How The Poor, Defenseless Yakuza Are Getting Screwed By The Man (And Pizza Hut)

Everyone’s most loved group, the Yakuza, is once again being brought down by “The Man.” The Japanese organized crime syndicates, known for their strict code of conduct and crimes such as extortion, prostitution, blackmail, protection money and fraud, are now in danger of losing a significant part of their revenue. Last October, organized crime exclusionary laws went into effect, and are starting to take a toll on the group.

Robin Hood And His Band Of Merry Yakuza

Few people knew how into tattoos Little John was

This isn’t the first time the Yakuza have been unfairly mistreated. Even though the group has came to the aid of Japanese inhabitants numerous times, Tokyo wastes no time in limiting their activities. Why all the hate Tokyo? Have you already forgotten the Robin Hood-like deeds of the Yakuza? Was Sega’s exclusion of important content (hostess bars) from the Western-version of Yakuza 3 not enough? Hostess bars are an important part of the Yakuza culture, you know! Geesh.

Setting aside all the illegal activities the Yakuza are involved in, the group does have an appearance of being a band of good Samaritans. In the previous two major natural disasters in Japan, the Great Hanshin earthquake and the Tohoku earthquake & tsunami, the major Yakuza groups have been one of the most responsive in providing significant amounts of supplies and shelter to the distressed. In less than a day, the major Yakuza groups were able to transport essential supplies to ground zero. FEMA could learn a thing or two from the Yakuza on emergency response for natural disasters.

Yes, you could say it is a PR move. But, like a boss, they asked the media and distributors to not reveal the source of the help, mostly out of concern for the individuals that would automatically turn down anything associated to the Yakuza. Putting others before themselves in a times of crisis. Could they be more saint-like?

So what are the new laws? To sum it up in one sentence:

Anyone doing business with the Yakuza can be charged as a criminal.

Paying off blackmail, hush money, or an evening with a hostess at a Yakuza-run hostess bar could potentially net you some jail time, a fine, and/or have your name publicly associated to the group (i.e. social suicide, just ask Shinsuke Shimada). But what constitutes ‘doing business’ with the Yakuza? The definition isn’t clear cut, but anything that fosters their activities could land the ‘innocent’ party in trouble. So, let’s check out how the new laws have affected the Yakuza and their “clients.”

Can’t Wait To Show Off Your New Yakuza Business Cards? Not Going To Happen

Look at that subtle off-white coloring, that tasteful thickness… oh my God. It even has a watermark.

Just like any other business, print shops are required to be in compliance with the new laws. This restriction also includes print-makers that do meishi (business cards). You may be thinking who cares if a bunch of mobsters can’t get a hold of business cards. Here’s the thing: business cards are extremely important in Japan. It is a very crucial element when one establishes business relations with another.

No matter of your business status, if you don’t have a business card to offer, you are often dismissed as unimportant or irrelevant. Business cards and the ritual around it is an art and very serious business that is also a part of the Yakuza culture (they are Japanese, after all).

Not having a business card in Japan would suck pretty bad. Looks like they’ll have to start changing their job titles to things other than “Yakuza boss” or “Sans-Pinky Driver” to get around this law problem. I bet Kinkos America would be happy to provide some Yakuza business cards, though.

It’s Not Delivery, It’s Digiarno.

Those aren’t hot dogs in the crust. Those are Pinkies.

Imagine that you are sitting in your Yakuza’s business office in downtown Tokyo, hard at work counting the hush money you have collected from, let’s say, Olympus (Oops, see what I did there?). But then it dawns on you that it is FRIDAY. Not just any Friday, but PIZZA FRIDAY! Every Yakuza’s member’s favorite day of the week (Sushi Sunday comes in at a close second). This is the (theoretical / made up) day when your Kyodai buys the entire group pizza for lunch.

Getting excited to fill your stomach with cheesy pizza goodness loaded with little hamburger patties, mini hot dogs, and lima beans, your Kyodai enters the room with a more stern-than-usual look on his face. “Grab your jackets and smokes you pieces of sh*ts, the Pizza Hut down in Shibuya needs a little ‘visit’.”

Apparently, the Pizza Hut refused to fulfill your big brother’s order due to 1) it being such a large order, and 2) the fairly obvious scary Yakuza dialect used when placing the order over the phone. Two indicators that the store managers were taught to look out for by the police in order to avoid doing business with Yakuza. Sorry, Kitano Takeshi, you won’t be getting your pizza today.

“We don’t know if the address we deliver to is the place of a yakuza,” said the Delivery Business Safety Driving Council. But don’t panic. “One or two pizzas are OK,” the Council said, “but delivering a huge amount of pizza, knowing that the customer is a yakuza is a no-no.” [Source]

But seriously, though… since when do Yakuza order so much pizza that this becomes part of the local Pizza Place employee training in Japan? Can you imagine how awesome the informational video must be for this?

Yazuka For Life? Hope You Weren’t Expecting Life Insurance With Your Benefits

Hopefully Dental Insurance Is Still Available To The Yakuza

Although not part of the newly enacted laws (this was just set up because of the laws) the 45-member Life Insurance Association of Japan have began to add cancellation clauses to their life insurance policies in the event the policy holder or any of its beneficiaries are a member of the Yakuza. This includes even post-death life insurance holders. Doesn’t matter if the death was natural or from an infected pinky from yubitsume, the insurance company now has the right to unconditionally cancel the policy.

For the beneficiaries, many of whom may be innocent family members, this puts them in a bind. Even after death the poor, defenseless Yakuza can’t catch a break :( Really, though, if anyone needs life insurance, it’s the family of Yakuza members. You know? So greedy, life insurance providers… so greedy.

I’m sure over the course of the next few weeks, months, or years, Yakuza discrimination will get worse and worse. Things seem to have reached a tipping point where Yakuza control over the government / big corporations have gotten weak enough for everyone to break free without having to worry as much about retribution. It’s a slippery slope, too – these laws won’t be the last we’ll see.

What’s next? Losing their dental insurance? (WARNING: this video is super duper grossssssss. Ewwwww)

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bY3il84pcHk']

P.S. Not following us on Twitter? Cut your pinky off, you lackey.
P.P.S. Not following us on Facebook, too? Seppuku is the only way you can apologize now.

  • Kris

    This post was really good, I now want to join the Yakuza… Are you sure your not one of their recruiters..?

  • Anonymous

    This article is awesome! Viet’s articles always seem to be awesome and funny (not that the other posters aren’t), so I don’t see why he doesn’t do more. DO MORE VIET! :D

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    You know I can’t publicly admit any association to the Yakuza, for fear of a social lynching. However, you can stop by any of their cozy public offices in Japan and sign up.

    :P

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Ahhhh.. Thank you. Glad you enjoyed the article. Unfortunately, my kohai duties (making tea, getting drunk with the boss, and saying yes all the time) restrict me from spending time writing fine literature.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    (By the way, seriously don’t stop by any of their offices)

  • :3

    I loved the American Psycho reference! :3

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Then you’ll love this: http://tbc.ytmnd.com/

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    lol

  • 痛くない

    Oh sre, now yo tell us tht. A lttle hard to typ wthout tht one fingr, yo know.

  • Kellylav143

    The good deeds of the yakuza are kind of like biker gangs doing toys for tots in america =) (not that all bikers are criminals, of course!) But I think the Hell’s Angels do that, or they used to.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Sorry. But look on the bright side. Your pinky-less hand will make a great conversational starter.

  • Kwok Leuih

    You guys always have the best links, particularly the news stories; I learn more about Japan through your site than any other because you connect the dots so well.

    Thanks and more thanks.      

    Poor yakuza…

  • Caleb Hirsch

    The Yakuza have always been and odd organized crime outfit. They have a Japanese purity that keeps them committed to the well being of Japan. I was not surprised to find that they were the first responders to the natural disasters.

  • Hinoema

    “The Yakuza have always been and odd organized crime outfit. They have a Japanese purity…”

    Oh, really.

    “The yakuza buy unwanted female children from China–where the law restricts couples to only one child and the cultural preference is for boys–for as little as $5,000 and put them to work in the mizu shobai (literally the “water business”), the yakuza’s network of bars, restaurants and nightclubs. China is not the yakuza’s only source of young women. Many of the yakuza’s prostitutes come from the Philippines, where girls from impoverished villages are tricked into going overseas with promises of respectable jobs at good wages. Once they arrive in Japan they are put to work as strippers and hookers by their yakuza masters.”

    www dot trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/gang/yakuza/4.html

    They aren’t pure. They aren’t funny. They’re fucking thugs, destroying the lives of underage girls. I can’t believe this comm is fangirling them. 

  • Hinoema
  • あああぁ~!指が!

    Of course they’d help out. Disaster victims need to get back on their feet before they can start paying protection money again.

  • Zarma

    No one’s questioning that lol. I don’t think you understood his point.

  • Hinoema

    Which was? 

  • http://doraniman.blogspot.com Doraniman

    Poor defenseless Yakuza? I sincerely hope that is sarcasm.

  • http://www.chimericfire.com Nathaniel

    From what I’ve heard, there have been laws (or at least company policies) which prohibit bath houses from allowing entrance to people with tattoos because apparently the only people who get tattoos are Yakuza.

    I foresee this blowing up in their faces. The thing is, this might prevent some people from wanting to become Yakuza. However, it will make life so much more difficult for existing Yakuza that they will have no choice but to resort to crime in order to survive. For example, if you cannot buy food anywhere, you still need to eat. If you cannot obtain food legally because nobody will do business with you, then your only recourse is to steal it.

    The thing is, organized crime is often a symptom of failures in the system. Basically, some problems have made it difficult for some people to get educated, find work and/or protect themselves. Everyone is just trying to get by and for some it seems to them like the only way to accomplish that is through joining a gang. Stuff like this don’t fix the problem, it makes it worse. Gangs are made up of people that society has left behind. It is that apathy (and animosity) which led to the current situation. The solution isn’t more of the same.

    I see this possibly leading to a new black market opening up for Yakuza liaisons. The Yakuza might start hiring straight-laced looking individuals to handle their day to day business operations. If you need to get some pizza for all the guys, you just pay someone in a suit to go down to the pizza place and pick it up under the pretense that it’s for a party. As for business cards, I guarantee that Kinko’s America would take it up. I used to work for them and I’ve made business cards for Russian pimps before (they’ve got a very diverse clientele). Once again, if they have difficulty dealing with the companies over here, they could hire an American to place the order and ship it to them… although they would have to hire someone in Japan to receive and deliver the order since FedEx Japan might not want to do business with them.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Sarcasm? Nah. This is A+ serious business journalism.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Sarcasm? Nah. This is A+ serious business journalism.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    You do make a few good points. Really can’t excuse any of their actions. However, I do think many in the Yakuza join the syndicate due to unfortunate circumstances. I remember reading a journal article saying that in a lot of the Yakuzas, over half are of Burakumin origin. One of the bosses of a major Yakuza syndicate admitted that 60% of its members are Burakumin. If you read anything about the Burakumin, they had a long history of being discriminated against, and of which still continues to this day.

    As for the business cards… I don’t think Kinkos isn’t going to cut it with the big bosses. I’ve read they like to carry those fancy cards, the ones with real gold prints, etc. Unless Kinko offers this service?

  • Bobina

    I enjoyed this post :D lol, very fun with a hint of politics