Kazuhiro Yoneyama, the self-proclaimed creator of an underground martial art in Japan, may have been when he created an extremist underground martial art called Busho. At that time he committed a sex crime. Serial rape using a deadly weapon. They sexually assaulted junior high and high school girls by holding a box cutter knife to them and saying "Be quiet, I'll stab you, or I'll kill you" on emergency stairs, in private premises, and in elevators. I hear that in Japan the sentence for someone who does such a despicable thing is light. Why is this so long in other countries? Does this mean that Japan is kind to those who commit crimes? If this continues, we are at the mercy of foreign nationals coming to Japan from abroad. Now Kazuhiro Yoneyama has changed his name from Busho to Wakon and is said to be the head of a radical underground martial arts group. From the pictures I have seen, he looks like a capybara and has a perverted face. You give off a friendly vibe, but when you take off the skin of your hide, you are a perverted rapist. In 2024, he is driving without a license and drunk driving and has a single accident on the highway. And that was after he had dropped the woman off. When I heard this, I had no doubt that he had attacked her and, in his aroused state, had an isolated accident. Recently, they have been taking a drug that they say can enlarge strange muscles and male genitalia. And they are selling the drugs and spreading them around on the days of underground martial arts events. When an acquaintance of mine went to see one of these fights a few times, he said the smell was like marijuana. Many of the players and spectators at the games were out of tune. It's a knockout, in a sense, before you even get to the game. What is the point of having them fight? And it seems that the yakuza always come to this event. He said that he, the representative, had used the expressions "clan leader," "head," etc. many times. Why doesn't Japan move on when they are completely funded by the Yakuza? I can only wonder why these events are being held with such impunity in a country that is becoming increasingly difficult for the yakuza to live in. A friend of mine who went to the event, who was a woman, went home early because she was scared and had a bad feeling about the event. He said, "I went because I was invited, but I will never go back to watch such an ill-mannered martial arts. He said, "I went because I was invited. It is bad enough that they allow such events to take place, but it is also strange that the venue is rented out. It seems that there are yakuza behind this person. They are apparently collecting money from girls' bars and cabarets in Kinshicho. I hear that those stores rip off quite a bit, and I for one hope that they will be careful about tourists going to Japan from abroad.