Court case against MP adds to Japan’s public-private partnership to censor speech that goes against their narrative
The manufacturer of the covid mRNA “vaccine” in Japan has initiated a lawsuit against a Japanese Member of Parliament for commenting that covid injections are “akin to a biological weapon.” Highlighting this case, Professor Bruce Davidson

The manufacturer of the covid mRNA “vaccine” in Japan has initiated a lawsuit against a Japanese Member of Parliament for commenting that covid injections are “akin to a biological weapon.”
Highlighting this case, Professor Bruce Davidson explains how the state and selected corporations are conspiring to suppress freedom of speech in Japan. “Japan has been gradually evolving into a place where it is difficult to publicly express ideas unapproved by powerful business interests and officialdom,” he writes.
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Japan Rides the Censorship Bandwagon
By Bruce W. Davidson as published by Brownstone Institute on 24 May 2025
The manufacturer of the replicon mRNA covid “vaccine” in Japan, Meiji Seika Pharma, has brought a lawsuit against a member of the Japanese Parliament, Kazuhiro Haraguchi. Haraguchi had commented that the covid injections are “akin to a biological weapon,” a statement which the Meiji Pharma president claimed was beyond the bounds of acceptable expression.
However, statements like Haraguchi’s about the dangers of the covid mRNA injections are now commonplace in many nations, and drug companies do not seem to be suing people for making them, at least in the US. Instead, state attorneys general in Kansas and Texas have been suing Pfizer for misrepresenting its covid injections.
In general, Japan has been gradually evolving into a place where it is difficult to publicly express ideas unapproved by powerful business interests and officialdom. In addition to government and corporate news media collusion to keep covid medical realities from the Japanese public, the government passed a law to squelch non-conforming messaging online.
The intentions behind this measure are clear: Prominent government figures have openly declared their conviction that “misinformation” is a major problem in Japan. In December 2024, Prime Minister Ishiba stated that he was considering more regulations concerning Internet discourse that he considers problematic, and a prominent LDP (Liberal Democratic Party) politician named Noda commented recently that Japan was being influenced more and more by “fake” information.
In May 2024, Japan’s Parliament passed a law to enable the quick elimination of defamatory posts from social media platforms like Facebook and X (formerly Twitter). By this law, such platforms would have to make explicit sites for taking requests to delete posts and also make clear their criteria for taking down posts. The new law went into effect on 1 April 2025.
Unsurprisingly, some Japanese YouTube vloggers are expressing concerns that, under the new set of regulations, their vlogs may soon be targeted as purveyors of “misinformation,” especially when they criticise government policy.
Only online media platforms are targeted in this development, even though Japanese print communications and TV programmes have also often been guilty of spreading harmful disinformation. Ironically, in many instances, this is not because they are unregulated but precisely because they are under the thumb of government agencies.
For example, the Japanese National Police Agency has deliberately leaked information about people under investigation to pressure them into confessing to crimes. Since the Japanese public often naively believes that suspicion equals guilt, this tactic results in terrible consequences for the unjustly accused.
In 1996, after an unsuccessful attempt by the Aum Shinrikyo cult to assassinate three Japanese judges, police leaked to news media outlets some details of their investigation of Yoshiyuki Kono, an innocent man whose family was also severely injured in the attack.
Kono’s experience of being hounded by both the authorities and the corporate news media mirrors that of Richard Jewell, the heroic security guard who became a suspect after the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bombing. The FBI deliberately leaked details of their investigation to American corporate news outlets, which proceeded to harass and condemn Jewell along with the investigating FBI agents, though the case eventually unravelled.
Even before the social media platform law, Japanese news media outlets were effectively controlled by the government. As a result, Japan was ranked lowest among all Group of Seven nations for freedom of the press in the World Press Freedom Index. Japan’s overall ranking dropped from 68th to 70th after the 2024 social media law was passed.
The reasons for this are the press club system and the self-censorship of most Japanese reporters. Each government ministry has a press club consisting of representatives from prominent news media outlets, and they receive official briefings from government officials. However, these members of the press can be banned from these briefings if they do anything that reflects badly on the government.
Therefore, at such meetings, there is “no atmosphere that encourages deliberation of important issues because reporters know that if they ask difficult questions they can be punished,” in one Japanese reporter’s words. For instance, reporters at press briefings were afraid to ask questions about unclear statements to Chief Cabinet Secretary Suga, who sometimes harshly responded, “That question is beside the point!”
These developments are especially ominous in light of the fact that Japan already has a tainted history in regard to suppressing freedom of information and expression. In 1925, the Japanese government passed the Peace Preservation Law, which criminalised the expression of unapproved ideas.
In the years that followed, totalitarian control rapidly replaced democratic government and unrestricted public debate. This culminated in a war that brought great horrors to Japan and other nations. Freedom of expression is a matter much more significant than words.
About the Author
Bruce Davidson is a professor of humanities at Hokusei Gakuen University in Sapporo, Japan. He specialises in theology, critical thinking and education.
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