That's all that the New York Times has to say about Japan. It's a picture of part of the first page of the newspaper's website.
These are pictures of parts of the first page of results for a Google search of the term "Japanese schoolchildren suicide":
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I added the line to separate pictures of noncontiguous parts of that page.
People at the New York Times spent time and were paid money to research, write and publish that article about Japan, instead of researching, writing and publishing something to try to prevent the deaths of Japanese students who are killing themselves this month and planning to kill themselves on September 1st.
The spite of this newspaper is such that it would rather spend time and money ridiculing people than trying to save lives. Most of the conglomerate media is that way: most of the conglomerate is, too.
For people who never read my "Preliminary page," this is part of what it says:
"I don't choose excerpts or supporting information for code purposes."
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, August 20, 2016 @ 12:04 a.m.