04/06/2026
Japan lost 900,000 people last year.
Not to emigration. Not to war. To time.
Fewer babies are being born than at any point in modern Japanese history — and 2025 marked the 10th consecutive year that record was broken.
In Tokyo, you barely notice. The trains are packed. The streets are full. The city hums.
But in rural Japan, the disappearance is visible.
Over the past 30 years, 1,366 kilometers of railway have been shut down across the country. 68 routes — gone. One-third of them in Hokkaido alone.
These weren't redundant lines. They were the only connection some towns had to the outside world.
When the young people left for the cities, the passengers disappeared. When the passengers disappeared, the trains stopped. When the trains stopped, the towns got quieter.
And yet — this is the part that only Japan could produce — many of those stations are still standing.
Platforms swept clean. Signs still legible. Benches still in place.
No graffiti. No decay. No vandalism.
Just empty stations, maintained with the same care as when they were full, waiting for trains that will never come again.
Japan doesn't let things fall apart. Not even the things it's losing.
A country that is shrinking — but refusing to do it without dignity.
That tells you more about Japan than any population statistic ever could.