Don't blame Li Xinghe for being ruthless and cruel. If it were the Yasukuni Shrine before 1978, Li Xinghe would have been more willing to offer incense. But the Yasukuni Shrine after the joint enshrinement of demons in 1978 and the reopening of the Yushukan Museum in 1986 was a place that harbored filth and demons, deserving such exorcism.

Overnight, the Chiyoda Ward was filled with the sound of cannons.

In the darkness, dark and menacing armored vehicles traversed the streets, angular VT4 main battle tanks opened their heated gun barrels, and soldiers chased after fleeing police. Tokyo once again experienced a magical night of change.

In the early hours of the morning, the public watched in shock as the television broadcast the news:

"Former Prime Minister Shinjiro Koizumi is suspected of gathering madmen within the Liberal Democratic Party who are disobedient to the national path and indifferent to the national crisis, and colluding with the remnants of fascist Nazi forces in the Japanese Diet, plotting to persecute Cabinet Secretary Seikawa Ma at the Yasukuni Shrine. He is currently wanted by the authorities..."

"Takeo Akiba, Director of the Secretariat of the National Security Council, is suspected of plotting to organize an anti-state, anti-social militarist rebellion and is currently wanted by the authorities..."

"Commander-in-Chief Yoshinobu Kusunoki of the National Police Agency of Japan..."

"Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Chief of Staff Yoshimi Ogata..."

Overnight, a warrant was issued for their arrest everywhere.

The Japanese stared in disbelief as Li Xinghe danced gracefully on the stage, his dance shoes leaving humiliating footprints on their brains.

He blasted the Yasukuni Shrine to smithereens, and then conveniently issued an arrest warrant for Japan's nominal prime minister, creating a crazy night that was tantamount to a second coup.

Moreover, Li Xinghe also sent people to attack the Liberal Democratic Party headquarters, preparing for a complete blockade.

Some might ask, wouldn't arresting so many politically connected ministers and members of parliament, many of whom hold real power, weaken Japan's political capacity and cause massive political chaos?

The answer is actually quite simple.

Without these people causing trouble and creating problems, civil servants now receive direct instructions from Li Xinghe, and administrative efficiency has actually improved.

Because Li Xinghe has always adhered to a very special, yet very Japanese, principle in his work.

We'll fight our own battles, not yours.

He arrested Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) members, seized LDP assets, and liquidated a large number of LDP local organizations, all using the judicial power of the prosecutor's office, without completely eradicating the civil service system. The civil servants, as long as they didn't interfere with Li Xinghe's killings, felt no pressure.

In more Japanese terms, it means killing is killing, but it won't cause trouble for everyone's work.

At 8 a.m., Li Xinghe appeared before the news media with Kay Trump.

Li Xinghe proudly announced:

"It used to be said that the core group of Japanese politics had the so-called three redundancies: redundant officials, redundant expenses, and redundant members of parliament; and the so-called three lows: low ability, low intelligence, and low efficiency. Now I can proudly announce to everyone that I have physically eliminated these problems!"

Anyone familiar with the Song Dynasty's system knows that modern Japan's complex, inefficient, and foolish administrative system serves to suppress the possibility of a militaristic resurgence through a highly chaotic and inefficient government. However, it has also brought with it the troublesome problems of overstaffing and incompetent officials.

In the midst of numerous political clashes and changes, Li Xinghe decisively chose to uphold the laws of the Great Western King.

If all the inefficient people represented by the Liberal Democratic Party were arrested in one fell swoop, the Liberal Democratic Party and the postwar system would be completely destroyed, and the Yasukuni Shrine would be blasted to pieces, then the problem of "three redundancies and three lows" mentioned by Li Xinghe would seem to have a solution.

Li Xinghe also has good news:

"At the same time, another problem we must solve is whether Japan will choose to revert to the right wing, to revert to fascist, Nazi, and militaristic practices, or choose..."

The question of whether to fully integrate into modernization has finally been answered. I want to tell you that I choose modernization, I choose to integrate into civilization. Therefore, I will completely demolish the Yasukuni Shrine, which has become a gathering place for right-wing elements. I will also thoroughly eradicate the remnants of right-wing influence, systematically eliminating the national turmoil caused by the lingering ghosts of the perpetrators of World War II.

What do you mean?

While the main contradiction in East Asia is the conflict between China and the United States, historical issues also present considerable problems. The Japanese right wing, like a dog that eats excrement, keeps resurfacing.

Now it's all right, the problem is solved.

The Yasukuni Shrine has been completely destroyed by Li Xinghe. The memorial tablets and relics of war criminals such as Hideki Tojo, Kenji Doiyama, and Osami Nagano were all reduced to dust by the violent bombardment of 125mm shells. Whether they were war criminals from World War II or heroes from Japan's wars after the Meiji Restoration, they are all gone now.

The Yasukuni Shrine, Kudanzaka, and the Emperor's official shrines for worship are all gone now.

The resurgence of right-wing militarist forces in Japan, attempting to hijack the Yasukuni Shrine, has dashed any hopes of a renewed resurgence by hijacking the Imperial Family.

Everything turned into a blank space.

Japan should completely erase that history and obediently become a modern small country. As for who Li Xinghe killed, where he demolished, which historical building he destroyed, or whether he injected his essence into the Imperial Family, you should all ignore that and pretend you didn't see it.

The Japanese public was still in shock, their minds blank.

"This...this solution is just too..."

Yeah, don't ask me how I solved it, just tell me if it was solved or not!

The author says:

Author's Note: Thank you all for your support. 6300 words. Let's bombard the Yasukuni Shrine, let's blow it up! No need to split it up.

Chapter 718: Only One Path Through the Galaxy (4800 words)

"Your Excellency, make a decision."

In the deep darkness of the night, before Li Xinghe trampled on the Yasukuni Shrine, Koizumi Shinjiro, Akiba Takeo, and others, along with some far-right police officers, totaling about a hundred people, gathered at the Yasukuni Shrine to prepare their final desperate plan for a comeback.

Koizumi called Li Xinghe and received a reply that the other party would definitely come.

He foolishly thought everything was going smoothly, making unconditional promises to Akiba Takeo and the others, and becoming complacent about it:

"Huh? How come the plan is going so smoothly?"

Then, the bustling winds of Tokyo couldn't conceal the commotion at the Imperial Palace next door.

"Huh? Why is it so noisy by the roadside?"

Because the Imperial Palace has been undergoing demolition and renovation, people haven't realized it yet.

Even as Li Xinghe's tank battalion marched out of the Imperial Palace's north gate, Koizumi and many right-wing activists were still craning their necks, mistakenly believing that the approaching force was the Metropolitan Police Department's armored vehicle battalion. In reality, the Metropolitan Police Department's Special Police Armored Vehicle Battalion had long been under Li Xinghe's command, and their base was located next to the Ministry of Defense/Self-Defense Forces headquarters.

Then Li Xinghe opened fire.

Tanks smashed the torii gate, and artillery extinguished all confidence.

With the deafening roar of the 125mm smoothbore gun, the last remaining men on the right flank scattered and fled like startled flies.

The entire scheme to turn the tables was so low-IQ it was like a sixth-grade student planning a brawl after school.

However, a crude and foolish plan can still lead to extremely tragic consequences.

Amidst their confusion, Shinjiro Koizumi and Takeo Akiba escape into the bustling metropolis of Tokyo.

Li Xinghe, however, leisurely began issuing government decrees:

"The Liberal Democratic Party is suspected of murdering the Taiko. By order of the Cabinet, the Liberal Democratic Party is to be dissolved immediately! All its original party assets are to be confiscated, all party members are to be removed from office, and those suspected of supporting and advocating far-right militaristic forces and approving a coup to harm the country will be severely prosecuted!"

Thus, a comprehensive plan to eliminate the Liberal Democratic Party was launched.

In Chiyoda Ward, a formidable tank smashed through the gates of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) headquarters. Soldiers brandished batons, beating the LDP staff who remained behind, leaving them bloodied, before storming into their meeting room.

"We've caught Yoshihide Suga!"

Yoshihide Suga and Lee Sung-ha are absolute political enemies because Suga is the embodiment of a farmer-forestry politician; his father was the "Strawberry King" of the prefecture, and he himself rose to his current position through years of political maneuvering. Given Lee Sung-ha's extensive disruption of agricultural cooperatives, Suga and Lee Sung-ha are practically blood enemies.

Therefore, Yoshihide Suga, as a person suspected of treason, was immediately sent to prison.

The second person said:

“Kishida Fumio sat alone in the Liberal Democratic Party headquarters, saying that he could neither leave nor stay.”

Fumio Kishida was, after all, the leader of the Kishida faction; he should die with some sense of responsibility.

The third person reports:

"Toshimitsu Mogi has run away; it seems he has fled to Taiwan."

Mogi rose to prominence through diplomacy and was destined for a career as an ambassador, so his decision to flee at this time seems plausible.

The fourth person to speak:

"Shigeru Ishiba went home and submitted his resignation. He also decided to disband his Ishiba faction and continue to run for parliament as an independent."

Shigeru Ishiba didn't have a strong political background; he rose to prominence through the patronage of Kakuei Tanaka, a fellow townsman. Even now, as another successor to Tanaka, Li Xinghe wouldn't go so far as to completely destroy Ishiba. His sensible decision to dissolve his faction was a successful political suicide, thus escaping Li Xinghe's pursuit.

The fifth person came to report:

"Sanae Takaichi has announced her withdrawal from the Liberal Democratic Party, and she is currently... writing a proposal to bestow a royal title upon you."

Sanae Takaichi is the most blatantly subservient. Her generation of far-right extremists has already had their spines broken, and now they're starting to grovel.

Sanae Takaichi believes that since Li Xinghe is the father of the future emperor, then you might as well not use your son anymore and just give yourself a royal title first.

Li Xinghe chuckled three times, too lazy to bother with him.

He won.

Win big!

The Liberal Democratic Party, an ancient party representing 70 years of postwar Japanese history, has reached the end of its life.

As the saying goes, Kishida was trapped, Mogi was driven away, Yoshihide was imprisoned, Ishiba was born, and Takaichi was demoted.

Five former prime ministers, each making different choices in the final stages of the Liberal Democratic Party's regime, vividly illustrate the predicament of Japan's center-right ruling party in its final years.

Kishida, as one of the leaders of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) faction, was trapped in the LDP headquarters out of necessity; Motegi, a politician from the diplomatic system, decisively fled to Taiwan after seeing no hope of success; Suga, a member of parliament with agricultural and forestry roots, had no choice but to fight Li Xinghe to the death; Ishiba Shigeru was a protégé of Tanaka Kakuei and happened to have a mentor-student relationship with Li Xinghe; Takaichi Sanae and the far-right simply performed a performance of complete subservience, flattering Li Xinghe to the point of ugly obsequiousness.

For families whose husbands have been arrested and whose fates are unknown, Ayako Aso began her performance:

"Madam, I would like to visit your home."

The other party hurriedly invited her to their home.

Ayako Aso certainly wouldn't do anything outrageous at this time. She took out her notebook and earnestly asked the other party:

Have you considered changing your allegiance?

"Yes, yes, yes!"

The lady immediately knelt down and kowtowed to Ayako Aso.

Like a pyramid scheme member, Ayako Aso, carrying the other party's profuse thanks, headed to the next Liberal Democratic Party member's home, ready to gather new forces.

Li Xinghe said:

"The Liberal Democratic Party still has 101 million members. Of these 101 million, at least 10% are political criminals with extreme right-wing ideologies, right? The goal is to arrest 10 people."

At least 10 people have been arrested!

10 middle-class families will be torn apart. This is a massive purge.

Are there any places in Japan where so many people are detained?

No.

So the result is still the same: they'll be exiled to Taiwan and left to wait to be bombed to death on the beaches.

.

To resist?

The Liberal Democratic Party was powerless to resist. Ordinary members were too grateful to even think about it, but when things fell apart, Li Xinghe was actually doing them a favor by keeping their social security contributions, letting them find a company to work for and make a living.

Those members of parliament with extreme ideologies and close ties to the Japan Conference were not even released; some were reportedly sent to the Aoyama Command Headquarters dungeon this morning. That's a place where most people who go in never come out.

The vast majority of people just want to quickly pledge their loyalty and escape the rotten ship that is about to sink into silence.

……

On the morning of November 29th.

The headlines were shocking, as the hurricane was impacting all of Japan.

Fuji Television reported on it immediately:

"The Liberal Democratic Party is hereby dissolved!"

NHK, a semi-official Japanese broadcasting station, recounted what exactly happened last night:

"Last night, April 29, Cabinet Affairs Minister Li Xinghe was ambushed by National Security Bureau Director Akiba Takeo. In order to protect His Excellency the Taiko, the First Armored Division stationed in Edo and the ruins of the old Ooku was immediately dispatched to suppress the remaining militarists in the Yasukuni Shrine."

Japanese television stations obtained Li Xinghe's orders for a major purge:

"The Cabinet Secretariat issued a special order: It is a responsibility that Japan, as a defeated nation in World War II, must fulfill to eliminate the remnants of militarism. Going forward, the government will systematically review society, textbooks, and local buildings in a comprehensive manner to eliminate the interference of militarists."

TV Asahi reports:

"Minister Seikawa has decided to completely dissolve both houses of parliament, hold new elections, and consider revising the Japanese Constitution."

As one shocking news announcement after another was made, Japanese society, amidst the uproar, gradually and silently accepted it all.

What's the point of saying anything now that things have come to this?

Speaking of cleansing, Japanese society has generally done a good job of segmenting its members. For example, when discussing World War II military topics, people generally avoid talking about specific individuals and ideologies, instead using neutral language to discuss military equipment and battles, such as the famous meme about the Shinano sinking in a day. Brainless right-wingers, on the other hand, will only endlessly repeat "Long live the Empire!"

Since the Japanese right wing generally has low IQ, it's not difficult to change them.

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