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YUKIO MISHIMA

LAST SPEECH

 

Yukio Mishima could be seen as a man ahead of his time.   Modern Japan is an artificial state created by American imperialism after the defeat of Imperial Japan in World War II.    It is not a natural state.  It's constitution, written by America, even prevents it from being a normal state by constricting its military powers.

By ignoring American principles of free enterprise and continuing the concept of state directed capitalism, Japan was able to somewhat economically recover from World War II.  This prosperity created a form of political nihilism as the Japanese people became preoccupied with money as a main goal of life.

Mishima saw through the illusion.  He looked back to a time when Japan was not a puppet state of American imperialism.  He looked back to a time when Japan was in touch with its ancient historical and religious roots.

His public ritual suicide may or may not have been the right way to express his ideas.  However, there can be no doubt that he tapped into the collective unconscious of the Japanese people.

Today, his ideas have greater relevance.  With the rise of China, Japan's prosperity is threatened by a far more powerful Asian economic colossus.  The Fukashima disaster calls into question the rule of Japan's big corporations.  Donald Trump's antics hardly display a model for any sane person in Japan.

Since his death Japan has moved towards his ideas.   Nationalist politicians have come to power.   However, the future of Japan has created a political paradox.   While Japan has moved towards the ideas of Mishima, its geopolitical position has in many ways pushed it closer to America out of fear of China.    Japanese nationalist politicians who hate America with a passion are in a nonsensical position.

Where will this go?  Not clear.   Stay tuned.  However, people should not underestimate the power of Pan-Asian nationalism rising up against American imperialism.

Mishima committed ritual suicide on November 25, 1970.  Below are his last words.  It is not the complete text but relevant excerpts.


CONDEMNATION OF POST WORLD WAR II JAPAN

We have watched as postwar Japan has become infatuated with economic prosperity and forgotten the foundational principles of the nation. Citizens have lost their solidarity, rush ahead without correcting fundamental problems, have fallen into stopgap measures and hypocrisy, and have cast their own souls into a state of emptiness. Politics is just a facade over a mass of contradictions, self-preservation, lust for power and hypocrisy. Any long-term plans for the nation a hundred years from now have been consigned to foreign countries. We have watched with gritted teeth as the the shame of defeat has been ducked and avoided rather than wiped away, and as Japanese themselves sully their own history and traditions.

MISHIMA SEES MILITARY AS HOPE OF JAPAN TODAY

Even now we dream of the SDF as the only place where the true Japan, true Japanese, and the true soul of the warrior remains. Furthermore, it is clear that legally the SDF is unconstitutional. The fundamental issue of the nation’s defense has been weaseled around with an opportunistic legal interpretation, and we have seen how having a military that does not use the name “military” has become the source of corruption of Japanese souls and the degeneration of morality. The military, which should hold the loftiest honor, has been subject to the basest of deceits. The SDF continues to bear the dishonorable cross of a defeated nation. The SDF is not a national military, has not been accorded the foundational principles of a military, has only been given the status of a physically large police force, and even the target of its loyalty has not been made clear. Postwar Japan’s long slumber enrages us. We believe that the moment the SDF awakens will be the same moment Japan awakens. And we believe that if the SDF does not awaken itself, Japan will also fail to awaken. And we believe that our greatest duty as citizens is to exert all our effort, however feeble, to work towards the day when, through constitutional reform, the SDF can be made into a true national military and stand upon a military’s foundational principle.

Four years ago I entered the SDF alone with this ambition, the next year I formed the Shield Society. The fundamental principle of the Shield Society is the resolve to sacrifice our lives so that the SDF might awaken, to make it into a national military, a national military with honor. Since constitutional reform was already difficult under the parliamentary system, a domestic security operation* offered our only chance. So we aimed to cast aside our lives as the vanguard of a domestic security operation and become the keystone of the national military. A military protects its nation, a government is defended by the police. When we arrive at the stage where the government can no longer be effectively defended by the police, a deployment of the military will make it clear just what the nation is, and the military will revive its foundational principle. The foundational principle of a Japanese military can only be “protecting Japanese history, culture and tradition centered on the emperor.” In order to correct the twisted foundation of this nation, we, though few in number, trained ourselves and volunteered ourselves to this task.

Ever since that day, we have been watching the SDF carefully, moment by moment. If, as we had dreamed, the soul of the warrior still remained in the SDF, how could it ignore this situation? Protecting the very thing that negated it, surely that is a logical contradiction. If you are men, how could a man’s pride allow this? Even after enduring and enduring, rising up with firm resolution once the last line of what you are supposed to protect has been crossed is what it means to be a man, what it means to be a warrior. We desperately strained our ears. But from nowhere in the SDF did we hear a man’s voice rise in response to the humiliating order to “protect that which negates you.” Now that it has come to this, with the awareness of your own power, you knew that the only path forward was the correction of the twisted logic of the nation, but the SDF has been as silent as a canary with its voice stolen.
 

We were sad, angry, and finally enraged. Gentlemen, can you do nothing without being given a mission? But, sadly, the mission accorded to you will ultimately not come from Japan. It is said that civilian control is the basic principle of a democratic military. However, in England and America civilian control means financial control over military administration. Unlike Japan, it does not mean that the military is castrated without even the right to make personnel decisions, manipulated by treacherous politicians, or used as a pawn in partisan politics.
 

CONDEMNATION OF CURRENT JAPANESE MILITARY
 

Furthermore, it seems the SDF has swallowed the flattery of politicians and is walking the path of even deeper self-deceit and self-desecration. Where has the soul of the warrior gone? How will you go on, as nothing but a giant armory whose soul is dead? During textile negotiations, textile workers called the LDP traitors. Yet although it is clear that the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which concerns the long-term security of the nation, is the rebirth of the 5:5:3 Unequal Treaty, not one general from the SDF has cut his stomach in protest.
 

What does the return of Okinawa mean? What does the defense of the mainland mean? It is clear that America doesn’t want Japanese territory being defended by a true autonomous Japanese military. If we can’t revive our autonomy within the next two years, the SDF will end forever as, in the left-wing’s words, mercenaries for America.
 

ANNOUNCEMENT OF RITUAL SUICIDE TO INSPIRE REVOLUTION
 

We waited four years. The last year we waited with particular passion. We can wait no longer. We cannot wait for those who would desecrate themselves. But another thirty minutes; let us wait the final thirty minutes. We rose up together and together we will die for righteousness. To return Japan to Japan’s true form, that is why we die. Is it enough to insist on the sanctity of life, even when the soul is dead? What sort of military holds nothing above the value of life? Gentlemen, we are now going to show you a value even greater than the sanctity of life. That is not freedom, nor democracy. It is Japan. The country of history and tradition that we love, Japan. Is there no one here who will throw their bodies against this degenerate constitution and die? If there is, stand with us and die with us now. We have undertaken this action in the fervent hope that you, gentlemen, who have the purest of souls, may be reborn as individual men and as warriors.

 

Mishima, Yukio. “Mishima Yukio no ‘Geki’ zenbun.” Asahi Shinbun. November 26, 1970. p.4.

 


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