Japan has plunged into a crazy spiral of aging that is claiming an unexpected victim: the yakuza

the yakuza it’s news in Japan. And not because of his coups, a particularly successful police raid or a change in policy by the Government of Sanae Takaichi to combat the criminal network that takes centuries filtering into Japanese society. No. The yakuza is in the news because after several years of seeing its ranks decimated, it has reached an all-time low. According to police statistics, in 2025 their criminal groups numbered about 17,600 people (among members and allies), far from the more than 80,000 just a decade and a half ago. This loss of strength is explained by the control of the police and a turn in the underworld towards new criminal networksbut also because of a trend that affects the rest of the country: the yakuza ages, just like society ages Japanese. The yakuza is shrinking. These are not good times for the yakuza. Not at least as far as follow-up is concerned. Statistics from the National Police Agency show that Japan’s quintessential criminal institution (and one of the best-known in the world) has seen its member and affiliate base fall to a minimum. In 2025 They totaled 17,6001,200 less than the previous year. If we look only at the hard core, the full members, the figure is even more devastating: it remains at 9,400, the lowest since there are records. Is the data so bad? Yes. The problem is not that 2025 has been a particularly bad year for the yakuza, but that it maintains a trend that goes back a long time. Nippon explains that the institution has been seeing its ranks thinning little by little for at least 21 years, tracing a negative curve that has no signs of improving. For reference, the newspaper recalls that until 2009 the yakuza had more than 80,000 people spread throughout the country. If we go back to the 1960s, that support base was considerably higher. The crisis also seems to be affecting (to a greater or lesser extent) the different organizations that make up the yakuza. Nippon appointment half a dozen entities that have either stagnated their social mass or have lost members. The worst stop is Sixth Yamaguchi-gumiwhich in 2025 remained at 3,100 members and 3,200 affiliates. They are 200 and 400 less respectively than a year before. Curious yes, new no. The 2025 data is revealing, but will probably surprise few people in Japan. The country takes years reading headlines that report the gradual loss of base of organized crime networks. In 2022 the Police Agency already revealed that the number of members and associates of mafia groups had fallen to 24,100, the lowest figure since at least 1958, the first year with statistics. Only a few years later the ranks of the yakuza fell below the 20,000 barrier, a new low. What is the reason? As is often the case with all social phenomena, whether related to crime or not, this trend is explained by a combination of factors. In the case of Japanese bands, however, there is one particularly interesting one: age. The Japan Times reveals that one of the theories that the authorities use to explain this decline is the aging suffered by organized groups. The yakuza is getting older, just like japan. In 2022, the Japanese police estimated that 30.8% of members They were between 50 and 59 years old, making it the largest cohort. People between 60 and 69 years old represented 12.5% ​​and septuagenarians 11.6%. More than 50% were 50 or older. In general, the average age of the members was 54.2 years, seven more than a decade before. Members between 40 and 30 years old accounted for 12.9% and those in their twenties did not exceed 5.4%. An increasingly aging country. That the ranks of the yakuza are aging can be explained for several reasons. A key one is that Japan in general is getting older. The country has been immersed in a serious demographic crisis which has plunged its birth rate and raised the average age of the population. According to the records According to Statista, in 1950 this indicator marked 21.3 years, in the mid-90s it had already risen to 39 years and in 2020 it was close to 48. Their forecasts assume that at the end of this century the average will comfortably exceed 50 years. The result of that drift? Japan presents one of the worst percentages of population over 65 years of age: represents more than 29%. Click on the image to go to the tweet. One word: tokuryū. There is, however, another factor that explains why the organizations that make up the yakuza are increasingly aging. It is not that crime is fading in Japan, rather it is transforming and it is doing so by leaning towards a new format: the tokuryūcriminal networks that flee from hierarchical and well-structured models, such as the yakuza. The tokuryū (the word is the sum of tokumeik“anonymous” and ryūdo“fluid”) often operate as groups of criminals who form for coups, without structure, codes, organizational rigidity or bonds. That nature deprives them of some of the advantages of the yakuza, but it also has its strengths. The police find it difficult to deal with such loosely knit groups. And they also seem to offer an attractive model for younger offenders. The Japan Times assures that last year 12,178 people related to tokuryū were arrested, 2,073 more than in 2024. Many of them were under 40 years old or even in their twenties, which gives another clue about the changes that the underworld world is experiencing. “The younger generations’ aversion to yakuza organizations, with strict codes of conduct and hierarchies, is a contributing factor to their decline,” precise the diary Sankei Shimbun. Fighting crime. When explaining the bleeding of the yakuza, the authorities point to another factor: the work of legislators and police. Specifically, they point to greater application of the law and ordinances that complicate the participation of companies and individuals in organized crime. To combat crime the … Read more

A huge blue spiral appeared in the sky of Europe at 9 at night. It was the wake of a spacex rocket

It is hard to believe, but the last night were not aliens either. If you were looking at the sky at 20:55, European central time, you could see a bright blue spiral illuminating the night. It was a Spacex rocket. A strange show. In United Kingdom, Belgium, Poland either Ukraine. From The clean skies of Sierra Nevadain Granada. Virtually all of Europe has managed to capture the spiral light that crossed the sky last night. They soon appeared photos on social networks. People asked what that strange phenomenon was. It is not a usual show, although it has already been seen in Hawaii, Alaska either Iceland. A Falcon 9 of Spacex. Neither a missile, nor a satellite, nor a galaxy about to swallow us. Nor a UFO. The object had a name and surname because it was a Falcon 9 rocket of Spacex by recentrating in the earth’s atmosphere. He had taken off from Cabo Cañaveral, east of the United States, two hours before. The Spy Nrol-69 satellite of the American National Recognition Office (NRO) had put in orbit. And he was returning to the earth to disintegrate in the atmosphere in a controlled way. What caused the spiral. Before a controlled reentry, the 13.8 -meter length rocket rotates to get rid of the fuel that is still in its deposits; A process called passivity. The low temperatures instantly froze the propellants released by the rocket, which added to the turn movement and the position of the sun caused the light show over Europe. The turn is what made it look like a spiral, and the sunlight was what illuminated the frozen wake. Nothing to do with the incident of Poland. In February, the second stage of a Falcon 9 rented without control over Europe. Several pieces of the rocket fell into populated areas of Poland, without causing damage (except the dismissal of the president of the Polish Space Agencyfor its management of the incident). In this case, and as is usually the case, the second stage of Falcon 9 successfully turned on its engine to fall controlled in the atmosphere, far from populated areas. They were the light conditions and the flight profile that made its wake visible in the European night sky, without further consequences than the scare of some European spectators. Images | Jay in Kyiv, High Calar Observatory In Xataka | Elon Musk has revealed the plan after Starship explosions: v3 earlier than expected, but with half a capacity

There is a spiral structure surrounding the solar system

Thousands of kilometers from our planet there are all kinds of mysteries to discover. Some we end up deciphering them, like that Strange television signal It takes years to solve, but others remain with that halo of singularity. In this group there is everything from Low intensity magnetarsuntil those radio bursts that we detect from time to time. And then there is Oort’s cloud, a fascinating region that has just revealed something surprising. A spiral in the confines. The edge of the solar system has long been a little explored, obvious border, since it is a vast and enigmatic territory full of ice cream that orbit at extreme distances. Over there, Oort’s clouda region that extends up to 100,000 astronomical units (UA) of the Sun, has been considered a simple sphere of debris Cosmic, but a recent computational study has placed it on the front page. The reason? An unexpected and fascinating structure has been revealed: A spiral structure similar to that of a miniature galaxy. The finding, directed by astronomer David Nesvorný of the Southwest Research Institute and Posted in The Astrophysical Journal After its diffusion on the ARXIV predimussion server, it reveals that the gravitational force of the Milky Way has shaped the internal Oort cloud in a spiral structure of 15,000 A diameter. This spiral, which has endured since the beginning of the solar system, Challenge the previous conceptions about the morphology of Oort’s own cloud and could redefine our understanding of the evolution of transneptunian objects. The composition of the Oort cloud. As far as we know, Oort’s cloud has traditionally divided into two regions. The external Oort cloud, located beyond 10,000 UA, is a spheroid of icy bodies that are weakly linked to the sun and suffers frequent gravitational disturbances of nearby stars. From this region come most of the long period comets, those who travel through the solar system in elliptical trajectories after being diverted by gravitational interactions. On the other hand, the internal Oort cloud is between 1,000 and 10,000 UA, and so far it was believed that it had a more stable and disk -shaped structure. Due to its proximity to the sun, the objects in this area They are more strongly linked to their gravity and are less susceptible to external star disturbances. However, the new computational models have revealed that their shape is not a uniform disc, but a spiral structure with twisted arms and an inclined disk about 30 degrees with respect to the ecliptic plane. The influence of the Milky Way. Apparently, the key to this unexpected morphology lies in the interaction of the internal Oort cloud with The so -called “galactic tide”a gravitational phenomenon generated by the Milky Way. This force, exerted by the gravitational attraction of the galactic center, nearby stars and possible black holes, especially affects the most distant regions of the solar system. He Model developed by Nesvorný And his team was prosecuted in NASA’s Pleiades Superordinateusing data on the formation of the solar system 4.6 billion years ago. During the simulation, the scientists introduced the gravitational influence of the Sun, the impact of galactic tide and interaction with the Milky Way. Results? It was found that The spiral was formed in the first hundred years after the creation of the Solar System and has remained stable since then, even resisting the nearby step of stars in the last millennia. Implications and challenges of finding. As the researchers say, one of the most surprising aspects of the study is that the spiral is not a temporary effect or a recent disturbance, but a permanent structure within the internal Oort cloud. Comparison with previous research suggests that this form has been present in multiple previous simulations, although it had not been identified so far. However, and this is underlined at work, confirming this structure through direct observations is little less than a monumental challenge. Reasons? The enormous distance and low luminosity of objects Oort’s cloud causes even the most advanced telescopes to be unable to detect them directly. In fact, most of the evidence of the Oort cloud comes from the study of long period comets, which limits the possibilities of characterizing its internal structure with precision. And despite these difficulties, scientists consider that this finding is A crucial step to understand the history of the Solar System. The spiral structure of the internal Oort cloud could provide clues about how the icy bodies in the confines of the solar system were formed and evolved, in addition to helping to understand the impact of the Milky Way in our cosmic neighborhood. A new horizon in exploration. No doubt, the discovery of this spiral structure in the internal Oort cloud challenges the traditional conception of the already enigmatic edge of the solar system, showing that The severity of the Milky Way has played a crucial role in its formation and evolution. The finding also reinforces the need to develop new methods of observation and space missions dedicated to exploring the regions farthest from the solar system. If you want also, it enhances the idea we already had, that Oort’s cloud is still an unexplored bordera cosmic file that retains the primitive history of the Solar System. As the researchers indicate, their study could reveal key information on the origin of comets, the dynamics of transneptunian bodies and the interaction of our planetary system with their galactic environment. Next to nothing. Image | DOLANH, NASA /ESA AND A. FEILD /SPACE TERESCOPE SCIENCE INSTITUTE In Xataka | For five years we have tried to decipher a television signal that came from the sky. Until now In Xataka | X -ray telescopes have revealed an unimaginable object: a superstructure of more than one billion light years

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.