Outlawing Parties Hostile to the Nation — Learning from Germany
An essay arguing that political parties acting against the nation should face legal action, drawing lessons from Germany’s attempts to outlaw extremist parties. It examines parliamentary conduct, international lobbying, and orchestrated narratives undermining national sovereignty.
2016-03-23
In December 2012, the upper house decided to file a second petition with the Federal Constitutional Court to outlaw the NPD—this comes from the Wikipedia entry on Germany’s NPD.
Should we not learn from Germany and petition the courts to outlaw the Democratic Party?
I recently wrote about what Yoshifu Arita asked in the Diet.
He spoke about actions allegedly taken against resident Koreans at the gates of Chosun University and in downtown Tokyo—incidents unknown to 99.9 percent of the Japanese people.
He boasted theatrically, like a kabuki actor, saying, “Those of you here do not know the scenes, but I was present at every one of them,” failing to grasp that it would itself be strange for a politician to be present at such scenes.
He thus embodied the truth that criminals inevitably return to the scene or reveal themselves somewhere.
Diet members and citizens alike work day and night; unlike him, no one has the leisure to attend such scenes every time.
Nor could there possibly be people who know such scenes.
In other words, the orchestrators of staged events feed information to Arita.
At the time, Arita was a figure who had made a name for himself on television wide shows, an obvious pseudo-moralist who read Asahi and the like, a leftist drifter—an ideal convenience for the Korean or North Korean CIA.
Moreover, armed with videos they had filmed, he rushed to the United Nations without delay, becoming the vanguard in denigrating and accusing Japan and the Japanese.
Such conduct is what is called treason, what is called a traitor to the nation.
A party that harbors many such individuals should be regarded as hostile to Japan, and we should, following Germany’s example, file a petition to have them outlawed.
