Right-Wing Extremism on the Rise

The Trumpet.com is reporting that  right-wing extremism is increasingly becoming a driving force in Japanese politics and society.

While the news regularly carries stories about how right-wing extremism is growing in Germany, with right-wing parties entering into government and promoting nationalist policies, this same trend is gathering steam in Japan, that other great aggressor in World War ii.

It is shadowy right-wing groups, the Independent reports, that “are at the forefront of a concerted push to get Japan to move away from its post-war pacifism” (Dec. 8, 2006).


The Washington Post reports:

ii. The right-wingers trumpet their patriotism in the sound trucks and at Tokyo’s controversial Yasukuni shrine honoring the country’s militarism.”

They also use violence and other sinister methods to promote their nationalist cause. In February last year, for example, right-wing extremists burned down the house of a prominent liberal politician. “Japan’s police are calling it right-wing terrorism and say such groups are on the rise,” writes the Independent. Members of one such group, Taiko-Sha, “are accused of carrying out fire-bombings, beatings, stabbings, shootings, and even their own ritual suicides, to make a political point” (op. cit.).

Such groups have received little exposure over the years. Now, however, the aggressive nationalism they espouse is becoming mainstream. “[A] resurgent nationalism among some mainstream politicians and North Korea’s recent nuclear testing have meant right-wing groups are now being listened to at the highest levels, and many of the policies they have been seeking are now on the government’s agenda” (ibid.; emphasis ours). Traditionally sensitive topics that have recently become open to political and public discourse—such as stripping the constitution of its pacifist components, developing nuclear weapons, and promoting patriotism in schools—are the very issues right-wing extremists have been pushing for decades.

Manifestations of the popular rise in Japanese nationalism advocated by right-wingers include foreigners being targeted by police, the alleged censorship and intimidation of journalists and scholars who criticize nationalist trends in Japan, the Defense Agency being upgraded to a Defense Ministry, a new school curriculum aimed at instilling in students “an attitude that respects tradition and culture, and love of the nation and homeland,” and teachers being threatened with suspension and loss of pay if they don’t sing the national anthem and salute the flag.

“All of this,” comments the Independent, “is exactly what Japan’s influential and well-organized right-wing movement has been demanding for years.”

Yumi Kikuchi, a writer who attended a meeting in central Tokyo recently to protest against moves to the right, put it bluntly: “If you look at all the laws they passed in the past three years it is preparation for war like we did 60 years ago.”

Naturally, some surrounding Asian nations are eyeing the emerging nationalism in Japan nervously. However, it is not only Japan’s neighbors that should be concerned; Japan’s history shows it can be a threat much further afield. In this context, it is worth noting that the right-wingers also advocate cutting ties with the United States—a trend also likely to be reflected in Japanese society and politics in the future as right-wing sentiment becomes more and more mainstream.

5 Responses to “Right-Wing Extremism on the Rise”

ghoti Said:

It’s very misleading to call Yumi Kikuchi a writer. It would be like quoting Michael Moore as an impartial journalist. Worse, actually. She believes the World Trade Center was blown up by the US government, among other things. She is an extremist with her own political organization. No surpise that she would make an unsupported comment such as the above. In pre-war Japan, she wouldn’t be free to spew her rubbish.

And then to say that some countries (such as tolerant China and North Korea, for example) feel threatened by Japan’s rising militancy?? Japan is doing far less than most countries would do in their own defense. Meanwhile, the sabres are rattling all around NE Asia.

This report reads like a Wai Wai story without the sex. Take a few anecdotes and invent a major trend. The China Daily eats this stuff up, pengyou.

Mr. Pink Said:

Wai Wai without the sex — why that’s like sushi without wasabi, or the Chuo line without suicides. It’s like a ski area without curry rice, or 10 a.m. at Mitsukoshi without two dozen staff bowing you welcome. One might go so far as to say it’s like Remora without a pun!

alexpappas Said:

OH my god Mr. Pink… Thats histerical…

“Chuo Line without suicides.”

Damn man! Thats awesome!! ha ha ha

ghoti Said:

I went off on this before I noticed it was all culled from The Independent, which lags slightly behind Wai Wai in journalistic integrity.

Japan's one party system, only semi democratic - JapanForum.com Said:

[...] nationalistic pro japanese rants, perferably scripted by Japanese spy agencies. and look at this: Right-Wing Extremism on the Rise On and on there are tons of sources of Japanese resurgence of violent campaigns. Japan – The Rise [...]

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