peninsula and the Japanese archipelago, which formed part of the Empire of Japan, were not warring enemies each other.
   However, the journalists, who are obsessed with the defeat of the war, lie to China, South Korea, and North Korea that they are the victorious nations, and then encourage them to criticize and blackmail Japan without reason.
   The reason why they are trying to quarrel between Japan and the United States without being discouraged is because they have not given up on the defeat revolution.
   The press, who are extremely afraid of re-examination of war responsibility, have sacredized the masochistic view of history and made it seem like it was a sin to even question it. "We will not tolerate historical revisionism" is the amulet for them.
Postwar Case Files
   The Potsdam Declaration, which Japan accepted, was issued in the name of the Prime Minister of Great Britain, the President of the United States of America, and the President of the Republic of China.
   The Soviet Union later joined and ratified it.
   The CCP was not an opponent.
   Nor were the inhabitants of the Korean Peninsula and the Japanese archipelago, who formed part of the Empire of Japan, warring enemies each other.
   However, journalists who are obsessed with defeating the war are trying to trick China, South Korea, and North Korea into lying that they are the victorious nations, and then blaming and blackmailing Japan without reason.
   And Koreans hide their real names and give themselves Japanese names.
   Their crimes are either reported as crimes committed by Japanese people, or the crimes themselves are not reported.
   The Communist Party of China was not an opponent of resistance.
   The people of the Korean peninsula and the people of the mainland, however, were not enemies of war, but the journalists, who insisted on defeating the war, tried to make China, South Korea, and North Korea lie that they were victorious in that war.
   When I went to the library and researched Korean crimes, I found the following records:
   On October 22, 1945, the Oani incident occurred.
   Around 9:00 a.m., 12 Koreans who were working at the Ani Mine in Aniai Town, Kitaakita District, Akita Prefecture went to Fushikage Village in Oani Village, Kitaakita District, Akita Prefecture, about 16 kilometers deep in the mountains, and invaded a jointly managed chestnut grove.
   A villager spotted him picking up chestnuts, and when he was warned, a brawl broke out, in which several people on both sides were injured.
   At 1:00 p.m., about 40 Koreans attacked, so the police and the defense team immediately rushed to the scene and rushed to suppress them.
   On December 24, 1945, the Ikuta Police Station was attacked.
   Around 9:00 p.m., a mob of over 50 Koreans broke into the police station shouting, "Let the Okayama detectives come here!" After putting the officer under house arrest with a pistol, Japanese sword, and dagger, he began searching for an investigator from the Okayama Prefectural Police Department.
   While the investigators were able to escape, the mob cut the police phone lines inside the station, leaving the station without any means of communication with the outside world.
   Afterwards, the riot was suppressed by Allied forces who heard about the incident.
   Before the attack, there was a gun robbery incident by a group of seven in Okayama City, and an investigator from the Okayama Prefectural Police came to Kobe City on a business trip to pursue the robbery.
   Because the Ikuta Police Station cooperated with this investigator, they were attacked by a mob.
   Although the documents listed below certainly indicate that it was a group of Koreans who set out to retaliate, it does not say whether or not the criminals in the original pistol robbery case were Koreans.
   On December 29, 1945, the Naoetsu station lynching murder occurred.
   Around 7:00 pm, the train from Niigata to Osaka arrived at Kuroi Station on the Shinetsu Main Line of the Japanese National Railways.
   A group of three Koreans tried to get on the train, but they could not get on because it was full.
   There, they smashed the window glass of the train and tried to get on board, but were blocked by a male passenger, so they had no choice but to hang on the deck and go to the next station, Naoetsu Station.
   When the train arrived at Naoetsu Station, the three men confronted the man who had blocked them, saying, "We couldn't get on from the gate, so we had no choice but to break the glass and try to get on, but why did you interfere?" The man objected, saying, "There is no way to get in through the window," so he dragged the man down to the platform of Naoetsu Station, took out pipes and shovels, which are station equipment, and attacked the man and beat him.
   The man suffered more than a dozen injuries to his head and left eye, and died.
   When the police were urgently deployed, they found a group of three who were treating wounds at a hospital in Naoetsu.
   They pleaded guilty and was arrested as a murderer.
   On January 3, 1946, the Tomisaka Police Station was attacked.
   At noon, a police officer directing traffic spotted two trucks carrying a large number of suspicious persons heading toward the Tomisaka Police Station at the Kasugacho intersection, and immediately contacted the police station.
   Shortly after receiving the call, the truck arrived at the Tomisaka Police Station, and about 80 Koreans rushed into the police station, breaking the restraints of the police and demanding the immediate release of the detained Koreans in Japan.
   Sensing the danger, the police called another police and called for the security forces to come to the rescue.
   Twenty Koreans in Japan occupied the telephone room, and communication with the outside world was cut off.
   The chief of the police station, who was involved in the negotiations, refused, saying, "No Koreans have been detained."
   However, Korean residents in Japan doubted that and began to search inside the detention center.
   Police officers who tried to stop them were beaten and kicked, causing a series of injuries.
   Koreans in Japan found the suspect in the detention center and took him out.
   While accusing that 'The police chief lied that the Koreans were not detained', they robbed a truck that was passing by the Tomisaka Police Station and fled.
   On January 9, 1946, the Ikuta Police Station was attacked.
   In the following year, after a gambling group was arrested under the Sannomiya Guard, 30 to 40 Koreans invaded the station again with the aim of recapturing the criminal, but this incident was also suppressed with the cooperation of the Occupation Forces.
   3 masterminds were arrested.
   On May 13, 1946, the Nagasaki police station was attacked.
   At 10:30 a.m., a 280-member police force launched a simultaneous crackdown, arresting 150 Japanese, 26 Koreans, and 6 Chinese, and taking them to the Nagasaki Police Station.
   Immediately after that, the Korean Association of Japan and Chinese groups stormed the Nagasaki Police Station and demanded the suspect's immediate release, but the police chief refused, saying that they could not release him before he was questioned.
   Around 2:30 p.m., about 200 people, including Koreans and Chinese, surrounded and attacked the Nagasaki police station with bats and iron bars.
   One police officer was killed and 10 injured.
   After that, he attacked the Higashihama-cho police box and the Minatomachi police box, and assaulted the police officers.
   On August 5, 1946, the Toyama Station Police Station was attacked.
   Around 6:50 pm, black rice crackdown was carried out at Toyama Station, and three Koreans were arrested.
   However, two Koreans who were watching interrupted and forced the three to flee.
   As a result, two self-governing corps members were arrested for obstructing the execution of official duties and taken to the police station in front of Toyama Station, where about 30 Koreans surrounded them, creating a dangerous atmosphere.
   I asked the police station for help, but before that, a big fight broke out.
   Immediately after that, a relief team rushed in and forced the Koreans out.
   A police officer was injured in the brawl.
   On September 22, 1946, the Sakamachi Incident occurred.
   Around 12:50 a.m., eight officers from the Murakami Police Station went to Sakamachi Station to crack down on black rice.
   As soon as the officer appeared, about 50 Koreans and Chinese disappeared all at once.
   When the police tried to seize the black rice left on the platform, the outlaws attacked them, yelling "Beat!" The train arrived while the police were fighting back, and 20 Koreans got off the train and joined the outlaws.
   After assaulting the police, they boarded the train and escaped.
   In the afternoon of this day, we received information that they were trying to transport black rice again.
   When 10 police officers headed to the scene and tried to crack down, about 50 Koreans and Chinese attacked them and punched and kicked them.
   The Kanaya Village Defense Corps rushed to the aid of the police, but on the contrary, they confiscated their knives and wooden swords and turned them into weapons.
   After that, the order to withdraw was issued, so the police and others temporarily withdrew.
   After that, officers from the Niigata Military Administration Department of the Occupation Army arrived at the site and told Koreans and Chinese that they had to obey Japanese laws as long as they lived in Japan, refusal to do so would be contrary to Allied directives." With the approval of the military administration, the police were able to crack down firmly, and 12 people were arrested.
   From September 26th to 29th, 1946, the Niigata Daily was attacked.
   Sixteen Koreans from the Federation of Koreans in Japan visited the Niigata Nippo and told both the Niigata Nippo and the Yomiuri Shimbun that they had admitted that the reporting of the Sakamachi Incident was wrong, and that they had misreported the news to the citizens of Niigata Prefecture through a radio broadcast.
   Please make a statement that it was." Both companies decided to postpone the request until the 29th, saying that they could not give an immediate answer.
   After that, the Yomiuri Shimbun made a concession on September 28 and agreed to publish an apology article admitting the misinformation.
   On September 29, 16 Koreans visited the Niigata Nippo again and asked for a response from the Niigata Nippo.
   Niigata Nippo replied, "We will wait for the results of the investigation by the police and take appropriate action," and refused their demands.
   The Koreans were indignant, and threw tea bowls at them to go on a rampage all at once, destroying equipment in the company.
   The Niigata Police Station arrested the Koreans for violating the Act on Punishment of Violence etc.
   On December 20, 1946, the Prime Minister's Official Residence Demonstration Incident occurred.
   At the national convention, about 10,000 Koreans gathered.
   Kyuichi Tokuda of the Japanese Communist Party was also present.
   At 1:30 p.m., a demonstration march began with placards reading, "absolutely opposed to the policy of massacring Koreans" and "the Yoshida Cabinet is an enemy of Japan." When they approached the prime minister's official residence around 2:00 pm, they suddenly ignored the police's restraint and rushed to the main gate of the official residence.
   The police tried to close the gate to prevent entry, but the demonstrators rampaged by throwing stones and brandishing placards, and finally entered the prime minister's official residence.
   At about 2:30 p.m., the U.S.
   Gendarmerie was called out and soon dispersed all the demonstrators.
   In the incident, 23 police officers were seriously injured and two pistols were stolen.
   On October 20, 1947, the Obanazawa Police Station was attacked.
   Seven Koreans planned an attack on the police station in order to vent their frustration over the police's raid on black rice, and boarded the Obanazawa police station of the Tateoka Police Station at around 3:00 pm.
   Since the police were absent, they destroyed the objects inside the police station and withdrew after removing the gatepost.
   After that, a police officer who returned from going out was surprised to see the devastation inside the police station and immediately contacted the police station.
   Immediately after that, the seven Koreans mentioned above and 30 other Koreans surrounded the police station and committed violence such as throwing braziers.
   With the support of the neighboring Shinjo Police Station and the Occupation Army, the Tateoka Police Station arrested 29 people.
   From April 23 to 25, 1948, the Hanshin Education Incident occurred.
   At 9:00, a people's rally against the oppression of Korean schools was held at Otemae Park in front of Osaka Castle, Osaka Prefecture.
   More than 7,000 people, including Koreans living in Japan and Japanese members of the Kansai District Committee of the Japanese Communist Party, gathered at the rally.
   16 representatives were selected and decided to negotiate with Osaka Governor Bunzo Akama at the Osaka Prefectural Government Building.
   At 12:30, negotiations between the deputy governor and 16 Korean representatives began at the Osaka Prefectural Governor's Office, but no agreement was reached.
   At 3:00 p.m., shouts were heard from more than 7,000 people, including Koreans in Japan and Japanese members of the Japanese Communist Party Kansai Regional Committee.
   At the same time, more than 50 young men formed a corps and formed a scrum to break through the blocking line in front of the Osaka Prefectural Office.
   At 3:30 p.m., following the Action Corps, more than 7,000 people, including Koreans in Japan and Japanese members of the Japanese Communist Party's Kansai Regional Committee, violently stormed into the Osaka Prefectural Office and occupied the corridors up to the third floor.
   The lieutenant governor escaped through a wartime underpass under the guidance of a police officer.
   Around 5:00 p.m., the crowd stormed into the governor's office and took actions such as breaking down doors and furniture.
   Tasuke Masuyama, who had been dispatched to the Japanese Communist Party's Osaka District Committee, rushed to the governor's office with Kanichi Kawakami, a member of the House of Representatives, but the situation was out of control.
   At night, bonfires were lit in various places around Osaka Castle by Koreans living in Japan and Japanese members of the Kansai District Committee of the Japanese Communist Party, and the Choren tried to create a place for negotiations with Kawakami as the representative.
   However, the U.S.military and armed police arrive there and fight with Koreans in Japan and Japanese members of the Japanese Communist Party Kansai District Committee.
   One Korean resident in Japan died and 20 were injured.
   Thirty-one officers were injured.
   179 people were arrested for rioting.
   On April 25, Choren and about 300 Japanese people stormed the Minami Police Station and demanded the release of the arrested, but the police fired warning shots at the protesting crowd and drove them away.
   On April 26, the following day, the Choren held the "People's Rally Against Oppression of Korean Schools" in Higashinari Ward and Asahi Ward, Osaka.
   In the afternoon, negotiations were held again between the Korean representatives and the Governor of Akama Prefecture.
   At 3:40 p.m., Colonel Craig of the Osaka Military Administration Department, who was waiting in a separate room, ordered the suspension of negotiations and the dissolution of the 20,000 Korean residents in Otemae Park.
   In response, 1,600 Korean residents in Japan headed for the Osaka Prefectural Office again and started throwing stones at the line of defense of the armed police.
   Armed police force fire trucks to spray water, rushed into demonstrators and opened fire with pistols.
   Kim Taichi, a 16-year-old Zainichi Korean, died in this clash.
   The arrestees were put on trial by a military court, and nine Japanese and eight Koreans in Japan were sentenced to four years or less of hard labor.
   Among them, Park Ju-beom, then chairman of the Hyogo Prefectural Headquarters of the Chongryon, served time in Kobe Prison and was released on parole on the grounds of illness on November 25, 1949, but died just a few hours later.
   After the incident was resolved, the Osaka Municipal Police Department received a letter of appreciation from the US Army 25th Division Headquarters.
   On the 10th, Hyogo Governor Yukio Kishida issued a blockade order to Korean schools.
   In response to this, the Choren visited the Hyogo prefectural office on the 14th and demanded negotiations with Kishida.
   In response to this, the Choren visited the Hyogo prefectural office on the 14th and demanded negotiations with Kishida, but visitors' behavior often became intimidating and threatening.
   On April 23, the police and the US military MP blocked the Korean school Nada and Higashi-Kobe schools, and on the following day, on the 24th, Koreans and Japanese living in Japan gathered in front of the Hyogo prefectural office to protest the blockade.
   At 9:30, Governor Kishida, Kobe City Mayor Kenkichi Kodera, Chief Public Prosecutor, and 15 others discussed the provisional injunction to close Korean schools and countermeasures against protest meetings by Korean residents in Japan.
   Information that negotiations were under way reached the Korean Federation, and about 100 Koreans and Japanese in Japan rushed into the Hyogo prefectural office.
   After occupying the governor's reception room and destroying equipment, etc., he breaks down the wall and rushes into the governor's office to abduct and confine Governor Kishida and the MP.
   Koreans and Japanese who broke into the governor's office cut off the telephone line and cut off contact with the outside, "withdrawing the school closure order", "cancelling the provisional disposition to close the Korean school", and "approving the continuation of the Korean school".
   He demanded Governor Kishida to release the arrested Koreans.
   Kishida, who was in a state of half confinement, pledged to accept various requests at 17:00.
   However, at 22:00 that day, Governor Kishida, Deputy Governor Satoru Yoshikawa, Chief Prosecutor Ichimaru, Deputy Prosecutor Tanabe, Chief of Hyogo Prefectural Police Idei, and Chief of Kobe Municipal Police Bureau Furuyama were summoned to the Hyogo Prefectural Military Administration Department of the occupying forces.
   At 23:00, the Hyogo Prefectural Military Administration Department declared a state of emergency.
   Due to the declaration of a state of emergency by the Ministry of Military Administration, all police officers in Hyogo Prefecture and Kobe City were placed under the command of the commander-in-chief of the military police of the United States Army, and a thorough arrest of intruders into the Hyogo Prefectural Office was ordered.
   Due to the declaration of a state of emergency by the Ministry of Military Administration, the pledge to meet the demands of Korean residents in Japan, which had once been accepted by Governor Kishida, was invalidated.
   In the early morning of the 25th, police officers under the command of the MP and the commander of the US military police began arresting those who entered the prefectural office, and by the 29th, 1,590 or 7,295 people had been arrested.
   Kazutomo Horikawa, a member of the Kobe City Council of the Japanese Communist Party, was also detained.
   On April 28, the state of emergency declared by the US military government was lifted.
   Of those rounded up, the main ones were detained and 23 were brought to military trial.
   Horikawa, who was the only Japanese defendant, was sentenced to 10 years of hard labor, and the Korean resident in Japan was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor, and after completing his sentence, he was deported to his home country.
   On October 11th and 12th, 1948, the Hyojyogawara Incident occurred.
   The opening ceremony started at 10:00.
   Although there were troubles such as the Sendai City Police issuing a warning over the hoisting of the North Korean flag, the first day ended without any particular confusion.
   On October 12th, the second day, an athletic meet was held.
   U.S.military police ordered the march to stop because they marched with the national flag on their heads instead of raising it.
   After that, the athletic meet resumed, and the closing ceremony was held around 16:30.
   At that time, several Koreans who had drunk alcohol entered the hall and began to sing.
   People who agreed with this appeared one after another, and the atmosphere was disturbing, such as marching with red flags.
   Among them, a group carrying the North Korean flag marched, ignoring the restraint of the US military police and continuing the march, so the US military police confiscated the flag and arrested four participants.
   A subsequent U.S.Gendarmerie investigation arrested two more.
   On December 9, 1948, the Ube Incident occurred.
   When about 200 Koreans gathered at the Ube Civic Center and held a livelihood support people's convention, the Occupation Army military police and police arrested the chairman of the Yamaguchi Prefectural Headquarters of the Korean Federation in Japan.
   The participants of the tournament collided with the police in a collective attempt to recapture the suspect, causing a commotion with many injured on both sides, but was suppressed by police firing.
   On January 25, 1949, the Masuda Incident occurred.
   Based on a tip that smuggled goods were hidden in a Korean village in Masuda-cho, Mino-gun, Shimane Prefecture, two officers from the Shimane Military Administration Department and two economic investigators from the Occupation Forces embarked on an investigation without a warrant.
   However, it was refused on the grounds that "a search without a warrant is illegal," so 10 police officers helped seize the illegal goods, but they were recaptured by about 100 Koreans.
   The next day, 9 suspects were arrested, but at night about 200 people stormed the police station demanding the release of the suspects and tried to break into the station, resulting in a brawl with the police, and 48 people were arrested.
   Nine of those arrested were indicted and found guilty of rioting.
   The Edagawa Incident occurred from April 6 to 13, 1949.
   Around 6:00 p.m., three investigators found the main culprit and attempted to arrest him.
   However, the main culprit claimed to be someone else, and several Koreans around him were also watching the investigators, so they switched to voluntary accompaniment.
   Then, when he tried to go outside, the main culprit pushed the investigator away and ran away barefoot.
   Investigators tried to stop him by firing three threatening shots from his pistol, but as he continued to run away, he finally fired at the main culprit.
   They managed to arrest him, but the main culprit was injured in the process.
   About 40 Koreans who were watching this attacked the two investigators saying, "Kill the guy who killed your friend." The investigators were taken to a facility of the Japan-Korean Federation.
   Another investigator sensed the seriousness of the situation and called the Fukagawa Police Station and Tsukishima Police Station, which have jurisdiction over the Edagawa district, using the telephone of a nearby private house.
   Soon after, support units from Fukagawa Police Station and Tsukishima Police Station rushed to the Edagawa branch of the Federation of Korean Residents in Japan, but they met with fierce resistance, and the police were injured one after another.
   But the Koreans softened their stance abruptly when the US military police came.
   In the negotiations that followed, the Korean side promised to hand over the perpetrator of the assault, but even on April 8, they did not hand it over, and on the contrary, demanded disciplinary action against the investigators.
   From April 9, the police set up a checkpoint on the bridge over the Edagawa district and started checking all passers-by.
   Concurrently, an internal investigation was conducted.
   As a result, a suspect who assaulted a police officer was identified, and a simultaneous investigation was conducted on April 13, and five suspects were arrested.
   10 more arrested by April 19.
   From April 7 to 11, 1949, the Takata Dubrok Incident occurred.
   Around 6:00 a.m., the crackdown unit arrived at the Korean village and began crackdowns.
   Since it was early in the morning, the crackdown itself was carried out in an orderly manner, and it was lifted around 8:30 am.
   Around 10:40 a.m., Koreans began to gather at the Takada City Police Station, and by noon the number had swelled to 200, demanding the release of the arrestees.
   However, the police firmly refused, so they threw stones at the police station and damaged more than ten windows.
   About 200 Koreans gathered in front of the police station on April 8 and demanded their release.
   At noon on April 9, a Korean woman appeared at the Takata tax office.
   Since I was alone, the police officer who was guarding the tax office thought it was an ordinary user and let his guard down.
   I've been When the security police advised her to leave, she started a sit-in, shouting, "Murderer!" At 1:00 p.m., many Korean men rushed in and tried to break into the tax office, causing skirmishes and injuries on both sides.
   On April 10, it was found that illicit sake was being brewed in Takada City as well, based on the confession of the arrestee, so the Shinetsu Branch of the Federation of Korean Residents in Japan and other locations were searched.
   On April 11, about 500 Koreans gathered in Takada City and held a demonstration march.
   They yelled at the citizens, "The police are unfairly oppressing Koreans," and "Set fire to ash the city of Takada." The police also arrested 12 ringleaders of the demonstration, and the incident began to settle.
   The Hongo Incident occurred from June 2 to 11, 1949.
   The executives of the Federation of Korean Residents in Japan protested that police officers at the Hongo Police Station of the Fukui Prefectural Headquarters Wakasa District Police Station had created a map of the Korean district.
   The cadres returned once and surrounded the police station with 70 Koreans in Japan.
   Then he assaulted the police officer inside and continued to stay there.
   The Wakasa district police station dispatched police officers, but they still remained and finally disbanded on June 4.
   The Korean side demanded the dismissal of the assaulting police officer, compensation for damages to the victims, and an apology to the Koreans.
   Police headed to the site on June 10 to arrest the two Koreans.
   200 Koreans who were waiting threw rocks and feces to obstruct the arrest, but they managed to force their way through and arrested the two as planned.
   After that, the Koreans continued their demonstrations, such as standing in front of the police station shouting 'ethnic oppression, reappearance of the fascist police,' and distributing leaflets titled 'The truth about the fascist national police Wakasa district police.'
   On August 20, 1949, the Shimonoseki Incident [riot] occurred.
   Around 11:00 p.m.on the 19th, about 150 Koreans in Japan gathered in front of the office of the Korean Federation and held a rally to criticize Mindan.
   The rally itself ended without any particular problems, but members of the Choren who were in charge of guarding and members of the Mindan met on the street and got into a brawl, in which the Choren was injured by the Japanese sword possessed by the Mindan.
   At around 2:30 am on August 20, the Choren summoned about 200 members to raid the Shimonoseki branch of the Mindan and the homes of the members of the Mindan.
   Then, they disbanded after committing violence such as looting money and goods from the damaged houses.
   As a result, the city was temporarily thrown into chaos even though it was early in the morning.
   The Shimonoseki City Police immediately requested support from the Yamaguchi Prefecture Headquarters of the National Local Police.
   The national local police issued an emergency call to all police in Yamaguchi Prefecture, including the municipal police, and mobilized students from the police academy.
   After the arrival of support units from various parts of the prefecture, they began to search the facilities of the Choren and Mindan all at once.
   On the following day, August 21, the Shimonoseki City Police and the National Local Police set up the "Joint Security Headquarters for the Shimonoseki Incident," and set up checkpoints throughout the city to prevent escape.
   In the end, 208 people were arrested, and 75 people were indicted for attempted murder and rioting.
   On March 20, 1950, the Taito Kaikan Incident occurred.
   At 9:00 a.m. on the 10th, officials from the Tokyo Metropolitan Government went to Taito Kaikan.
   The Metropolitan Police Department has put a large number of police officers on alert in preparation for unforeseen circumstances.
   The official ordered the hall to be handed over, but the former Choren not only ignored it, but also resisted by throwing stones.
   Therefore, the requisition on that day was temporarily canceled, and it was decided to requisition on March 20.
   From the day before the scheduled requisition date, the former Choren set up a barricade at the entrance of the hall and patroled the surrounding roads to be vigilant.
   At 7:00 a.m. on March 20, an official tried to enter the Taito Kaikan but was interrupted.
   They then threw rocks and chili powder at the police officers who were guarding them.
   Therefore, the police carried out a forced entry and arrested 119 Koreans.
   On August 15, 1950, the Tsurajima Incident occurred.
   On September 8, 1949, the Ministry of Justice issued notification No.51 under the direction of the GHQ, and ordered the dissolution of the Choren in Japan and the Korean Democratic Youth League in Japan by applying the Ordinance for Regulation of Groups.
   Chosen Gakko and Mindan Soren also received requests for dissolution.
   These measures had a direct impact on the lives of Korean residents in Japan.
   Some of our Korean compatriots, who were worried about the future, shouted for a revolution, illegally occupied public facilities, and armed themselves with molotov cocktails.
   Amid such unrest, about 700 Koreans gathered to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the liberation of Korea in Tsurashima-cho, Asakuchi-gun, Okayama Prefecture.
   15 police officers were injured in the incident.
   From November 20th to 27th, 1950, the attack on the Nagata Ward Office [the Second Kobe Incident] took place.
   At 1:00 p.m., about 200 Koreans stormed the Nagata Ward Office in Kobe City.
   The demand is "exemption of municipal tax" and "thorough public assistance".
   However, since the ward mayor did not approve of this, he put the ward mayor under house arrest and made a fuss.
   The Kobe City Police were immediately dispatched and 30 people were arrested.
   At 11:00 a.m. on November 24, about 300 Koreans once again stormed the Nagata Ward Office and demanded an interview with the mayor.
   When the head of the ward refused, the Koreans stormed into the ward office, smashed the window glass, and violently attacked police officers who were dispatched.
   On the morning of November 27, the police received information that about 600 Koreans from Himeji, Akashi, Amagasaki, and other cities were heading to Kobe to seek the recapture of their comrades who had been arrested on November 24.
   The police issued an emergency summons to the Kobe City Police Department and about 3,000 police officers from the Hyogo Prefecture Headquarters of the National Police, and ordered them to stand by.
   About 1,000 Koreans, including those living in Kobe City, gathered at the Nishi-Kobe Korean School in Nagata Ward.
   The Koreans held a rally for reunification of the motherland, prepared rocks and clubs for throwing stones, and the situation became disturbing.
   I will put it to the people's court," he said, ignoring the order.
   At around 3:20 p.m., they left the school and started marching.
   Finally, the police began arresting the protesters near the Minatogawa Ohashi stop of the Kobe City Tramway, but the demonstrators put up a fierce resistance, and about 60 people were arrested.
   The remnants moved north along the Shinminato River and attacked the Nagata Ward Office and the Nagata Tax Office, breaking the windows.
   179 people were eventually arrested.
   On January 23, 1951, the Yokkaichi Incident occurred.
   When they tried to take over the former Chosen Yokkaichi branch, about 20 Koreans who were present threw utensils and glass fragments, blinded them with ash and chili peppers, and threw concentrated sulfuric acid on them to interfere with the takeover.
   As a result, seven enforcement officers were seriously or slightly injured, requiring two to three weeks to fully heal.
   The police were dispatched and arrested 15 people on suspicion of obstructing the performance of official duties.
   On March 7, 1951, the Oji Korean School Incident occurred.
   On that day, the Oji Police Station blocked the surrounding roads and tried to prevent the influx of the crowd other than the students of the school, but the crowd ignored it and eventually 2,000 people gathered.
   The meeting started at 10:00 am.
   Meanwhile, the crowd outside the school resisted the police by throwing rocks and spraying pepper powder, so a police officer tried to take a picture from the second floor of a nearby private house.
   However, the crowd who saw it rushed into the private house, assaulted the police officer, and destroyed the camera.
   Kuramae police officers who had come to assist him tried to rescue him, but he was attacked on the contrary.
   The Metropolitan Police Department finally decided to forcibly disperse the crowd, and the police force tried to rush into the school.
   The crowd resisted by throwing bricks and stones, but by 2:50 p.m., they were all expelled from the school.
   Police said 28 people were seriously injured in the incident.
   On June 13, 1951, the Kanagawa Incident occurred.
   Kanagawa Prefectural Korean School PTA Federation Athletic Meet was held at Aoki Elementary School in Kanagawa Ward, Yokohama City.
   When they tried to arrest him, they tried to interfere with it, and a big fight broke out.
   This resulted in several casualties on both sides.
   After the sports day ended, about 500 Korean residents in Japan rushed to the Yokohama City Police Headquarters, forming a scrum in front of the entrance and screaming.
   As a result, the Yokohama City Police mobilized about 1,000 police officers and arrested 28 people on suspicion of violating public security ordinances.
   On October 22, 1951, a group blackmail incident occurred at the Shimosato Village Office.
   About 200 Korean residents in Japan rushed to the village office in Shimozato village to petition for "welfare protection" and "opposition to deportation."
   On December 1, 1951, the Higashinari Police Station was attacked.
   Around 11:00 am, Koreans gathered at the former Miyukimori Korean Elementary School and marched to the Higashinari Police Station.
   After that, they gathered at Motomiyukimori Korean School and arrived in front of the main gate of the Higashinari Police Department at around 12:15.
   In addition, about 20 people rushed from the east road and 20 people from the south road of the police station and tried to rush into the police station, but the Osaka Metropolitan Police Department riot police stopped them.
   Protesters threw rocks and hot peppers as well as three bottles of cider containing chloropicric acid.
   Three people were arrested for obstruction of justice in this case.
   On the afternoon of December 16th, they held an illegal demonstration and were divided into three units and attacked factories in Ikuno Ward and Tatsumi-cho.
   On December 18, 1951, the Hino Incident occurred.
   At 11:30 a.m. on October 18, members of the Korean United Democratic Front in Japan and the Fatherland Defense Corps gathered in Sakuragawa Village, Gamo County, Shiga Prefecture, and tried to mount speakers on their bicycles and hold a bicycle demonstration.
   It was an illegal demonstration that had not been notified under the Shiga Prefecture Public Security Ordinance.
   The National Local Police Shiga Prefectural Headquarters Gamo Higashi District Police Station tried to stop the protesters, but the demonstrators forced their way through and entered Hino Town.
   The demonstrators made speeches in front of the Hino Post Office, such as "No forced repatriation of Koreans" and "No military bases." During that time, Koreans living in the surrounding area gathered to picket and build barricades.
   And 20 people were arrested for obstruction of justice after attacking the police with clubs.
   February 21-23, 1952.a wooden district police station was attacked.
   The Aomori Prefectural Headquarters Kizo District Police Station has arrested two Korean residents in Japan on suspicion of causing injury.
   In response to this, dozens of Koreans in Japan rushed to the daily police station demanding the immediate release of the arrested.
   On February 23, about 70 Koreans in Japan tried to break into the police station and got into a scuffle with a security police officer, and the glass door at the entrance of the police station was destroyed.
   At 7:00 p.m. on the same day, 11 police officers from the Hirosaki District Police Station, who rushed to help, were guarding a wooden station on the JNR Gono Line when they were surrounded by Koreans living in Japan and had their batons stolen.
   The Tanagawa Incident occurred from March 26 to 30, 1952.
   The Tanagawa-cho police, with the support of the neighboring National Local Police Sennan District Police Station, had repeatedly exposed the illegal brewing of alcoholic beverages by Koreans, but the number continued to increase.
   On March 24, 1952, the Osaka Regional Taxation Bureau held a joint investigative meeting with the Izumisano Tax Office, the Osaka District Public Prosecutor's Office Kishiwada Branch, and the National District Police Sennan District Office, and decided to crack down all at once.
   Around 5:40 a.m. on March 26, 2014, a joint investigation team of 45 National Tax Bureau officials, 1 prosecutor, 1 assistant prosecutor, 12 public prosecutor's assistant officers, and 50 uniformed police officers gathered at the Sennan district office.
   Divided into 10 groups, they rode 10 trucks and headed to 9 locations in Tanagawa-cho and 1 location in Fukahi-cho, for a total of 10 counterfeiting sites.
   Despite encountering resistance from Koreans at various parts of the bootlegging factory disguised as a barn and a pigsty, public prosecutor's office officials arrested the suspect, and the National Taxation Bureau staff seized liquor brewing equipment such as Dobrok, Koji, and distillers as evidence.
   Each group then gathered in front of Tanagawa Station on the Nankai Electric Railway Tanagawa Line.
   At that time, about 200 Koreans, led by women and girls, sat down in front of the truck and blocked traffic by placing large stones on the road.
   While the police who tried to remove them met with fierce resistance, the number of Koreans, encouraged by weak security, increased further.
   Incited by the roars demanding the right to live, the Koreans rushed to the trucks, yelling, "Kill me!" He committed violent acts, such as knocking down, destroying, and robbing evidence, and letting suspects escape.
   Three trucks escaped from this crisis and headed for the meeting place, the Osaka Detention Center, but the remaining seven trucks were stranded on the national highway in front of the station.
   It was a failure caused by a weak security system with five police officers per team.
   Prosecutor Otsubo, the general commander of the joint investigation team, and Sennan District Police Chief, who received an unforeseen situation, requested support from the Fukahimachi Police Inspectorate to the Osaka Prefectural Police Headquarters.
   The investigative team decided to defer the arrest to a later date, and in preparation for the arrest at a later date, they took a number of photographs of the scene, reinflated the tires while eliminating obstructions on the road, and withdrew to the Sennan police station.
   That was around 7:30 am.
   Around 8:00 a.m., about 30 Koreans stormed the Tanagawa Police Station and protested, "What are you going to do with our lives?" Soon, three representatives will be left and withdrawn.
   Around 9:00 a.m., a journalist from the Mainichi Shimbun's Osaka head office who had come to cover the story was on his way to the Tanagawa Police Station to cover the investigation into the Dubrok bootlegging district.
   An incident occurred in which he was injured.
   In addition, the Joto tax office employee also injured his right hand in this commotion.
   The Osaka Prefectural Police Headquarters, which took the situation seriously, spent two days on the 27th and 28th identifying suspects and collecting evidence from evidence photographs of the scene, police officers who were dispatched to the scene, and testimonies of third parties.
   As a result, 17 suspects were identified.
   On the 29th, he received an arrest warrant and search warrant from the Osaka District Public Prosecutor's Office on suspicion of violating the Act on Punishment of Violent Acts, obstructing the execution of public duties, bodily injury, and violating the Liquor Tax Act.
   At 2 a.m. on March 30 of the same year, about 450 people, including public prosecutors, uniformed and plainclothes police officers and police academy students from 8 district police stations in Osaka Prefecture, gathered at the Osaka Prefectural Police Academy.
   After 5:00 a.m., about 30 cars and trucks were dispatched to 21 locations in 5 districts of Odadaira, Asahi, Higashi, Minato, and Fukahimachi Hyogo, and they were arrested and seized.
   When an investigator tried to arrest a suspect, they were hit with human feces, had their hands bitten, were thrown at random with water buckets, tubs, maki, etc., wielded hoes and clubs, and threw pepper powder.
   Three investigators suffered bruises, etc., but there was no organized group resistance as much as last time.
   At the time of this arrest, the three suspected masterminds of the assault on the 26th escaped.
   Of the 27 people arrested, including emergency arrests, five were released after questioning.
   The remaining 25 were sent to the Osaka District Public Prosecutor's Office on suspicion of the Liquor Tax Law, obstructing the execution of public duties, bodily injury, and obstructing business, and 19 were indicted.
   During the arrest activities on March 30, one Korean was questioned and fled.
   After a scuffle with a police officer who caught up, the trigger of the pistol was pulled, and the bullet penetrated the right side of the abdomen, resulting in serious injury and death several days later.
   On May 1, 1952, a bloody May Day incident occurred.
   Three days after the occupation by GHQ was lifted, it was the 23rd May Day, and the Central May Day resolved to "open the square in front of the Imperial Palace" along with "opposing the rearmament" of the National Police Reserve.
   The tournament opened at around 10:20 am, and on the way there were a series of intruders, mainly from Zengakuren, who tried to incite the invasion of People's Square.
   We were divided into the eastern, southern, central, and western courses, and moved on to the planned demonstration march.
   Even in the middle of the march, there were a series of attempts to incite people to invade People's Square.
   Although there was confusion such as being assaulted because they refused, they finally arrived at the scheduled dissolution point sequentially from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm and disbanded.
   However, some of the demonstrators disbanded in Hibiya Park, mainly on the southern course, which was particularly disturbed, were led by Zengakuren and members of left-wing youth groups, and about 2,500 citizens, including Koreans and day laborers.
   People formed a scrum and began to exit from the main gate of Hibiya Park.
   The Metropolitan Police Department had decided to wait for the organizers' voluntary control at the venue and during the procession, but organized a 5,600-strong force to guard the crowds.
   In addition, more than 10,000 police officers were on standby to prepare for a quick response.
   A crowd of 60 people, led by the Marunouchi Police Chief, first stopped the crowd that had passed through the Hibiya intersection and started an unregistered demonstration, but they were attacked with stones, bamboo spears, and clubs, injuring 13 people.
   The demonstrators threw stones at 19 foreign cars and broke the window glass one after another as they headed north.
   At Babasakimon, 470 troops from the 1st Area Reserve and the three police stations of Mita, Tokyo Minakami, and Takanawa were on guard, but part of the Area Reserve was armed with pistols and some tear gas.
   Others only carried batons.
   In addition, the demonstrators were extremely radical, and the captain of the area reserve, worried about the damage to the surrounding ordinary passers-by, lifted the cordon on the roadway, and the demonstrators poured into the square in front of the Imperial Palace.
   The demonstrators broke in and started throwing rocks at the Marunouchi police officers guarding in front of the Nijubashi Bridge and the two companies of the 1st Army Reserve Corps as reinforcements.
   At the Ikuta-cho police officer's police box, a box was knocked over, and a police officer was beaten up and had his handgun stolen.
   The police used tear gas to suppress the rioters, and at around 3:00 p.m.
   Around this time, however, the rioters increased to 8,000 as the cordon was breached at Sakuramon Gate and Ikuida Bridge.
   The police also relocated their reserve units one by one to strengthen the system, but the battle with the rioters was fierce, and some of them had no choice but to use pistols.
   As a result, the mob fell into chaos, and the police organized a system to suppress it at once, and by 3:40 p.m., most of the mob had been removed from the square.
   However, the mob, which was driven out of the square, continued to attack persistently.
   At Iwaida Bridge, four members of the 1st Army Reserve Corps were surrounded, beaten violently with square sticks, thrown into the triumphal moat, and further stoned.
   In addition, four other members were surrounded and were about to be subjected to similar assaults, but they were only able to escape from danger with warning shots from their pistols.
   In addition to this, there was a series of assaults on police officers, and there were cases in which pistols were stolen.
   At around 3:50 p.m., 14 foreign cars parked on the moat side in front of the Sakuramon Gate were overturned and set on fire.
   They surrounded and assaulted them, and set fire to their sidecar.
   The fire brigade that was dispatched to extinguish the fire was also stoned and beaten, injuring 13 people and hoses being cut.
   These mobs also began to disperse around 4:00 pm, but after that, the Yurakucho police station was attacked, and some of them fled to Hibiya Park and continued throwing stones.
   It was after 6:00 p.m.that the square in front of the Imperial Palace and Hibiya Park regained calmness.
   As a result of these riots, the demonstrators suffered one death, about 200 were seriously or slightly injured, and the police suffered 832 injuries.
   The dispatch of the National Police Reserve Corps was also being considered on that day, but it was not ordered to be dispatched as the incident was brought under control by the general police force.
   The "reserve force" that was dispatched to this incident was the "reserve force of the Metropolitan Police", which later became the riot police.
   it's not about the police reserve
   From May 12 to 25, 1952, the Omura Prison Incident occurred.
   The Ministry of Justice forcibly deported 410 Koreans to Busan, South Korea, but the South Korean government refused to take back 125 and sent them back to Japan.
   These reverse deportees were interned in the Omura camp.
   The deportees demanded their immediate release from the detention camps, claiming that the South Korean government's repatriation eliminated the grounds for their detention.
   The Korean United Democratic Front residing in Japan agreed with this, and a "struggle to recapture the deportees" unfolded.
   At 10:30 a.m. on November 11, a representative of the detainees requested a meeting with the warden, but the authorities refused, leading to a riot at 3:20 p.m.
   Security guards at the camp and Omura City police officers used tear gas and fire engines to stop the protests and finally put them under control.
   On May 13, 1952, the Hiroshima District Court suspect recapture incident occurred.
   At 2:55 p.m., the courtroom No.2 of the Hiroshima District Court was supposed to open the disclosure of the reason for detention.
   The suspects were Koreans who were arrested on April 30 and May 1 for arson by throwing Molotov cocktails at the Furuichi-cho Police Station of the Hiroshima Prefectural Headquarters Asa District Police Station and a private house, respectively.
   was a person The court opened as scheduled for the disclosure of the reason for detention, but the court was held in a strange atmosphere, with many Koreans occupying the spectator seats and red flags and North Korean flags being raised.
   At 5:20 p.m., just before the closing of the court, about 200 Koreans in the spectators' seats climbed over the fence separating the suspects from the audience, obstructing the guards who tried to handcuff the suspects, and recaptured the four suspects.
   About 70 police officers from the Hiroshima City Police were on standby at the Hiroshima District Court office just in case, but by the time they arrived at the scene, they had already fled.
   On May 26, 1952, the Takata Incident occurred.
   An adviser to the Mindan Aichi Prefectural Headquarters has been threatened by North Koreans living in Japan.
   In March of the same year, his home was attacked and a notice of death was posted.
   Around 5:40 a.m., dozens of North Koreans broke into the adviser's house and made a violent move, such as breaking the door and glass.
   The adviser managed to escape and asked for help from the Takada Police Station of the Nagoya City Police Mizuho Police Station.
   Soon after, a group of people chasing the advisor rushed to the Takada Police Station and set fire to it by destroying equipment and throwing Molotov cocktails.
   The adviser evacuated from the back door with the guidance of a police officer and headed for the janitor's room from the main gate of Takada Elementary School across the street, but was caught up and assaulted and injured for 10 days.
   On May 31, 1952, a Nara police officer's house was raided.
   On the 25th, the Sakuraicho Incident occurred in Sakuraicho, where the general secretary of Mindan Isoki Branch was attacked by Koreans in Japan who were affiliated with the former Chosun.
   The National Local Police Nara Prefectural Headquarters arrested the criminal and sent him to the Nara District Public Prosecutor's Office.
   On May 30, the Nara City Police received a call from the Isoki District Police Station, saying that a group of Koreans residing in Japan were heading to Nara City.
   A group of Koreans residing in Japan rushed into the Nara District Public Prosecutor's Office, and the Nara City Police eliminated them by force.
   For this reason, the old Choryu system began to feel antipathy toward the Nara City Police.
   The house of the police officer of the Nara City Police who was attacked was located in Sakuraicho, where the Sakuraicho Incident occurred.
   On May 31, about 10 masked Koreans knocked on the door of the Nara City Police Department Police Sergeant's house in Sakuraicho.
   When the police officer's father opened the door, he suddenly assaulted him and left him unconscious.
   Then he broke the windows and shoji and fled.
   The Bankai Incident occurred from May 31 to June 5, 1952.
   At that time, about 3,100 Koreans living in Japan lived in Ube City, most of whom were receiving public assistance.
   The city authorities decided not to increase welfare benefits because they were "hanging around during the day" and said they had "potential income."
   The Koreans were enraged by this, and after that they rushed to the Ube City Welfare Office day after day and hung up the city officials.
   By June 3, the number had reached about 400, so the Ube City Police mobilized all of its staff to deal with it, but the Koreans seized the opportunity to attack the Kami-Ube Police Station while they were away.
   On June 5, the Yamaguchi Prefectural Headquarters of the Korean Liberation Relief Association formed the 'Democratic Patriotic Youth League' in Banrai-cho, Ube City, and on that day, many Koreans gathered from all over the prefecture.
   About 70 of them broke into the Ube Industries factory at 11:00 a.m., beat the guards and cut the telephone lines.
   After attacking the house of a member of the Mindan, he withdrew.
   Police surrounded the Liberation and Relief Association office at 2:00 pm to arrest the attackers.
   The police called for the group to disperse, but the Koreans resisted by throwing stones and other means.
   At 3:30 p.m., the police began to use force, and at 4:00 p.m., they introduced tear gas canisters to finally suppress the protests.
   On June 10, 1952, the Shimadzu Sanjo factory incident occurred.
   At around 4:00 p.m., about 50 Korean residents in Japan who belonged to the Homeland Defense Corps rode a truck and stormed Shimadzu Corporation's Sanjo factory in Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City, breaking through the restraints of the guards and rushing inside.
   He then delivered a speech against the anti-corruption law.
   At the request of the factory, about 15 police officers from the Kyoto Municipal Police Horikawa Police Station rushed to the spot, but a Korean man in his fifties interfered, so they were immediately arrested and put into a patrol car of the Kyoto Municipal Police Southern.
   Then, about 100 Koreans in the vicinity began to make a fuss.
   When the police car took off with its siren sounding and approached Kasuga-dori Sanjo, a large number of Koreans stood in front and threw Molotov cocktails into the car.
   The patrol car immediately turned into a flaming car, swerving off the road and into the garage of a Kyoto city bus, crashing into the bus.
   Eight police officers on board were seriously injured.
   The arrestee also suffered burns, but managed to escape.
   On June 13, 1952, the Samegai Incident occurred.
   In Samegai Village, Sakata District, Shiga Prefecture, there was a confrontation between Koreans and Koreans in Japan who were affiliated with the Mindan and the United Democratic Front in Japan, and there were brawls on the 10th and June 11th.
   At around 5 a.m., police officers from the Sakata District Police Station, Shiga Prefecture Headquarters, headed to the scene to arrest the suspect, but the Koreans sensed the situation beforehand and barricaded themselves in their homes by setting up pickets.
   The Koreans threw rocks and clubs at the suspects and obstructed the arrest of the suspects, resulting in a big brawl, but the police put it down and arrested 48 people for obstruction of official duties.
   On July 7, 1952, the Osu Incident occurred.
   Representatives Hoashi Kei of the Japan Socialist Party and Kisuke Miyagoshi of the Japan Reform Party visited the Soviet Union and the Chinese Communist Party, signed a "Japan-China private trade agreement" that was against the policy of the Japanese government, and returned to Japan on the 6th at Nagoya Station.
   Arrived.
   A crowd of about 1,000 people gathered in front of the station to welcome the two representatives and staged an unregistered demonstration, but was dispersed by the Nagoya City Police.
   Twelve people were arrested at that time, and it was discovered from the documents that one of them had that he planned to bring a large number of Molotov cocktails to the welcome rally the next day and attack the US military facilities and the central police station.
   On the 7th, the Nagoya City Police strengthened its security system and put all police officers on standby.
   Around 2:00 p.m., a crowd consisting mainly of members of the Japanese Communist Party and Korean residents in Japan began to gather at Osu Stadium in Naka Ward, and a welcome rally was held around 6:40 p.m.
   When the rally ended at 9:50 p.m., students from Nagoya University started giving speeches, which provoked approximately 1,000 people to form a scrum as they left the main gate of the stadium and started an unregistered demonstration.
   Despite repeated warnings to disperse the police broadcast vehicle, demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails at it and set it on fire.
   The police immediately rushed to the scene to suppress the rioters, but the demonstrators dispersed in all directions and attacked the police force in waves with Molotov cocktails, stones, bamboo spears, and placards, and set fire to ordinary passenger cars on the street.
   As a result, the Osu district fell into chaos.
   Apart from the Osu demonstrators, there were also incidents in which a passenger car parked in a US military parking lot was set on fire, and Molotov cocktails were dropped at the Naka tax office.
   In the incident, 70 police officers, 2 firefighters and 4 civilians were injured, while 1 protester was killed and 19 injured.
   Nagoya City Police launched an investigation and eventually arrested 269 people.
   More than half of them were Koreans living in Japan.
   As a result of the investigation, it was found that the incident was planned by the Communist Party Nagoya City Committee and carried out in cooperation with the Fatherland Defense Corps, a Korean organization.
   From November 9th to 12th, 1952, the Omura Prison Incident occurred.
   On May 12, the Ministry of Justice forcibly repatriated 410 Koreans to Busan, South Korea, but the South Korean government refused to accept 125 and sent them back to Japan.
   These reverse deportees were interned in the Omura camp.
   The deportees demanded their immediate release from the detention camps, claiming that the South Korean government's repatriation eliminated the grounds for their detention.
   The Korean United Democratic Front residing in Japan agreed with this, and a "struggle to recapture the deportees" unfolded.
   At 10:30 a.m. on November 11, a representative of the detainees requested a meeting with the warden, but the authorities refused, leading to a riot at 3:20 p.m.
   Security guards at the camp and Omura City police officers used tear gas and fire engines to stop the protests and finally put them under control.
   From November 19th to 26th, 1952, the Goshogawara Tax Office was attacked.
   The Sendai Regional Taxation Bureau, with the cooperation of the police, raided a bootleg brewery operated by Koreans living in Japan around Itayanagi-cho, Kitatsugaru-gun, Aomori Prefecture.
   The Sendai Regional Taxation Bureau seized about 100 koku of moonshine, about 400 cans of sake lees, and about 200 other containers, and arrested 45 people for violating the Liquor Tax Law.
   In addition, seven Korean residents in Japan were arrested red-handed for obstructing the execution of official duties, alleging that they interfered with the detection.
   After that, Korean residents in Japan demanded "guarantee of living rights" and "placement of employment," and protested day after day at the Itaryu District Police Station and the Goshogawara Tax Office.
   On November 26, about 60 people rushed into the Goshogawara tax office, broke into the office, and occupied the office.
   In October 1960, the Tokyo District Court handed down a first-instance ruling seeking an increase in public assistance costs, arguing that it did not meet the level of guaranteeing the "right to live a minimum healthy and cultural life." The plaintiff won the case entirely.
   Later, the plaintiff's attorney at the time said, "I never thought that the administrative disposition could be revoked, overturning the common belief that Article 25 of the Constitution merely stipulates the nation's obligation to make efforts.
   It was an unexpected ruling, as I recall.
   The judge who drafted the ruling later became a lawyer and expressed his feelings in the Communist Party's official newspaper.
   The communist ideology that prevailed in the legal world, combined with the bias in the broadcasting industry and the prevalence of different ethnic groups, distorted the social structure of Japan.
Transition of Power (United Nations Transformation)
   In December 1956, Kim Il-sung proposed the Chollima Movement (economic development plan) at the Plenary Meeting of the Workers' Party of Korea.
   In 1957, in China, Mao Zedong, who was convinced of the effectiveness of the Soviet-style planned economy after seeing the recession caused by the economic fluctuations in Japan, promoted the Great Leap Forward policy.
   In terms of agricultural and industrial production indicators alone, the people were imposed quotas that overtook Britain and the United States in a short period of time.
   The campaign to capture large numbers of sparrows that devoured crops caused locust damage and led to a series of starvation deaths due to food crises.
   In April 1959, Liu Shaoqi became president, but Mao Zedong did not relinquish his positions as chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and chairman of the Central Military Commission.
   In July 1959, Peng Dehuai, who had pointed out the problems with the Great Leap Forward policy and called for a policy change, was dismissed from his position as Minister of National Defense and as a member of the Central Military Commission.
   In March 1960, a series of large-scale demonstrations criticizing Syngman Rhee, who continued to win re-election after repeating fraudulent elections in South Korea, took place at the call of intellectuals.
   Syngman Rhee was abandoned by the military and forced into exile in Hawaii.
   In 1960 the Communist Party of Great Britain published 'Out of apathy'.
   The [New Left Movement] did the following to flood the world with voices "against the Vietnam War".
   ◦ They unilaterally criticized the Ngo Dinh Diem regime and the US military.
   ◦ A rebel movement calling itself the "National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam" hid the fact that it was actually North Vietnamese military personnel conducting the attack.
   ◦ They dramatized the incident in which a woman named Francine Leconte set herself on fire and linked it to the anti-war movement.
   ◦ They created and screened a false information propaganda film as if the main forces of the North Vietnamese Army were "people aiming for liberation".
   ◦ They made the revolutionary song "International" popular.
   After the fall of the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam), it gradually became clear that these were all propaganda for the advantage of the North Vietnamese revolutionary forces.
   In January 1962, at the Central Conference on Expansion of the Communist Party of China (the Congress of Seven Thousand People), Liu Shaoqi evaluated the cause of the Great Leap Forward as "a third natural disaster and a seventh man-made disaster".
   At the meeting, Mao Zedong reflected on the failure of the Great Leap Forward and expressed his opinion that he would resign from the front line of the party, but no one thought that was Mao's true intentions.
   When no one had the courage to speak up, general secretary Deng Xiaoping said that Liu Shaoqi should be made president in order to relieve hunger.
   No objections were raised, and Mao Zedong retired from the front lines.
   In April 1962, "A Town with a Cupola" was screened in Japanese cinemas.
   Zainichi who watched a movie depicting people returning to their home country with the image that "North Korea, which is developing like a thousand miles, is a paradise on earth," went to North Korea.The number of people who went to North Korea includes Japanese wives.
   It is said that more than 90,000 people.However, in order to make remittances to returnees, there was an operation to leave family members who had not returned to Japan.The Red Cross Society was responsible for the actual return to Japan.
   North Korean ships were also used for operations against Japan through the Chongryon, kidnapping of espionage training personnel, and sending spies against South Korea.
   Chongryon promoted the establishment of Korean schools and ethnic education.
   South Korea continued to refuse to accept Koreans in Japan.
   South Korea claimed the release of Korean criminals in Japan in exchange for the return of fishermen who had been detained in the Sea of Japan.
   Nationalist and communist Koreans who claim to be a "victorious country" and claim more rights than Japanese people, people who collude with leftists to riot, such as the attack on the Nagata Ward Office and the bloody May Day incident, commit crimes The Japanese government took great pains to deal with the causers and requested to South Korea, "We would like you to accept the return of those who wish to return because we will bear the cost of returning home."
   However, South Korea ignored this and instructed the Mindan to continue their compatriots' residency in Japan.
   In September 1962, Mao Zedong of the CCP criticized the novel Liu Zhidan, which contains a description of [the anti-Party element] Gao Gang, as "an invention for writing a novel and using it for anti-Party anti-People."
   Xi Zhongxun, who helped write the novel, was dismissed from his post after being held responsible.
   At that time, Xi Jinping, the eldest son of Xi Zhongkun, was nine years old.
   In November 1965, an article was published in a newspaper in Shanghai, stating that the Peking Opera "Hai Rui Kan" was a drama criticizing the dismissal of Peng De Huai.
   In March 1966, General Secretary Miyamoto of the Japanese Communist Party, who was working hard to help North Vietnam fighting the Vietnam War, angered Chairman Mao Zedong by trying to act in line with North Vietnam's desire for Soviet-made weapons.
   Then, China and Japan have become hostile to each other.
   In May 1966, a notice from the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China criticized Peng Zhen and others who advocated for the "Hai Rui Satsukan" and directed an attack on the capitalist factions (representatives of the central and local governments).
   Wall newspapers were also posted on the campus of Peking University, criticizing the leadership of the university committee.
   In the following month, "People's Daily" advocated the elimination of "old ideas, old cultures, old customs, and old customs that poison the people," and lynching facilities (cow troughs) were built in various places.
   Deng Xiaoping was dismissed from the post of general secretary and disappeared from the political arena.
   Tens of millions of people are said to have been victims of the Cultural Revolution.
   A reenactment of the witch hunts of the Middle Ages in Europe.
   In 1967, Kim Il-sung of North Korea purged Park Kim-joo of the Gapsan faction and completed the dictatorship.
   In March 1969, military clashes broke out on Zhenbao Island near the Sino-Soviet border.
   After half a year of hostilities, a ceasefire was discussed at the funeral for the death of North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh.
   By this time, the number of casualties on both sides exceeded 100 each.
   The resolution was postponed, and the two armies continued to face each other near an undetermined border.
   In April 1969, at the 9th National Congress of the Party, Lin Biao said, "In the party, those in power who follow the path of capitalism have created a bourgeois command center, followed revisionist political and organizational lines, and And with agents in every sector of the central...
   To retake the power that the establishment has seized, carry out the Cultural Revolution openly, across the board, from the bottom up, to raise the broad masses mentioned above.
   There is no choice but to expose the dark side.This is, in effect, a great political revolution in which one class overthrows another."
   However, Lin's ambition was suspected when he did not agree to the President's plan to abolish the vacant post after Liu Shaoqi's downfall.
   In July 1971, 23 countries, including Albania, submitted to the United Nations a proposal to restore the representation rights of the government of the People's Republic of China and expel the government of the Republic of China.
   In October, the Albanian resolution was passed by more than double the number of votes against, and the Republic of China was expelled from the United Nations.
   Image Albanian insert
   Since then, the United Nations has become a pawn of the CCP.
   The CCP exported the "Cultural Revolution" to the world.
   Needless to say, the "Cultural Revolution" was devised by Mao Zedong to cover up the failure of the Great Leap Forward policy, which resulted in mass starvation as a result of pushing ahead with only ideas and ignoring science and reality.
   The CCP exported the "Cultural Revolution" to the world.
   Needless to say, the "Cultural Revolution" was the power restoration strategy devised by Mao Zedong to cover up the failure of the Great Leap Forward policy, which resulted in mass starvation as a result of pushing ahead with only ideas and ignoring science and reality.
   In Europe, campaigns were launched to condemn the Holocaust, accusing the National Socialist German Workers Party of genocide of Jews and others.
   In Asia, there was a negative campaign against South Vietnam.
   As a result of carrying out [anti-war campaign] to condemn the US military after setting up US soldiers with marijuana, a sense of war-weariness prevailed in the US military, and South Vietnam was destroyed in the Tet offensive.
   Workers lose their jobs when their companies go bankrupt.
   Workers who became skeptical of communism destroying companies were became to be unused as main revolutionary fighters.
   Communists began to use minorities as main revolutionary fighters.
   Propaganda abounded that "Minority" refers not only to historically anti-mainstream groups and the economically vulnerable, but also to women against men, minorities against the majority, and criminals against ordinary citizens.
   The propaganda slogan was "It is not the criminal who is to blame, but the society that made the crime happen.
   Therefore, perpetrators should be protected instead.
   Victims are a conservative class who have lived in peace, and should not be protected.
   The new generation of young people are all struggling with alienation, which is why they turn to crime.
   Black people, poor people, losers and dropouts of the world are the heroes who can make a revolution."
   After the stigma of 'Nazi' and 'Hitler' became obsolete, 'hate speech' came to be used as a phrase with the power of amulet to shut down controversy.
   The Holocaust Denial Condemnation Resolution (adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2007) and the Draft Concluding Observations on Hate Speech (published by the UN Human Rights Committee in 2011) are the fruits of the CCP's work.
   The Act on Promotion of Efforts to Eliminate Unfair Discriminatory Words and Behaviors Against Persons from Outside Japan (Act No.
   68 of June 3, 2016) also follows this trend.
   The Chinese Communist Party chose the Socialist Party of Japan as an import and export partner for the [Cultural Revolution], avoiding the pro-Soviet Japanese Communist Party...
   In February 1972, young people who were devoted to Mao Zedong's theory of the people's war and repeated robberies in order to obtain funds and firearms escaped because they were about to be found guilty during questioning, and took the janitor's wife hostage.
   I barricaded myself in Asama Sanso.
   The hostage rescue operations of the Metropolitan Police Department riot police and the Nagano Prefectural Police riot police, which surrounded the villa, ran into difficulty, leaving 3 dead and 27 seriously or slightly injured.
   On the 10th day, the troops rushed in, successfully rescued the hostages, and arrested all five criminals.
   As a result of arresting the culprit, a horrific incident hidden behind the scenes came to light.
   The criticism of the members and self-criticism within the group called "summary" escalated and resulted in a terrible result.
   Tsuneo Mori, an executive, made up the theory that "he would be beaten unconscious, and when he woke up, he would be reborn as a different person and become a true communistized revolutionary fighter." The number of victims of violence increased day by day, leading to deaths, but Mori et al.
   The victims' causes of death are said to be general bruises from beatings, visceral rupture, freezing to death due to exposure to sub-zero temperatures, and debility due to lack of food.
   Some members were declared "betrayal of the organization" by Mori and sentenced to "death penalty".
   This "death penalty" was intended to kill the victim by stabbing him with an ice pick or knife and then strangling him.
   The behavior of making comrades criticize themselves and massacre may be said to be a template for Mao Zedong's power seizure.
   In February 1972, US President Nixon visited the Communist Party of China while the Asama Sanso hostage rescue operation was in trouble.
   It was for the two countries hostile to the Soviet Union to join hands.
   The realization of the US-China summit had a major impact on Japan's attitude toward China.
   In September 1972, Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka visited China.
   Then, the Japan-China Joint Statement was announced.
   In March 1973, Chinese premier Zhou Enlai longed for the introduction of technology from Japan and the United States, and restored Deng Xiaoping as vice premier.
   In August 1973, the "criticism movement" began in China, and the good and bad of Chinese thought was judged.
   Goodness: Shao Zheng Wei, Wu Qi, Shang Yan, Han Fei, Xun Jing, Li Si, Qin Shihuangdi, Emperor Gaozu of the Former Han Dynasty, Emperor Wen, Emperor Jing, Cao Cao, Zhuge Liang, Wu Zetian, Wang Anshi, Li Zhuogu, Mao Zedong
   Evil: Confucius, Mencius, Sima Guang, Zhu Xi
   Lin Biao, with his feudal Confucianism, had been considered an enemy of Marxism.
   In 1974, the amateur clause was removed from the Olympic Charter.
   The Olympic Games in ancient Greece were originally an event that emphasized not only the physical body but also the personality, but later, as prizes and status were awarded to the winners, the spirit of amateurism was lost, and injustice and refereeing became the norm.
   The ancient Olympic Games ceased to be held at the end of the 4th century when Christianity became the state religion of Rome.
   Will history repeat itself...
   In 1974, Britain's Conservative Party was plagued by labor unrest, lost the general election and stepped down, threatening national decline.
   In the 1975 British Conservative Party leader election, rival Joseph gave up his candidacy due to a number of complaints, and Thatcher, who was to depose the scandalous leader of the Heath party, won.
   In January 1976, Zhou Enlai died of cancer.
   In April, Hua Guofeng, who was trusted by Mao Zedong for his lack of ambition, was appointed as Prime Minister of the State Council and First Vice-Chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, placing him second in the ranks after Mao.
   In July 1976, Zhu De, who supported Mao Zedong, died of old age, and Mao also died of illness in September.
   In October, Hua Guofeng arrested Jiang Qing, Zhang Chunqiao, and other quartet leaders of the Cultural Revolution, resolving internal conflicts and effectively ending the Cultural Revolution.
   Hua Guofeng, who had a weak power base, began construction of the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall in November and tried to borrow the power of the tiger, but was unable to win the hearts of the people.
   He eventually lost power to Deng Xiaoping and disappeared from the political arena.
   In 1979, the Conservatives won the election, and Margaret Thatcher, who became prime minister, curbed trade unions and revived Britain.
   The 11-and-a-half-year Thatcher administration has caused internal divisions in the Labor Party.
   The Labor Party has turned to avoiding nationalization and following a free market economy.
   In June 1981, Deng Xiaoping, who was appointed chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China, promoted economic construction and reform and opening up.
   He implemented a unified national plan, unified price, and unified distribution for important commodities, and left the rest to market mechanisms.
   He abolished the People's Communities and allowed enterprises to focus on profitability and distribute profits according to profits.
   The central branch of politics concentrated on the management of major projects and national key enterprises, leaving other management to the local governments.
   He designated Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Shantou and Xiamen as special economic zones to attract foreign companies.
   In July 1984, the Olympic Games were held in Los Angeles.
   With Olympic host cities struggling to pay off their debts with huge deficits over the last few decades, the IOC must accept an operating plan submitted by a voluntary organization with no public financial guarantees and no other city but Los Angeles to run.
   Like the ancient Olympics, which ended at the end of the 4th century, the modern Olympics were destined to come to an end.
   Voluntary organizations tried to reduce costs by utilizing existing facilities and increased income by selling commercial rights.
   As a result, victory supremacy, which enhances the effect of publicity, prevailed, and Coubertin's gentlemanly spiritualism was neglected.
   In January 1987, in China, the veteran party members who were concerned about the excessive capitalization of the party succeeded in making a comeback, and General Secretary Hu Yaobang was dismissed and Zhao Ziyang was elected as his successor.
   In April 1989, former General Secretary of the Communist Party of China Hu Yaobang died of a heart attack.
   Street activism in memory of Hu Yaobang has become frequent, and the number of people gathering at Tiananmen has grown to the point that the capital's functions have been paralyzed.
   General Secretary Zhao Ziyang's appeal did not succeed, and the people gathered at Tiananmen did not disperse.
   In June, a frustrated Deng Xiaoping ordered the People's Liberation Army to quell the crowd.
   Zhao Ziyang was dismissed as general secretary.
   The number of victims of the suppression is said to be in the thousands.
   It was broadcast live that regulators stepped into a CNN broadcasting station that had been reporting without complying with the strict instructions of the Chinese authorities and forced them to stop broadcasting.
   Developed Western nations, having witnessed human rights violations, imposed economic sanctions on China.
   Hiroko Kuniya, a newscaster who appeared on NHK Close-up Gendai, broadcast the lie that there were no fatalities in the Tiananmen Incident.
the fabrication of 'NHK close-up modern'
   In November 1989, Jiang Zemin succeeded Deng Xiaoping as chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China, and in April of the following year he was also chairman of the State Central Military Commission.
   It is said that he was selected with the intention of both avoiding the people's June 4th Tiananmen Square allergies and avoiding pro-democracy groups.
   On January 15, 2019, NHK started free broadcasting for the Chinese people and began to broadcast propaganda supporting "the objective legitimacy of the Chinese Communist government" as a "Japanese public broadcaster."
the start of 'NHK China Broadcasting'
Formation and process of collapse of nations that violate human rights
   Iemoto (tha grand master) of the "Defeated Revolution": The Soviet Union is a country created by Lenin and the Workers-Peasants Red Army, who took advantage of the confusion after the Russo-Japanese War to destroy the Romanov dynasty. After many internal conflicts, Stalin seized power. The government, which was established through a series of coincidences that could be called fortuitous, overestimated the power of the capitalist sphere and was constantly tormented by fear.
   Stalin's staff came up with the "icebreaker theory."
   Japanese journalists, who were on the same page as the Soviet Union, tried to put the "icebreaker theory" into practice, fueling the US-Japan confrontation.
   The entire country of Japan was reduced to ashes in World War II, just as the journalists who believed in the revolutionary defeat theory had planned, but the revolution that accompanied the defeat did not occur.
   The journalists put the blame for the outbreak of war on the military and the people and devoted themselves to brainwashing them with a masochistic historical view.
   On the other hand, the Soviet Union pushed forward with aggression against neighboring countries and the establishment of puppet governments.
   As a result, the following countries were reddened:
   Union of Soviet Socialist Republics December 30, 1922 - December 26, 1991
   Mongolian People's Republic November 24, 1924 - December 12, 1992
   Democratic Union of Yugoslavia November 29, 1943 - November 29, 1945
   Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia November 29, 1943 - April 7, 1963
   Socialist People's Republic of Albania 29 November 1944 - 11 January 1946
   Polish People's Republic 28 June 1945 - 19 July 1989
   Democratic Republic of Vietnam September 02, 1945 - July 02, 1976
   People's Republic of Albania January 11, 1946 - December 28, 1976
   People's Republic of Bulgaria September 15, 1946 - December 7, 1990
   Romanian People's Republic December 30, 1947 - August 21, 1965
   Czechoslovak Republic 09 June 1948 - 11 July 1960
   Democratic People's Republic of Korea September 9, 1948 Existence
   Hungarian People's Republic 20 August 1949 - 23 October 1989
   People's Republic of China October 1, 1949 in existence
   German Democratic Republic 07 October 1949 - 03 October 1990
   Republic of Egypt July 22, 1957 - February 22, 1958
   United Arab Republic 02/22/1958 - 09/02/1971
   Czechoslovak Socialist Republic July 11, 1960 - March 29, 1990
   Republic of Cuba July 1, 1961 Existence
   Federal Socialist Republic of Burma 02 March 1962 - 23 September 1988
   Syrian Arab Republic 08 March 1963 - 27 February 2012
   Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia April 7, 1963 - April 27, 1992
   Democratic People's Republic of Algeria September 08, 1963 - February 23, 1989
   United Republic of Tanzania April 26, 1964 Existence
   Romanian Socialist Republic 21.08.1965 - 21.12.1989
   People's Democratic Republic of Yemen 30 November 1967 - 22 May 1990
   Republic of Iraq July 17, 1968 - April 9, 2003
   Libyan Arab Republic 01/09/1969 - 02/03/1977
   People's Republic of the Congo January 03, 1970 - May 1, 1992
   People's Republic of Bangladesh April 11, 1971 Existence
   Arab Republic of Egypt September 02, 1971 - March 26, 2007
   Democratic Republic of Sudan May 08, 1973 - October 10, 1985
   Provisional Socialist Military Government of Ethiopia June 28, 1974 - February 22, 1987
   Democratic Kampuchea April 17, 1975 - January 10, 1979
   People's Republic of Mozambique June 25, 1975 - December 1, 1990
   People's Republic of Angola November 11, 1975 - August 28, 1992
   People's Republic of Benin November 30, 1975 - March 1, 1990
   Lao People's Democratic Republic December 02, 1975 Existence
   Portuguese Republic April 02, 1976 Existence
   SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM July 02, 1976 Existence
   Democratic Republic of Somalia October 21, 1976 - January 26, 1991
   Republic of India December 18, 1976 Existence
   Socialist People's Republic of Albania December 28, 1976 - March 22, 1992
   Greater Libya Arab Socialist People's Jamahiriya State March 02, 1977 to October 23, 2011
   Democratic Republic of Afghanistan April 27, 1978 - November 30, 1987
   Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka September 7, 1978 Existence
   People's Republic of Kampuchea January 10, 1979 - May 1, 1989
   Cooperative Republic of Guyana 06 October 1980 in existence
   People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia February 22, 1987 - May 27, 1991
   Republic of Afghanistan November 30, 1987 - April 28, 1992
   There are several nations that were established by the "defeated revolution" and still continue to violate human rights. One of them is North Korea.
   It is a country that is maintained by the act of making people believe lies without letting them know the truth through information control, but the manipulation activities are causing immeasurable harm to Japan.
   In the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, who was appointed General Secretary (Supreme Leader) of the Communist Party in 1985, raised the concern that the rigid political system based on communist ideas would hamper economic development and lag behind the development of liberal spheres.
   The two prescriptions of
   1) perestroika (revolution)
   and
    2) glasnost (information disclosure)
   gradually permeated the Soviet Union.
   In August 1991, the communists who felt a crisis in this movement almost caused a coup in the Soviet Union, but President Yeltsin of the Russian Republic called for a general strike from a tank, and many people responded to the call. The coup failed and the country of the Soviet Union disappeared.
   The number of people who agreed with communist ideas decreased, and the false sign that "workers are the main characters" was taken down in the Soviet Union and Europe.
   But a new billboard, "Multicultural Politics," has been put up in America.
   "Worker-protagonists" and "multicultural political correctness" were twins with the same root, born out of the scientific socialism of Marx Engels.
   Back in October 1917, after the Russian Revolution, revolutionary upheavals in Munich and Berlin, Germany, were quelled by attacks by German troops.
   In 1919, a revolutionary government was established in Budapest, Hungary, but this too was crushed within a few months. With the Hungarian Revolution crushed, Lukács Györgyi fled to the Soviet Union to figure out why the revolution was not successful. The conclusion was that "traditional culture and Christian beliefs are preventing the people from awakening to class consciousness. Unless we destroy traditional culture and Christian beliefs, there will be no revolution."
   In 1923, Lukács founded the "Marxist Institute" at the University of Frankfurt, Germany. The group of scholars working at the "Marxist Institute" is called the "Frankfurt School".
   Max Horkheimer of the Frankfurt School presented a "critical theory" that replaced the working-class theory of revolution. Rather than starting a violent revolution, it was easier to overthrow the government by slowly eating Western culture (Christian spirit) over a long period of time.
   Jewish scholars of this school (M. Horkheimer, T. W. Adorno, W. Benjamin, H. Marcuse, E. Fromm, Neumann, J. Habermas, Schmidt, etc.) moved to the United States, reluctant to strengthen the Nazi power. In exile, he founded the Frankfurt School in America with the help of Columbia University. It is said that the Frankfurt School's emphasis on "minorities" is influenced by the fact that Jews feel that they are a "minority."
   The Frankfurt School pretended to have nothing to do with Marxism, so the ideas were accepted and spread among intellectuals in America.
   In 1926, Antonio Gramsci, General Secretary of the Italian Communist Party, was arrested under the Mussolini regime and wrote "Theory of Hegemony" in his "Prison Notebooks."
   The content of the "hegemony theory" is "to obtain art, movies, theater, education, newspapers, magazines, radio, etc., one by one, to change people's thinking, and to lose interest in traditional culture and Christianity. If so, the government will fall naturally and the revolutionary side will be able to become the power."
   The important point is to replace the main force working for the revolution from the "working class" with the "minority." "Minorities" are not only historically marginalized and economically oppressed, but also women against men, minorities against the majority, criminals against ordinary citizens, etc. is. "It is not the criminals who are to blame, but the society that caused them to commit crimes.
   No, the new generation of young people are all struggling with alienation, which is why they turn to crime.It is the blacks, the poor, the losers and the dropouts of the world who are the heroes who can start a revolution."
   He became ill in prison and died in 1937.
   In the 1920s, after the decline of the European film industry due to the effects of World War I, the American film industry enjoyed prosperity.
   
   On May 11, 1927, the film industry established AMPAS (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) with the aim of fending off criticism and preemptively resolving labor disputes.
   The company set up the Academy Awards with the aim of "developing art and science in cinema" and tried to promote works that adhered to Christian morality, but the staff and actors did not approve of the company's works. While criticizing the selection, he took the initiative by using measures such as boycotts.
   Each company stopped supporting the academy, and the academy became independent by selling the broadcast rights of the Academy Award ceremony to a television station.
   Marcuse of the Frankfurt School has had a great influence on the New Left movement since the 1960s. Marcuse said, "The majority of people living in an industrial control system like the United States come to feel that "reality is taken for granted," and lose the ability to think critically.
   Minorities (misfits, minorities, etc.) are not managed, so they do not become 'one-dimensional humans'," he expected of 'minorities'.
   The New Left Movement has done the following things under the slogan of "against the Vietnam War".
   ◦ He unilaterally criticized the South Vietnamese government and the US military.
   A rebel movement calling itself the "National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam" hid the fact that it was actually North Vietnamese military personnel conducting the attack.
   ◦ He dramatized the incident in which a woman named Francine Leconte set herself on fire and linked it to the anti-war movement.
   It created and screened a false propaganda film as if the main forces of the North Vietnamese Army were the "people aiming for liberation."
   ◦ Made the revolutionary song "International" popular.
   After the fall of South Vietnam, it gradually became clear that all of these were propaganda for the advantage of the North Vietnamese revolutionary forces.
   Political correctness is a tactic that makes the minority hate the majority.
   For example, the history education and propaganda that has been carried out in South Korea is that the Japanese military in the past made girls living on the Korean Peninsula sex slaves and forced people living on the Korean Peninsula to work. It was a story based on a lie, dramatized as if it were a historical fact.
   As a result, South Korea elected a president who views Japan as an enemy and wants to get along with North Korea.
   In Okinawa Prefecture, some plays based on the false history were staged, in which Yamatonchu (Japanese people other than Okinawans) often ridicule and bully Uchinanchuu (Okinawa citizens). There was also a lot of propaganda that exaggerated the crimes committed by American soldiers.
   The method of embedding "political correctness" deep in the hearts of the people of Okinawa over a long period of time, little by little, was successful, so Okinawa Prefecture elected a prefectural governor who views the US military as an enemy.
   Furthermore, [history recognition] becomes a powerful weapon for the revolutionary forces.
   Not My Idea, published in 2018, argued that "whites enjoy greater privileges than people of color because of the land taken from indigenous peoples and the infrastructure built with labor of black slaves forced from Africa."
   The movement to compensate Korean comfort women, requisitioned laborers, and Ainu cultural protection using Japanese taxes as a source of funds is also on the same trend.
   There was a time when a drama in which they insulted was broadcast on the radio, but this was also part of the history fabrication work.
   The Taiwan Natural Independence Movement and the Hong Kong Umbrella Movement were unexpected side effects, but behind the scenes that are hidden from the public with the freedom to not press, the Chinese Communist Party's powers are suppressing.
   The cover of The Green Revolution, written by Charles Reich in 1970, read: "Revolution has arrived. A revolution different from the old. Starting with the individual and the culture, the influence of the political system." is just one final stroke: no violence is required for success, no suppression by violence will succeed, a new generation of revolution that has spread with alarming speed and is already changing laws, institutions and social institutions." the article was written.
   Gramsci's ideas influenced European communism and the American counterculture movement, and the Green Revolution is one such example.
   When these ideas are taught in college, their destructive tendencies are inherited by both scholars who remain in college and journalists who find employment at news organizations and publishers. This is why the media is dominated by the left.
   Even if the methods and signs are different, each line of Marxism aims at the same goal, the accomplishment of the revolution (creating a society that controls and controls the people with ideological ideas).
   People in the past thought that the "equality of mankind" written in the "Communist Manifesto" published in 1848 was a wonderful idea, and that "dictatorship" was a temporary (on the way from capitalist society to communist society).
   However, the post-Soviet "multiculturalist" sees "dictatorship" as the ultimate goal.
   Political scientists in Harvard University and elsewhere are "multiculturalists," hiding their goal of realizing a society in which the elite dominates the masses, gaining the support of the minority, and criticizing remarks with the majority in mind. succeeded in targeting When Mr. Trump was elected in the US presidential election, demonstrations close to riots occurred frequently even before any policies were put into action.
   It also promoted Affirmative Action. It is a measure based on the claim that people who are placed in a disadvantaged position due to conventional inadequate education and poverty will be given preferential treatment through positive discrimination to achieve substantial fairness.
   Anyone who disagrees with this will be immediately criticized as a discriminator and socially eradicated.
   In Eastern Europe, which was invaded by the Soviet Union and established a puppet government, economic stagnation continued for a long time. Released from the state, the Berlin Wall fell.
   In 2000, Jiang Zemin announced the idea of three philosophies in the CCP. The idea is to focus on social productivity, advanced culture, and the fundamental interests of a wide range of people. He said, "Take care of Chinese supremacist thought over communist ideology."
   It is no exaggeration to say that communist ideology has largely fallen out of favor around the world, although it remains in a very small number of countries that violate human rights.
   However, the ghosts of the last century have survived and are trying to destroy Japan.
   Though it doesn't matter what happens to our bodies, which are short-lived, if the Japanese Ethnic were to perish without being able to revive themselves from the burned-out ashes, it would be the matter of grave concern to the fate of mankind.
   Because, it is rare that an ethnic group be formed with the creed of "cooperative relationships are important" and create values that make the world prosperous by obtaining nourishment from the natural world.
   Namely, that ethnicity with that creed has been cultivated by the confront natural threats rather than external enemies.
   By the way, if they continue to be threatened by foreign enemies, those who are good at conspiracy and mathematics will survive while repeating political disputes within their own race, and the ethnic character that seeks to prosper by absorbing nutrients from others will be cultivated.
   That is why, in the short time left, I would like to continue searching for the path to Japan's revival.
   
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