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Zanthorus
12th September 2011, 20:13
From the early seventeenth century until the middle of the nineteenth century (Meiji Restoration) Japanese society was locked in a rigid class structure that allowed very little or no mobility at all. That meant that members of a social group within a certain social class had no choice but to accept their place in society. In addition, there was a clear distinction between the ruling class--the samurai--and the other classes--peasants, craftsmen, and merchants. Within each class as well, there was a certain hierarchy according to which members of the class had to act their social role with little opportunity to change their status. This reality have produced strong identifying characteristics for each social class to which the individual had to conform. Outside these social classes, as they were designated by the ruling samurai elite, were the classless people and outcasts who were placed bellow everybody else. Ninjutsu, for the most part, was the fighting skills and methods practiced by a small number of families who belonged to the lower samurai class, peasants, and even outcasts, and only rarely by warriors belonging to the samurai elite. Consequently, ninjutsu since the Edo period has been identified as different than the noble traditions of the samurai, and those practicing it were usually regarded by the rest of society as lowly people. In other words, ninjutsu was anything but conformity to the pre defined social rules. As such, it could have never received a seal of approval as a recognized martial tradition, not even when those samurai were actually employing warriors proficient in ninjutsu.

The social conditions and the strong tendency for conformity I have just discussed produced another problem. Fighting methods or weapons that were not practiced by the samurai elite were considered mysterious at best, sometimes demonic, often super natural, and certainly unworthy of respect. Here again is the problem that rises from social conformity. For the samurai elite who were bound by rules of behavior and a code of honor and ethics, fighting methods were confined to a small number of weapons, namely bow, sword, staff, jutte, and spear. This resulted in little creativity in fighting. However, for warriors other than the samurai, those who were not constrained by their position in society, creativity was a necessity for winning. They have maintained unusual and innovative fighting methods and weapons that were developed in earlier periods, while systematizing, recording, and adding to it during the Edo period. Consequently, ninjutsu came to be perceived very negatively, and when Japan moved into the modern period ninjutsu gradually disappeared while its dark and mysterious image, which already became folklore, was now viewed as an historical fact.Of course this only confirms what we all knew already, namely:

http://pictures.mastermarf.com/blog/2010/100125-ninjas-better-than-pirates.jpg

Ele'ill
12th September 2011, 20:32
That picture reminds me of autumn on the east coast because of how the light is hitting the tree in the background.

Johnny Kerosene
15th September 2011, 20:18
While the stuff about ninja's being lower class was interesting, that picture is totally wrong. While the ninja is screwing around climbing shit for no reason, the Pirate is reading material relevant to the conquest of enemy ships, and the slaughter of those who oppose said conquest. When the time for battle comes the ninja will be tired because he was too busy dicking around and the pirate will be well-rested, and well-educated.

Susurrus
21st September 2011, 08:31
That's not a real ninja, a real ninja would attack from the drain under the pirate.

¿Que?
21st September 2011, 09:14
Yeah, ninjas...who could ever forget the great ninja strike of 84...
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c0/Black_Bloc_Hamburg.jpg/300px-Black_Bloc_Hamburg.jpg

Smyg
21st September 2011, 09:49
^ Hm. Seems like the ninjas has lost some of their deadly efficiency over the years. :D

Nox
21st September 2011, 10:30
Aaaah, so that's where anarchists get their outfits from :laugh:

bcbm
21st September 2011, 17:55
group dressed in ninja-style outfits vandalizes east side businesses (http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/44225917.html)