Liberal Japan

japan.shadowofiris.com

  • Search Form

  • Subscribe

  • Meta




  • Strict constitutionalism and anti-tax: the JCP

    Posted by Matt Dioguardi on January 24th, 2008

    Some of the people who have been kind enough to read this blog have referred to me as a libertarian. Of course, I’d prefer to think of myself as a liberal of the classical mold, but I have to admit in many ways that aligns me with modern libertarians.

    Anyway, let me pose a question. According to the views I hold, which party would I be best off to support in Japan? (I’m not a citizen, so speaking in terms of moral support.) Ironically enough, if my decision were to be based on campaign posters, it would have to be the Japanese Communist Party.

    proconstitution.jpg

    For literally years now, I’ve been seeing campaign posters arguing for a strict interpretation of article 9 of the Japanese constitution, the antiwar clause. Wow, that’s just what I believe. The constitution should be taken seriously and interpreted strictly. Good on you, JCP.

    antitax.jpg

    Now, recently, I’ve noticed a new poster from the JCP. This poster says something like stop the sales tax increase. It’s an anti-tax message. Wow, I can get into that. Fight the tax raise, the government already gets too much money.

    So there you have it. Based on campaign posters, the JCP is the party of strict constitutionalism and antitax to boot. Now, that’s the party for me. Okay, if I actually checked their platform, I’d probably have to revise this a bit, but anyway …

    I can’t help but wish JCP luck next election cycle with their anti-tax, strict constitutional platform.

    One Response to “Strict constitutionalism and anti-tax: the JCP”

    1. Matt@occidentalism.org Says:

      On the issue of the antiwar clause, I am fully behind you. While I think that alteration of the constitution should be taken under serious consideration, it should be an actual change to the constitution, not an unconstitutional “reinterpretation”.

    Leave a Reply

    XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>