In a manga comic book that is well known in Japan, My wife is an elementary school student, a 24-year-old teacher marries a 12-year-old girl as part of a top-secret social experiment.
There is no depiction of actual sex, but the teacher’s steamy fantasies fill the comic’s pages in graphic detail, including a little naked girl with sexually suggestive props.
Meanwhile, in a widely available new DVD, a real-life Japanese model poses in a tiny white bikini. She makes popcorn in a maid’s costume. She plays with a beach ball, while being hosed down with water.
The model, Akari Iinuma, is 13 years old.
Japan, which has long been relatively tolerant of the open sale and consumption of sexually oriented material, lately has developed a brisk trade in works that in many other countries may be considered child pornography. However, now some public officials want to place tighter restrictions on the provocative depictions of young girls — referred to as “junior idols” — that are prevalent in magazines, DVDs and Web videos.
One particularly big target is manga comic books that depict pubescent girls in sexual acts. It is a lucrative segment of the US$5.5 billion industry for manga, illustrated books drawn in a characteristic Japanese comic-book style.
A newly revised ordinance by Tokyo’s metropolitan government, which restricts the sale of such material, has prompted a national debate between its publishers and critics inside and outside Japan, who say the fare exploits children and may even encourage pedophilia. Other local and regional governments, including the Osaka Prefecture, are considering similar restrictions.
“These are for abnormal people, for perverts,” said Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara, throwing two comic books to the floor during an interview.
Ishihara spearheaded the ordinance changes, which take effect in July.
While the revised law applies to an area containing only about a 10th of Japan’s population, Tokyo is the nation’s media capital and a de facto arbiter of the country’s pop culture boundaries.
“There’s no other country in the world that lets such crude works exist,” Ishihara said.
To protest the ordinance, 10 of the country’s biggest publishers have said they will boycott the Tokyo International Anime Fair next month, Japan’s premier event for manga and animated films.
The new law specifically bars only the sale of the restricted comics and videos to minors, but industry executives say it will essentially end publication of the material by discouraging risk-averse publishers and booksellers from handling it at all.
“There are no victims in manga — we should be free to write what we want,” said Yasumasa Shimizu, vice president at Japan’s largest publishing company, Kodansha, which is participating in the boycott. “Creativity in Japanese manga thrives on an ‘anything goes’ mentality.”
Manga taps into a history of erotica that dates at least as far back as the ukiyo-e prints of the 17th to 19th century, including Hokusai’s famous portrayal of a fisherwoman and octopuses in a salacious encounter. However, it was as recently as the 1980s that comic magazines such as Lemon People introduced a wider audience to sexual manga featuring young girls.
“There is a culture, an industry that worships youth and innocence,” said Mariko Katsuki, who published a book last year chronicling adults who are attracted to small children. “Much of the attraction is nonsexual, but sometimes it becomes a dangerous obsession.”
The new Tokyo law, which applies to anyone under 18, bans the sale of comics and other works — including novels, DVDs and video games — that depict sexual or violent acts that would violate Japan’s national penal code, as well as sex involving anyone under 18. The ordinance also requires guardians to prevent children younger than 13 from posing for magazines or videos that depict them in sexually suggestive ways.
Legal experts say that Japan’s anti-child pornography laws are lax by international standards. Japan has banned the production or distribution of any sexually explicit, nude images of minors since 1999, when parliament passed an anti-child pornography law in response to international criticism of the wide availability of such works in the country. However, even now, unlike the US and most European countries, Japan does not ban the possession of child pornography.
In recent cases in the US and Sweden, authorities have made arrests over manga books imported from Japan depicting sexual abuse of children. A US manga collector, Christopher Handley, pleaded guilty in 2009 to violating the 2003 Protect Act, which outlawed cartoons or drawings that depict minors in sexually explicit ways.
Japan’s 1999 law has also helped stamp out a formerly popular genre of photo books depicting nude underage girls. One of the genre’s best-selling books, published in 1991, featured nude photos of actress Rie Miyazawa, who was not yet 18 at the time of the photo shoot.
However, in the past five or six years, books and videos have emerged that sidestep the law by featuring girls, some as young as six, posing in swimsuits that stop short of full nudity. These models, who are paid about ¥200,000 (US$2,400) a shoot, often dream of careers in acting or music, industry insiders say.
Junior idol photo books and DVDs are widely available on Web sites such as Amazon.co.jp and in specialized bookstores. There are at least eight magazines devoted to such photos, including Sho-Bo, which features girls of elementary school age.
“I loved the white bikini,” Iinuma, the 13-year-old model, told the adult male fans who turned out at the Sofmap electronics store in Tokyo for an event to promote the release of her second DVD, Developing Now.
It is a plotless, 70 minutes of Iinuma in various costumes and poses.
At the gathering, Iinuma performed a short dance, spoke about the video shoot, then posed as men approached her to snap photos, while her mother looked on from the back of the room.
Hiromasa Nakai, a spokesman for the Japan Committee for UNICEF, said the abundance of child pornography in Japan made it even easier for those who would normally not be considered as having clinical pedophilia, a psychiatric disorder characterized by a sexual obsession with young children, to develop a sexual interest in children.
“To a degree, it has become socially accepted to lust over young girls in Japan,” Nakai said. “Condoning these works has meant more people have access to them and develop an interest in young girls.”
There have been earlier moves to regulate pedophilic material in Japan, especially after the murders of four little girls in 1988 and 1989 by a man police described as a pedophile. The case spurred local governments across Japan to adopt ordinances setting some limits to sales of pedophilic works, including a loose ratings system for explicit manga books imposed by the publishers themselves, and it also set the stage for the 1999 anti-child pornography law.
Already the Tokyo government checks for “unwholesome” manga titles and can order publishers to label the titles as for adults only. However, supporters of more regulation say those efforts have been sporadic.
“We believe that when the rights of adults or businesses violate children’s rights, children must come first, but we also respect free speech, so the least we can ask is people keep their fetishes under wraps,” said Tamae Shintani, head of Tokyo’s parent-teacher association for elementary schools.
The industry’s defenders say comparing manga to pedophilia involving real children is absurd.
“Depicting a crime and committing one are two different things. It’s like convicting a mystery writer for murder,” said Takashi Yamaguchi, a Tokyo lawyer and manga expert.
Yamaguchi and others also contend that the Tokyo government pushed through the new regulations without ample debate. Some also worry that stronger regulations will harm an industry that has already had its fortunes fall in recent years — sales of comic magazines, in particular, have fallen by a third over the past decade, to US$24.3 million in 2008.
Manga artist Takeshi Nogami, whose best-known work features high-school girls riding military tanks, says he senses a disdain among policymakers toward manga itself.
“They think reading manga makes you dumb,” Nogami said.
In late December at the Comic Market, a self-published comic book fair that is held twice a year in Tokyo and attended by more than 500,000 people, manga titles depicting adults having sex with minors were on open display and they were readily available to fans like Koki Yoshida, aged 17.
“I don’t even think about how old these girls are,” Yoshida said. “It’s a completely imaginary world, separate from real life.”
Congratulations to China’s working class — they have officially entered the “Livestock Feed 2.0” era. While others are still researching how to achieve healthy and balanced diets, China has already evolved to the point where it does not matter whether you are actually eating food, as long as you can swallow it. There is no need for cooking, chewing or making decisions — just tear open a package, add some hot water and in a short three minutes you have something that can keep you alive for at least another six hours. This is not science fiction — it is reality.
A foreign colleague of mine asked me recently, “What is a safe distance from potential People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Rocket Force’s (PLARF) Taiwan targets?” This article will answer this question and help people living in Taiwan have a deeper understanding of the threat. Why is it important to understand PLA/PLARF targeting strategy? According to RAND analysis, the PLA’s “systems destruction warfare” focuses on crippling an adversary’s operational system by targeting its networks, especially leadership, command and control (C2) nodes, sensors, and information hubs. Admiral Samuel Paparo, commander of US Indo-Pacific Command, noted in his 15 May 2025 Sedona Forum keynote speech that, as
In a world increasingly defined by unpredictability, two actors stand out as islands of stability: Europe and Taiwan. One, a sprawling union of democracies, but under immense pressure, grappling with a geopolitical reality it was not originally designed for. The other, a vibrant, resilient democracy thriving as a technological global leader, but living under a growing existential threat. In response to rising uncertainties, they are both seeking resilience and learning to better position themselves. It is now time they recognize each other not just as partners of convenience, but as strategic and indispensable lifelines. The US, long seen as the anchor
Kinmen County’s political geography is provocative in and of itself. A pair of islets running up abreast the Chinese mainland, just 20 minutes by ferry from the Chinese city of Xiamen, Kinmen remains under the Taiwanese government’s control, after China’s failed invasion attempt in 1949. The provocative nature of Kinmen’s existence, along with the Matsu Islands off the coast of China’s Fuzhou City, has led to no shortage of outrageous takes and analyses in foreign media either fearmongering of a Chinese invasion or using these accidents of history to somehow understand Taiwan. Every few months a foreign reporter goes to