Conclusion
Since I launched the series on the 19th of November last year, I have already written 68 installments of Exploration of Devil Cave to introduce the inside situation of shameful Japanese caves in the interior in a frank manner. The reader should understand how devils repeat their shameless behavior a step away from Vancouver and are harming the reputation of the Japanese without our knowledge.
I will conclude by insisting on the eradication of the devils. Indeed, it will be extremely difficult to realize. It will be impossible to have it completed overnight. However, from the standpoint of us Japanese living in Canada, it is clear that their existence only creates a hundred harms and not even one benefit, and I have to say that it is absolutely necessary for us to move toward an eradication policy.
If some people attempt to refute my view by insisting that caves also exist in France, Germany, Great Britain, the United States, and Japan to begin with, and thus it is reasonable that Japanese caves exist in Canada, they are ignorant fellows, who are not informed of the real facts. Research of the real issues of Japanese prostitution in Canada only proves that the devils are bacillus that hinders the growth of the Japanese.
I do hear a pro-prostitution argument that prostitution facilitates settlement of migrant workers in a colony. However, Canada is a territory belonging to Great Britain, which has a treaty with Japan; it is definitely not a colony of Japan. Canada is not a place on which the Japanese government is freely able to execute its own colonial policies. At least it cannot be regarded in the same way as Taiwan or Sakhalin. I believe that colonization and immigration need to be thought differently. Immigrants are under restrictions and those cannot be resolved in the next one or two years. People living in Canada are stuck in a deep quagmire. I often hear problems of exclusion too. There once was even an idea that we should move to the east of the Rockies.
I must think deeply about the future. Those devil fellows went east of the mountains long ago and have been obstacles for the Japanese in all directions. This is true today; this will probably be true in the future too.