McTojo wrote:That's the problem with Japanese women! Why they have to marry white dudes? Why can't they just marry Japanese men, then have me as their boyfriend. I just don't get it!
Y'know, you seriously need to get some game, dude.
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McTojo wrote:That's the problem with Japanese women! Why they have to marry white dudes? Why can't they just marry Japanese men, then have me as their boyfriend. I just don't get it!
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Iraira wrote:Y'know, you seriously need to get some game, dude.
Mulboyne wrote:Honda, who sadly died a few years ago, brought out strong feelings in British guitarists. Here she is with Brian May a year later:
IparryU wrote:pretty good i must say... how difficult is that to do?
Greji wrote:Hey lighten up Choko. You can't Bogart all the young lemurs for yourself. We codgers got rights to 'em as well!
WORDS TO LIVE BY
[SIZE="4"]Educator, writer, farmer Gregory Clark[/SIZE]
By JUDIT KAWAGUCHI
Gregory Clark, 75, is the Honorary President of Tama University and Trustee of Akita International University in Japan. A prolific writer, with a background in economics and international politics, his opinionated investigative pieces often spark intensive debates. His 1978 book "The Japanese Tribe: Origins of a Nation's Uniqueness" explored what he saw as the differences between the rationalistic, ideological societies of the West and China, and the emotional/practical Japanese. The book stirred strong feelings from both sides of the argument.
Clark's personal story reads like a brilliant novel: Born in Britain as the son of a famous economist, Colin Grant Clark, Gregory moved to Australia with his family as a boy. He entered the Australian foreign service and from 1959 was stationed in Hong Kong and later in Moscow. Fluent in Chinese and Russian (and now also Japanese and Spanish), he abruptly left the Australian foreign service in 1965 due to his strong opposition to the Vietnam War. He turned to academia, with a spell in journalism, and has been living in Japan on and off since 1969. Although education and writing are his fortes, Clark's passion is more grounded: He is also a farmer and land developer in Chiba Prefecture's Boso Peninsula, where he prefers to play with dirt rather than with politics.
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chokonen888 wrote:hehe, this is the land of plenty when it comes to lemurs. Enough to share for sure ]http://www.fuckedgaijin.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=3871&stc=1&d=1327032409[/IMG]
gaijinpunch wrote:Totally late to this, but a high five to anyone that can name the game and the system w/o Googling.
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