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7/3/2025, 3:03:03 AM
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Nobody in Japan is thought he was actually a God. That was American propaganda that Americans themselves ended up falling for. Nobody in Japan cared or knew what he was talking about when they made him do that. It did not even make the news in Japan.
> On 1 January 1946, the rescript was reported on the front page of many major newspapers. The Asahi Shimbun headline was "New year's day rescript paves way for peace and progress for the people as Emperor laments confusion of ideals."[a] The Mainichi Shimbun headline was, "Rescript presented in the new year: The bonds of society are trust, respect, the Emperor, and the People."[b] The newspaper headlines did not mention divinity, only that peace and the emperor were with the people. The emperor's refutation of divinity was not valuable as news.[8]
Nobody in Japan is thought he was actually a God. That was American propaganda that Americans themselves ended up falling for. Nobody in Japan cared or knew what he was talking about when they made him do that. It did not even make the news in Japan.
> On 1 January 1946, the rescript was reported on the front page of many major newspapers. The Asahi Shimbun headline was "New year's day rescript paves way for peace and progress for the people as Emperor laments confusion of ideals."[a] The Mainichi Shimbun headline was, "Rescript presented in the new year: The bonds of society are trust, respect, the Emperor, and the People."[b] The newspaper headlines did not mention divinity, only that peace and the emperor were with the people. The emperor's refutation of divinity was not valuable as news.[8]
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