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Takaichi Is Not for Western Feminists

A female PM determined to protect her nation and culture.

New Japanese cabinet minister Kimi Onoda. The Good Oil. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.

Have you heard the thunderous roar of celebration from Western feminists as Japan elects its first female prime minister?

Of course you haven’t. Because she’s a conservative.

The same feminists who still valourise a useless quota hack like Julia Gillard, whose lasting legacy is passing the legislation that allows autogynephile men in dresses to show their cocks in little girls’ change rooms and bash and rape women in women’s prisons, are calling a woman who battled to win her place in a rigidly traditional society is sneered at by Western feminists as ‘far right’. And Western feminists cheer on cross-dressing male fetishists who screech that she’s ‘female Hitler’.

Wait till they hear what her female cabinet minister is doing.

Kimi Onoda, the new Cabinet minister overseeing policies on foreign nationals, indicated she would take a stricter approach to reduce crimes and other misbehavior of foreigners in Japan.

“Crimes and disruptive behavior by some foreign nationals, as well as inappropriate use of public systems, are causing anxiety and a sense of unfairness among Japanese citizens,” Onoda said on Oct 22 at her first news conference since her promotion.

Anyone who’s been to Japan knows that the Japanese don’t lower their high expectations of public behaviour and decorum one bit for foreigners. Their country, their rules: sit anywhere than a designated seat in public and a policeman will quickly appear and tell you to move on.

And they absolutely will not tolerate gaijin who act like barbarians. Whether that’s an American leftist who posts videos of himself shoplifting from convenience stores and tagging graffitti or Muslims who think they can block roads like they do in the West. Even if police don’t act decisively, Japanese citizens take notice and expect action.

Tightening policies on foreign nationals was a key issue that Takaichi advocated during the Liberal Democratic Party’s leadership race.

Onoda played a central role in Takaichi’s campaign and was referred to as the “captain” of the team […]

The newly formed Cabinet strongly projects the conservative political stance of new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Onoda is perhaps the most emblematic appointment who reflects the “Takaichi color.”

Onoda, at 42 the youngest member of Takaichi’s candidate, was born in the US, but grew up in Okayama Prefecture from the age of one. She is known for her candid speaking.

She worked at a game development company before serving as an assembly member in Tokyo’s Kita Ward.

She resigned during her second term to run in the 2016 Upper House election, where she was elected to the Diet for the first time.

Since then, she has focused on such issues as illegal residency and employment by foreign nationals.

She’s not the only one in the Takaichi cabinet to do so. Hiroshi Hiraguchi, the new justice minister, has stated that he will co-operate with Onoda to “strengthen measures against illegal stayers” and “enforce strict immigration control.”

Half Japan’s luck.


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