Kyoto Police Tightens Grip on Loli Manga

June 15th, 2007 by PCSbot

On June 7th, the Kyoto Prefecture’s local government investigated and labeled 13 lolil manga as “harmful book.” The fact that manga containing excessive sexual content can be accessed by juvenile at common bookstores and convenience stores is regarded as a social problem in Japan. As a result, the Kyoto local government has decided to label manga containing inappropriate content involving elementary school girls, also there will be a meeting with the Juveniles Growth Planning Committee on the 15th to further discuss this matter. [Comipress]

SNAKE: Not a social problem in Japan — schoolgirl panties in vending machines.

LOU: Ironic.

ROB REILLY: Steve You mean to tell me that tenticle penises from an other-worldly monster and a teenage catholic school girl isn’t suitable for young developing minds?! Thank god we have our first amendment rights intact. I don’t wanna know a world where a comic that tackles such hard hitting subjects like power rejuvenating rapist demons aren’t held in high esteem!

BOMB QUEEN: If Japan keep this up Manga will be kicked out the convenience stores and sold only in specialty shops. Hmmm…. where have I heard that before? Whatever, look, you folks need to ease off my friends in Japan. They got the child sex honed to a science and as far as I’m concerned more power to them. But I’m not worried, since the books are still importing to my city where crime is legal. However, I’ll sell them right back to Japan’s Yakuza for a tidy profit. I hear Loli manga makes for great reading in those sex traffiking brothels. My gain your loss.

Also, while we’re here… stop baggin’ on Japan already. You so-called bloggers always jumping on the knee-jerk “only in Japan” bandwagon. Anime, manga, culture… whatever. Half of you can’t find Kyoto on the damn map. Start looking in the mirror before looking at Japan’s fascination with elementary school panty shots. Now, are we finished here, or do you still want to push your luck?

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed