Masako Ganaha Explained

Masako Ganaha
Native Name:我那覇真子
Birth Date:10 August 1989[1]
Birth Place:Nago, Okinawa
Alma Mater:Waseda University School of Human Sciences
Occupation:Freelance journalist
Years Active:2013–
Organization:Citizens' and People's Association for Correcting the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times
Representative Operating Committee Member of Citizens' and People's Association for Correcting the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times
Broadcaster at Okinawa Branch of Nippon Culture Channel Sakura
Movement:Conservatism
Opponents:Ryukyu Shimpo
Okinawa Times
Opponents of U.S. military bases in Okinawa
Parents:Takahiro Ganaha (father)
Relatives:Takao Ganaha (uncle)
Takemitsu Ganaha (grandfather)
Chiken Kakazu (uncle)
Website:ganahamasako.com

Masako Ganaha (Japanese: {{ruby-ja|我那覇|がなは; born August 10, 1989)[2] is a Japanese freelance journalist and JSDF reservist. She is a representative operating committee member of the Citizens' and People's Association for Correcting the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times (Japanese: 琉球新報、沖縄タイムスを正す県民・国民の会). She is also an external advisor for the Sanseitō party.[3]

Background

She was born in Nago, Okinawa.[2] Her father, Takahiro Ganaha, is an operating committee member of the Citizens' and People's Association for Correcting the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times. Her uncle, Takao Ganaha, was the co-representative of the "Okinawa People's Association for Straightening Out the Prefectural Government and Themselves," which was a separate action group of the "Correcting Association." Her grandfather, who claimed to be the originator of soki soba, was Takemitsu Ganaha, a former Nago City assembly member.[4] Her uncle,[5] Chiken Kakazu, was a former House of Representatives member.[6]

She aspired to become an FBI special agent,[7] and studied abroad in Ohio and California during her time at Okinawa Prefectural Nago High School in 2005.[2] However, upon learning that U.S. citizenship was a minimum requirement for FBI special agents, she gave up on her FBI dream, returned to Japan, and dropped out of Nago High School. She subsequently obtained a high school equivalency diploma and entered the School of Human Sciences at Waseda University. While at university, she served as an executive committee member for the Japan Student Association Fund, which hosted the Prince Takamado Trophy All Japan Junior High School English Speech Contest.[2] She graduated in March 2012.[2] After graduation, she was set to join a publishing company, but changed her path due to differences in editorial policy. She returned to her family's home in Nago City to tutor children in English and dance and began her political activities.

On February 21, 2013, she delivered a speech advocating for the relocation of the Futenma Air Station to Camp Schwab in Henoko, Nago City, at a "Nago City Residents' Rally to Promote the Relocation of the Dangerous Futenma Air Station to Henoko."[8] [9] This marked the start of her engagement in public discourse.

In November 2013, based on her experience from speeches, and with the cooperation of, where she had interned during university,[10] she established Yanbaru Press LLC and launched the local free paper .[11] The content ranged from political topics, including interviews with Diet members, to local information titled . Despite receiving significant feedback and distributing all copies of the first issue, the paper was discontinued due to editorial differences with Headline Co., Ltd.[12] Additionally, during the 2014 Okinawa gubernatorial election, she served as the public relations officer for the campaign of former Okinawan Governor Hirokazu Nakaima.[12] In April 2015, she established the Citizens' and People's Association for Correcting the Ryukyu Shimpo and the Okinawa Times, which criticizes local newspapers in Okinawa. She has also contributed articles to Sekai Nippo, affiliated with the Unification Church.[2] At the same time, she served as a caster for the Okinawa branch of Nippon Culture Channel Sakura.[2]

Starting in December 2016, she, her father Takahiro, and her younger sister Mai began broadcasting two radio programs, "Okinawa Defense Information Bureau" and "Applied Psychology Radio Seminar," by purchasing airtime on a local community FM station.[13] This subsequently became a subject of civil litigation. On January 2, 2017, she appeared on the program (DHC TV), which became a matter of investigation by the Broadcast Ethics & Program Improvement Organization (BPO) following protests from opposition groups.

In October 2020, she traveled to the United States to cover the 2020 United States presidential election.[14] She reported from the U.S. through her YouTube channel and other internet video channels remotely and stayed in the U.S. until March 2021, when she returned to Japan.[15]

In May 2022, she gave an interview to Unification Church-affiliated newspaper 'Sekai Nippo', discussing the book 'Blackout' by black conservative activist Candace Owens, which she translated. She expressed her views on the black community in America, stating that "the Democratic Party implants a victim mentality, creating a scenario where they must vote for the welfare-oriented party."[16] [17]

2020 U.S. presidential election

Cornell University Library archive

As a result of widespread baseless election fraud claims, which undermined trust in the election, Masako Ganaha was documented as one of the sources in a dataset on the arXiv archive site operated by Cornell University.[18]

2021 United States Capitol attack

She claimed that some participants in the protest during the Capitol attack were Antifa members who incited the violence.[19] Similar claims were made by many Trump supporters but were thoroughly debunked by fact-checking organizations.[20] Consequently, misinformation and disinformation spread in Japan, but there has been no retraction from her.

Bibliography

Books

Translations

. 2022-04-20 . Ganaha . Masako . ja:ブラックアウト:アメリカ黒人による、“民主党の新たな奴隷農場"からの独立宣言 . Burakkuauto: Amerika kokujin ni yoru, “Minshutō no arata na dorei nōjō" kara no dokuritsu sengen . ja . Blackout: How Black America can Make its Second Escape from the Democrat Plantation . . 978-4908925931 . Candace Owens . .

Television

International

Japanese

Web video

Radio

References

Notes

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20180130143716/http://masakoganaha.weebly.com/blog. 2016-09-10. 2018-01-30. 2024-07-25. ja. dead. Ganaha Masako WEBSITE. ja:我那覇 真子 WEBSITE. Masako Ganaha's Website.
  2. Web site: Ganaha Masako . ja:我那覇 真子 . 2024-07-25 . Viewpoint . ja.
  3. Web site: ja:メンバー紹介. Menbā shōkai. Introduction of Members. Sanseitō. ja:参政党. 2022-12-11. ja.
  4. Web site: ja. ja:名護市議会議員名簿. Nago-shi Gikai Gi'in Meibo. Nago City Assembly Members List. Nago City Hall. 2018-06-24.
  5. Half-brother to Takao and Takahiro
  6. Web site: ja. 2003-05-19. ja:我那覇節子さん死去/嘉数知賢衆院議員の母. Ganaha Setsuko-san shikyo/Kakazu Chiken shūin gi'in no haha. Setsuko Ganaha, mother of House of Representative member Chiken Kakazu, passes away. Shikoku News. Shikoku Shimbun. 2018-06-24.
  7. News: ja. ja:我那覇真子さん「FBIのエージェントになりたかった」「沖縄は『保革伯仲』が真の姿」「実家近くをウロウロする人が…」 (3/5). Ganaha Masako-san "FBI no ējento ni naritakatta" "Okinawa wa 'hōkaku hakuchū' ga shin no sugata" "Jikka chikaku o urouro suru hito ga..." (3/5). Masako Ganaha: "I wanted to become an FBI agent", "The true situation of Okinawa is 'balanced power between conservatives and liberals'", "Strange people wandering near my home..." (3/5). 2013-11-15. Sankei Shimbun. 2017-01-11.
  8. News: ja. ja:「沖縄で人権侵害ない」「知事は尖閣狙う中国の脅威を無視」 国連人権理で辺野古賛成派が反論. "Okinawa de jinken shingai nai" "Chiji wa Senkaku nerau Chūgoku no kyōi o mushi" Kokusai jinkenri de Henoko sanseiha ga hanron. "No human rights violations in Okinawa", "Governor ignores the threat of China targeting the Senkaku islands" - Pro-Henoko relocation side reacts at UN Human Rights Council. 2015-09-22. Sankei Shimbun. 2015-09-22.
  9. News: ja. ja:北部地域振興協議会 市民大会開き辺野古推進を決議. Hokubu chiiki shinkō kyōgikai shimin taikai hiraki Henoko suishin o ketsugi. Northern Area Promotion Council Holds Citizens' Rally to Decide on Henoko Promotion. Ryukyu Asahi Broadcasting. 2013-02-22. 2016-09-28.
  10. News: ja. ja:【きょうの人】沖縄・名護でフリーペーパー発刊 我那覇真子(がなは・まさこ)さん(24). [Kyō no hito] Okinawa·Nago de furī pēpā hakkan — Ganaha Masako-san (24)]. [Today's Person] Launching a free paper in Nago, Okinawa: Masako Ganaha (24). Sankei News. Sankei Shimbun. 2013-11-15. 2017-01-11.
  11. News: ja:11月15日に沖縄・名護で新メディア「新聞やんばるプレス」創刊. 11-gatsu 15-nichi ni Okinawa·Nago de shin media "Shinbun Yanbaru Press" sōkan. New Media "Yanbaru Press" to Launch in Nago, Okinawa on November 15. ja. Tokyo Headline. . 2013-11-08. 2016-10-02.
  12. News: ja. ja:沖縄県知事選 20代の選対関係者に聞いた沖縄の現在(下) ── キャスター・我那覇真子さん. Okinawa ken chiji-sen 20-dai no sentai kankei-sha ni kiita Okinawa no genzai (ge) — Kyasutā Ganaha Masako-san. Okinawa Prefectural Governor Election: Interview with 20s Campaign Staff — Present Okinawa (Part 2) — Newscaster Masako Ganaha. The Page. 2014-11-19. 2016-10-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20141121165540/https://thepage.jp/detail/20141119-00000024-wordleaf. 2014-11-21.
  13. http://masakoganaha.weebly.com/blog/3424548 ラジオはじめました♪ (2016年9月1日)|script-title=ja:ラジオはじめました♪|title=Rajio hajimemashita♪|trans-title=Starting Radio♪|date=2016-09-01|url=http://masakoganaha.weebly.com/blog/3424548
  14. Amerika daitōryō-sen kyoku shuzai kaishi!. ja. YouTube video. ja:アメリカ大統領選挙取材開始!. Coverage of the U.S. Presidential Election Begins!.
  15. 3/30 Nihon kikoku hōkoku honban namahōsō. ja. ja:3/30日本帰国報告 本番生配信. Report on Returning to Japan on March 30.
  16. News: ja:「現代の奴隷農場」に陥る米国黒人社会 被害者意識植え付け支配. Gendai no dorei nōjō ni ochīru Beikoku kokujin shakai higai-sha ishiki uetsuke shihai. The Modern Slave Farm Trap of the Black Community in America: How Victim Mentality is Imposed and Control is Maintained. Viewpoint. Sekai Nippo. July 2022. 76-79.
  17. 'Sekai Nippo', May 27, 2022, p.8.
  18. https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.08210 VoterFraud2020: a Multi-modal Dataset of Election Fraud Claims on Twitter
  19. Web site: ja. ja:議事堂乱入でANTIFAの影を見抜いた日本人女性. Gijidō ran'nyū de ANTIFA no kage o minuita Nihonjin josei. A Japanese Woman Who Detected ANTIFA's Shadow in the Capitol Attack. 2021-01-14. Japan Business Press Group. Hiroshi Ogawa 小川博司. JBpress.
  20. Web site: en. There’s no proof antifa stormed the Capitol. The rumor spread quickly anyway. 2022-12-24. The Poynter Institute. PolitiFact.