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IkemenTommy wrote:Probably because of downsizing of Toyota and the subsequent slave labor associated with it. Well, they can always be picking strawberries instead.
;)"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!!!"
alicia454 wrote:Any idea why and where they went? Hopefully the Brazilians moved to other parts of Japan, such as Tokyo, since Aichi would not be a first choice as a Japanese locality to live in, for most people.
Iraira wrote:I thought that's what all the obaasans and oyajis took bus tours to do?
alicia454 wrote:Any idea why and where they went? Hopefully the Brazilians moved to other parts of Japan, such as Tokyo, since Aichi would not be a first choice as a Japanese locality to live in, for most people.
alicia454 wrote:Any idea why and where they went?
alicia454 wrote:Hopefully the Brazilians moved to other parts of Japan, such as Tokyo, since Aichi would not be a first choice as a Japanese locality to live in, for most people.
FG Lurker wrote:Just a guess, but back to Brazil? The jobs that brought them to Japan have vanished and things here are unfortunately going to get worse before they get better.
Sure, because there is so much automobile manufacturing in Tokyo.
aquamarine wrote:There's always Hyundai, out in Chiba. . . . (BWHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHA)
Oh god damn I make myself laugh sometimes.
IkemenTommy wrote:It doesn't make much sense for Hyundai to build a factory in Japan unless they want to build something with quality. Now come to think of it, that's an oxymoron.
Reflecting the precarious working conditions experienced by many non-Japanese laborers, a recent government survey found roughly 4,300 foreign workers lost, or were expected to lose, their jobs as of December. Over 30 percent of the 486,000 foreign nationals working in Japan are employed as dispatch or contract workers, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare survey found. The survey was conducted for the first time last October in line with a new stipulation which obliges businesses to report the number of foreign workers they employ. The count excluded ethnic Koreans who hold special permanent residency status. By nationality, Chinese accounted for 43 percent of the total, followed by Brazilians with 20 percent, and Filipinos comprising 8 percent.
" wrote:Over 30 percent of the 486,000 foreign nationals working in Japan are employed as dispatch or contract workers
Mulboyne wrote:That's the national average but the Yomiuri puts that number at closer to 60% for Shizuoka in this article (Japanese).
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