tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32776756.post2125933069806617973..comments2023-10-20T18:03:01.821+09:00Comments on GlobalTalk 21: Japan: "Okinawa-gate: The Unknown Scandal"? Give Me a Break.Jun Okumurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00291478225274759649noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32776756.post-13591148276220798192007-05-10T09:42:00.000+09:002007-05-10T09:42:00.000+09:00Let's address the specifics first.I knewBryan Wals...Let's address the specifics first.<BR/><BR/>I <I>knew</I>Bryan Walsh didn't write the article because it carried someone else's byline. So I was making a joke. If you didn't get the point, I can only say: my bad. You may have noticed that I make these personal references from time to time. And no, I only explain other people's jokes, and only when asked.<BR/><BR/>Denial of reality: I think the more interesting issue here is, since Takichi Nishiyama's law suit and Bunroku Yoshno's statements were fairly widely reported at the time, why did the public basically give the government a pass? I don't think this is a case of Big Brother telling <I>Asahi Shinbun</I> to shut it. In any case, the Japanese media, as is the case with the media in every liberal democracy, are in the business of satisfying its audience.<BR/><BR/>Paramour. You should do some fact-checking on this. Not even in his most recent statements does Mr. Nishiyama deny that there was a relationship. Indeed, the existence of a relationship seems implicit where he refers to the matter. There is no way you can build a case on his behalf by dismissing the matter with conjectures about the veracity of the personal charges against the two. That is no way to conduct an argument. Having said that, there is an uneasy symbiosis between the police and the media. The authorities routinely leak details of ongoing investigations, which the media dutifully lap up and publish; after all, this is a pretty reliable source. This leaves the media vulnerable to manipulation (I think I've written about this elsewhere, though I can't be sure), and I have very little doubt the authorities handled them perfectly in this case. However, by putting the documents in the hands of the Socialist Party"<I>Bakudan Otoko</I> (Bombshell Guy)" instead of writing it up in a newspaper article (or even other outlets; reporters have them) like a proper journalist, he alienated most of the mainstream media. With the sex scandal as a new angle, lost <I>Mainichi</I> support as well, and he has no one to blame but himself for that. As for the criminal case, I don't think the relationship angle had any bearing, except perhaps in sentencing; we don't exactly practice sharia in Japan.<BR/><BR/>As for Eisaku Sato's Nobel Peace Prize, I confess I have not yet completely recovered from my astonishment after all these years. Having said that, I don't understand why any of the other stuff matters to anybody, except as resume padding. Take away those home runs from Rafael Palmeiro, and he's not going to make it to Cooperstown. Same thing.<BR/><BR/>As for your charge that "the press in Japan is peculiarly willing to print scurrilous rumors about private citizens and exonerate the government for its funny business", I'm sure you have examples of the first point. But that's a subject of another discussion. As for the second part, they were certainly distracted, perhaps led astray, from what then became the Socialist claims of the existence of a secret agreement. But if they did "exonerate" the government, my view is that it was much more as an unwitting participant, together with the public, than as a "willing" accomplice.<BR/><BR/>************<BR/><BR/>Now you may ask, why bother? Why should I care if a TIME correspondent messes up royally? More broadly, why do I persist in attacking the English language mainstream media? The problem is, Japan appears infrequently there, and when it does, the focus is usually on the weird, and the lurid, and the strange and inscrutable. In principle, I have no problems with that. Tit for tat, I say. However, I do see many cases of ignorance, incompetence, and possible falsehood, and they almost invariably wind up casting Japan in a negative light, sometimes to a point beyond recognition. Since the EMSM is the only news source about Japan for much of the world out there, I think it's useful to provide corrections where they are warranted.<BR/><BR/>Kidding. Seriously, it's fun, and not many people seem to be doing it. And I know very little French, and next-to-no Serbo-Croatian.Jun Okumurahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00291478225274759649noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32776756.post-64771964780624974452007-05-09T13:38:00.000+09:002007-05-09T13:38:00.000+09:00I'm confused.If you are not certain the author of ...I'm confused.<BR/><BR/>If you are not certain the author of this ewpoer ia Walsh, wthen why do you include the "Aren't you lucky you are based in Tokyo, B.W.?" gibe?<BR/><BR/>One of your points is that governments routinely deny reality. I agree. What beggars the imagination is the government of Japan's continued denial of reality when said a denial is detrimental to its own interests. This is not a question of a judgment call, as in "Are we making progress in Iraq or not?"<BR/>This is a question of a denial of the existence of an object, a visible and palpable thing, whose validity and authenticity is vouchsafed by the U.S. government, Japan's main military ally. <BR/><BR/>Another of your points is that the TIME article is framing the story in a shoddy manner. I agree. But is identifying the female MOFA officer from the outset as a "paramour" any less shoddy? You know well that once somebody whispered "She's his lover" the pair of them were finished in the courts--both of public opinion and of law--especially in that day and age. To casually label the woman Nishiyama's paramour perpetuates an irrelevancy and possibibly a lie.<BR/><BR/>Sato Eisaku won his Nobel for about 15 different reasons, judging from the presentation speech one finds at the nobelprize.org website. Getting the U.S. to (ostensibly) denuclearize Okinawa was only one of those reasons.<BR/><BR/>I agree that the article overreaches (the points you have sought to quote here sound as though they reach right over the edge of silly). However, the poor quality of the article does not invalidate the broader worry that the press in Japan is peculiarly willing to print scurilous rumors about private citizens and exhonerate the government for its funny business.MTChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04626942240117432624noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32776756.post-91136692524781077562007-05-09T11:41:00.000+09:002007-05-09T11:41:00.000+09:00MTC: I had a feeling someone would come up with th...MTC: I had a feeling someone would come up with this kind of comment. But towering authorities, cowering media is the point of the original story, and my point is that the story fails to make it because of at best sloppy research.<BR/><BR/>Feel free to adopt whichever version of the renditions of the facts of the Nishiyama prosecution that fits your image of the Japanese media (which I believe are, as you will understand if you read my other post and previous posts, both manipulative and manipulated, though I reject that singular focus in Western conventional wisdom that they are the running dogs of the Japanese political establishment). But I fail to see how that in any way is a meaningful rebuttal against the thrust of my argument. After all, Nishiyama's more recent civil suit case, including Bunroku Yoshino's testimony, was widely reported and many editorials called on the government to fess up.<BR/><BR/>What you might want to give some thought to, though, is: why didn't the Japanese public get in a tizzy over the revelations and the Japanese government's continued denial? Then there's the "Nawa wo utte Nawa wo katta" complaint from the Japanese textiles industry...<BR/><BR/>********************<BR/><BR/>By the way, Mr. Walsh's byline is nowhere to be seen on this story. Given what I've seen of his work, I think if it had been his to write, he would have talked to more people first.Jun Okumurahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00291478225274759649noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-32776756.post-70493843256793975002007-05-08T18:47:00.000+09:002007-05-08T18:47:00.000+09:00Jun - You know very well that the real issues here...Jun - <BR/><BR/>You know very well that the real issues here are the government's determination to deny reality...and the Press's terrifying willingness to fall into line and accept just-so stories. <BR/><BR/>No one has ever proven a romantic liaison between the two protagonists. Considering the immense pressures being put upon the Gaimusho employee, her statements have to seen as having been coerced. The government's case against both of the defendants rested in part upon perjured testimony. In Nishiyama's case, how could a journalist violate the Civil Servants Law prior to the existence of a secrecy act?<BR/><BR/>Since the American copies of the secret agreement are available from the National Archives, the continued denials of the existence of said agreement are deleterious to Japan's reputation as a nation of sane individuals.<BR/><BR/>You accuse Mr. Walsh of being unfair but...MTChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04626942240117432624noreply@blogger.com