新世界秩序の秘密を知る男とは?!

Naokiman 2nd Channel
21 Feb 202441:53

Summary

TLDRこのスクリプトは、現代史の研究者である芳津ハヤシ氏のインタビューを通じ、第二次世界大戦中の日本の戦略とその後の世界情勢に至るまで、幅広い歴史的背景を探求しています。芳津氏は、教育システムやマスメディアでは触れられていないと感じる歴史の不一致に疑問を持ち、自らの研究を通じて真実を追求しています。彼は、日本の戦争参加前に重要な役割を果たした“Akimaru Institution”の存在や、その後の戦争指導や戦後処理に関する見解を述べています。さらに、彼はグローバル勢力が日本の破壊を目的としていたと主張し、戦時中の政策決定や戦後の世界秩序に関する陰謀論的な視点を展開しています。最後に、日本のアイデンティティと国家主義の重要性を強調し、現代の日本の姿を問い直す契機を提供します。

Takeaways

  • 📚 現代史と現代史の研究者である芳津はやしが、世界史の謎に迫る中で、歴史の鍵を探求し始めた。
  • 🔍 芳津はやしは「秋丸機関」という名前の研究機関を発見し、日本の戦争戦略に貢献したと学んだ。
  • 🤔 芳津はやしは、戦時下の日本のメディアや教科書によれば、日本は軍国主義が暴走していたとされがちだが、実際には違ったと結論づける。
  • 👑 昭和天皇に代わって、近衛文麿と海軍の長沼オサミが日本を南下させ、日本を破壊することで近衛は国を支配しようとしたと芳津はやしは主張する。
  • 💸 ウォール街のグローバリスト勢力が、日本の急速な成長を妨げ、最終的に日本を破壊しようとしたと芳津はやしは見る。
  • 🇯🇵 芳津はやしは、日本のアイデンティティと国家主義を失うことがグローバリストの目的であると述べる。
  • 💊 疫学的な詐欺行為が20年間計画されており、危機感を作り出し、総力を活用して独裁的な社会を築いていくと芳津はやしは警告する。
  • 🌏 グローバリスト勢力は、国家主義を排除し、世界を統一政府下に置こうとしていると芳津はやしは示唆する。
  • 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 近現代の家族構造や伝統的な価値観がグローバリストによって壊される恐れがあると芳津はやしは述べる。
  • 🤝 国際的な金融資本家であるロックフェラーやロトシルト家の人々は、日本の破壊と占領を目的として活動していたと芳津はやしは考える。
  • 🕊️ グローバリストは平和主義を推進しながら、実際には国家主義を排除し、世界をコントロールしようとしていると芳津はやしは主張する。

Q & A

  • 歴史研究で明らかになった「秋丸機構」とは何ですか?

    -秋丸機構とは、日本が連合国に対して戦争で勝つための戦略を研究していた機関であり、日本の戦争開始戦略に基づいていたとされています。

  • Fumimaro Konoe内閣が南下を強要した背景にはどのような意図がありましたか?

    -Fumimaro Konoeは、日本の破壊を目的としていたとされています。彼は自身が国を運営し、日本の統治を目指していたため、南下を強要し、日本を連合国に向かって戦争に巻き込みました。

  • なぜグローバリスト勢力は日本を破壊しようとしましたか?

    -グローバリスト勢力は、日本が急速に成長し、自信過剰になりすぎたため、最終的に日本を破壊しようとしたとされています。また、日本のポスト戦時管理によって経済成長を促し、彼ら自身のために利益を得ようとしたためです。

  • Fumimaro Konoeが自殺したとされていますが、真相は如何でしょうか?

    -Fumimaro Konoeの自殺については、多くの証言が矛盾しており、彼はグローバリスト勢力によって暗殺された可能性が高いとされています。

  • 秋丸機構が提唱した戦略とはどのようなものでしょうか?

    -秋丸機構は、日本の艦隊がインド洋を征服し、イギリスの補給路を遮断することで、イギリスを逼り、大西洋でナチドイツがUボートでアメリカからの支援を沈めることから、日本が最終的に勝利する戦略を提唱しました。

  • 日本の大正時代の人々はグローバリズムにどのような反応を示しましたか?

    -日本の大正時代の人々は、国家主義、家族、結婚、地域社会への強い結束力を持っており、グローバリズムに強い反発を示しました。

  • グローバリスト勢力が日本に与えた影響とは何ですか?

    -グローバリスト勢力は、日本の国家主義を奪い、日本をアメリカ式の産業社会に変えようとしました。また、日本の統帥部を反日的なトップマネジメントに変えることで、日本の全体的な姿勢を変えようとしました。

  • 日本の北方領土問題に関して、アメリカはどのような役割を果たしましたか?

    -アメリカは、ソ連による北方領土の占領に協力的役割を果たしました。プロジェクト・フーラという共同作戦で、北方領土だけでなく、千島列島の占領も行われました。

  • アメリカが移民国であるという誤解はなぜ広がりましたか?

    -ユダヤ人の資本がアメリカに入り、中央金融を掌握し、アメリカを変容しようとした結果、メディアと政治を通じてアメリカが移民国であると誤解されるようになりました。

  • 第二次世界大戦中に使用された原子爆弾の本来の目的とは何でしたか?

    -原子爆弾の本来の目的は戦争の終結ではなく、日本の降伏を促進し、またソ連に対抗するための威力の示しでした。もし日本がポツダム宣言に応じなければ、本土上での上陸と同時で原子爆弾を使い続ける予定でした。

  • グローバリスト勢力が推進する「新しい世界秩序」とは何ですか?

    -グローバリスト勢力が推進する「新しい世界秩序」とは、国家主義や伝統を排除し、世界統一政府を目指すことです。また、労働者と消費者を増やし、国家の障壁を取り除き、グローバル企業の利益を追求することを目指しています。

Outlines

00:00

😀 歴史の真実を探求する会談

現代史研究家のChikatu Hayashi氏が、現代史と戦時下の日本の真相について語る。Hayashi氏は幼少期から世界に矛盾を感じ、教育制度やマスメディアでは答えが得られないことに気づき、自ら歴史の研究を開始。国防研究所で「秋丸機構」という未知の組織を発見し、日本の戦争戦略に貢献したと知る。また、日本国内でも軍国主義とは異なる見解を展開し、世界から与えられた情報のほとんどが虚偽であると結論づける。

05:00

🏗️ 戦後日本の管理と経済成長

戦後、日本は急速な経済成長を遂げたが、それは自己の利益のために働かせられた結果であり、軍事力を持たないまま符牒天皇を置く計画だった。Fumimaro Konoeは天皇を戦争の責任者とし、自らが国を統治しようとした。また、Wall Streetのグローバリスト勢力が日本の破壊を企て、Konoeがこれを利用しようとしたとされる。

10:01

🇯🇵 日本の戦略と真実の戦争

日本の戦略はロジックに基づいており、真に勝つことができたとされる。しかし、Wall Streetが太平洋戦争にアメリカを参戦させるための策略を講じた。山本五十六はハワイへの攻撃に反対の声 많았지만、仕方なく攻撃を決行。また、日本の国家戦略はアメリカとの本格的な戦争を避け、思想戦を行い、アメリカ国民に宣伝活動を行うことにあった。

15:04

🌐 グローバリストの意図と日本の役割

グローバリストの目的は世界統一政府の確立であり、国や歴史を抹消することが求められる。これによって、世界的な貿易障壁を排除し、グローバル企業とワシントンの利益を追求する。また、ロクフェラーやロスチャイルド家の金融资本家が、日本の破壊を目的としたとされる。

20:04

📚 グローバリストの歴史と日本の将来

グローバリストの200年間の歴史と、日本の将来について語る。日本の民族性とアイデンティティ、そして和の精神の重要性が強調される。また、グローバリストが日本の将来について予測し、日本の経済力を期待していたことが明らかになる。

25:09

🕊️ 和平主義とグローバリストの策略

日本の平和主義とグローバリストの策略について語り合う。日本の教育機関が反日的な考え方を広め、LGBTQ活動がアイデンティティを抹消する手法とされる。また、フランクフルト・スクールの理論が新しい共産主義としてアメリカ教育に影響を与え、社会的動向を創出している。

30:09

🔍 真実の歴史を探求する

真実の歴史を探求し、日本の民族性とアイデンティティを守る重要性が語られる。また、グローバリストの影響力と、日本の政治状況、特に安倍晋三元首相の役割とその暗殺について述べる。さらに、新型コロナウイルス禍の背景には20年間の計画とシミュレーションがあるとする見方と、その影響について警告する。

35:10

🌟 日本の将来とグローバリストの策略

日本の将来について語り合い、グローバリストの策略に対する警戒を呼びかける。また、日本の中小企業団体が結成し、日本の明るい将来を示す兆しとされる。最後に、アメリカでの選挙不正行為とそれに起因する内乱の可能性について触れる。

Mindmap

Keywords

💡現代史研究者

現代史研究者は、現代の歴史に関する専門家です。ビデオでは、チカツ・ハヤシという現代史研究者が登場し、彼の研究と見解が紹介されています。現代史研究者が歴史の矛盾や不条理さを追究し、真実を探求する姿勢は、ビデオの主題に沿った重要な要素です。

💡アキマル機構

アキマル機構とは、日本の大东亚戦争における戦略立案に関与したとされる研究機関です。ビデオでは、アキマル機構が日本軍の戦争方針に多大な影響を与えたとされており、その存在が歴史の裏側にある力関係を象徴していると説明されています。

💡グローバリズム

グローバリズムは、世界的な経済や政治の一体化を推進する思想や運動です。ビデオでは、グローバリズムの力が日本の戦時中の政策に影響を与え、戦後の世界秩序を築こうとしたと主張されています。グローバリズムは、ビデオのメッセージで重要な役割を果たしており、世界史の背後にある力として描かれています。

💡コンソーシアム

コンソーシアムとは、複数の企業や組織が協力してプロジェクトを進める組織形態です。ビデオでは、世界的な金融資本家であるロックフェラーやロスチャイルド家の人々が、グローバリズムの推進を通じて世界をコントロールしようとするコンソーシアムの一環とされています。

💡ナンキン大虐殺

ナンキン大虐殺とは、1937年に日本軍が中国のナンキンで行ったとされる大量殺戮事件です。ビデオでは、ナンキン大虐殺が実際に起こったかどうかについて触れられており、歴史家の見解として扱われています。この事件は、戦時中の日本の軍事行動に対する歴史的な見方と向き合い方に関する議論の中心に位置しています。

💡太平洋戦争

太平洋戦争は、第二次世界大戦中のアジア太平洋地域で発生した戦争です。ビデオでは、日本が太平洋戦争に参戦する前にアキマル機構の研究に基づいた戦略を立案し、その結果、戦争に挑んだとされています。太平洋戦争は、ビデオの歴史的背景として幅広く触れられており、日本の歴史的な選択と結果に関与しています。

💡フミマロ・コロナ

フミマロ・コロナは、日本の政治家で、ビデオでは彼が日本の軍事的行動に影響を与え、戦争を仕掛けたとされています。また、アメリカ合衆国との関係や、戦争後の日本の憲法制定にも関与したと描かれています。フミマロ・コロナは、ビデオの中で、日本の歴史的な転換期を象徴する人物として紹介されています。

💡新世界秩序

新世界秩序とは、グローバリズムの思想に基づいて、世界的な政治経済構造を一元的に支配しようとする計画です。ビデオでは、グローバリズムの力が新世界秩序を目指しているとされており、それが歴史の背後にある陰謀論的な側面を探求しています。新世界秩序は、ビデオの主題に沿って、世界史の深層にある力関係を象徴する重要な概念です。

💡LGBTQ

LGBTQとは、性的少数者を指す省略語で、Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer/Questioningを含みます。ビデオでは、LGBTQがグローバリズムの力を通じて推進される新しい思想の一形態とされています。また、伝統的な価値観やアイデンティティを破壊するツールと見なされていると説明されています。

💡パンデミック条約

パンデミック条約とは、世界的な感染症の発生に対処するための国際的な規約です。ビデオでは、パンデミック条約がグローバリズムの力によって推進され、国家の主権と個人の基本的人権を侵害する可能性があると警告されています。この条約は、ビデオのメッセージで、世界的な健康問題に対する対応がグローバリズムの推進下にあると主張する重要な要素です。

Highlights

Chikatsu Hayashi は現代史の研究者であり、現代史と戦時下の日本の研究に貢献している。

Akimaru Institution は、日本が連合国に対して戦争で勝利する方法を研究していた機関であり、日本の戦略立案に貢献した。

Fumimaro Konoe は、日本を破壊し、自身が国を支配しようとしたと述べ、その意図と行動について分析している。

Wall Street とグローバリスト勢力は、日本の急速な成長に対抗し、日本を破壊しようとしたと主張している。

第二次世界大戦の戦術と戦略の議論を通じて、当時の情勢と各国の意向を深く掘り下げている。

アメリカの教育システムやマスメディアが伝える歴史の99%は虚偽であり、真実を知るためには独自の研究が必要であると強調している。

ナンキン大虐殺については、研究資料に基づいて真実を追求し、国際金融資本家による戦争の背後にある陰謀を明らかにしている。

第二次世界大戦後の日本の経済成長は、グローバリスト勢力によるポスト戦時の管理の下で促進されたと分析している。

Fumimaro Konoe が昭和天皇を戦争の責任者とし、戦時下の日本の破壊を企てたと述べ、その背後にある思想と意図を明かしている。

グローバリスト勢力が推進する新しい世界秩序について警告し、国家主義と伝統を守る必要性を訴えている。

LGBTQ 運動が新しいマルクス主義の一環であり、歴史・伝統・健全な社会を破壊するツールとなっていると主張している。

ロシアのプーチン政権やアメリカのトランプ前政権が新しい世界秩序に対抗していると見ている。

日本はグローバリスト勢力の影響下にあるとし、日本の人々が目覚める必要性を強調している。

アトム爆弾の投下は人道的な観点から見直され、日本の迅速な降伏が追加の投下を防いたと釈明している。

北方領土問題について、ソ連だけでなくアメリカも関与していたと主張し、歴史的な観点からの見方を提供している。

新型コロナウイルスパンデミックは、危機感を作り出し、総力を活用して独裁的な社会を築こうとする20年計画の一環だと分析している。

日本の中小企業の経営者団体が目覚めて活動しており、日本の将来に希望を持ち、グローバリスト勢力に対抗する力になる可能性があると述べている。

トランプ大統領が再選された場合、アメリカは選挙不正によって深刻な内乱に陥り込む可能性があると警告している。

Transcripts

play00:37

Hi, guys!!!

play00:39

It's time for another interview today.

play00:41

Today's special guest is Chikatsu Hayashi, a researcher of modern history.

play00:46

Pleased to meet you.

play00:47

- You almost bit your tongue. - Yeah, let’s try again "modern and contemporary history".

play00:51

- I'm sorry, it's difficult for me to pronounce clearly. - It's difficult.

play00:53

First time I said it, modern history.

play00:55

Thank you.

play00:56

Thank you very much.

play00:57

I mean, you've surpassed all of the world powers, modern history.

play01:02

Thank you for saying that.

play01:04

I'm sure there's nothing you don't know.

play01:07

When I was a kid, I started to realize that there was something wrong with this world.

play01:10

That there are so many contradictions and things are not right.

play01:13

but I don't know why. It just doesn't make sense.

play01:16

I'm a rebellious kid who asks a lot of questions of my teachers at school.

play01:19

But I didn't get any straight answers.

play01:21

I spent a dozen years of that kind of thing without resolution.

play01:24

We can't know with the current education system or from the current mass media.

play01:26

We don't have the answer.

play01:28

The older I got, the more I wondered if there might be a clue to this mystery in history.

play01:33

Maybe it's in the last world war or the second world war in particular.

play01:38

I thought I had to get to the bottom of it myself. I started going to the National Institute for Defense Studies.

play01:44

So I looked at a lot of historical documents.

play01:46

I thought maybe there was a key there.

play01:48

And one day I ran into something I'd never heard of.

play01:52

It said "Akimaru Institution".

play01:53

A word out of nowhere.

play01:55

No answer even I asked the chat GPT.

play01:57

It doesn't come up?

play01:58

It's not showing up. Like, "I don't have that information."

play02:00

It doesn't show up in various first class historical documents.

play02:02

It doesn't even appear in history books,

play02:04

but it's written in the National Institute for Defense Studies' Japan-U.S. War, Greater East Asia War,

play02:09

in a very important part before Japan's participation in the war.

play02:12

To put it simply, the Akimaru Institute was an institution that did research on how Japan could win the war against the Allies.

play02:20

Japan started the war with a strategy based on the research of the Akimaru Institute.

play02:25

That's what I found out.

play02:26

What I mean is that you learned in the United States that Japan was militarism run amok, right?

play02:31

Yeah, when I watch YoutTube and all the comments are like, "Oh, that was worse than the Nazis."

play02:36

I mean, there's such a saying.

play02:38

It's the same in Japan today. The media and the textbooks have that kind of tone.

play02:41

But it turned out to be completely wrong.

play02:44

In the end, it was a chance for me to see that what the world tells us is almost 99% a lie.

play02:52

What we're learning is all or almost all bullshit.

play02:55

Simply put, one winning pattern was to pincer Germany and beat the Soviet Union.

play02:59

And the Allies were afraid of that.

play03:01

Then, Fumimaro Konoe and his cabinet, forced us to move southward.

play03:06

Together with a naval officer named Osami Nagano.

play03:08

Konoe and his cabinet were so determined to destroy Japan.

play03:10

They were going to crush Japan, the Empire of Japan.

play03:13

And they forced us to the south.

play03:15

Why did he want to destroy Japan?

play03:16

Konoe wanted to run the country himself.

play03:20

This country.

play03:21

The Empire of Japan is the country that received Emperor Showa.

play03:24

Fumimaro Konoe is a member of the Fujiwara family.

play03:26

- Fumimaro Fujiwara. - I see what you mean.

play03:28

He thought he was the one who had to destroy Meiji Japan and Imperial Japanese Constitution,

play03:34

and change it to an era ruled by him.

play03:37

That's amazing.

play03:38

The court nobles don't have military power. They used to be able to manipulate the Heike and the Minamoto clans.

play03:43

Fumimaro Konoe's idea was that he wanted to use the U.S. military to destroy the Empire of Japan.

play03:48

Destroy Japan once.

play03:51

Then the U.S. moved in and MacArthur didn't learn much, so Konoe let them say that he is a cosmopolitan.

play03:59

I see.

play04:00

He used that war, in a sense, to get himself in control.

play04:04

And use the United States as well.

play04:05

But in the end?

play04:06

In the end, he destroyed the Empire of Japan.

play04:09

In the end.

play04:10

Succeeded.

play04:11

And then he let MacArthur to ask him make a constitution for Japan.

play04:14

But there was another big factor in that war.

play04:17

Wall Street, the globalist forces.

play04:19

- This is where it starts to get bad. - It's going to get bad.

play04:21

It was a war to destroy Japan.

play04:23

In the first place.

play04:24

In a larger framework.

play04:25

Wall Street's big ambitions coincided with what Konoe was trying to do.

play04:30

Did Konoe know the purpose of the international finance capitalist, Wall Street?

play04:35

- I think so. - Oh, yeah?

play04:36

Konoe was trying to take advantage of Wall Street's ambitions.

play04:40

Reversed?

play04:41

Yeah.

play04:41

So he destroyed Japan first.

play04:43

When the U.S. military moved in, he got along with MacArthur. Konoe wanted to take control of the new Japan.

play04:48

He was going to take it.

play04:50

However, I'm super-concluded now.

play04:52

I'm actually going to talk about this in 10 hours.

play04:54

After 10 hours!

play04:56

In conclusion, globalist forces wanted to take advantage of Japan,

play05:00

but Japan grew up too fast and got cocky so they wanted to destroy it in the end.

play05:03

Postwar management made the Japanese work like a beaver to make the economy grow.

play05:07

To make money for themselves.

play05:09

They didn't let the military power that Japan was supposed to have.

play05:11

Didn't let.

play05:12

To make it work, they tried to put a symbolic emperor from the beginning.

play05:16

But it was Fumimaro Konoe who wanted to destroy the emperor.

play05:19

Right.

play05:20

Konoe held Emperor Showa responsible for the war and asked him to get on a ship and die in the war.

play05:27

Really?

play05:28

- He can do that much too. - Wow.

play05:30

That's who he was.

play05:31

So he tried to put all the responsibility for the war on Emperor Showa.

play05:33

That's not the Wall Street scenario.

play05:35

True.

play05:36

They even wanted to use the emperor, right?

play05:38

Yes, yes, yes

play05:39

And then since Konoe knew too much...

play05:41

For example, there are communists under the umbrella of Wall Street.

play05:43

And he's got these communists and these Wall Street people on his staff.

play05:48

And he sent Japan to war.

play05:50

He knew what he were doing.

play05:52

If they make Konoe a war criminal and send him to the Tokyo Trials, he's going to talk about it all.

play05:56

Right.

play05:56

And that's not what they wanted and then he was hostile to the Showa Emperor in the first place.

play06:00

That's why the globalist forces killed Fumimaro Konoe.

play06:03

I think it was December 16, 1945.

play06:05

Konoe is supposed to be suicide, isn't it?

play06:07

Look at the title of this book. "Konoe did not commit suicide."

play06:11

So he was killed.

play06:12

I think. I looked into a lot of detail about that. I have a lot of testimony that contradicts each other.

play06:18

He died in a house in Ogikubo, Suginami Ward, Tokyo, called Tekigaiso, and I went there, too.

play06:23

- You actually went there. - To check it out.

play06:24

It's like he took advantage of the strong big guys, but they ended up cutting him off.

play06:29

As for Konoe, he's a member of the Fujiwara family for over 1000 years and he's a courtier.

play06:33

I think it's the second oldest family in the world after the Emperor's lineage.

play06:36

So for Konoe, the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers, they are the upstarts.

play06:41

- I see. - I guess he thought he was probably bigger than them.

play06:44

- He's gotten bolder in his feelings, too. - I think he thought he could use them.

play06:48

What Konoe did was to drive Japan into the quagmire of the Shina Incident.

play06:53

He drew the line for war between Japan and the U.S.

play06:55

He backed out of the whole thing. With his one thought or his one purpose.

play06:59

He's got a role around him to help him, to instigate him, to keep an eye on him.

play07:03

He's totally taken advantage of.

play07:05

There's been a complete scenario.

play07:06

Japan was tilted by the quagmire of the Sino-Japanese Incident, economically.

play07:10

So Roosevelt stopped the oil when Japan is not doing well economically.

play07:13

I see.

play07:14

So we had to go get the oil.

play07:16

And this is where the conversation finally goes back to the Akimaru Institution.

play07:19

Akimaru Institution was created by the Army at the end of 1939.

play07:22

Was it that thing where they look at things from an economic point of view?

play07:24

I think we're going to find out that the army is not at all what people are saying.

play07:30

The Japanese Imperial Army was very rational.

play07:33

War is not a spirit. The idea was that war was economic.

play07:36

It's not in our image.

play07:38

- It's the other way around, isn't it? - Yeah.

play07:39

Why did we get that image? As I've talked about it, it's also War Guilt Information.

play07:44

If you're losing so much in the second half of the war, you don't usually go to war.

play07:47

That's usually the case.

play07:49

But Japan kept fighting.

play07:50

The Japanese army studied World War I very well.

play07:54

Then, they took the view that war was an industrial production force.

play07:58

It was this agency that studied the economy to see if there was a way to break through.

play08:04

And what were the results of their research?

play08:06

No one in the leadership wanted to go to war with the U.S. at that time.

play08:10

"If we tried to fight the U.S., we would lose."

play08:12

So, the Akimaru Institute was under that assumption. If we went south to get oil, we would run into the British.

play08:17

Here is a great idea from the Akimaru Institute: the Japanese fleet of the navy should conquer the Indian Ocean.

play08:22

Then the British would run out of supplies that they would dry up.

play08:25

In the Atlantic, Nazi Germany would sink the support from the United States with submarines called U-boats.

play08:30

That's great.

play08:31

Basically, they knew they were not going to fight the United States.

play08:35

In the first place.

play08:36

Based on that research, there was an operation that was agreed upon by the Army and the Navy.

play08:42

When you're going south to get oil, even so, you have the Philippines in the middle.

play08:45

So the Philippines has to hold back the occupation.

play08:48

The Philippines was positioned as an autonomous U.S. territory at the time.

play08:51

So there's a possibility of a conflict with the U.S. because of that.

play08:54

So their idea was even if they occupied it, they would return it to the U.S. immediately after.

play08:58

There was a pro-American government in the autonomous region.

play09:01

They would give that back to the U.S. as well.

play09:03

And I'm sure you know this but it's the reflection of World War I.

play09:06

It's all connected.

play09:07

This is President Wilson.

play09:09

President Wilson was manipulated by this Wall Street Colonel House, who is said to be a proxy for the globalist forces.

play09:14

Here he is, Colonel House.

play09:16

Colonel House.

play09:17

The American people were fooled by these people into going into World War I, and it didn't do any good.

play09:22

Just a lot of young people died.

play09:24

So, the American people and Congress were in agreement that they would never go to war again.

play09:28

"Apparently, Roosevelt is agitating for war with Germany and Japan but we'll never going to listen."

play09:32

Pretty much everybody was very much in the anti-war movement at the time, right?

play09:36

They were already solidly anti-war.

play09:38

So Congress and the American people have agreed that they're not going to take that risk.

play09:43

Even they heard that Japan occupied the Philippines for a while, but it will be returned soon.

play09:48

I mean, the risk of going into a world war was too big for them too.

play09:52

So if we went south to get oil and conquered the Indian Ocean, blockade it, and fall, this scenario of Japan wins World War II.

play10:01

We probably won.

play10:02

- If you use your geopolitical common sense. - If you use common sense.

play10:05

If you think about it normally, this war is a war that Japan win, if the scenario was as it was...

play10:10

Then history would have changed.

play10:12

So the assumption is that the U.S. will not enter the war.

play10:14

Wall Street had to destroy that premise.

play10:17

The trick to get the U.S., which will never enter the war, to enter the war is...

play10:20

9.XX.

play10:21

Oh, no. I made a big mistake.

play10:23

No, maybe it was.

play10:24

The trick was...

play10:25

What? A war in the Middle East?

play10:27

Hamas? Oh, no.

play10:29

So that's Isoroku.

play10:31

Isoroku Yamamoto...

play10:32

Why do you think he went there?

play10:34

Even Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet Yamamoto's many subordinates were against the attack on Pearl Harbor.

play10:41

It would only make the Americans angry. You're just giving them an excuse to get into the war.

play10:44

They knew exactly what they were doing, but they had to go. Was it the system?

play10:50

It's an Institute, it's an army, so they can't just go against the top.

play10:54

Do you know what Chief Yamamoto did?

play10:57

He lined up the top brass on the deck and he said,

play10:59

"I want to attack, and those who are against me, leave now."

play11:02

Then they can't say no, right?

play11:03

He also said that he has faith.

play11:05

A year before the attack on Pearl Harbor, he wrote a letter to the Minister of the Navy and that's what's left.

play11:11

"If we attacked Hawaii out of the blue, the U.S. would be horrified and Japan would win the war."

play11:16

That's what the letter says, but I think he knew it was impossible.

play11:22

Did he know that?

play11:23

I think he knew, indeed.

play11:25

He's more of a gambler, a flamboyant person.

play11:27

He's also a womanizer.

play11:29

He studied at Harvard University in the United States.

play11:31

That's right.

play11:31

And he could have been told from somewhere else.

play11:33

Isn't there something a little bit more rebellious about it?

play11:35

Maybe. He doesn't have a big strategic eye either.

play11:37

How can the Axis Powers win if they think globally?

play11:41

Power play...

play11:42

Because all the sane staff in the military command and all the people at the heart of the Department of the Navy were against it.

play11:47

The government was against it, and of course, the Army was against it.

play11:49

You can't go that far in the first place without being detected by the enemy.

play11:53

With a large fleet.

play11:54

It's said that Roosevelt and the others knew about it and let them come on purpose.

play11:58

They knew, and they invited them in.

play12:00

Yeah, yeah, there's a study like that.

play12:02

Common sense tells you that's impossible, right?

play12:04

Of course.

play12:05

Based on a decent study made by the Akimaru Institute, the army and the navy had all kinds of discussions.

play12:10

Created war strategy guidelines.

play12:12

Based on that, the Imperial Japanese Army Government Liaison Conference was held on November 15, 1941.

play12:17

Just before the war started, because the war started on December 8.

play12:20

The official national strategy that Japan decided was not to go to war with the United States.

play12:23

Japan won't surprise Pearl Harbor, but take the Philippines once.

play12:26

And then intercept the American navy in the Far East around the Marianas.

play12:30

Not going all the way there.

play12:32

Give the Philippines back to them.

play12:33

Japan's war strategy against the U.S. was not total war; it was ideological warfare.

play12:38

Ideological warfare?

play12:38

The Amerindian Congress and the people didn't want to go to war. They were absolutely against it, right?

play12:43

Tell the American people, American Congress not be fooled by the Roosevelt administration.

play12:48

They were planning to do propaganda.

play12:49

Did they try to do that?

play12:51

That's the national strategy, the Ideological warfare.

play12:53

Japan was trying to do that...

play12:54

This is what it says. In print in this national strategy.

play12:57

Not much of an image.

play12:58

So it's being erased.

play12:59

They were playing pretty smart back then.

play13:02

- Excellent. - That's insanely excellent.

play13:04

So Japan fought on the same level.

play13:07

That's the problem for them.

play13:08

Right.

play13:09

For Wall Streeters.

play13:10

Okay, so, up until the very end in a sense, Japan was doing well?

play13:15

Yes, they were doing what they were supposed to do.

play13:17

Japan would have won.

play13:18

But by being cheated in a sense at the last minute, the whole thing was turned upside down like Othello.

play13:24

The attack on Pearl Harbor, in short.

play13:25

To summarize what I just said for an hour, let's talk about"logic".

play13:29

"Logic": making sense or not.

play13:31

In a world of logic, Japan was not defeated. In a world of logic, there was no attack on Pearl Harbor

play13:35

But it's an atmosphere.

play13:36

With the atmosphere, Japan went into a war between the U.S.

play13:38

That's all it took.

play13:39

They say, 80 years ago, the atmosphere has plunged army into war.

play13:42

It's not.

play13:43

Exactly.

play13:44

The Army was a world of logic.

play13:45

The Navy ran amok with the atmosphere.

play13:47

I just want to ask you something.

play13:50

Every time I learn about these things during World War II in oversea, I see a lot of people saying that Japan was barbaric.

play13:56

That's what they say about Nanjing. The Philippines is also said to be a genocide.

play14:00

How do you see those facts from your point of view?

play14:02

First of all, the Nanjing Massacre was

play14:08

Is that true in terms of research material?

play14:10

Yeah.

play14:11

So, if we break it down to begin with, we end up with communism and international finance capitalists, right?

play14:16

It's often called a conspiracy theory.

play14:17

I've heard that you have the power to turn this conspiracy theory into fact.

play14:21

Well, I mean, I don't feel like I'm talking about conspiracy theories at all.

play14:25

Right?

play14:26

I'd like to show people a little bit of the power structure of this world in the first place.

play14:30

I don't call it a conspiracy, I call it a plot.

play14:33

Plot, well, I see.

play14:34

There are many ways to say this but in the end Rockefeller was the architect of the war against the U.S.

play14:38

Oh! There he is.

play14:39

"Who plotted the war between Japan and the U.S.?" is the title.

play14:41

"Rockefeller, Roosevelt, Konoe and Hoover" is the subtitle.

play14:45

To put it plainly, these international finance capitalists Rockefeller or Rothschilds, they are the globalist forces.

play14:50

What's their number one goal?

play14:52

In terms of the big history, they wanted to smash the Empire of Japan down.

play14:57

As for Japan, they wanted to smash it down.

play14:59

Put it under occupation.

play15:00

So they're ultimately about occupying all over that part of the world, right?

play15:04

It's that New World Order kind of big story to begin with.

play15:07

It's about creating a New World Order.

play15:09

Unified world government.

play15:11

They want to establish it.

play15:12

That's what it leads to.

play15:14

All the people are on this page.

play15:16

Can I put this image for a second?

play15:17

- Sure. - Can I put it on the screen?

play15:19

Sure, so it's all the people.

play15:20

Page 204.

play15:21

Pacific Congress you mentioned earlier.

play15:23

Members of the Pacific Issues Study Group in attendance. It's marked with a star here.

play15:27

The first one, the most straightforward, starts with the House Colonel has planned.

play15:30

Rothschild's agent.

play15:32

This guy started building it.

play15:34

Okay.

play15:35

And then he started the Federal Reserve System, the Fed, to bring the United States under the umbrella of President Wilson.

play15:41

And then he got the United States into World War I. And then he created the League of Nations.

play15:45

In short, capitalism, moneyism.

play15:47

To make more money is to bring countries under your umbrella in the New World Order.

play15:52

And the next step is to eliminate countries.

play15:54

Eliminate countries.

play15:55

Eliminate nations.

play15:56

Eliminate history.

play15:57

Why do they want to do that?

play15:59

Karl Marx wrote that eventually capitalism would develop and the country would cease to exist.

play16:07

Really?

play16:08

So he's imagining the Rothschilds.

play16:10

I wrote in this book, Karl Marx was a member of the Rothschilds.

play16:12

I'm going to be a little bit more specific about it. They have the first generation, right?

play16:16

That guy was a moneylender in Frankfurt, Germany. But not just in Germany, he sent his kids all over Europe.

play16:21

Yes, five children.

play16:24

Paris, Vienna, Naples, and Frankfurt, respectively.

play16:27

There is the third son, Nathan.

play16:31

Was it Nathan who was the most active one?

play16:33

No, not that. He's the third son, but they call him "sister" (Ne-san in Japanese).

play16:38

I see!

play16:40

Sorry.

play16:40

I only hear "Nathan" in English, so...

play16:43

But with the Japanese way, right.

play16:45

That's what you mean.

play16:46

I felt like I was left behind.

play16:48

So sorry.

play16:50

"Sister", that's what you mean.

play16:51

I was just wondering.

play16:53

Nathan went to London by himself.

play16:55

And he started a business from there and made it bigger. But he can't do it alone, right?

play16:59

Right.

play17:00

So there was already a Jewish millionaire.

play17:02

They were called the Cohen family, and they were in charge of the British Empire, including trade.

play17:06

Textiles at the time and cotton products were the mainstay of world trade.

play17:11

The Cohen family was in charge of that. And then he became their son-in-law.

play17:14

The whole Cohen family was in the textile business.

play17:18

I think Nathan Rothschild's wife's cousin? is Marx's grandmother, right?

play17:22

Oh, so that's where the connection comes in.

play17:24

Marx's grandfather and grandmother were also in the textile business.

play17:27

Rothschild and Cohen's family are kind ones.

play17:29

Karl Marx is the brilliant grandson of them.

play17:32

He is the Cohen-Rothschild family and he is the Rothschild family.

play17:34

In a sense that system to control the world was already established there?

play17:39

- That's where it started. - Okay.

play17:42

You can look at it as that.

play17:43

Then the Rockefellers rise up, oil comes out.

play17:47

And then the Rothschilds helped the Rockefellers rise.

play17:50

And we often say that Rothschild in the rear guard, Rockefeller in the vanguard.

play17:53

I have that image.

play17:54

They ran the U.S. and ran the world. There's a history of that.

play17:58

There's an ownership relationship, but they don't really move themselves out in the open.

play18:01

The one that jumps up and down and stands out is Bill Gates or so.

play18:03

Right.

play18:05

It's said that he's pretty much taken over from Rockefeller in the area of public health.

play18:08

In the 21st century.

play18:10

Davos or Schwab. The ones that stand out right now.

play18:12

Klaus Schwab.

play18:13

Soros is standing out as well.

play18:14

Right.

play18:15

In the end, the top tier that is aiming for that New World Order is called the Deep State.

play18:20

Yes.

play18:21

They say it's a dark government.

play18:22

It's network, finance, industry, government, etc.

play18:26

I think those layers are already being created.

play18:28

There's an alignment of interests. They don't want nationalism there.

play18:31

For example, if the country is solid, and if there's a national interest, they will create trade barriers like tariffs.

play18:37

That's a hindrance.

play18:38

It's a hindrance.

play18:39

In brief.

play18:40

They don't want traditions either. They just want to buy labor cheaply from overseas.

play18:43

All they want is immigration. And that's what's happening more and more.

play18:46

Getting rid of the walls...

play18:47

The interests are aligned. Global corporations, Wall Street, the families, and the shareholders, etc.

play18:52

When you put money-making at the core, those things get in the way.

play18:56

The war and public health are a business.

play18:58

And the neocons are the same in that sense.

play19:00

Even under the guise of war, there's the idea of crushing nationalism.

play19:04

I mean, they've already established a segment of the population that's in agreement over the years.

play19:08

That layer turn 8 billion people into obedient world citizens.

play19:13

8 billion are so-called mass consumers as well as working people, white-collar and blue-collar.

play19:17

Times have changed, because in the past, when you talk about colonial rule, it was almost like slavery.

play19:22

To make more money, all 8 billion of them should be workers and consumers; obedient citizens of the world.

play19:28

And if 8 billion is too much, they can reduce it.

play19:30

If it's too much, they can reduce it, right.

play19:31

I just talked about the 200-year process for about 10 minutes.

play19:35

Can I just ask one more thing?

play19:37

Does religion come into it?

play19:39

No, I don't think so.

play19:41

Oh, I see.

play19:42

Religion is nationalism too.

play19:43

When you trace it back to the source, it can lead to that.

play19:46

- I still think Judaism has a special place. - Right?

play19:49

In Israel, it's not even a target of the nationalism crushing.

play19:54

There are a lot of traditional Jews there.

play19:56

Right.

play19:57

They have by far the highest number of child births of any developed country.

play20:00

and the traditional family structure with three generations living together is the most maintained in Israel.

play20:04

So what's going to happen from a religious point of view?

play20:07

Maybe they are moving in the direction of keeping Judaism alone.

play20:11

That's what they want.

play20:12

Yeah, we've been walking in that direction for 200 years of history.

play20:15

And if you look at the current administration, the Biden administration is following suit.

play20:17

And the Kishida administration is following suit.

play20:19

There are other trends that have been gaining strength in recent years.

play20:21

For example, Putin's in Russia.

play20:23

Where is Putin's position?

play20:25

- Position to defeat the New World Order. - I see.

play20:28

Trump stands that way too.

play20:29

Exactly, it's easy to see.

play20:31

And Robert Kennedy Jr. too.

play20:32

I think he's the one who's the most outspoken about it.

play20:36

The U.S.'s independence was from the British in the first place.

play20:38

And that's been the history of the U.S., which they were ruled by it, or they fought against it.

play20:42

Trump didn't just come out of nowhere.

play20:44

Roughly half of the U.S. is anti-globalism.

play20:47

- It's always been that way. - Always.

play20:49

And that's where Trump is getting in and strengthening it.

play20:51

A lot of people in the West are waking up.

play20:54

It's roughly 40% and 50% are said to be anti-globalism.

play20:58

That much!

play20:59

Yeah, that's right.

play21:00

And there's been increasing.

play21:01

I think so too.

play21:02

The Ukrainian war revealed the truth, so...

play21:05

They are starting to get it.

play21:06

That the U.S. intervenes too much everywhere.

play21:08

But Japan has woken up in that sense, still only 1%.

play21:13

Well, yeah.

play21:15

For example, if Trump is elected president...

play21:17

Next year?

play21:18

Yup. There is a possibility that the U.S. will withdraw from the WHO.

play21:21

He's applying for withdrawal once during the Trump administration.

play21:23

He said so.

play21:24

Biden fixed it back again.

play21:26

Japan could be an honor student at WHO.

play21:30

Oh, on the contrary.

play21:31

This is the Pandemic Treaty.

play21:33

Is that next year?

play21:34

It's been discussed tremendously, and it's already been scheduled since 2021

play21:38

and we're moving forward with the Pandemic Treaty

play21:40

and the revision of the International Health Regulations.

play21:42

You don't know that, do you?

play21:43

I don't know the details.

play21:44

Because it's not reported.

play21:45

And that's going to be decided by the General Assembly next May.

play21:47

And in the West, Robert Kennedy Jr. said it very clearly that

play21:50

It's a denial of national sovereignty, it's a denial of basic individual human rights,

play21:54

and the WHO is trying to govern the world under the guise of a pandemic.

play21:57

Governing the world.

play21:58

Many countries are aware of it. Except Japan.

play22:00

If this is agreed, we're going to have another pandemic-like thing after this.

play22:04

And will do a forced vaccine and a lockdown...

play22:07

Lockdown, vaccine passport, etc. We're forced to have a digital health certificate.

play22:11

So they're setting that up.

play22:13

There's a concern about that.

play22:14

It's done behind closed doors,

play22:16

and the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are not open about it.

play22:19

They don't know that? Or it's not like they don't care about that.

play22:23

That's the subtlety of it; they'll tell you that they don't want to violate the sovereignty of the state.

play22:28

They say that.

play22:29

But you have to be careful because even if the Japanese officials have the best intentions...

play22:34

Japanese politics itself seems to be controlled, as we saw with the LGBTQ bill the other day.

play22:42

So it was driven by dynamics beyond the good intentions of the various officials.

play22:46

Well, yeah.

play22:47

The U.S., for example, with Trump as president, they could withdraw from the WHO.

play22:51

Japan could be in the most delicious country for globalist forces.

play22:55

That's what you mean.

play22:57

That's the kind of situation we're in right now, so anyway, we need to ring the alarm with you Naokichan.

play23:01

With Naokiman.

play23:02

Naokichan is fine.

play23:03

I wanted to blow a whistle.

play23:05

I wanted to talk about a series of these things that actually led to now with certainty.

play23:10

If you don't make people aware of it, I don't think it's going to get to the present day.

play23:14

You have to know this kind of history properly.

play23:17

In the first place, in terms of identity, what is the nature of the Japanese people?

play23:21

What kind of identity did we originally have in the prewar period?

play23:24

There's a long history, if you take it all the way back to the Jomon period,

play23:28

There was the importance of harmony. And the Japanese are fused together in that way over a long period of time.

play23:35

It's a world of harmony.

play23:37

In addition to that, patriotism was very important.

play23:41

The Meiji, Taisho, and Showa eras came, and the globalists hated it the most.

play23:45

I see, nationalism.

play23:47

History or tradition.

play23:48

So it was pretty strong, then?

play23:50

Yes, family, marriage, or community.

play23:53

And the collective power was amazing.

play23:55

Think tanks on their side before they burn Japan down were coming to the conclusion.

play24:01

January of 1945, I think.

play24:03

It's before the Tokyo Air Raid and the Hiroshima-Nagasaki atomic bombing.

play24:05

They knew that Japan would be burnt to the ground and under occupation.

play24:08

Then what to do?

play24:08

A Rothschild-affiliated think tank was reporting to the Rockefeller- affiliated Pacific Affairs Research Council conference.

play24:13

What kind of report is that, simply put, "give them oil, give them an Asian market,

play24:18

Japanese are hardworking, they're good at what they do."

play24:20

"So they're going to be the economic powerhouse of the world."

play24:23

Oh, my.

play24:23

They came to that conclusion in 1945.

play24:26

20-30 years later, that is 1965 or 1975.

play24:29

I can't believe they expected it with such accuracy.

play24:32

And that's why the emperor became a symbolic system.

play24:35

And they thought if they changed the top management to be anti-Japanese, then the whole Institute would be so too.

play24:40

I see.

play24:41

As long as there are people who have the spirit of the Showa era, it didn't happen.

play24:46

Their scheme, which the educational institutions and Kasumigaseki function

play24:49

as anti-Japanese Institutes, is now working after 70-80 years.

play24:52

I see. It's all in their hands.

play24:54

What surprised me again in the document in its conclusion is that Japan is going to become an American-style industrial society.

play25:01

That's exactly what happened.

play25:02

Yes.

play25:03

But they have a fear, though. Japan will be so within 20-30 years, but don't let them bring back nationalism.

play25:09

That's the point.

play25:10

So far it hasn't come back, right?

play25:12

That's what they're trying to do with the speech and the GHQ War Guilt Information Program.

play25:17

In a way, they instilled a sense of guilt in us that the Japanese military was to blame.

play25:22

That the Japanese people who allowed it to happen were bad.

play25:25

And that's exactly where we lose all patriotism.

play25:27

Yes.

play25:28

So they deny it all.

play25:29

Deny everything.

play25:30

And then the next thing they did is to lose our identity as a Japanese person.

play25:33

They're doing it globally, though.

play25:34

So that's exactly what LGBTQ people are doing, to eliminate identity in a very simple way.

play25:40

Well, you could say that.

play25:41

Various recent events are called "the new Marxism".

play25:44

It's also called the new communism.

play25:45

In other words, it destroys history, tradition, and a healthy society.

play25:48

And they say LGBTQ is part of that. Trump says so, too.

play25:52

Now America is being invaded by Marxism.

play25:55

In the first place, Marx, as I said before, while looking at the global New World Order,

play25:59

advocated logic, such as capitalism collapsing, and the workers starting a revolution.

play26:02

And that's why the Soviet Union and the Chinese Communist Party were formed.

play26:07

So, in the end, it's used as a tool for divide and conquer.

play26:10

Simply put, it's Wall Street that created the Soviet economy.

play26:13

That's how it's set up.

play26:14

That's how China works then.

play26:15

Yes, of course.

play26:16

As long as the U.S. and the Soviet Union are pointing nuclear missiles at each other, we're all preoccupied with that.

play26:21

- That's all we can think about. - Right.

play26:22

For example, in the U.S., they're not going to see the fact that a few have all the wealth and control.

play26:27

When they say crisis, they all turn toward the Soviet Union.

play26:29

They've created that kind of world.

play26:30

They made money in the military business in local wars. The Korean War, the Vietnam War...

play26:34

But it was inefficient to keep that Soviet Union.

play26:36

Because it's not a market economy.

play26:38

So the next communist force that makes money is the Chinese Communist Party.

play26:41

China after Deng Xiaoping

play26:44

So, it was a tool for the bipolar structure of the world.

play26:48

Marx's proletarian revolution never happened, but cultural communism did happen.

play26:53

And that's what's undermining the world right now. And that's what's happening with LGBTQ.

play26:56

The theory that's going to replace that Marxian proletarian revolution is the Frankfurt School.

play27:01

It is in Germany, and that's where an upside-down world is advocated.

play27:05

In short, all upside down.

play27:07

So there's nothing uglier than a healthy male-female relationship.

play27:10

For example, that children who take pride in their families are insane.

play27:14

Wow...

play27:15

Patriotism, or enhancing that mindset of yours is said to be the disease.

play27:19

So, they're trying to make the world a better place with eliminating all that kind of stuff.

play27:22

They encourage that kind of children's rebellion against their parents or the order.

play27:25

So they're propagandized.

play27:26

Anyway, it's going to destroy the whole order.

play27:28

They are creating a world where the things we frown upon are the things that are wonderful.

play27:33

The scary thing is that if you deny the word diversity, you will be considered bad.

play27:38

They're going to call you a racist.

play27:40

Even in the Frankfurt School, diversity is what's important.

play27:42

And if you don't respect diversity, you are an insane person.

play27:46

Regarded as a person with strange obsessions.

play27:48

I see what you mean.

play27:50

That obsession is considered insanity.

play27:52

So that's the backbone of all the movements.

play27:54

This logic that Frankfurt is the new communism has taken over American education.

play27:59

And it was so well funded by the capitalists

play28:01

that it took over American education in the postwar period.

play28:04

So the elite students in America have all become that way of thinking.

play28:09

You mean those GAFA-like companies today.

play28:12

The one who's screaming that the American people can't be saved if we don't defeat that elite is Robert Kennedy Jr.

play28:18

Or Trump.

play28:19

I see a lot of viewers who love conspiracy theories treat Trump like he's the messiah.

play28:26

For us Japanese, if Trump is inaugurated next year, compared to other forces, he is better, right?

play28:32

I think he's going to correct the Biden administration's aberration of America.

play28:36

I think he will fight with international Institutes, or he'll come to terms with Putin about the war.

play28:42

So I think he's going to make the world less prone to war.

play28:47

But please remember. Before three years ago, Trump was president.

play28:50

Right.

play28:51

In the first half of the term, there was a Republican majority in both the Senate and the House.

play28:54

And the Russian president was Putin and the Japanese prime minister was Prime Minister Abe.

play28:58

- It was a golden trio. - Right.

play28:59

So did Japan get Japan back then? No, they didn't.

play29:03

Not at all.

play29:03

And he hasn't even made Prime Minister by visiting Yasukuni Shrine. Abe has been a bulwark, though.

play29:09

What happened in the era of Trump and Abe?

play29:11

They messed up Japan's defense industry.

play29:14

They set it up so that Japan buys everything from the US.

play29:16

Then during that time, the privatization of water supply. The water law issue, the seed law issue.

play29:21

They are the ones who destroyed the future of Japanese agriculture with their trade agreements.

play29:27

History shows us that,

play29:29

presidents who try to protect America fulfill their promises, but it doesn't mean the globalist forces will go away, right?

play29:35

Of course.

play29:36

Even if Trump is next in line for the presidency, it doesn't mean the globalist forces will go away.

play29:39

They continue to hold back the major parts of the world.

play29:42

So you can look at it as a struggle that's going to get more and more intense.

play29:44

That's right.

play29:45

Because even when the rigged election took place, Trump was the president.

play29:49

That's right.

play29:50

That's when they can do a trick like that.

play29:52

That's when BLM got intense with the Trump administration, right?

play29:55

Yes, it did.

play29:55

And the attack on the Capitol building.

play29:57

Perhaps if Trump becomes president America will become more and more violent.

play30:01

Then again, Trump is pro-Israel, right?

play30:04

And he's close with some Jewish groups.

play30:06

If he didn't, he wouldn't be president in the first place.

play30:09

I thought he was clever, too, because he proceeded to put America first,

play30:13

but he freed Japan to Wall Street. I think that's what he did.

play30:19

Make sure to exploit that.

play30:20

I think that was the bargaining point.

play30:22

Ah, that's interesting.

play30:23

And that's a possibility for the next four years.

play30:26

If Trump becomes president, the environment will be better than it is now.

play30:29

The Japanese people have to wake up and stand up.

play30:31

We still have to start with history to wake up, absolutely.

play30:36

I see.

play30:37

I don't think there are that many Japanese who still think Biden is nefarious.

play30:41

Probably people who watch the news in general don't understand.

play30:45

So the Trump messiah means that he is a strong leader who puts America first.

play30:50

Or in terms of international relations,

play30:52

in terms of Russia, for example, or not starting wars, he's a great leader.

play30:57

But I don't think we should look at him as the savior of Japan.

play31:00

You have to be your own savior each and every citizen.

play31:03

Wonderful.

play31:03

We have to.

play31:04

In that vein, Abe got attacked after all.

play31:07

What is your view on this?

play31:09

There's been a lot of talk about it, though.

play31:12

I'll tell you two points of view.

play31:14

The first one is that we've got a totally different press conference

play31:16

from the doctor in Nara who did the first surgery and the subsequent police statement.

play31:20

Totally different.

play31:20

So, the bullet got in here, didn't it?

play31:22

Yamagami would never be able to shoot from behind.

play31:25

That's the first point, and that already says it all.

play31:28

Abe did his best in some areas,

play31:30

but after all, the role of Japan's prime minister is that of a proxy for the global powers of the Occupation.

play31:36

Oh, wow.

play31:37

Proxy.

play31:38

It can't be helped. That's what it means to be the prime minister in Japan.

play31:42

I see.

play31:43

The first Abe cabinet had the slogan, "Break free from the postwar regime."

play31:49

How long has it been since I've been here, two hours?

play31:51

About two hours.

play31:51

He just said what I talked about for two hours.

play31:54

That's where he got screwed over.

play31:56

They brought up the pension issue, and dragged him down.

play32:00

And he had a bad gut, right?

play32:01

He was exhausted, physically and mentally. He was dying, wasn't he?

play32:05

Breaking free from the postwar regime was a great slogan.

play32:08

I think it was one of the greatest slogans in the history of the world.

play32:10

It's like everything I've ever talked about in this slogan.

play32:13

But the people did not understand.

play32:15

The people couldn't understand it because they've been so brainwashed.

play32:17

That's right.

play32:18

That happened to him.

play32:19

I see.

play32:20

The media doesn't explain it, either.

play32:22

Abe said he was sorry, himself.

play32:24

He said he's reflected on it since the first Abe cabinet.

play32:26

What was on Abe's mind even in the end?

play32:29

So in front of the so-called agents of globalism, he said, "I have come back to life on the side of globalism"

play32:37

Like, "Please make money in Japan. I'll cooperate with you."

play32:40

But the poster at that time made for a nationwide campaign for the House of Councillors in Japan

play32:43

has the famous line, "Restore Japan."

play32:45

So it's a little different from what he's saying.

play32:48

That, but the prime minister can't help it

play32:50

But after he left, he said a lot of things that were based on his original aspirations.

play32:55

For example, I think he was actually in touch with Vladimir Putin behind the scenes.

play33:00

He was in touch.

play33:01

It's said to be so.

play33:02

He was a dangerous man for them.

play33:04

And he is the number one political figure in Japan.

play33:06

So they didn't want him.

play33:07

That's what the situation was like. I can tell you those two things.

play33:11

But it's much clearer for me.

play33:13

I mean, Japan has lost a very important piece of the puzzle.

play33:16

Yeah.

play33:16

About what I was saying earlier, but we can't rely on Abe alone.

play33:20

Exactly.

play33:21

You have to be Abe.

play33:23

You have to be the hero.

play33:24

I think Abe was one of the most brilliant politicians.

play33:27

But when it comes to the prime minister, that's that.

play33:29

Well, yeah.

play33:30

Can I change the subject for a second?

play33:31

We had a pandemic, right?

play33:32

Why did they decide to do that at that time?

play33:35

It was a 20-year plan.

play33:36

Oh, so it's a 20-year plan?

play33:38

There's been a lot of planning and simulations over the last 20 years.

play33:43

The point is that if they spread an epidemic, they're going to create a sense of crisis.

play33:47

And a vaccine. It's also a business.

play33:50

Through both, they're creating a totalitarian society.

play33:53

Twenty years ago, at the time of 9/11, there was an incident called anthrax attacks.

play33:56

I was living in the U.S. at the time, so we were like, "We're in a trouble," right?

play34:02

There's a prevailing theory that it was a set-up.

play34:05

Since then, in terms of security against terrorist attacks, biological weapons,

play34:10

Vaccine development has flourished.

play34:11

Fauci, who became the director of the Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases 20 years before...

play34:14

Fauci.

play34:15

A lot of money now flows to Fauci.

play34:18

So he could do as much research as he wanted.

play34:20

And that's how we got from anthrax to smallpox and that kind of thing.

play34:23

But it was hard to make a big case out of it.

play34:27

Now they've changed their focus and they've come up with the idea of an epidemic that comes out of the interior of China.

play34:31

And so they've moved more and more towards research on the acquisition of influenza, coronas, and so on.

play34:36

They've been doing more and more gain-of-function research.

play34:37

At the same time, they've been doing vaccine development.

play34:40

Moderna and all that stuff.

play34:42

And that's going to be technically ready in 2019.

play34:45

Oh, it was that timing.

play34:46

There's been a global simulation been going on for the last ten years.

play34:49

Like the system.

play34:50

The whole systemic side is in place, and it happened in 2019 from the Wuhan Institute.

play34:55

Occurred.

play34:56

I think we can say that the whole process is very well planned.

play35:01

Anyway, it's business and the way forward on the road to the New World Order.

play35:06

It's been a concrete testing ground and demonstration for the last three years.

play35:10

And the population has been reasonably well controlled.

play35:12

Since the time of the Spanish flu, there's been some strange, artificial things being done.

play35:16

And the Spanish flu?

play35:17

There's something about using the Army to spread the epidemic.

play35:19

Because of improved nutrition and sanitation after the war there's less disease, especially in the developed world.

play35:24

That's not good, so the U.S. government and the drug makers were working together to develop plagues.

play35:29

AIDS or SARS or so.

play35:30

- So they say. - That's terrifying.

play35:33

So the pandemic that followed from that.

play35:35

Yes, that's the trend.

play35:37

A lot of things occur like Corona in the 21st century.

play35:39

- By far more than in the past? - More.

play35:41

There's a lot of stuff out there. It's supposed to be clean.

play35:43

I know it's probably Wuhan, not the seafood market,

play35:45

but I have a feeling that it came out the way it's supposed to come out.

play35:48

But even now, the WHO or whatever, they're still saying it's a disease of zoonotic origin.

play35:53

Can I change the topic again?

play35:55

The Middle East issue.

play35:56

So I'm just wondering what kind of scenarios waiting for us.

play35:59

Many things can be said, but I want to see what the next move is before I say anything for sure.

play36:03

But I still think that Iran is going to get involved.

play36:05

Iran got involved.

play36:06

Oh, that's dangerous.

play36:07

Dangerous.

play36:07

Not good.

play36:08

War or before that there is the issue of say oil.

play36:11

For Japan.

play36:12

We're almost entirely dependent on the Middle East, aren't we?

play36:14

When I say this, again, I don't want people to go out and buy.

play36:17

That's kind of the thing.

play36:19

It's like running out of toilet paper.

play36:21

So I don't think it's a good idea to say that.

play36:23

But in the end, the person behind the scenes is also the one who is in control.

play36:25

Well, the money is coming to Hamas itself from the globalist forces, right?

play36:29

So they're trying to start a confrontation there.

play36:31

I think so.

play36:32

Have you seen this yet? The Northern Territories issue?

play36:34

I saw Hayashi-san's...

play36:36

It's wrong that the Soviet Union invaded and took the Northern Territories alone.

play36:40

Because it was a joint operation between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

play36:42

Joint operation? Did the U.S. set it up, too?

play36:44

The U.S. set it up.

play36:45

In the U.S. Naval Historical Center's resources.

play36:49

It says Project Hula. This is a joint U.S.-Soviet invasion of the Northern Territories.

play36:52

Not only the Northern Territories, but also it's the invasion of the Kuril Islands.

play36:54

This is a picture of the Northern Territories of the Kuril Islands.

play36:57

There was a base in Alaska where the U.S. Navy was training thousands of Soviet generals,

play37:03

Soviet soldiers, entirely made in the U.S., landed there, and they took it over.

play37:06

Come to think of it, the Soviets didn't have marines.

play37:08

The U.S. gave them the function of the Marine Corps and trained them.

play37:11

Without the U.S. taking the initiative, the Soviets couldn't have done anything.

play37:14

Pulling the strings.

play37:15

People don't know that, right?

play37:16

We don't know that.

play37:17

It would change our perspective on the Northern Territories issue.

play37:18

But I think American officials probably know, and I think Putin knows.

play37:23

And maybe even Prime Minister Abe knew.

play37:25

I was watching your video earlier, and you said that the U.S. is considered a country of immigrants, but actually it's not.

play37:31

Oh, no, it's not.

play37:32

Scandinavians and people of Western European descent immigrated to the U.S. and completed 19th-century America.

play37:37

That was the good old USA.

play37:39

And then the big Jewish capital came in and took over the central around finance.

play37:43

They're in the media and politics. And they were trying to destroy the good old U.S.

play37:49

They brought a lot of immigrants into the U.S. as well.

play37:51

They tried to make America not America.

play37:52

The good old American side is no longer the USA, no longer a nation of immigrants at the beginning of the 20th century

play37:57

But the media under the umbrella of Wall Street and others are saying America is a nation of immigrants.

play38:02

Exactly.

play38:02

So they just accepted it more and more.

play38:04

And that's what continues to this day,

play38:05

and the percentages of the so-called typical Christian, Nordic, Western European are going down tremendously.

play38:10

Uh, WASPs?

play38:11

Oh yeah. America is no longer America.

play38:13

So, since the beginning of the 20th century, there's been a shift from a WASP-centered to a big capital-centered.

play38:18

But in a way, it's a little bit like what's happening in Japan right now.

play38:20

So we're doing the same thing all over the world.

play38:26

The atomic bombs fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. They were originally supposed to drop about 20 of them.

play38:31

20 bombs?

play38:34

The purpose of the atomic bombs was not to end the war.

play38:37

They decided to drop it on the Japanese first.

play38:39

Drop it on the Japanese?

play38:40

Not Japan.

play38:42

If Japan doesn't accept the Posodam Declaration on August 14,

play38:45

Then, they would have done the mainland landings and dropped atomic bombs at the same time.

play38:50

Wow.

play38:51

When they landed after dropping the atomic bombs and destroying Japan...

play38:54

So they planned it.

play38:54

3 bombs per month.

play38:55

Wow...Horrible...

play38:57

Why did it stop at two bombs? Because Japan surrendered.

play39:00

So if they hadn't surrendered, if they had kept fighting, there would have been three atomic bombs a month.

play39:04

It's not only about Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

play39:07

Clearly there was racism there.

play39:09

Racism?

play39:10

If you're Japanese, fine, as a target to be dropped.

play39:13

So they didn't have to take into account the humanitarian.

play39:15

It was just a subject of 10 or 20 bombs to show the power.

play39:18

That world war would be a mess.

play39:20

But it changes the way you look at things.

play39:22

Surely does.

play39:23

Just talking about the Northern Territories and the atomic bomb would change it.

play39:25

And the story of the last two hours.

play39:27

As you figure out the various structures...

play39:29

But we are made to not be able to see things. The fiction of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty...

play39:35

The fictional land is overrun by the Chinese.

play39:38

Now.

play39:38

That's what happens when you keep going.

play39:40

Can be.

play39:41

Yeah.

play39:46

Wow!

play39:46

What's her name?

play39:48

This is Lulu-chan

play39:48

Luli-chan?

play39:49

Lulu.

play39:50

Lulu?

play39:51

What is this timing?

play39:52

If you have something to say...

play39:55

Oh!

play39:56

There's a great Institute that's started up in Japan.

play39:58

Oh my goodness.

play39:59

Suddenly the atmosphere has changed.

play40:02

Not the global Japan Business Federation.

play40:04

Huh? Oh?

play40:05

The National Yamato Managers' Federation is up and running.

play40:09

The managers are awake.

play40:10

Are there?

play40:12

There are a lot of small and medium-sized company presidents, but it's powerful.

play40:17

They have so much momentum.

play40:20

So Japan is bright.

play40:22

Japan is bright!?

play40:24

With Naokiman-chan.

play40:24

Yes, with Naokiman-chan.

play40:26

Can we change that if we have that big business association?

play40:29

Yup.

play40:30

Well, I want to work a little bit harder.

play40:31

Please.

play40:32

- Can non-managers be included? - Sure.

play40:34

I got it.

play40:35

And this one...

play40:36

This is a good book.

play40:37

What can you understand if you read this?

play40:38

It's well written. You can see the base that makes the world what it is today.

play40:42

The foundation.

play40:44

It's hard to understand a lot of things without this base.

play40:48

You end up on the surface.

play40:49

It's important to understand the foundation.

play40:51

Can I just have one more?

play40:52

Yes, of course, of course.

play40:53

If Trump is really winning in another rigged election and he falls short.

play40:57

America will most likely end up in a civil war.

play40:59

Civil war!

play41:00

Civil war!

play41:01

This is the book written by Colonel Hous e that I mentioned earlier and this scenario is amazing.

play41:04

The American people are unhappy with the Deep State and so angry about the rigging of the election.

play41:10

And it's a scenario where they have a civil war revolution.

play41:11

So it's been written?

play41:12

The American National Army invades Washington.

play41:15

Oh no!

play41:16

American people win.

play41:17

They will win.

play41:18

There is a hero named Philip Dru.

play41:20

He's going to carry the expectations of the American people and he's going to be the ruler.

play41:24

Colonel House, the agent of the globalist forces...

play41:27

So that's what he's saying.

play41:30

He's writing a civil war revolution scenario that the American people will win.

play41:33

He's actually publishing this.

play41:34

I'd love for you to read about why that is.

play41:38

I think this has cleared up a lot of issues,

play41:41

such as the composition of the world, the power structure, and Japanese identity.

play41:46

That's good.

play41:47

Thank you very much.

play41:48

Okay, thank you all for watching!!!

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