The Yakuza had more than 180,000 members in the 1960s. - FactzPedia

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The Yakuza had more than 180,000 members in the 1960s.

 

The Yakuza had more than 180,000 members in the 1960s.


The Yakuza peaked during the post-WWII period, a time when Japan was in absolute shambles.
People back then still believed in the concept of honorable gangsters, and the combination of the two led many of Japan’s youth right onto the Yakuza’s doorstep.
Japanese gangsters. Yakuza, who trace their roots back to rōnin (masterless samurai), often adopt samurai-like rituals and identify themselves with elaborate body tattoos. They traditionally engage in such organized-crime pursuits as extortion, blackmail, smuggling, prostitution, drugs, and gambling, and they control many restaurants, bars, trucking companies, and taxi fleets in Japanese cities. In the 1980s they also became involved in land speculation, fueling the “bubble economy” that burst by the end of the decade. Their membership reached a high of more than 180,000 in the early 1960s but had dropped to less than half that number by the early 21st century. They are organized into hundreds of gangs, most affiliated under the umbrella of some 20 conglomerate gangs. Yakuza gangs are rigidly hierarchical and follow strict codes of behaviour.
 

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