This push to vilify anime and manga appears to partially contradict the party’s statements in 2021, where the JCP affirmed their alleged commitment to “free expression” but had reservations about how women are portrayed in creative works.
" You commies say you support muh freedumbs but you don't support muh freedumb to be a weird misogynist pervert!!! Checkmate tankies!!"
Extremely critical support to Vice, I guess? Damn this gamer is furious.
this fucking website is gonna be an absolute goldmine of horrible gamer/weeb takes isn't it?
CW mentions of CSAM
Completely conflating drawn CSAM with "fanservice" repeatedly, insisting its fine because its just drawings and could have no impact on the real world, and the usual gamer/otaku takes on women in video games, etc.
Then I just decided to check their front page and see if there was more garbage, and immediately found an example of them complaining about their sexed up video game characters being sanitized by wokies or whatever for unrealistic body proportions, and the writer clapped back saying x character was actually based on a 3d scan of a real life model. A) that doesn't mean it isn't promoting an unrealistic beauty standard just because it isn't physically impossible. and B) I clicked through to the tweet source on that, and then to the account for the game it was promoting, and the character shown on the game's profile had thighs and asses and boobs like twice as big as the IRL model. Amazing work all around.
That Vice documentary was... uh... I can't even put it to words, this is absolutely disgusting. I knew the pedophile problem was bad, but I didn't think it would be that bad. Holy shit.
Gamers trying to go after vice for going after pedophilia is so pathetic it's hilarious.
Despite all this, Vice News has hypocritically supported actual pedophilia, as noted by their past articles and videos:
Of the listed, just reading the top line shown in the screengrabs the gamers deigned to share, 5 are clearly about people with an attraction disorder but didn't commit CSA, and one about satanic panic. Can't even read the first paragraph and probably just googled "vice pedo" and cobbled the results together, what unserious people.
I haven't been to Akihabara (or Tokyo at all) in my one trip to Japan, but I have been to Osaka's smaller equivalent Nipponbashi Den Den Town.
It's very much a town of contrasts and alongside the mostly fine but usually expensive hobbyist shops and the completely unproblematic electronics stores, there's the horny sections of weebery.
An uncomfortable experience ngl, which also extends to a lot of women on the streets advertising for at least partially sexualized establishments like maid cafes etc.. Some of it aimed at tourists, but by necessities of language barriers, mostly for local weebs.
A minor interesting thing was how it was basically impossible to find any merch etc. for anything older than a year or so except for the huge shows and surprisingly, old mecha. Everything moving extremely fast, jumping from cash cow with waifus to the next.
Indeed, as much as it would fit the bit, the only Azumanga related stuff I saw was the comic itself. 😔 Pretty good music stores though.
I found a screencap of the story from the JCP's newspaper on a JCP member's blog. Did my best job to grab, order, and correct the text (I wasn't super sure what order to read things in so I apologize if it's a bit disjointed, but Google had zero fucking idea, and the quality is kinda shit) I'll include a lightly-edited DeepL machine translation as well as the original text (please point out any transcription errors!). Not entirely sure if this is the whole story--seeing as it's a front-page story, there might be more, but I have no way of accessing the full issue.
Full text (DeepL Japanese-to-English machine translation)
(Newspaper dated 23 February 2024)
Convenience Store Sales of "Adult Magazines" Revived
One of the headlines on the cover encourages sexual crimes
New Women's Emergency Survey confirms 95% of stores
[Image of 7-Eleven, Lawson, and FamilyMart signs alongside blurred-out adult magazines]
Signs of convenience stores and magazines sold at those stores (image partially edited)
[In the center of the article: ] Respect for women's human rights | Companies questioned about their attitudes
An emergency investigation by the New Japan Women's Association (NJWA) has revealed that the sale of "adult magazines" at convenience stores, which once disappeared, has returned. (by Hiroshi Nikuma)
The NJWA surveyed 517 convenience stores in the prefecture from December 10 to 12 last year, and found that 95.4%, or 493 stores, were selling the books, with the covers of the books featuring such titles as "molester," "peeping," "sugar baby" and "runaway girl," all of which are unacceptable even for adults and which remind people of sex crimes, prostitution, and child prostitution.
Concerning the sale of "adult stories" in convenience stores, Aeon-affiliated Ministop announced in 2017 that it would stop selling them in response to requests from female customers and others. In addition, 7-Eleven, Lawson, and FamilyMart all decided in principle to discontinue the sale of the magazines in all of their stores in Japan by August 2019 due to the fact that the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics were scheduled to be held in the coming months.
With the growing global movement to eradicate sexual violence, and the accusation of violence against children by the former president of Johnny & Associates, the way companies deal with sexual violence in Japan is being severely questioned. Survey participants voiced their surprise and criticism of the fact that the materials are not "zoned" (sold in restricted areas) and are placed openly in general magazines, in products for children, and near toilets. They also commented, "I am astonished that sex has been commercialized to such an extent that it is constantly sold in our daily lives," and "If children who have not received proper sex education see them, it will send the wrong message."
The NJWA lodged a complaint with 7-Eleven, Lawson, and FamilyMart, claiming that the products are degrading to women's dignity.
There are approximately 58,000 convenience stores nationwide. The NJWA is conducting a more detailed national survey from February 10 to April 10. (You can participate in the survey via QR code)
The sale of "adult magazines" in convenience stores may fall under the category of "environmental sexual harassment" as defined by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, in which sexual posters and advertisements in the workplace cause distress to employees. Store owners also stated that "female employees are welcoming [the discontinuation of sales]."
In response to inquiries from this newspaper, Seven & i Holdings, Laweson, and FamilyMart all stated that they have not changed their policy of "discontinuation in principle." However, Seven & i admitted to selling the products at some of its stores. "It seems as if their promise has been reneged on." Ryoko Ikeda, a member of the NJWA's Central Standing Committee and director of the Children and Education Department, does not hide her indignation.
In addition to the scheduled 2020 Olympic Games, the 2019 "stop sale" was also pointed out by the UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). In 2016, the Committee issued a summary finding on Japan's implementation of CEDAW, stating that it was "concerned about the persistent existence of patriarchal attitudes and deep-rooted stereotypes [of stereotyped gender roles]. In particular, the report stated that the media "promotes sexual violence against women and girls through stereotypical expressions such as sexual objectification."
Based on the summary findings, the NJWA proposed that convenience stores nationwide respect women's human rights when handling "adult magazines. Ikeda recalls that upon the announcement of the "suspension of handling in principle" in 2019, "many members welcomed that 'women's voices and actions have changed society'."
Convenience stores play an important role in disaster response and other infrastructure. The major convenience store chains are members of the Japan Franchise Chain Association and cooperates with the association's "Creating a Safe and Secure Community" initiative. They respond to emergency evacuations of women and children from stalking and sex crimes, and in 2022, there were 7093 "run-in reports" for women and 4593 for children ("2022 Convenience Store Safety Station Activity Survey Report").
Sales of publications in convenience stores account for 1% of total merchandise sales. Sales are decreasing year by year.
Many convenience stores enter into franchise agreements with "convenience store headquarters" and receive permission to use their trademarks and other rights by paying a portion of gross profit (royalties), which is calculated by subtracting "costs" from "sales".
Seven & i Holdings stated, "Under the franchise agreement, the franchisees have the authority to purchase the products, so it is difficult to force them to stop selling the products, but we will continue our efforts to create an environment that is easy for customers to use.
A store owner, who agreed to be interviewed on condition of anonymity, said that while franchisees have the discretion to make purchasing decisions regarding the handling of "adult magazines," the head office is largely responsible for compliance (adherence to norms), including protection of human rights.
The aforementioned Ms. Ikeda said, "There is a great responsibility on the head office to ensure compliance, including the protection of human rights."
"There has been a string of accusations of sexual crimes, domestic violence, and sex trafficking. As long as they are committed to the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals), they have a responsibility to fulfill their tasks of gender equality and protection of children's human rights."
edit: Oh yeah, I should give a TL;DR: adult magazines which include some pretty gross content are sold out in the open at convenience stores, which (unsurprisingly) a lot of people find objectionable. The article goes through the history of convenience stores saying they would stop selling them, but then not really stopping, whether the franchises are really that independent of their parent company (which basically says "we can't stop them from selling what they want"), and so on. The "secret poll" is a survey being conducted by the New Japan Women's Association which readers are invited to participate in to get a more complete picture of what publications are being offered in which stores (the figures given in the article were from a sample of 517 stores compared to the ~58,000 in Japan). The UN is mentioned mostly to highlight the dire state of women's rights in Japan, and that a UN committee (CEDAW) had commented on the supposed halt on sales of the magazines as part of an earlier report.
Critically: Unless the article takes a wild turn on a subsequent page that I can't see, the NJWA doesn't actually say anything (in this article) about a general ban on the sale of adult magazines--they just want people to be able to work their shitty-paying service jobs, grab a bento, or take a piss at the 7-Eleven in peace without seeing a bunch of degrading sexual material. And the JCP literally doesn't make a policy prescription--it's an article about this issue which has been a point of discussion for years and the NJWA's actions, not an official party proclamation. So the JCP has not done anything worthy of critical support (because they literally didn't do anything) and no one is coming for these gamers' shitty manga.
So... basically they're saying this adult content shouldn't be sold in regular convince stores but at retails specially marked as "adult" vendors of erotica?
Nope, different characters for the given name (mangaka is 理代子 and NJWA member is 亮子), and the mangaka is also Riyoko rather than Ryoko (not just a romanization difference). Honestly, I can't even be absolutely sure if her name is Ryoko--it's the most common name reading for those kanji, but it could be Akiko or something else for all I know
edit: idk if anyone's gonna see this at this point, but can anyone confirm if I got the reading order right? It should be simple in principle (right-to-left, top-to-bottom) but those pull quotes threw me for a loop. It seems to me like they essentially created separate columns, where each time you hit the pull quote you reset to the right and go down until you get past the pull quote, then start again at the top of the column on the left of the pull quote. The bit about polling squished in the lower right was the part I was least sure about since it stands alone.
If the left took an absurdly anti-anime and anti-manga stance I feel like the people we alienate on the left would be outnumbered by the people joining us because of their intrinsic hate of anime. Lets characterize an entire art form as reactionary and see what happens, im willing to gamble with your treats.
There's a weird fixation on anime and manga being labeled as inherently bad, bordering to a small scale moral panic, among english-speaking internet socialists.
Possibly, same as the whole age of consent stuff, because libertarians and adjacent ideologies are infamously defensive of the worst aspects in both these things.
I agree, but I think it's primarily driven by how accepted certain content unique to the medium is online. If weebs were just as mortified by the existence of simulated CP as we are then things would be different, but they're all seemingly super into it, which heightens our own feelings of disgust and makes people want to paint the whole medium as being that way.
1- The good discussion to be had is drawn out by the nature of HB as a "dunk" site. In general a large percentage of people come here to be "morally outraged". I certainly engaged with this in the past so I'm not being cynical here. But with regards to anime, it is the lowest of the low hanging fruits. Weebs are pretty much adjacent to gamers and public enemy #1 of the online left, for some very good reasons of course, nobody is stupid or blind.
To be clear there is very little to defend about these communities, specially someone that self-identify as a "Gamer" or "Weeb".
But people are very eager to take the shortest path to guilty by association arguments. "Oh you watch anime in 2024? Certainly you like the absolute bottom of the barrel trash incest anime from 2011!"
Either you enjoy the party approved treat or else its the gulag. But the actual irony is a lot of people here have consumed and will continue to consume games, western TV shows, the occasional capeshit etc. Nobody is actually willing to give up their treats, but everyone is certainly willing to police each other. Why? because its the fate of the western left realy. We are not organized, we're not politically active, but in the struggle to find any meaning or any change, its easy to attach to the simplest cause at hand because very often its the only cause we can actually organize towards.
Social media activism is one of the strongest forms of liberalism.
2-I certainly had my hate for Hasan in the past, but one of the things I like about him is he is very much upfront with the no ethical consumption shit. He will say "yeah I go to Japan, Yeah I watch One Piece or whatever other popular show I like, yeah I play games, yeah I watch TV..." Is he correct? Maybe not 100% but certainly he is not wrong, we know that when people criticize leftists habits they're always hypocrites, chuds complain about woke but they're also consuming just as much etc.
Engaging in treat wars is not productive because its hypocritical.
"Oh you're not living on some dirty shack drinking vodka and watching old USSR movies from 1965? YOU'RE DOING SOCIALISM WRONG". Hasan dunks on that constantly and he does it well imo.
But the JCP didnt take an anti manga/anime stance, they are against selling fanservice manga/adult magazines in convinience stores which i think its fine