TOKYO — In the Land of the Rising Sun, a conservative Shinto cult dating
back to the 1970s, which includes Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and
many of his cabinet among its adherents, finally has been dragged out of
the shadows.

The group is called Nippon Kaigi (Japan Conference) and is ostensibly run
by Tadae Takubo, a former journalist turned political scientist. It only
has 38,000 members, but like many an exclusive club, or sect, it wields
tremendous political influence.

Broadly speaking, Shinto is a polytheistic and animist religion native to
Japan. The state-sponsored Shintoism promulgated here before and during
World War II also elevated the Emperor to the status of a God and insisted
that the Japanese were a divine race—the Yamato; with all other races
considered #inferior.

Nippon Kaigi originally began in the early 1970s from a liberal Shinto
group known as Seicho No Ie. In 1974, a splinter section of the group
joined forces with Nippon o Mamoru Kai, a State-Shinto revival organization
that espoused patriotism and a return to imperial worship. The group in its
current state was officially formed in May of 1997, when Nippon o Mamoru
Kai and a group of right-leaning intellectuals joined forces.

The current cult’s goals: gut Japan’s post-war pacifist constitution, end
sexual equality, get rid of foreigners, void pesky “human rights” laws, and
return Japan to its Imperial Glory.

With Japan’s parliamentary elections to be held on July 10, the cult may
now have its chance to dominate policity completely. If the ruling
coalition wins enough seats, the door will open to amending Japan’s modern
democratic constitution, something that has remained sacred and inviolate
since 1947.

Indeed, for Japan, these elections may be a constitutional Brexit—deciding
whether this country moves forward as a democracy or literally takes a step
back to the Meiji era that ended more than a century ago. Then, the Emperor
was supreme and freedom of expression was subservient to the interests of
the state.

The influence of Nippon Kaigi may be hard for an American to understand on
a gut level. But try this: Imagine if “future World President” Donald
Trump belonged to a right-wing evangelical group, let’s call it “USA
Conference,” that advocated a return to monarchy, the expulsion of
immigrants, the revoking of equal rights for women, restrictions on freedom
of speech—and most of his pre-selected political appointees were from the
same group.

Abe, a third-generation politician, is the grandson of Nobusuke Kishi, who
was Japan's minister of munitions during WWII and arrested as a war
criminal in 1945 before becoming prime minister in the 1950s.

Abe is a staunch nationalist and historical revisionist, who also served as
prime minister, from 2006 until 2007, before resigning abruptly mid-term.
His ties to the Nippon Kaigi organization go back to the ’90s.

In line with fellow members of his imperial and imperialist cult, Abe has
said the revision of the constitution is his lifetime goal. In an interview
in Nikkei Asian Review, published in February 2014, Abe stated, “My party,
the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), has been advocating amending our
constitution since its founding almost 60 years ago.”

So, now, Abe and his party, at least the extremist factions, are at last
coming very close to that goal.

Continue reading at...

https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-religious-cult-secretly-running-japan

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