I have always thought that it is ridiculous to divide capitalism into * * * and constitutional monarchy. Capitalism overthrew feudalism, saying that it overthrew all systems, but retained the monarchy with the most feudal characteristics. In the final analysis, the boss hasn't changed, and neither have the people. Only ministers with vested interests have changed. According to the very traditional view, the monarchy is a compromise between capitalism and feudalism. It can only be said that it is a hybrid, that is, a semi-feudal and semi-capitalist hybrid. The Japanese emperor has also become a typical representative of this hybrid. This is why I want to say that Japan is semi-feudal and semi-capital.
Speaking of semi-colonialism, this is the most painful thing for the Japanese. Many Japanese dare not face it, but they have to live a semi-colonial life. Speaking of semi-colonies, China once had such a period of dire straits. Fortunately, we broke it, and the Japanese themselves sent themselves into this fire pit. The most important feature of a semi-colony is a sovereign state, but it is nonsense to say that foreign troops are stationed and that they have independent rights such as diplomacy, military affairs and finance. In a word, today's Japan is worse than Cixi's Great Qing Dynasty. For example, in diplomacy, no matter how the war is fought, Li Hongzhang still stands firm in international diplomacy, at least he can engage in theory; Now in Japan, kneeling down and feeling late is just a slap in the face. When it comes to finance, Cixi is just compensation for defeat, but now the Japanese, whose master is fighting far away, were originally dry, but they just pasted their faces and lost money. As for the military, that's not to mention. A bit like Zhang Xueliang in those days, so I won't say much. I naturally understand.
When did the Japanese become such a completely semi-colony? In the 1960s and 1970s, two landmark events were the signing of the Japan-US security agreement and the failure of the Red Army revolution. As for the Japan-US security agreement, including the supporting administrative agreement, I define it as Article 21 of Japan, and Kishi Nobusuke can be compared with Yuan Shikai. The "Article 21" of that year gave birth to the May 4th Movement in China, and the Japan-US security treaty also gave birth to the Japanese revolution marked by the Red Army Movement.
At that time, many patriotic students in Japan hated the government's traitorous behavior. Just like China in those days, they suddenly saw the light in the dark, except that China studied Marxism and the Soviet Revolution at that time, while Japanese students studied our Mao Zedong Thought and China revolutions. Anti-American, anti-government, rebellious, and even preparing to assassinate the emperor, just like the August 1st Uprising, Japan began to set up the Red Army Group and started an armed revolution. Of course, what it has done most is similar to the current terrorist activities. But a single spark, not to mention a prairie fire, is a spark, which was jointly suppressed by the Japanese government and the American government. It is reported that more than ten thousand patriotic students are missing. According to our understanding of Japanese police and CIA, we can only burn some yellow paper for these patriotic students at Naiheqiao. After the Japanese Red Army was suppressed, it had to go underground. In 2000, Fusako Shigenobu, the leader of the Red Army, was arrested and sentenced to 20 years in prison, marking the complete end of the history of the Red Army. Since then, there has never been a revolution or revolutionaries in Japan, and the rest are either slaves or traitors. No, it should be said that they are Japanese traitors. For example, the current Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who was also a patriotic student, has now become a running dog of the United States.
When China was reduced to a semi-colony, after half a century of revolutionary advance and bloody sacrifice, it finally got rid of the semi-colony completely and moved towards independence, freedom and prosperity. And Japan, after the defeat of the Red Army Revolution, will there be new revolutionaries and revolutionary activities? Where is the future of Japan? Is it to continue to live in the hot water of semi-colony? Or learn from China and get rid of your tragic fate through revolution? Please listen to the next breakdown.
Related information:
One: About Japan-US Security Agreement
1951September 8, Japan and the United States unilaterally signed the San Francisco Peace Treaty with Japan. Five hours later, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshitomo and American representative Acheson signed the treaty. The official name is the Treaty of Safeguard between Japan and the United States of America. The treaty consists of a preface and five texts. The main points are: the United States has the right to station land, sea and air forces in Japan and its surrounding areas; At the request of the Japanese government, the US military can suppress riots and riots in Japan. The conditions for the US garrison shall be stipulated separately by the administrative agreement between the two countries.
1952 On February 28th, Japan and the United States signed the Japan-US Administrative Agreement in Tokyo in accordance with Article III of the Japan-US Safeguards Treaty. There are 29 articles in the text of the agreement. The status and privileges of the US military stationed in Japan are specified in detail, such as Japan providing bases and facilities to the US military and recognizing the right of the United States to use, manage and defend these bases and facilities; Japan has no jurisdiction over crimes committed by American soldiers and their families; Japan pays US$ 6,543.8+US$ 55 billion in defense fees to the United States every year.
1952 On April 28th, the Japan-US Safeguard Treaty and the Japan-US Administrative Agreement came into effect at the same time. During the implementation of the treaty, the Japanese people strongly opposed it because of the atrocities committed by the US military. The simultaneous signing and entry into force of the Security Treaty and the San Francisco Peace Treaty show that they are closely related. Japan has an extremely important strategic position in the American policy of leading Asia. However, the United States felt that the terms of continuing to station troops in Japan should not be included in the "Peace Treaty with Japan", so it signed a separate treaty. 1On September 29th, 953, the two countries revised the terms of the trial of crimes committed by American troops in the administrative agreement, stipulating that the right of first instance of crimes committed by American troops belongs to Japan except for performing official duties.
1958 10 year 10 4 October, Japan and the United States held the first negotiation on amending the security treaty.
1960 65438+1October19, Japanese Prime Minister Kishi Nobusuke and US President Eisenhower signed the Japan-US Cooperation and Security Treaty (commonly known as the New Japan-US Security Treaty) in Washington, D.C., which came into effect on June 23rd. 1960. The new treaty consists of a preface and a text of 10, and is valid for 10 years. Compared with the Japan-US Security Treaty, it is a mutually beneficial treaty, and both countries have the obligation to strengthen the Japan-US military alliance. Japan still relies on the nuclear umbrella of the United States to safeguard its own security, and undertakes more obligations such as providing military bases, expanding armaments, and fighting together. At the same time, the administrative agreement was revised and renamed as the Agreement on Facilities and Areas and the Status of US Forces in Japan, and Japan's share of defense funds was cancelled. Because the new treaty is hostile to the people of the Soviet Union, China and other Asian countries, Japan is in danger of being involved in American military actions, which has aroused strong opposition from the Japanese people.
From 1959 to 1960, the Japanese people carried out 23 national unified actions against the revision of the Japan-US Safeguards Treaty, forcing Eisenhower to cancel his visit to Japan and forcing Kishi Nobusuke to step down. Every time the number of people involved in the unified action ranges from several million to tens of millions. The scale, time and participants of the struggle are unprecedented in Japanese history. After the expiration of 1970, the Japanese government notified the American government and announced an automatic extension. 1972 in may, the United States returned Okinawa to Japan, and the treaty also applied to Okinawa.
Two. About the Japanese Red Army Movement
1In March, 970, the Red Army issued a call for world revolution and hijacked the plane to fly to North Korea, which shocked the world. Most of the nine hijackers were high flyers from top universities. The oldest Takao Tamiya is only 27 years old, and the youngest Morihiro Shibata is only 16 years old, and he is still a freshman. The crew of "Dian" hijacked the crew and later opened a "Japanese Revolutionary Village" near Pyongyang. In order to make the revolutionary cause successful, the Red Army organized the kidnapping of Japanese students from Europe to North Korea to have children with them and cultivate revolutionary descendants.
Overseas, Fusako Shigenobu, the leader of the Red Army faction, led the Red Army to create a massacre at Lida Airport in Tel Aviv, the Israeli capital, and threw incendiary bombs at the Shell Refinery in Singapore for the "lofty Palestinian people's liberation struggle"; In Japan, in order to oppose the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the emperor's accession to the throne, left-wing organizations threw incendiary bombs at the imperial residence in the palace, preparing to assassinate the emperor ... They shouted the slogan of "anti-imperialism and patriotism, and revolution is slaughter and destruction", always ready to dedicate themselves to their beliefs and seek for a hundred lives for lofty ideals.
A group of students who grew up in this land occupied by the US military saw the ills and emptiness of society and were confused about their future. As a result, a vigorous new leftist movement rose in the Japanese archipelago. Kyoto University and Meiji University are the bastions where leftist students are most concentrated. Students constantly took to the streets to demonstrate and clashed with riot police, throwing incendiary bombs at the police.
Due to the repression of the authorities, some people took to the road of armed forces. 1969, the "red army" composed of radical ultra-left students was born. The Red Army's program is to establish the so-called egalitarian workers' world and overthrow imperialism and capitalism. They believe that the way to realize the revolution is to carry out terrorist violence. Because the goal is lofty, any terrorist action, no matter how cruel, no matter how bloody, no matter who suffers, is beyond reproach in their eyes.
When the Red Army was suppressed at home, it turned its attention to overseas. Some of them hijacked planes to North Korea on 1970, while others went to the Middle East to fight local guerrillas on 197 1. Its core organization has 15 members, and the current total number is about 100. Its base is Syria-controlled Lebanon, such as the Bekaa Valley. Other members are scattered in Syria, Libya, Europe and Southeast Asia. The leaders of the Red Army are Fusako Shigenobu and Okamoto Kozo.
In the early 1970s, the Japanese Red Army launched a series of attacks in Japan and around the world.
1970, Seida, one of the backbone elements, hijacked a JAL passenger plane with 13 1 passengers and 7 crew members on board. 1On May 30th, 972, the "Red Army" hijacked two Japanese planes at Tel Aviv airport, killing 24 people and injuring 76 others (Fusako Shigenobu gave birth to a daughter with a local Palestinian activist during his stay in the Middle East, and named her life as "To commemorate the revolution, sacrifice the lives of his comrades and live in danger" [69/kloc-0] 1On September 28th, 977, five Japanese Red Army elements hijacked a JAL plane flying from Paris to Tokyo, demanding that the Japanese government release the arrested Red Army members and extort huge sums of money; 1988 In April, they attacked an American club of the United Labor Organization in Naples, killing five people.
Later, under the severe attack of the Japanese police agency, the Japanese Red Army gradually disappeared. It is said that most leading members of the Red Army fled to the Middle East and lived in seclusion in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon. One of the leading members was arrested in 1987, and the most important leader Fusako Shigenobu was also arrested in 1 1 in 2000.