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As an anime fan myself, it's rather disconcerting. Perhaps this is the true Horseshoe Theory (tm). alt-right originates from 4chan, an anime shitposting board.
You know, people who hate “feminism” because they keep telling anime fans they are horrible people for watching harem anime and things like that. Because Japan is by all means a conservative society. So, anime fans would tend to be conservative because they’re exposed to conservative views through anime.
Japan is a conservative homogeneous nation and very opposed to immigration, which is what white nationalists are fighting for. No offense, but i find a lot of males who are obsessed with anime to be very socially awkward and have a very little understanding of how the world works, which makes them easily manipulated with memes and youtube videos.
The fact that a lot of Shipping in anime communities are usually LGBTQ+ (cough… MHA… cough…) Now why is that? Because in the real world LGBTQ+ people don’t feel accepted. These are just basic things you can realize if you look at certain anime communities. Certain Anime’s will target cringier people than others.
It's a case of SJWs achieving the opposite of what they set out to do. Japan is racially homogeneous, and still has very xenophobic immigration policies- something that right-wingers wish their own country is like. We must win the battle against the pandemic and triumph in the war against racism.
But yeah, Anime (not including Manga) despite being everywhere in Japan isn't actually mainstream. Disney which is more culturally and racially diverse with what the Right Wing would consider "Woke" is vastly more popular in Japan than Anime actually is.
The alt right is overwhelmingly male, but are anime fans? “I’ve never met a female anime fan in real life,” reads an Anime News Network comment in 2007.
The Buzzfeed article focuses on young radicals who also love anime. That’s one story about an undeniable and fascinating sub-group of the fandom. But of course, most of us anime fans don’t fit into that group. We can like One Piece and not become radical nationalists, too!
The difference between the alt-right and the left, of course, is in the interpretation of who is persecuted. Attack on Titan begins in a city with three walls, surrounded by massive, mindless, near-invulnerable, human-eating monsters called Titans. The city’s populace, stratified into castes and controlled by a repressive military regime, ...
Here, Isayama’s convoluted racial coding comes to the foreground, because Isayama does construct many symbolic parallels between the Eldians and an ideal Nazi state. Eldian society is ethnically homogeneous, with the exception of a single Asian woman, and all the named Eldians have European names.
Most people consider Attack on Titan a work that straightforwardly condemns the effects of fascism and racism in society . In the internment camps, the broadly sympathetic Eldians are marked with starred armbands—an apparent reference to the yellow badges the Nazis forced Jews to wear.
The pale mukokuseki or “stateless” default character design template used in most Japanese anime is often interpreted as Japanese in Japan and white in the U.S.) The coup against the state could be read as an anticolonial revolution, but the alt-right interprets it as a nationalist putsch against a pacifist state.
The main character, Eren, discovers he has the power to transform into a Titan, and the scouts capitalize on the advantage to secure and explore territory. After being targeted by the military regime, the scouts lead a coup d’état and install one of their own on the throne. Eventually, the scouts discover the truth: They live on an island, ...
White supremacists have found inspiration in the ultraviolent, ultrapopular saga. Courtesy of Netflix. Isayama Hajime worked nights at an internet café. He found the customers strange and often frightening. Many wandered around aimlessly, struggled to communicate, were drunk and belligerent. Inspired by these phantoms, Hajime, a quiet, polite man, ...
Isayama explicitly based one heroic general on Imperial Japanese Army General Akiyama Yoshifuru, while fans on both the left and the right see close parallels between another character and Nazi General Erwin Rommel. Another character, Mikasa, shares her name with an Imperial Japanese battleship.