tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post115699505482670909..comments2008-08-04T16:07:45.247+09:00Comments on My So-Called Japanese Life: Effective Propaganda?Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-27893453509563624352007-01-29T16:28:00.000+09:002007-01-29T16:28:00.000+09:00It's time to "de-grain" the Japanese culture. The ...It's time to "de-grain" the Japanese culture. The Japanese benefit greatly from being a part of a global market. In fact, I can easily say that the Japanese economy wouldn't be where it was today if it weren't for the openness of foreign markets to Japan and its culture. <br /><br />It's time for Japan to return the favor, even if it means upsetting the apple cart of their culturally comfortable prejudices. In other words, they have to start getting over it. They can't expect to be accepted by other countries if they aren't willing to offer similar acceptance to foreigners in their country.<br /><br />It's not an easy thing, nor is it going to happen quickly but the only way to get the Japanese to start changing is for the foreign community to exert pressure on them when they treat them unfairly. If that pressure never comes, they will remain complacent and their laws will continue to condone racist behavior.Sharihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17419851636570519145noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-71389563820450289352007-01-29T13:51:00.000+09:002007-01-29T13:51:00.000+09:00Japanese people of that age were brought up that w...Japanese people of that age were brought up that way. Look, even if you are Korean or Chinese and your ancestors have been living in Japan for 100+ years, they would still never treat you the same as they treat "real" Japanese. Even these Korean and Chinese many do not bother getting "citizenship" because they know the Japanese will always think "you are Japanese by name only; you aren't really Japanese". This attitude is in their culture ... ingrained. That explains partly how they were so readily able to butcher so many non-Japanese Asians during World War 2.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-1157217602970486532006-09-03T02:20:00.000+09:002006-09-03T02:20:00.000+09:00I hear so many horror stories about how landlords ...I hear so many horror stories about how landlords treat foreigners but I have had only good experiences. And I've had lots of landlords. If anything the only problem I've had with landlords was that they would let some of the other tenants get away with murder and when I complained and asked them to yell at those people they would chicken out.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-1157205633567319282006-09-02T23:00:00.000+09:002006-09-02T23:00:00.000+09:00Roy: I do see your point. I realize that there are...Roy: I do see your point. I realize that there are some foreigners who see their time in Japan as a chance to abandon the morality that their local laws bind them to in their home countries. Nonetheless, 17 years is a good amount of time to "prove" myself. And yeah, we've been in the same place for ages. We're not the nomadic types. ;-)<BR/><BR/>James: You also have a point about "gaman" but I think that's unrelated to what I think they believed I was up to. I think they felt it was about money, not about enduring inconvenience. Honestly though, I wasn't putting up with anything in my estimation. There have been far worse things we've endured like when the landlord's near deaf mother listened to T.V. so loudly we could clearly hear it and when their nasty dog which was behind a fence right in front of our apartment would bite anyone who walked close to it (and it barked like mad). We never complained about those things.<BR/><BR/>Still, I think we've been really lucky with our situation. I think we have one of the best situations one can have with a landlord in Japan.Sharihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17419851636570519145noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-1157189110413779042006-09-02T18:25:00.000+09:002006-09-02T18:25:00.000+09:00I think that Japanese people have the image of Ame...I think that Japanese people have the image of Americans as a people who like to sue each other all the time. They just don't know how to work within the Japanese system of gaman'ing everything that sucks, those damn Americans.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-1157116887009555702006-09-01T22:21:00.000+09:002006-09-01T22:21:00.000+09:00I forgot to say that I can't believe you've lived ...I forgot to say that I can't believe you've lived in the same place to 17 years!!!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33409496.post-1157116780419181842006-09-01T22:19:00.000+09:002006-09-01T22:19:00.000+09:00It's unfortunate that your landlord thought this w...It's unfortunate that your landlord thought this way but I can't really blame him or others that have preconceptions about renting to gaijin. I have so many horror stories about what gaijin (some of them my friends) did to their apartments and all the trouble they caused. Years back some friends rented a house near Ikebukuro and every weekend they had the most rockin' parties. Sometimes close to a hundred people would show up and trash the place. The police would come every time but there wasn't much they could do.<BR/><BR/>A couple of rotten eggs ruin it for the rest of us no matter how good our behavior is.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com