National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party
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The National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party (NSJAP) is a small but known National Socialist movement in Japan found on April 20, 1982 and is led by Kazunari Yamada. who maintains a website and blog which includes praise for Adolf Hitler involving pictures of him posing with cabinet minister Sanae Takaichi and LDP policy research chief Tomomi Inada. Due to their website being taken down in 2023, they moved to Wixsite to reestablish their platform. The NSJAP is also Turanist, anti-capitalist, anti-communist, anti-Korean, anti-Chinese, anti-Russian, and anti-American.
History and beliefs
Founded in 1982, the party is also known as 国家社会主義日本労働者党 Kokka Shakaishugi Nippon Rōdōsha-Tō (in Japanese) or Nationalsozialistische Japanische Arbeiterpartei (in German). It is possible that the Kokka Shakaishugi Gakumei (the National Socialist League), a National Socialist organization formed in the 1940s, is a direct political ancestor. Other ideological roots are found in Kita Ikki, Seigō Nakano, Sadao Araki and the Kodoha party; the most important Japanese National Socialist ideologists in the World War II period. The party celebrates the empire of Japan and its alliance with the Third Reich.
The party believes in a corporatist state, with a return to the Shogun system as an indigenous take on National Socialist principles of leadership. It is anti-Semitic, and seeks to expose the international Jewish conspiracy employing Freemasonry to control Japan. The party believes in the principles of Turanism (pan-Altaic) that looks for unity with other groups from the "Turanid" or Altaic racial origins, such as Koreans; Mongols; the Turkic peoples of Turkey, Central Asia and Russia; Hungarians; and even the Finns and Estonians.[1]. They have expressed support for other Asian nations against the People's Republic of China. "Our Geopolitical plan for the Freedom of East Asia is based upon the alliance of Manchuria, Tibet [2], Uyghur, Taiwan (Formosa), Mongolia and Japan" [1]. Their theories allow them to be placed within the wider context of the Eurasianism that forms a part of National Bolshevism.
The party is skeptical of the official history of the Nanking Massacre and disputed the accuracy of Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking.[3] The party has voiced support for repressed National Socialists around the world, including jailed German activist Marcus Bischoff[4] and NSDAP/AO leader Gerhard Lauck.
The party's website includes links to National Socialist sites worldwide.[5]
In the 1990s, the group campaigned for the expulsion of illegal migrants living in Japan. The NSJAP campaigns against Jewish influence on both the world stage and in Japan's national affairs. The party advocates for the abolishment of Monarchy and the restoration of the shōgunate, as it believes that the Imperial House of Japan became subservient to international Jewry following WWAC, as it is Japanese fascism. The NSJAP also campaigns against race mixing, and Freemasonry. The party also campaigns for Corporatism.
External links
Videos
References
- ↑ Their idea of a Turanian or Ural-Altaic family of languages is currently in dispute in mainstream linguistic circles.
- ↑ The party's website features an article on the history of the connections between "Germany and Tibet" by W. Grimwald.
- ↑ See "The Massacre of Nanking" is a lie!, What is Nanking Massacre?, 90 errors in Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking, Asahi News paper's photographs "The peaceful sceneries and conditions at Nanking", John Rabe's Diary, Some Comments on Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II, and Iris Chang obstructs the Japanese publication of her own book.
- ↑ The New Axis, National Socielist Japanese Workers Party
- ↑ Countries include South Africa, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Denmark, Great Britain, Vinland (the U.S.), Finland, Belgium, France, Germany, Austria, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Brazil, Romania, Slovenia, Spain, Basque Country, Bolivia, Peru, Venezuela, Paraguay, Chile, and Sweden. (Source)