Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Japanese conservative values, are they Japanese? – Part 1 – Drugs



At a recent anti-Yasukuni Shrine demonstration right wing pro-Yasukuni Shrine groups had to be separated from the protest by police. While most Japanese shun these groups due to their ties to organized crime many share their drive to return Japan to more conservative times. They have the so called golden age syndrome where each generation longs for a return to a remembered or fictional time in their past. But what values do they find lacking now? As shown by the media circus surrounding Noriko Sakai, Japanese view drugs as a major concern. The family unit is also being portrayed as under attack by higher divorce rates and the mainstream emergence of gay lifestyles is seen with alarm. But what are traditional Japanese values? What influence did western values have on Japanese values?

Looking at the craziness surrounding Noriko Sakai, you can see the hype surrounding drug use in Japan. Her only crime is having done drugs in the past, not caught with drugs or arrested while on drugs. She was arrested and Japan is going crazy because she admitted she has done them in the past! From the hysteria surrounding her situation you’d assume that anti-drug attitude has always been part of Japanese culture.

True before World War II the Japanese did prohibit Opium-based narcotics because opium addiction was used by colonial powers to undermine China’s power in the region and the Japanese didn’t want to fall into the same trap. However, as soon as they seized power of parts in China in 1932 they too started mass producing Opium to be sold to the Chinese. By 1939, the Japanese reported $90m (That’s $1.4 billion in 2009) per year in tax revenues from drug sales in China. After Pearl Harbour Japan abandoned its no drug policy and started feeding its population regular does of what the Japanese government called “senryoku zokyo zai” or “drugs to inspire the fighting spirits” today we call them methamphetamines i.e. speed. After the war American military government of Japan banned the industry but stimulants continued to be problem till the 60s. While uppers or stimulants were only officially endorsed by the government during the war one of the so called drug problems of Japan, Marijuana has deep cultural roots in Nihon culture.

Marijuana or cannabis has been in Japan for thousands of years and was widely farmed because of the superior hemp fibres found in the plant stem. Hemp production was a major part of Japan’s economy until cotton was introduced. The plant was still grown as a recreational drug and farming product until the American occupation. American General Douglas MacArthur and his colleagues rewrote the Japanese constitution in 1948 and included the Taima Torishimari Ho, the Cannabis Control Act.

So you can see that drugs that were thought of as, “normal” in Japanese society were after the American occupation demonized. Demonized to the point were a situation like Noriko Sakai can produce anti-drug hysteria for what was a government sponsored drug 65 years ago.

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