• @NateNate60
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      949 months ago

      Traditional Japanese forms of protest:

      • Kill others
      • Kill yourself
      • @Cypher
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        229 months ago

        Sometimes the order in which these protests are carried out may surprise you

        • @JoshuaSlowpoke777
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          119 months ago

          …by coming back as a yurei to haunt the people who wronged you? I’m not following.

          • @Cypher
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            29 months ago

            It was just a joke

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        in the us they usually do that to schools.

        imagine if they actually kill people that matter.

  • aname
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    289 months ago

    Can someone link to this story. What am I missing?

    • @[email protected]
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      1439 months ago

      Yagami Tetsuya assassinated Abe Shinzo, former PM of Japan, while he was drumming up support for a candidate from his party. The motive was his mother draining the family savings account to donate to a Christian cult known as the Unification Church, aka Moonies. He actually wanted to kill the Moonie leadership but deemed it unrealistic, so he went after Abe who had ties to the cult. After the assassination, it came out that a lot of Japanese leadership had ties to the cult and there was a bit of a witch-hunt.

      • @[email protected]
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        509 months ago

        Calling the Moonies Christian is… Debatable.

        The founder got excommunicated by the Presbyterians.

        Really good Behind the Bastards episodes on them btw.

        • @JoshuaSlowpoke777
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          179 months ago

          The way you used italics, I gotta ask, is excommunication coming from the Presbyterians unusual compared to other Christian groups?

          • @Kage520
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            79 months ago

            I was raised protestant, but not presbyterian. Still, I haven’t heard a lot of excommunication coming from any protestant group. That is mostly a Catholic thing I think, with some of that happening with maybe Puritans (I’m not that familiar with all of them) back around Salem Witch Trial days.

            • ✺roguetrick✺
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              Protestants excommunicate each other all the time. Only some denominations practice open communion. Many Baptist churches are worse than the Catholics about it. The different denominations are often not in communion with each other for some stupid reason. They do it in different ways, mind you, with a focus on elder councils or something.

    • Ogmios
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      679 months ago

      Guy’s mother joined a cult and ended up donating the family’s entire savings, leaving them in poverty. He’s supper pissed about the conditions they live in and eventually assassinates the former PM who was apparently involved with said cult somehow. Now it seems the government is earnestly considering the conditions which created such despair in the man.

      I’m just working off memory, but that’s the basics of it I think.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        I mean, killing a member of the government will definitely get the government’s attention.

    • @[email protected]
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      189 months ago

      without violence involved?

      No. There is always violence. Ghandi, Martin Luther King, the suffragettes, and Rosa Parks just received it instead of delivering it.

    • macrocarpa
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      89 months ago

      Over what time scale? Incremental change is also change, and don’t require violence. You might not have noticed the beneficial change because it’s happened over so long and society has been managed through the change.

      The other side to that question is - how frequently does violence achieve beneficial change? As opposed to violence which doesn’t effect change at all, or changes things for the worse?

      Terrorism, for instance?

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        Ok. Small and incremental changes. Our government has slowly gotten more corrupt and become more of an oligarchy over the past 60 years. Our government stopped doing what was best for most Americans a long time ago. The blackwater scandal during the Nixon Era would barely be a blip today. Insurance companies have gotten Healthcare to sky rocket. No one can afford a house because corporations have been allowed to buy them all up. Minimum wage has fallen way behind, there’s no ceiling for how many hundreds of millions the wealthy can make each year and still pay a lower tax rate than someone making $70k. People are in more debt than ever and fewer people are starting families because you can’t afford it. Our two party system bullies out any third party so political shifts never change. Gerrymandering is outrageous in many states in order to suppress voters. Anything that is generally passed that would benefit most Americans has its legs cut out from underneath it with stipulations or other earmarked junk. Corporations breaking laws get a slap on the wrist. I mean hell, Bayer knowingly infected hundreds of people with HIV back when it was a death sentence because they didn’t want to take the loss on discarding their tainted product. We have at least one Supreme Court Justice who has been caught dead to rights accepting gifts, and not a thing happens to him.

        So yeah. There’s have been small changes.

        • macrocarpa
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          38 months ago

          Oh right so you’re talking about change just in America then?

    • @DoYouNot
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      -29 months ago

      Gandhi and India’s independence from the British through nonviolent resistance comes to mind.

      • @[email protected]
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        279 months ago

        There were many assassinations and atrocities (including gunning down over 800 unarmed indians) that happened for 50 years leading up to that. Also, after ww2 the British feared that the ton of Indian National Army POWs released from Japan were gearing up to violently resist the British on a large scale. The British didn’t just give up because Ghandi was nice and all the non violent protests. They gave up after years of violence, then a break from the violence, and then the threat of going back to violence against the former POWs and the support they were getting.

        Ghandi and his followers were very influential and peaceful, but thats far from the only thing that forced out the brits.

        • @DoYouNot
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          89 months ago

          I mean sure, if we include violent reactions to non-violence and place the goalposts just so, then yes, absolutely everything includes violence…

          But as far as “any big moves or changes” you mention, Gandhi’s movement for non-violent resistance is the posterchild for doing exactly that without violence. It exposes violent state power as ultimately impotent when faced with massive, collective and coordinated non-violent resistance.

          And Gandhi was not “nice” just because he advocated for non-violence… He and his followers used coordinated, active efforts to cripple the mechanisms upholding British rule. The British hated him for it.

          I’m not sure I understand the point you’re trying to make.

          • @[email protected]
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            129 months ago

            I feel like you didn’t listen to anything I said. Let me summarize it for you. Ghandi was one piece of the puzzle to making the brits leave. The other piece was violence, and without the violence part, it wasn’t going to work.

            • @[email protected]
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              129 months ago

              You can’t have a successful MLK without a Malcolm X behind him reminding the oppressors of the other option if they don’t compromise with the former.

              • @[email protected]
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                49 months ago

                A good point. However, if violence was all there was, a devastating war would be the end result. The non-violence led the British public to disagree with the military actions.

                A destabilized nation cannot war afar.

                Apologies for butchering The Art of War, I believe the correct quotation includes “disruption at home” though it’s a very fuzzy memory.

      • @SkippingRelax
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        9 months ago

        Gotta love the downvotes.

        Q. Has change ever happened without violence

        A. Yes look at Gandhi

        Lemmy downwotes, no explanation given but obviously doesn’t fit the narrative

  • @TrickDacy
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    199 months ago

    The title of this post is disturbing.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      It’s unfortunate but in a lot of cases it’s the only thing that will work. Peaceful protest can help when protesting against a group that could be viewed as rational, if not, most people won’t just lie down if the conditions they are protesting don’t improve, and more drastic action becomes one of the few options left.

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        People here agitating for political violence are acting like this legislation is something like police reform or oil production rates when it’s actually just a relatively small thing which won’t negatively affect anyone in power and is generally considered popular.

        He’d probably have got it into the public dialog with a good pop song too.

        Honestly the reason this is interesting news is because it’s so uncommon, normally governments and the public shift away from whatever violent radicals support because they don’t want to be associated or don’t want to appear weak.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          it’s actually just a relatively small thing which won’t negatively affect anyone in power and is generally considered popular.

          It’s only popular because of the publicity gained by assassinating the country’s longest serving Prime Minister though. I don’t think a pop song would have hit the mark.

          It absolutely has affected people in power, as there were more than just him linked to the UC church (which his association with was the reason he was the chosen target) and they were removed from their positions. Thise still in power have cut ties.

          It is indeed an uncommon response though.

      • @TrickDacy
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        -29 months ago

        The title of the post could’ve also been written “sometimes, murder is good”. I don’t think that’s anything to defend just because sometimes violence has resulted in a better situation later.

    • @Nublets
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      269 months ago

      Y’all up in here bitchin like you weren’t just giggling bout that guillotining billionaires meme

      • @[email protected]
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        79 months ago

        The thing that makes gallows humour gallows humour and not violence is the humour part. There is a huge difference between joking about guillotines and actually using them

      • @TrickDacy
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        19 months ago

        I’m glad you know what I saw and how I reacted and that it’s inconsistent. Great job!

      • @[email protected]
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        -19 months ago

        Because the political violence mentioned in the title is murder. The title is “murder works and is good sometimes actually”. And the ‘sometimes’ mentioned here is when a man held a grudge against the Unification Church, couldn’t find a chance to kill high ranking members of the church and then decided to kill the former PM because he had connections to it and was easy enough to find.

        This is not okay, and very far from “good”.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          The fact you’re being down voted is scary, round here really seem desperate for chaos. The details of this case really aren’t anything to be celebrated

          • @[email protected]
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            59 months ago

            Seriously, I never would’ve guessed that my most unpopular opinion on lemmy would be “murdering people vaguely connected to your problem because you’re angry is bad”.

            This wasn’t an ideological act or whatever, the assassin’s mother was brainwashed and financially ruined her family, he was angry because of that (so because the church caused his mother to ruin the family, it’s a personal grudge against the church because it affected him), wanted to kill the head of the church, but couldn’t, so 20 years later he settled for Abe since he was accessible and supported the church (as the party did before him).

            The assassin could’ve exposed and drew attention to the church and their connections in various ways, instead he shot an old man at the end of his career. I am all for exposing corruption and malpractices, for taking away influence and power from those who have too much, but arbitrary killing is disgusting. Shall we applaud every broken and desperate murderer if the target they could get their hands on was bad enough by some criteria of the day? I hope this is people just trying to be edgy.

          • @TrickDacy
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            29 months ago

            I agree. Any dissent to this post being downvoted is kind of a bad thing for humanity. Murder is never something to celebrate. At best it could be “damn that was an evil thing but at least the dictator is dead”. But the readiness to accept it as actual good is so alarming

  • @SanndyTheManndy
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    159 months ago

    Violence works even when the other side is not open to compromise.

    • @Duamerthrax
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      First Pride “Parade” was a riot(Stonewall Riots) and the US Government finally caved on the Civil Right Movement because they realized they wouldn’t be able to control it anymore. Governments are based on their monopoly on violence. If something threatens that, they can either put down the opposition or remove the reason the opposition has for being violent. It’s a lesson the Right always knows and the Left keeps forgetting.

    • @[email protected]
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      169 months ago

      After a wiki binge I can try to answer: it seems that the “Unification Church” is a religious movement popular in Japan and Korea and pressures members into massive donation as well as bringing new members to the church.

      The assassin was acting in revenge for his mother’s donations to this church ruining their family. Shinzo Abe, the assassinated president, was a high profile member.

      So the bill basically sets up a bunch of rules on how donations can be solicited and offers a right of refund if there’s anything dodgy about the way the money was donated, or if the victim was deemed to be “brainwashed” into it.

      • @[email protected]
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        89 months ago

        Hol’ up. Abe wasn’t a member of the church. However, his grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, (founder of the LDP, fascist, and Class A war criminal) allowed The Unification Church to prey on vulnerable Japanese people. The Nippon Kaigi, the shadowy fascist organization that decides who leads the LDP, has allowed the church to fundraise in Japan for three generations.

        Tetsuya Yamagami started out as your run of the mill right winger until he learned of the links between Abe and the Moonies. He wanted to take revenge on Moon’s widow, Hak Ja Han Moon, but he couldn’t travel out of the country because of the pandemic. So he targeted the next best thing.

        Wouldn’t you know it? All that harmony disrupting shit that Japan just ignored couldn’t be ignore any longer.

        On top of that, there’s some scandal about LDP slush funds now. Fascists gonna fascist I suppose.

    • @[email protected]
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      399 months ago

      The assassination of Shinzo Abe. Former prime minister of Japan.

      In short, and I’m working on memory, the assassin killed Abe because Abe was very friendly with a religous cult. Said cult had brainwashed the assassins mother and made her penniless.