How The Yakuza Actually Works | How Crime Works | Insider

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  • čas přidán 9. 04. 2023
  • Yuyama Shinya is a former member of the yakuza in Japan. He says he was arrested 11 times, as a juvenile and adult, and has served eight years in prison. He says he joined the Japanese mob when he was 18 and served in several positions before leaving in 2012.
    He speaks with Insider about the ways the yakuza makes money, such as extortion and protection rackets. He discusses the initiation ceremonies and rules of membership as well as the ties the yakuza has to other criminal groups, such as the triads and Russian organized crime.
    Since leaving the yakuza, Yuyama has turned his back on a life of crime. He runs a CZcams channel and stood for political office on a platform of prison reform.
    Chapter 1: The Initiation - 00:47
    Chapter 2: The Bosses - 02:03
    Chapter 3: The Hierarchy - 05:06
    Chapter 4: The Rules - 06:06
    Chapter 5: The Money - 08:02
    Chapter 6: The Police - 11:29
    Chapter 7: The Prisons - 13:36
    Chapter 8: The Future - 15:13
    Chapter 9: The Aftermath - 16:26
    Find out more here:
    / shinyayuyama
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    How The Yakuza Actually Works | How Crime Works | Insider

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @r.speirs
    @r.speirs Před rokem +17971

    He comes off as extremely well spoken and charismatic. I can see why he was made the second to his boss.

    • @wowplayer160
      @wowplayer160 Před rokem +275

      I think the boss did it cause he made a lot of money through criminal means.

    • @speedmetalmassiah567
      @speedmetalmassiah567 Před rokem +65

      How can you tell? Do you speak Japanese? He might be speaking their equivalent of AAVE

    • @r.speirs
      @r.speirs Před rokem +547

      @@speedmetalmassiah567 bro you couldn’t even spell Messiah.

    • @hakimhayashi
      @hakimhayashi Před rokem +176

      The fact that man almost never blinked suggests how he’s always prepared

    • @TyrantRC823
      @TyrantRC823 Před rokem +374

      @@speedmetalmassiah567 he used keigo all the interview, and while he's not really that eloquent, he's being extremely polite in his speech.

  • @Scyths1
    @Scyths1 Před 8 měsíci +7348

    He comes as well spoken and regretful of his past, but do not make the mistake of thinking that Yakuza were at any point "good" people. They deal in human trafficking, forced prostitution, drug and weapon smuggling, racketeering and blackmailing, and lastly murder. Sure when there are disasters the Yakuza are almost always the first ones to either be there to help, or send help such as food or water, but these are never free of charge, as they expect either the people there to remember this act of "kindness" towards them, or expect the police to lower the heat on them for some time because they managed to be there while the bureaucracy of the government prevented the real services of getting there faster.

    • @jinx8624
      @jinx8624 Před 8 měsíci +383

      hit the nail on the head
      the good acts they did was essentially them preying on the weakest civilians
      i guess they are one of the best for society when it comes to crimes organisations tho so there could be an argument made stating that they are the lesser of evils

    • @CAMEL893
      @CAMEL893 Před 8 měsíci +752

      I'm Japanese. Your opinion is 100% correct. There was a yakuza office in the area where I lived. The yakuza actively interacted with the residents of the city, did volunteer work, and were well-liked by the residents. One day, however, it was discovered that the yakuza office was kidnapping people and removing and selling their organs. I still remember the horror I felt when I saw the news. The yakuza pretend to be good people, but you should never trust them.

    • @backcherry1207
      @backcherry1207 Před 8 měsíci +30

      He's talking about a much older time than you're assuming.
      I'm not surprised you don't know that, but those times certainly existed.

    • @user-jj6qj3cl2r
      @user-jj6qj3cl2r Před 8 měsíci +70

      ヤクザの下っ端が行った"女子高生コンクリート事件"を調べてみて
      どれだけ残酷かわかる

    • @vornamenachname554
      @vornamenachname554 Před 8 měsíci +47

      i disagree on him being regretful

  • @mrthriller2554
    @mrthriller2554 Před 8 měsíci +1706

    A family friend was a a member and when he told us the story’s about his past life we were in shock he told us he paid his way out and had to leave without one cent or they will come after him
    He was apart of the Yamaguchi-gumi
    he had 3 fingers missing and was one of the most calm and respectful people we have come across
    he has since past away had 4 children
    in Australia and will always be like family

    • @user-dt7gh5le2z
      @user-dt7gh5le2z Před 7 měsíci +39

      Never trust them completely. Even if it was a long time ago, the Yakuza are criminals.

    • @mrthriller2554
      @mrthriller2554 Před 7 měsíci

      @@user-dt7gh5le2z
      Man is not judged bye his mistakes but only the actions and life he choose to change too become better he made mistakes and everyday carried them in his heart
      When he died all that I seen was a beautiful honest father husband and freind

    • @Oroberus
      @Oroberus Před 7 měsíci +14

      Wow, even Yamagushi-Gumi? Dude obviously had it going back then

    • @justinthebeau2590
      @justinthebeau2590 Před 6 měsíci +34

      Yamaguchi-Gumi is the largest Yakuza organization

    • @mitsukami
      @mitsukami Před 4 měsíci +6

      Is being a Yakuza like being a Walter White? Making a lot of money through crime... If you can "give up" on the Yakuza and stay alive, that's a start, in other places you die if do this

  • @zacro920
    @zacro920 Před 9 měsíci +422

    Incidentally, the punishment of cutting off the pinky finger was a punishment for infantrymen in the Warring States period, for those who often cut off allies by mistake.
    A soldier without a pinky finger was considered by his allies to be someone to watch out for, and it was also a marker.
    These old ways of punishment still exist in the Yakuza world.

    • @user-wy8cs2dk1h
      @user-wy8cs2dk1h Před 8 měsíci +10

      Do not tell a lie. Bows and spears were the main weapons during the Sengoku period.

    • @cap8369
      @cap8369 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@user-wy8cs2dk1hDo not tell a lie.

    • @user-wy8cs2dk1h
      @user-wy8cs2dk1h Před 8 měsíci +13

      @@cap8369 It's not a lie. During the Sengoku period, there were many battles on the plains, so spearmanship and archery were more developed than swordsmanship. Swordsmanship was developed in the 18th century.

    • @zacro920
      @zacro920 Před 6 měsíci +15

      @@user-wy8cs2dk1h 剣で斬ったとは書いてないけど味方をよく攻撃してしまう者はそういう罰を受けていたって話だよ

  • @Cernunnas
    @Cernunnas Před rokem +18286

    Years ago I moved somewhere in Scotland where my neighbours were two Japanese Buddhist monks. After getting to know them better, I learnt that one of them used to be a member of the Yakuza and basically gave a monastery all the money he had for them to take him somewhere safe because he wanted to quit. Apparently that's one of the ways out.

    • @ChrisBChikin
      @ChrisBChikin Před rokem +1685

      Back when I visited Japan, I spent a night in a monastery with an onsen bathhouse. It's pretty common for onsen in Japan to ban people with tattoos because of the taboo associated with the yakuza. This one had no rules like that though, which our guide explained was because becoming a monk is regarded as a safe or acceptable way to quit the Yakuza so there are a surprising number of monks running about with their old gang ink. Apparently there was at least one ex-Yakuza member among the monks at our monastery.
      Handy for me, since I had a shoulder piece!

    • @LinksRoyal
      @LinksRoyal Před rokem +113

      was he missing a finger?

    • @MrK4LB
      @MrK4LB Před rokem +82

      @@ChrisBChikin do you know where this onsen is at? I'm visiting Japan soon.

    • @MetalizedButt
      @MetalizedButt Před rokem +1

      Or he was just a master bullshitter and you’re just gullible? He may not even be Japanese for all you know, lmfao.

    • @mrsticky005
      @mrsticky005 Před rokem +106

      Sounds like the monasteries and the Yakuza are in cohorts

  • @syuukyou0513
    @syuukyou0513 Před rokem +6933

    There is one big error in the video. At 14:44, a word "chigiri" appears. What he actually said was "Jigiri," not "chigiri." Chigiri is an ordinary but old word, also commonly used by yakuza, meaning "promise." On the other hand, "Jigiri" is a yakuza specific word meaning "cutting yourself." ("Jigiri" = じぎり = 自切り) As the kanji implies, the word itself means self-amputation in biology, as gecko cut its legs off in order to protect its life. He got arrested so his organization was spared. That's why he got promoted once he got released.

    • @shinzoabe8289
      @shinzoabe8289 Před rokem +177

      Maybe they mistook it for chigiri as in "to tear", like "千切り". Tearing and cutting are similar so it would have been an easy mistake to make, but you can definitely hear him saying "ji" and not "chi".

    • @dcthomas8959
      @dcthomas8959 Před rokem +17

      Chigiri means promise? So the point was sending someone to kill someone else was like a promise it will happen?

    • @cherry.basket
      @cherry.basket Před rokem +103

      @@dcthomas8959 no, the point is that he said “Jigiri” instead of “Chigiri”

    • @nerinobaloney3766
      @nerinobaloney3766 Před rokem +3

      What about Seppuku?

    • @syuukyou0513
      @syuukyou0513 Před rokem +61

      @@nerinobaloney3766 Seppuku means cutting your stomach. As you may already know, it was a way to kill yourself in order to preserve one's honor. FYI, it is really hard to die instantly from seppuku, so it was common to have another person behind you to finish you off (called Kaishyaku). I don't think there is any case of seppuku reported in modern Japan because, well, it is painful and you'll provably die.

  • @lucyblue_____
    @lucyblue_____ Před 8 měsíci +392

    My sister and I both lived in Japan for a year in 2010. There were a few times that I saw men which looked normal to me, but everyone else seemed to know to avoid. One time, my sister was on the train when a man got on. He was completely covered up (it was a really hot summer) and started talking on the phone (which is considered very rude in Japan. Nobody does this). My sister didn't pay him much attention, untill she realized almost all the other people in the train had moved to a different compartment. She knew the others knew something she didn't and also quickly left. She later realized he was probably Yakuza.
    I also got stopped on the street once by this strange woman who wanted to meet up with me to "learn english". She gave me her number and wanted to meet up in private later. I was only 16 (and Dutch btw, not American) so the host family I stayed with told my host sister to come with me to meet her. When I didnt show up alone, the woman was nowhere to be found. She didnt reply to my texts anymore. Her phone number also had different digits than a regular Japanese cell. I still don't know what that was, but after hearing about human trafficking in Japan I got an odd feeling about it.

    • @annika7310
      @annika7310 Před 8 měsíci +68

      Omg thank you for your comment!! Today a lady started talking to my friend and said she wants to learn English and they also exchanged phone numbers and tomorrow they are supposed to buy bed sheets (only both of them alone). My friend moved to Daegu today. The whole situation was really random. So I just took a screen shot of you comment and sent it to her. She was only worried it’s someone who what’s to spread christianity to her, so I guess she already got weird vibes of her

    • @lucyblue_____
      @lucyblue_____ Před 8 měsíci +44

      @annika7310 Hi! I'm glad you were able to warn your friend. Thanks for replying. You never know what someone's intentions are, so I am certain it's better to be safe than sorry. I've been asked about talking in English by many more strangers in Japan and it's usually just enthusiasm but you never know about that 1 person that's different. Anyway, tell your friend it's better to be seen as a rude foreigner than to be lured into anything you don't like (such as religion / cults etc).

    • @bekcha4170
      @bekcha4170 Před 8 měsíci +49

      @@annika7310If it’s Korea, it’s likely that they tried to get her into cult. Korea has a big cult issues.

    • @aalee1866
      @aalee1866 Před 8 měsíci +12

      ​@@annika7310i dont think its weird for the ppl there to ask for english lessons since korean are so hardworking, just tell your friend to meet the student in places w many people around. Dont meet at their home / teach at her own house since there's a case recently about this. Even if they tell their family were in the house dont go bcs you'll never know the truth in it. Go to cafe, rent studyroom or online would be good too. Be safe ❤❤

    • @annika7310
      @annika7310 Před 8 měsíci

      yes that's what we thought as well@@bekcha4170

  • @YouTubeLate
    @YouTubeLate Před rokem +637

    You can tell he was a Yakuza to a T. He understood the rules and how it governs one’s actions and is able to distinguish himself from petty criminals. Ignoring those who use intimidation to pretend and look like a gangster means he has intimate knowledge and understanding of what it means to be in that organization.

    • @gqedpbeicq
      @gqedpbeicq Před 10 měsíci +4

      to "a" tee

    • @buzz5969
      @buzz5969 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Lots of Bosozuka {Street Punks} get Tatts and try to be tuff but they are NOT yaks, just punks, I think he himself was a Bosozoka before becoming a Yak so yah he has first had knowledge lol.

    • @sylvierr0n277
      @sylvierr0n277 Před 27 dny +1

      u really over here glorifying ppl who ruin lives woah. smth i expected

  • @ruileite4579
    @ruileite4579 Před rokem +12070

    He didn't even change his expression when he talked about someone being sold off as a slave 😶
    Edit: I'm getting fed up with all you edgelords defending his actions. This guy is a criminal, and no "cultural differences" will change that.

    • @Padrae22
      @Padrae22 Před rokem +1262

      That guy who stole that money fucked up big time...

    • @skytaylor9767
      @skytaylor9767 Před rokem

      America has been called out for its slavery and they still have black slaves in this country

    • @ivanivanovich4294
      @ivanivanovich4294 Před rokem +69

      Kino

    • @AsiaDanceScene
      @AsiaDanceScene Před rokem +1466

      Far more chilling is the bored way he talks about bashing some guy with a hammer

    • @A-KDJ
      @A-KDJ Před rokem +63

      Unit 731

  • @oldmoviesinbwwithsubtitles3501

    If you’re a Yakuza for past 20 odd years and if the cops had your name it was virtually impossible to get an apartment. Their laws become so hard towards them many left.

    • @daydreamers8254
      @daydreamers8254 Před rokem

      yes, after the government literally required the true old yakuza to help stabilize their economy and keep the peace in the streets, this new generation of young guns trying to make a name for themselves have utterly ruined the honor and name of the yazuka.
      now, as you say, the government literally shits on you for existing if you even have ties or otherwise, associated with them.
      if only china would do something about the triads.

    • @Jake4595
      @Jake4595 Před rokem +277

      good

    • @dsan17
      @dsan17 Před rokem +649

      Not just an apartment. Basically anything that involves some form of background check. Like applying for a bank loan or an office job.

    • @Illuminat-ve5ue
      @Illuminat-ve5ue Před rokem +480

      @@Jake4595 not really, you are basically forcing them to stay yakuza

    • @abouttime2569
      @abouttime2569 Před rokem +365

      @@Illuminat-ve5ue Yet diminishing the new recruits. So it is a good thing in the long run.

  • @RebelMytzu
    @RebelMytzu Před 8 měsíci +20

    amazing video and very insightful for people outside the culture who want to know a bit more about this topic

  • @user-xb9rg8gp5b
    @user-xb9rg8gp5b Před 8 měsíci +115

    「決闘罪で捕まった人」ってだけで凄くレアな人だ…

    • @shki-ju2li
      @shki-ju2li Před měsícem +2

      アナーキーもだよね

    • @user-vv5rv3co2k
      @user-vv5rv3co2k Před měsícem

      アナーキーも同じ理由やん

    • @daihuku494
      @daihuku494 Před 7 dny

      ほんま草

    • @daihuku494
      @daihuku494 Před 7 dny +1

      *格闘技は良いのに決闘はダメとかいう矛盾してる法律ほんま草*

  • @ManipulateHavoc
    @ManipulateHavoc Před rokem +7275

    From this interview I feel that the Yakuza aren’t some outright illegal rampant hooligans. They are like businessmen, but with prescribed violence. You don’t see the violence on the surface, but if you go digging it seems you will. Like, they give off the shady vibe, but not the type you arrest on sight. I guess I just feel that they are subtle, yet scary.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 Před rokem +1

      Believe me, they are nothing more than undisciplined thugs who just put more effort into maintaining their illusion of discipline than other criminal organizations.
      Before the previous administration (headed by Shinzo Abe) instituted the anti-organized crime policy, they were throwing grenades at each other and doing drive-bys.

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před rokem +1169

      Most gangs, especially organized crime aren't rampant hooligans. That is just what the movies portray.

    • @gvsd3
      @gvsd3 Před rokem +252

      More scarier if you look at the case of junko furuta

    • @andylaw3222
      @andylaw3222 Před rokem +72

      You should read the book "Cosa Nostra" from John Dickie if you want to know almost everything about those types of organization^^

    • @ArtGirl82
      @ArtGirl82 Před rokem +627

      A shady vibe?! He said they sold a racketeering victim into slavery for $22,000 and had him shipped overseas. That's a little more than shady, that's evil.

  • @theotherotter
    @theotherotter Před rokem +5541

    He's so funny "finance related business was shark loan" "i was disciplined by being beaten up" every his phrase is a gold time delivery. he should became a humorist.

    • @user-gq1qs1kc7h
      @user-gq1qs1kc7h Před rokem +474

      That’s a typical Japanese humor. To complete the style, you do it with a poker face.

    • @YM-ii8jq
      @YM-ii8jq Před 10 měsíci +28

      殴る以外に躾ける方法は無い

    • @jerkchickenblog
      @jerkchickenblog Před 10 měsíci +106

      it might sound funny in english but it's normal in japanese

    • @4nem355
      @4nem355 Před 10 měsíci +54

      being beat up is to be disciplined are normal for asian

    • @360ferrari3
      @360ferrari3 Před 10 měsíci

      fake yakuza

  • @Sivrn-Val
    @Sivrn-Val Před 8 měsíci +415

    The ironic part about the harsher anti-yakuza laws is that while yes it has diminished the influence of the Yakuza greatly, its also created a power vacuum for other gangs to gain territory.
    And unlike the Yakuza, these gangs care more about violence than business.

    • @ZanicaKnight
      @ZanicaKnight Před 8 měsíci +6

      Reminds me of the hangure

    • @user-ls4we1qp4j
      @user-ls4we1qp4j Před 8 měsíci +30

      yakuza gone and Chinese mafia appears

    • @jijitters
      @jijitters Před 8 měsíci +30

      It has made the police more powerful. In certain situations, this might seem like a good thing, but in many places this is not something to celebrate.

    • @azechase6597
      @azechase6597 Před 8 měsíci +35

      ​@@jijittersi agree, in most countries when police become too powerful they become like a gang in their own right

    • @user-eb7sz5nr6p
      @user-eb7sz5nr6p Před 7 měsíci +10

      The problem of "han-gres" is becoming a very big problem in Japan today.
      Yakuza" like the one in the video are basically making their money off of stupid people who are basically incapable of borrowing money from banks and financial companies that charge legitimate interest. For example, debt addicts and gamblers who cannot borrow money from banks and financial companies that charge legitimate interest, addicts of illegal drugs, and people who fall for obviously shady business practices. Of course, these are basically criminal acts, and it is not uncommon for people who have led normal lives to become victims of the Yakuza, but I would be cautious about extorting people at random.
      This is an aspect of risk management in the yakuza community, where they protect their own organization by maintaining their own face and dignity and by not causing too many problems easily. On the other hand, the semi-gres have a kind of order that they are concerned about.
      On the other hand, the han-gres tend to be unconcerned with such order, and are marked by their extreme and unrestrained behavior, and many of them are foolish children and young people.
      In the past, policing these unscrupulous anti-social organizations was part of the yakuza's role, but as the crackdown on the yakuza has become stronger, it has become harder for them to engage in such activities.
      Of course, it is impossible to say that the Yakuza are righteous to society, but it is a fact that as the crackdown on the Yakuza becomes more severe, the han-gre, who were the target of their crackdown, are entering the vacant backstage business.

  • @Feeucg
    @Feeucg Před 8 měsíci +101

    おじいちゃんと同じ話し方、ヤクザの人って同じような話し方と声になるよね。そんでもって達筆なの、マジで不思議。

    • @user-pd6rc1ec6v
      @user-pd6rc1ec6v Před 2 měsíci +7

      達筆なのは手紙書くから

    • @chihiguchi
      @chihiguchi Před 2 měsíci +6

      声が私の好きな声優さんに似てると思ってしまう…笑

    • @ikirukachigm
      @ikirukachigm Před 18 dny +3

      殴られるから脳細胞が4んでジジイみたいな話し方になる

    • @daihuku494
      @daihuku494 Před 7 dny +1

      @@ikirukachigm草

  • @medardbitangimana4580
    @medardbitangimana4580 Před rokem +3903

    He strikes me as a very adventurous guy. I like the way he narrates the whole story with very little sense of seriousness 🤣. Like it's the kind of story he would narrate to his kids

    • @skytaylor9767
      @skytaylor9767 Před rokem +24

      That guy was so cool yes I would love to know that guy

    • @KamiKaZantA
      @KamiKaZantA Před rokem +3

      He is an absolute disgusting snake for selling someone into slavery in another country. Yes, he has a very 'cool' and confident look and air about him, but he is nothing but scum to have done something as henious as turning a civilian into a slave.

    • @Yvolve
      @Yvolve Před rokem +234

      Alright kids, let me tell you the story of that one time I kidnapped a dude and sold him as a slave, it was awesome!

    • @BIOSHOCKFOXX
      @BIOSHOCKFOXX Před rokem +36

      I think that what you mean is that he is chill about it, easy going personality right now but with a serious mind, though nonetheless chill about it. Or maybe he's just soulless that he simply didn't cared back then and even now, though morale did change for him and he takes his life serious after it all. You can't be shocked about your own things if you didn't felt shock back when you did those things, it will remain for you as a thing you did despite how bad it was, because why worry about something that happened before and your life is going for better now... Right?

    • @Fakeslimshady
      @Fakeslimshady Před rokem +5

      He's an influencer now in Japan thats why

  • @PowerShellNoob
    @PowerShellNoob Před rokem +2071

    I've always applauded how well-spoken and educated a lot of gangsters are. It's almost like they realize you can't be successful by brute strength alone and that intelligence is what really drives your organization forward.

    • @Onlybadtakes2589
      @Onlybadtakes2589 Před rokem +158

      Does seems that all the smart ones either move up in the ranks or leave the game completely

    • @pagodebregaeforro2803
      @pagodebregaeforro2803 Před rokem +76

      It seems not only you applauded but also praise, worship, got starstruck, adore a gangster.

    • @BushMaster420circle
      @BushMaster420circle Před rokem +18

      @@pagodebregaeforro2803 uhhhh how so.... legit ALL of those things have different meanings.... rofl

    • @aedes947
      @aedes947 Před rokem +62

      @@BushMaster420circle By his name he is brazilian, and these kinds of organized criminals cause terrible problems here. Some of us won't take lightly absolutely ANY kind of compliment directed to criminals, specially from organized crime.

    • @BushMaster420circle
      @BushMaster420circle Před rokem +7

      @@aedes947 ok from the way you worded it, I totally respect that, was only pointing out the words he used, werent what OP said BUT I can see what you mean, my only thing is, he could have done a better job at saying it, like explain the destruction these groups leave in there wake / path, which i can totally agree with why you feel that way!!! & yes crime ingeneral is horrible for society as a whole and when its done in such a manner as explained, like him saying "ooo hes smart" well sadly if he was truly smart he would have used his life for good rather then contributing to crime n abusing those who are lesser off then him

  • @zatoichison6420
    @zatoichison6420 Před 11 měsíci +63

    Very interesting for us knowing nothing about this kind of professions. Honest and well spoken with a very good final advise for many. Thank you for your video.

  • @mccnbinnie9840
    @mccnbinnie9840 Před 8 měsíci +38

    He's so well spoken and has the charismatic vibe about him, he tells the story so neatly even with is unchangeable form.

  • @pusheenbuttercup8319
    @pusheenbuttercup8319 Před rokem +2656

    He describes these horrible crimes so calmly, without emotion, like it is so normal. It's horrible, to take advantage of the poor or addicted, and sell human beings as slaves. On the one hand it's good he has stopped, but on the other... how many more youths get sucked into this life?

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 Před rokem +486

      If you get emotional just by bringing up these actions, you wouldn't last very long in the life of crime. So its no surprise that such emotions had to be suppressed.

    • @hyoroemonmeto6874
      @hyoroemonmeto6874 Před rokem +90

      "how many.."
      Just look at internet tough guys harassing people with feeling/offending people. Thats them

    • @Jouks
      @Jouks Před rokem +47

      bro is trying so hard to sound mature

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 Před 11 měsíci +143

      he's just trying to be honest in the interview. He never says thats good or bad, or whether he agrees with it.

    • @bloodyninja2411
      @bloodyninja2411 Před 11 měsíci +12

      When the system fails them they move to crime the end.

  • @AsiaDanceScene
    @AsiaDanceScene Před rokem +2812

    He talks in the same dispassionate way that most people talk about parts of their jobs about the parts of his job that involved torturing a person with a hammer and selling a guy into forced slavery.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 Před rokem +334

      Japanese people tend to speak that way, but if you could understand his choice of words, you will know that he is trying to convey an honest reality of the Japanese underworld.

    • @hakimhayashi
      @hakimhayashi Před rokem +59

      Selling someone to the slavery Isn’t such rare in Japan. You can dig some “kousen” (industrial ship). There’s a fascinating novel about it. Why 🇯🇵has grown so fast, there’s of course reason of slavery. Not from outside but from inside.
      Some europeans told me even our ordinal work looks like slavery to them😂

    • @4evergamer4
      @4evergamer4 Před rokem +13

      Maybe if the guy payed the money and did not run away to begin with he wouldnt have gotten sold as a slave...

    • @declanjones8888
      @declanjones8888 Před rokem

      ​​@@hakimhayashi Lol, any sort of effort or work is slavery to rich people.
      Why nobody likes them. (Except for other rich people.)

    • @insertname3977
      @insertname3977 Před 11 měsíci +129

      ​@@4evergamer4Nah, can't ever condone slavery.

  • @andrewtinn7060
    @andrewtinn7060 Před 8 měsíci +300

    I heard about a doctor who served the yakuza. He was a great heart surgeon with a steady hand. Number one. He served a yakuza boss by doing a heart transplant, but there was a fatal mistake and the yakuza boss died. The yakuza was very angry with him and put a bounty on his head. To escape, he hid in a fishing boat that came to America. Dude didn’t speak a lick of English. No food and no money. Darryl give me job. Now I have house, American car, and new woman. But a warehouse manager saved life. I confessed his big secret one day: I actually killed the yakuza boss on purpose. Good surgeon. The best!

    • @cocoadrink_014
      @cocoadrink_014 Před 8 měsíci +21

      人が人を殺すことは、いつだって良い事とは言えない。

    • @zhumiss7054
      @zhumiss7054 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Good for him!!!

    • @yomamafat1014
      @yomamafat1014 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Man you just made me remember this lol.

    • @mirandabathory
      @mirandabathory Před 8 měsíci +48

      @@zhumiss7054 it’s a dialogue from The Office lol

    • @veram.1177
      @veram.1177 Před 8 měsíci +27

      ​@@cocoadrink_014 It's actually a referente to a dialogue from an american TV series called "the Office", a popular comedy in the west.

  • @SreyesSrinivasan
    @SreyesSrinivasan Před 8 měsíci +87

    his eyes don't have a trace of fear or hesitation. you can tell he's lived his life staying true to his values

  • @yoshiyeo9369
    @yoshiyeo9369 Před rokem +533

    This video has been very informative! I’ve always wondered how ex-yakuza members are doing and what were their thoughts etc. Thanks for the video!

    • @amberg4131
      @amberg4131 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I wondered if the record or ties of him being former yakuza still sits for others to look up or do they have privacy laws for people like that? uS we have freedom of info so most of the crimes an adult commits we can get the records for; but minors have immunity typically, or can have their case blocked by prying eyes. Also, now the laws are changing again and if you had like some drug charges and your good for like 5 years or 10 maybe they take it off your record. I think gang stuff stays though but I could be wrong

  • @theurbanphilosopherz
    @theurbanphilosopherz Před rokem +15

    This is one THE BEST CHANNELS ON CZcams. Good content

  • @rith5073
    @rith5073 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Shoutout to Insider for giving this insight. I hope the interviewee is not getting any harm from revealing Yakuza.

  • @stevemuturi965
    @stevemuturi965 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wow! I love this series! Er, where can I comment on production and give ideas without getting my head bitten off?

  • @rootofhope
    @rootofhope Před rokem +80

    I know of one heart surgeon who was in the Yakuza who also got a fresh start at a paper company in Scranton Pennsylvania

  • @enigmaticharmer
    @enigmaticharmer Před rokem +45

    Quite enlightening. He's so well-spoken too.

  • @husepher
    @husepher Před 8 měsíci +1

    Delightfully Insightful

  • @TheStowAway594
    @TheStowAway594 Před 11 měsíci +262

    I wish him luck, its good to see someone that turned their life around. It's not an easy thing to do.

    • @78cottoncandy
      @78cottoncandy Před 8 měsíci +20

      Really? I wish him karmic retribution for all the suffering he's caused his victims.

    • @forbiddenalien833
      @forbiddenalien833 Před 8 měsíci +11

      ​@@78cottoncandyhe served his time though? 10 years of normal ordinary life without committing any crime yet you still want him to atone for what he's done? seems sort of harsh considering he already went to prison numerous times.

    • @therustler30
      @therustler30 Před 7 měsíci +39

      @@forbiddenalien833 lol, he has probably ruined hundreds of lives and negatively impacted thousands throughout his criminal career, a prison sentence is just what you get caught for, and it's definitely not a cleansing act of your character akin to a religious reincarnation lmfao, maybe if he saves a hundred people instead you can start saying he's "atoned", if there ever is such a point in life. He's a person with a cursed history and not someone I'd ever wanna associate with.

    • @pirimi
      @pirimi Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@forbiddenalien833serving time in prison doesn't bring back the dead & doesn't make his victims forget all the horrible and inhumane things he has done to them and made them do.

  • @vugiabaonguyen4660
    @vugiabaonguyen4660 Před rokem +482

    Salute to all the former criminals in 'How crime work' who take time to tell us about their former jobs even though they know they might get hatred or embarrassment from that just so we can get information to (hopefully) prevent crime in the future
    this is not a sarcastic comment, i truly appreciate that

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před rokem +7

      No one is preventing crime from these interviews. These guys are out of the game but the game still runs on.

    • @vugiabaonguyen4660
      @vugiabaonguyen4660 Před rokem +23

      @@corail53 did u read the word "hopefully"?

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 Před rokem +19

      @@corail53 Actually there is at least one that works with the police using their experience to help catch other criminals. Think he showed up on one of these.

    • @mouradtiger-yr8bi
      @mouradtiger-yr8bi Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@@neurofiedyamato8763
      Maybe you don't know that Governing is the highest level of gangsterism. Applied by dictatorship, accepted by United nations. The most effective gang system in history after the monarchism. People now are tend to follow governments rules because it's the most powerful entity in every nation.
      The higher your rank in your government, the more you have Wealth, nepotism, influence, fame...etc
      That's not different than a gang system. Exept that governments have more access to the nations Resources than other entities.

    • @user-sz2px8pv3f
      @user-sz2px8pv3f Před 8 měsíci +3

      These videos are basically a "what not to do" tutorial

  • @nikhilbhalerao9623
    @nikhilbhalerao9623 Před 9 měsíci +77

    He explained everything so nicely and well he is more educated then others and even the yakuza follow the rules that normal people don't.

  • @Ibetalkinvidyagames
    @Ibetalkinvidyagames Před 8 měsíci

    One of the best episodes

  • @ineshadixon1377
    @ineshadixon1377 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Thank you so much for telling your story and giving your incite.

  • @lovedoveskuroda
    @lovedoveskuroda Před rokem +37

    14:47
    It's typo, he talks about "Jigiri"
    Chigiri means promise.

  • @user-si4yw6yn8r
    @user-si4yw6yn8r Před 8 měsíci +35

    日本だから頑張れば変わることは多いかもしれないけど海外の治安の悪い所で生まれ育った人は難しいと思う。負の連鎖を断ち切るって大変だしね。頑張ることは良いことだけど。

  • @davewebster5120
    @davewebster5120 Před 9 měsíci

    Great advice at the end.

  • @jamiewilliams5894
    @jamiewilliams5894 Před 9 měsíci +20

    A amazing man to be so open about his life

  • @broefkip
    @broefkip Před 8 měsíci +92

    The most ironic thing, is how he speaks about it being hard to get back on your feet after having been in prison (it's nice that he wants to be a probation officer to help others). However the people he killed or sold into slavery never did get that chance.

    • @_Just_Another_Guy
      @_Just_Another_Guy Před 8 měsíci +12

      Perhaps he's seeking atonement for his past actions and wanting to be an officer is one way to obtain it.

  • @bl2005
    @bl2005 Před rokem +294

    i like how he casually describes "bashing someone with a hammer" without batting an eyelid..

    • @caezero2072
      @caezero2072 Před rokem +23

      I mean, I used to bash catfish in the head with a hammer (they're the kind of fish that's so hard to kill). And after numerous head bashing experiences, it simply made you numb and even bored, like its just another catfish.

    • @saidtoshimaru1832
      @saidtoshimaru1832 Před rokem +51

      Well, his training as a carpenter came to good use.

    • @MesaperProductions
      @MesaperProductions Před rokem +19

      Hey, it wasn't personal.
      It was strictly business.

    • @gary7vn
      @gary7vn Před rokem +23

      Watch some ex soldiers talk about bombing cities.

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před rokem +6

      And selling people in slavery.

  • @mikehunt9884
    @mikehunt9884 Před 8 měsíci +4

    the thing is, even if he quit and changed his life, he probably still faces very tough restrictions, like ive heard about ex yakuza who can't open bank accounts or even own a cellphone.

  • @gumifox
    @gumifox Před 8 měsíci +13

    Being a gangster is bad and all, but you can't deny yakuza are kinda cool. Like, they have this special aura around them. I've seen some other yakuza interviews too, and they are always this calm and well-spoken, but somehow send chills down your spine.

  • @wolfhunter9593
    @wolfhunter9593 Před rokem +25

    When he said he sold a slave and dispatch him to another country, I got chills like damn.

  • @user-mf5vx2re2u
    @user-mf5vx2re2u Před 3 měsíci +4

    OMG THE DISCRIBTION IS SO BEAUTIFUL

  • @rhyzhenthioz
    @rhyzhenthioz Před 11 měsíci +48

    Respect to guy. He is still alive and telling us his stories.

    • @huylam3951
      @huylam3951 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Honourable Yakuza who respected his rights and true knowledge.

  • @Nakita_Jade
    @Nakita_Jade Před 8 měsíci +32

    It’s honestly so cool and interesting how accurate the like a dragon series is. Even down to majima working as a construction firm.

    • @DOUBLERAINBR0
      @DOUBLERAINBR0 Před 8 měsíci +5

      The yakuza games are literally propaganda, Sega works with the yakuza. Games are okay but don't put them on a pedestal or believe in stuff from it

    • @Nakita_Jade
      @Nakita_Jade Před 8 měsíci +14

      @@DOUBLERAINBR0 and so did Nintendo, Sony and most Japanese companies after WW2 because that’s how businesses could afford to stay afloat. Almost every single major company had ties at some point to yakuza but now that anti yakuza laws are so tight companies would lose everything. Just because I like the yakuza series as a video game doesn’t automatically mean I morally align with the crime organization. If someone plays GTA and “puts it on a pedestal” are you saying they also agree with the mafia and organized crime? No of course they don’t. I’m 30 years old I know when to separate reality from fantasy.

    • @DOUBLERAINBR0
      @DOUBLERAINBR0 Před 8 měsíci

      @Nakita_Jade I like the yakuza games too, some people in these comments weren't separating the two, wasn't sure if you were and I have no idea who you are or how old you are. Lots of young people in here

    • @lightup6751
      @lightup6751 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Yakuza games and all the manga and anime and tv shows are incredibly romanticized.
      They are about as accurate as The Godfather is on the Italian Mob. It’s a distorted, romantic picture of a bunch of brutal and unscrupulous criminals.
      The Yakuza are responsible for human trafficking, slave labor, forced prostitution and harvesting organs from innocent people.
      Anyone playing Yakuza or GTA and therefor thinking the real Yakuza or real Mafia is cool is deranged and easily manipulated.
      It’s good if you don’t morally align with the Yakuza, it would be incredibly stupid to think they are cool. But the Like a Dragon games are not realistic or representing the actual Yakuza in any way. It’s a light hearted pop culture representation.

    • @cristianobrogna1225
      @cristianobrogna1225 Před měsícem

      @@lightup6751Like a Dragon and the Godfather use criminal life to creates great tragedies that talk about life in general.
      In the modern age, only organized crime features themes like death, betrayal, honor and so on with such magnitude.
      But yes, while the setting, even in the Godfather, is pretty accurate the whole time and the characters are heavily romanticized

  • @carlosvv5594
    @carlosvv5594 Před 11 měsíci +8

    He got a bunch of videos in other youtube channels telling he’s living a “normal” day to day life 👍👍👍

  • @jinx8624
    @jinx8624 Před 8 měsíci +10

    hes definitely speaking of the yakuza in a way that makes them seem better than they actually are

  • @seyana9514
    @seyana9514 Před 8 měsíci +78

    ここのコメント欄は信じられないほど寛容ですね。おそらく、日本に住んでいる私が悪事に敏感すぎるだけなのでしょうけれども、彼らの一切を好意的に受け取ることは出来ないです。

    • @Dadhj.
      @Dadhj. Před 3 měsíci +1

      It’s because when people are curious they don’t really understand till later at least I think so but yeah it’s weird they don’t

    • @kn2549
      @kn2549 Před 2 měsíci

      過去の悪事そのものを「好意的」に受け取っているわけでは無いと思うよ。ヤクザを辞めて社会復帰しようとしている、組織の仕組みを公にしようとしている点を評価しているんだと思う。欧米圏はキリスト教などの影響で人間は誰も生まれ変われる(2度目のチャンスを与えられる)などの教えが根付いているからこの様な人物を評価するんだよ。日本人の感覚だと臭い物には蓋をしがちだから悪事は聞きたく無い、見たくも無いと思って知らんぷりするのが普通だからね。

  • @yukasketch
    @yukasketch Před 11 měsíci +190

    I hope he gets the qualification and becomes a probation officer. I think he would do a very good job and help many people getting out of that life.

  • @user-mk8dv7oo1d
    @user-mk8dv7oo1d Před rokem +85

    4:48 "Kamidana" is not a "Buddhist alter" but Shinto's home shrine.

    • @BasedR0nin
      @BasedR0nin Před rokem +4

      I noticed that too

    • @MesaperProductions
      @MesaperProductions Před rokem +3

      Yeah, didn't seem like a very Buddhist thing to do.
      Shinto on the other hand..., errr, finger....

    • @v.d.2738
      @v.d.2738 Před rokem +3

      ​@@MesaperProductions It's a yakuza thing, not shinto thing obviously🤦

  • @januellerontos3808
    @januellerontos3808 Před rokem +70

    Yakuza and hikkikomori reflects the difficulty of "returning to the fold". But kudos to this man bringing the gospel that "Hey! There's life after prison.".. even the death of pinky cannot stop the "promise" of hope and future for these people.

  • @yakuzapedia
    @yakuzapedia Před 4 měsíci

    Great material. Will get in touch with him for an interview as well!

  • @user-hg8bo3em5y
    @user-hg8bo3em5y Před 9 měsíci +2

    The last minute was pretty inspiring, nice gentleman

  • @bushidotestu1997
    @bushidotestu1997 Před rokem +17

    I think the thing that really stands out for me with this is that when they did an interview with the mafia guys it was “shady shady shady” whereas with this guy it feels more like “shady business shady”. Like it doesn’t sound like that much of a difference but just how he talks about like a person talks about a past career instead of a lifestyle boggles me for some reason

  • @Showtimeg9
    @Showtimeg9 Před 7 měsíci +6

    He is very stone cold with everything he said no laugher while explaining things no face expressions describing anything it was all spoken with seriousness i liked that

  • @ricardomcmahon5658
    @ricardomcmahon5658 Před 3 měsíci

    Love the stories..really getting into your channel 🎉🎉❤

  • @user-ez3nc5vi5n
    @user-ez3nc5vi5n Před 8 měsíci +69

    ヤクザ自体にはフィクション含め良い印象はないんだけど、この人の喋り方は惹かれるな

  • @kaku2189
    @kaku2189 Před rokem +201

    The Yakuza are the product of eras between Meiji & Shōwa. The merchants & ronin's seized opportunity to establish themselves when the shoguns & daimyos were wiped out, with few becoming bankers or accommodated within the industrialization & reformation of power. The zaibatsus rose and beneath them were the losers that were unfavored and practically undermined every step the way throughout different governments & public policies. These outsiders conglomerated & collateralized that still maintain the complexity of powers reminiscing the post Tokugawa era.

  • @davidebassi9339
    @davidebassi9339 Před rokem +137

    I really loved this video. I'm from Italy and I like to watch videos about mafia. It's funny how they share some "tales". Like back in the day mafia was full of honors now it is ruined. Nope we just changed our perception about them and we (mostly) demystified the mafia. And the "security" that these criminals provide looks very similar, in italian is called "pizzo",if you have a business in some parts of Italy sadly you have to pay a fee for a protection. If you dont pay it the same criminals will destroy and sabotage your business until you cave. And if you take the noble road and denounce them, sometimes not even to the authority but just to your clients/ neighbours, theres a chance you get a bullet (sometimes leg = "gambizzare", sadly sometimes head) and they make an example out of you. Nowadays Mafia changed very much, its less violent and more about "smart" crimes such as money laundering and stealing government funds. They had to change because the perception changed, until the 90s for the general public Mafia didn't exist but now is less taboo and in very large areas of Italy is less prominent the presence of Mafia, at least the conventional way. I think its okay sometimes to glamorize criminal organizations in movies and tv shows, but lets show also the reality: there is nothing noble about these organizations and they are a cancer to our societies, parasites that thrives where the State cant prevail. Thanks again for this good interview

    • @radicalcentrist4990
      @radicalcentrist4990 Před 8 měsíci +6

      The State is also a mafia. The only difference is that it doesn't punish you with violence.

    • @sportyeight7769
      @sportyeight7769 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@radicalcentrist4990 Oh it really do punish you with violence if you don't follow the rules they chosed.

  • @user-qe3on9bk2q
    @user-qe3on9bk2q Před 8 měsíci +71

    コメント欄にいる外国人の方が自分よりよっぽどヤクザに詳しいの笑う

  • @nunyabusiness4904
    @nunyabusiness4904 Před 9 měsíci +14

    It's interesting how the Yakuza will operate legitimate businesses that seem respectable, even having regular office buildings that look like regular offices while dealing in illegal activities.

  • @7ak
    @7ak Před rokem +199

    14:46 I think this is jigiri not chigiri. Chigiri is a word used in a ceremony to become a yakuza brother and has a completely different meaning. And the meaning of jigiri is as it was said in the video.😊

    • @GokkanUxxgo
      @GokkanUxxgo Před rokem +14

      Jigiri Jigiri Awlright!- Yakuza Quagmire

    • @chellyouwhat
      @chellyouwhat Před rokem +1

      @@GokkanUxxgo hahahahaha

    • @hirooooooo
      @hirooooooo Před 8 měsíci +4

      日本人ですがこれはちぎりであってます

    • @7ak
      @7ak Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@hirooooooo あなたは間違っています。ジギリと検索してからコメントしなさい。

    • @hirooooooo
      @hirooooooo Před 8 měsíci

      @@7ak 間違ってないです

  • @aimeeaztec4601
    @aimeeaztec4601 Před rokem +18

    Very interesting guy! Great interview insider!

  • @ewwols2
    @ewwols2 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Actually at 4:47 he said some display the pinky finger on “kamidana(神棚)”. Kamidana is also an altar, but it’s related to religious faith indigenous to Japan called “Shintoism” or “Shinto(神道)” in Japanese, not Buddhism. FYI, shrine(神社⛩️) is also related to Shinto. Just so you know😉🩷

  • @user-zz4jc3ff8q
    @user-zz4jc3ff8q Před 8 měsíci +2

    I am Japanese but I had very little to know in his story. I felt he had the honor of being a yakuza

  • @Ojogiri_Da
    @Ojogiri_Da Před 8 měsíci +23

    ヤクザを規制すると中国マフィアとかが半グレがのさばるのも痛いけどヤクザを自由にさせるのも怖い

  • @ThinnkTwicce
    @ThinnkTwicce Před rokem +72

    Surprising amount of comments complementing him for his actions

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před rokem +53

      Because people have an unhealthy fixation on Yakuza and gangsters from what anime and the movies portray them as. People often use Scarface as a motivation source for hustling instead of seeing what that movie was actually about.

    • @AliveIsAll_I_am
      @AliveIsAll_I_am Před rokem +15

      for one thing he is very charismatic, and as for another point, I think some people like myself are very far removed from crime and the things he describes, so we are desensitized to it in a way. it can be difficult to really understand that way of life unless you have some kind of real life experience with it. I did get chills when he mentioned the slavery and beating someone with a hammer

    • @ciello___8307
      @ciello___8307 Před 11 měsíci +5

      nobody is doing that

    • @duovigintillongaming3779
      @duovigintillongaming3779 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Complimenting not complementing, different meanings

  • @hugh_jasso
    @hugh_jasso Před 8 měsíci +4

    "For people that don't like to follow rules, the Yakuza have a lot of rules" .. That Part.

  • @prenimystic
    @prenimystic Před 8 měsíci +1

    He's so charming in his demeanor, and so scary

  • @greenman6141
    @greenman6141 Před rokem +197

    I love the idea that being a loan shark is easier on the back and heart than being a carpenter. What jobs had be been doing? Trying to saw bits of wood that were running away and attempting to punch him in the head?

    • @pagodebregaeforro2803
      @pagodebregaeforro2803 Před rokem +17

      And at only 18 ...

    • @xtr.7662
      @xtr.7662 Před rokem +22

      thats how most people enter crime they dont know exactly what kind of life they entering and the consequences

    • @isoldevithmiris
      @isoldevithmiris Před 11 měsíci +2

      He could have found the idea of being a loan shark and eventually a yakuza member as an exciting experience at 18, not realizing that once you're in it then you're in it for a long time. He did a big dumb just like any other teenage boy but took it up a notch.

    • @Ezziokia1112
      @Ezziokia1112 Před 5 měsíci

      Perhaps he fell from a height.

    • @crystalthunderheart8895
      @crystalthunderheart8895 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Lifting heavy wood can be quite straining on your heart and back. Sawing is hard work

  • @hokkaido_jp
    @hokkaido_jp Před 8 měsíci +33

    話が上手いけどやってる事はえげつない

  • @ryanau5824
    @ryanau5824 Před 8 měsíci

    I am impressed at how much I understood without looking at the captions (from all the anime that I've watched)

  • @Taiyo_Jinja
    @Taiyo_Jinja Před 8 měsíci +1

    Businessmen, samurai & honourable killers. Such an interesting aspect of organised crime in the world.

  • @hakimhayashi
    @hakimhayashi Před rokem +69

    As a someone comes from where there’s been tons of yakuzas, some additional tips on clip :
    00:20 They skipped in sub “jingi”. Hard to translate though, this is the core of them. “Sincerity or moral code”.
    04:45 “Kamidana” is not Buddhism altar but Shintoism one. It’s like calling a Menorah a
    Christian symbole. Yakuzas are deeply Shintoist not Buddhist.
    14:20 “shike” as in being wet or storm, poor fishing on boat. It means in slang “being unlucky”.
    Brilliant doc tho! When I was kid, one of my best friend became Yakuza, it’d never been possible to be public about being yakuza at the time. Even Japan has changed anyhow…!

    • @Josche-hc9lu
      @Josche-hc9lu Před 11 měsíci +1

      I thought it was weird he mentioned a Buddha statue. Shinto altar makes way more sense. Pretty big blunder from Insider to be honest

    • @WiggaMachiavelli
      @WiggaMachiavelli Před 11 měsíci

      'Yakuzas are deeply Shintoist not Buddhist.'
      Source? (p.s.: there isn't one because you're talking rubbish).

    • @mokuseinoosa
      @mokuseinoosa Před 9 měsíci

      ​​​@@WiggaMachiavelli He is not lying. Most yakuza members personally practice both Shintoism and Buddhism like most Japanese, but as a clan, they usually worship Shinto deities and perform their rituals in the manner of Shintoism.
      There are two main types of yakuza: Bakuto (博徒) and Tekiya (的屋).
      Bakuto is a group of people who originally made their living by gambling, and they mainly worship Amaterasu (天照大神), the Shinto goddess of the sun.
      Tekiya is a group of people who originally set up stalls at festivals or worked as street vendors, and they mainly worship Shinnō (神農), Chinese god of herbal medicine and agriculture.

    • @WiggaMachiavelli
      @WiggaMachiavelli Před 9 měsíci

      @@mokuseinoosa Just like many companies may have a Shinto shrine...
      But you wouldn't say the company is 'not Buddhist'.

    • @mokuseinoosa
      @mokuseinoosa Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@WiggaMachiavelli Yeah, It'd be a lie to say that they are "not Buddhists at all", but most of their beliefs and rituals (except for funerals) are heavily based on Shintoism, so it's not really wrong to say that they are "not Buddhist" in the sense of the ordinary Japanese. We Japanese are very ambivalent about our religions, so it may be difficult for foreigners to understand some aspects of it.

  • @Hdcook123
    @Hdcook123 Před 8 měsíci +5

    This is so fascinating. So different then what I picture American gangs as.

  • @benhall4766
    @benhall4766 Před 8 měsíci +1

    i know it is bad and i have nothing but respect for this man for managing to leave that life but after playing the yakuza games i struggle to see anything but majima goro when i hear the word yakuza nice to put it in perspective

  • @martyn-jamesatkinson3329
    @martyn-jamesatkinson3329 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I enjoyed this talk, and could understand almost all of it in Japanese.

  • @simonshah8570
    @simonshah8570 Před rokem +41

    Great video and interesting man. It really sucks how convicts never get second chances.

    • @mr5311
      @mr5311 Před 8 měsíci +2

      If you don't get hired, make your own

    • @JayStrun
      @JayStrun Před 8 měsíci +5

      The entire point of serving a sentence is that once that sentence is complete, in terms of the written law you have been "redeemed" and are back to being a normal citizen.
      It's society that assigns a black mark on your record for having been convicted. And it's really unfortunate. The purpose of imprisoning someone is to punish them for doing wrong. But that should end when their sentence is over - unless they commit more crimes obviously.

    • @bekcha4170
      @bekcha4170 Před 8 měsíci +15

      @@JayStrunBecause the heavy crimes cannot be redeemed by just being in prison. There are some things that can’t be forgiven, human trafficking is one of them.

    • @JayStrun
      @JayStrun Před 8 měsíci +3

      @bekcha4170 that's your personal opinion (not saying you're right or wrong) and many people agree with you. But again, in terms of the law, those crimes ARE forgiven after you've served the sentence.
      Again, that's one of the key reasons you serve a sentence in the first place and aren't simply executed or enslaved. You do a crime, you are punished with a sentence, the sentence is served, the crime is forgiven. It's also a key reason why repeat offenders are punished more harshly. You've had the chance to be forgiven, and now you're committing more crimes.

    • @et4278
      @et4278 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ⁠​⁠​⁠forgiven is incorrect it is a punishment nothing more. No where in the world does serving a prison sentence forgive you of your crimes you always will (and should) have a stigma that follows you. In the eyes of the law you have paid for your crime. the legal system has no ideas of forgiveness as it is not a person.

  • @rikokojima
    @rikokojima Před rokem +85

    I’m surprised he can talk about this openly and not have a bounty on his head for it

    • @sdqsdq6274
      @sdqsdq6274 Před rokem +17

      what bounty , his clan probably got wipe out ,and he's ranking top , lol you think he dare to come out and spill it

    • @guestyour
      @guestyour Před 8 měsíci +2

      彼はそのうち消されるだろう

  • @mesunekonyan
    @mesunekonyan Před rokem +2

    I like how he's straight forward

  • @Fade-Gaming
    @Fade-Gaming Před měsícem

    I need to hear/read this guy speak more, he's really interesting!

  • @tomatomato374
    @tomatomato374 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I know and believe any people can change their lives even they do terrible things, but how people, who suffered by them, will be cared?? There are still lots of people who can't recover from the shock because of them.

  • @John-ir4id
    @John-ir4id Před rokem +566

    A common thread I noticed when former members of criminal organizations quit and talk about the life is their lack of honor, even toward their own rules and people. They use their high-minded ideals as a smoke screen to get what they want from people and society. Then again, that's not just criminal organizations... it's all of us.

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 Před rokem

      Government started as organized crime. Makes sense.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 Před rokem +18

      It's up to each one of us to be more than just a slave to our own desires, though I have come to conclude that save for few exceptional kind of people most people are just incapable of being more than just a product of earthly desires.

    • @John-ir4id
      @John-ir4id Před rokem +18

      @@thepunisher2988 Stop. I can already smell the bible on your breath. We're not interested.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 Před rokem +26

      @@John-ir4id How do you figure? I haven't mentioned anything about the Bible or Christianity for that matter, but you seem to be convinced that I am conveying a Christian idea.
      For the record, I'm not a Christian, but I'm just curious to find out why you assume so, because you aren't the only person who have thought so.
      What I wrote is based on my observations and experiences of dealing with a good representative sample of the population in my line of work, not based on some religious ideals.
      Like you mentioned, while most people claim to have some kind of higher value, rarely do people actually prove themselves with their action, and they justify their self-indulgent behaviour as if they are pursuing some higher ideals.
      Let me be clear: there is NOTHING wrong with engaging in self-indulgent behaviour.
      What is wrong is being dishonest about it by justifying one's own self-indulgent behaviour as if it is part of an higher deal.
      There is a reason why there are so many frauds in the tech and financial industry, and a lot of them start out with the claim that they are pursuing some ideals (fighting climate change, 'decentralizing' the currency, pursuing gender equality etc.) to attract victims who may actually share the ideals.
      There is nothing wrong with companies being honest about their intentions even if the intention is entirely selfish, because that way it can attract like-minded people and build their own ideals accordingly.
      That is the same for the Yakuza - all the Yakuza groups claim to follow their own code of honor and loyalty, but who are they kidding???
      They are an organization made entirely of people who grew up without lack discipline and sense of belonging (to family, to society), and you think the members automatically develop loyalty and discipline once they join?
      If you learn about the Yakuza from the accounts of former prosecutors in Japan, you will know that once they're threatened with indictment, all their pretense of discipline and loyalty go out the window. Japan has a conviction rate near 100%, and their prisons aren't very hospitable.

    • @John-ir4id
      @John-ir4id Před rokem +10

      @@thepunisher2988 I picked one out of a hat. But, whatever tradition you speak from, I really don't want to hear it.

  • @cristianchan5402
    @cristianchan5402 Před 11 měsíci

    being full introvert and being a single fighter after jail is fair life for us... who ready to change and try to look better future.. i wish there is no nightmare pass but carry on and keep moving...

  • @markdavids2511
    @markdavids2511 Před měsícem +3

    When I see Japanese men they’re always so polite & respectful, it’s easy to forget how fanatically they can fight

  • @zuhachan
    @zuhachan Před rokem +3

    he's from Tommy (Sabbatical)'s episodes!! i remember him

  • @jinx8624
    @jinx8624 Před 8 měsíci +48

    most former criminals like him make out that their organisations are more honorable then they actually are to try and take the moral high ground avoiding accountability for the terrible moral violations conducted by themselves and their former organisations

  • @abcxyz-py8ui
    @abcxyz-py8ui Před 11 měsíci +2

    Tokyo Vice is a good tv show with Ansel Elgort about a journalist covering Yakuza stuff back then

  • @emmanuelcalla4899
    @emmanuelcalla4899 Před 4 měsíci +2

    He is really calm, even when talking about something like this with its correspondent nature. I wonder if such steadiness and temple was build upon many heart breaking or nerve wracking situations in life. An ice cold facade.

  • @plusRpm
    @plusRpm Před rokem +15

    „he ran away without paying, but he was found. He was then sold of as a slave for 30.000$.“
    Certainly more efficient at getting their money back than beating them up but my god, that is the single most evil way i‘ve seen criminals get their money back from an escaped debtor

  • @sweetTRS
    @sweetTRS Před rokem +7

    It’s interesting that the yakuza have those strict rules (even tho aren’t followed) of not doing drugs, robbing or scamming people.

    • @petrolmonkey8339
      @petrolmonkey8339 Před 11 měsíci

      when you have the samurai class with "judge" and "executioner" job description, you better lie low :D

    • @orangutanenthusiast5631
      @orangutanenthusiast5631 Před 11 měsíci

      Part of the centuries old public relations grift they like to pull

    • @_Just_Another_Guy
      @_Just_Another_Guy Před 8 měsíci

      If you expected a criminal organization full of criminals with criminal careers to strictly follow many set of rules then you'd be better off believing that the sky is green.

  • @chloele7651
    @chloele7651 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I’m surprised how originized this all was. He just talked about the sake ceremony then registering into the yakuza like there was an online application lfhfkggjg

  • @nicorobin-bd2pl
    @nicorobin-bd2pl Před 8 měsíci +33

    he's so well-spoken and disciplined. i love how he told the story in a very informative way that we can easily understand. i learned a lot in just 18 minutes. to learn the japanese culture and tradition, we should not only embrace the good side of it but the entirety of how the country and its people work. 🤗 nihon suki!

    • @lightup6751
      @lightup6751 Před 4 měsíci

      But we should NEVER respect or compliment the Yakuza. They are responsible for human trafficking, harvesting organs of innocent victims and forced prostitution

  • @mbele3000
    @mbele3000 Před rokem +96

    I love how he explains the corporate right into the same rituals. It's f****** chilling

  • @riskaarisfilda1154
    @riskaarisfilda1154 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I'm more surprised about how yakuza even have rules. It never occur to me organization as bad the yakuza seems to be portrayed in the media, have rules. And when he said "yakuza was a protector back then" makes a whole lot of sense because probably of that said rules. Now i'm wondering if similar organization like the cartel, the triads or mafia have it too

    • @justinthebeau2590
      @justinthebeau2590 Před 3 měsíci +1

      All organized crime syndicates have their own rules and strict codes of conduct doesn't matter if it's the Yakuza rhe Cartels etc

  • @Carrera_Quan
    @Carrera_Quan Před 8 měsíci

    I think he was on sabbatical tommy's channel. Was very nice hosting Tommy.

  • @inamerica7906
    @inamerica7906 Před 9 měsíci +3

    it is like a cult is a way. Young guys who are not accepted by society experience "love" through the family system of Yakuza. They call their boss Oyabun which means father role or parent role in Japanese.