OH this is a classic.

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Andocrates wrote:What do you want the paper to say, "we know they were foreigners but we don't dare tell anyone for fear of upsetting gaikokujin wa, ne?"
Jack wrote:whatever foreigners do in Japan they should be let go scott free just to appease you.
Andocrates wrote:I think the fact that they were foreigners is newsworthy WTF. In America they often report the suspects were "black," or Hispanic, etc.
There are some people in America who also read racism in that. What do you want the paper to say, "we know they were foreigners but we don't dare tell anyone for fear of upsetting gaikokujin wa, ne?"
By the way, it is true that far from being singled out for recrimination, foreigners are allowed an unusual amount of leeway in Japan like you would never see in France, Italy or the US. You can do whatever you wnat in Japan and people will shrug and say "he's a gaijin and doesn't know better, it's not his fault".
American Oyaji wrote:Gai, what they do instead is show a picture of the supsect.
Same difference.
Police pay more attention to minorities on the whole.
Actually, they pay more attention to the areas where minoritites live as well.
I bought a 1999 Concorde LXI and had some cops following me around.
I pulled over and looked at them as if to say pull me over, but stop following me. They slowed but then pulled off. That really annoyed me.
American Oyaji wrote:Actually, I do. And it's a holdover of life in Japan. I'd heard so many horror stories about kokujin, that I was very paranoid about my own personal behaviour. I cringed when I found out that black guys raped that girl in Okinawa. I cringed when I saw that Mr. Blair from the New York Times was black. I do indeed blame their behaviour, but at the same time, I say this, a race of people shouldnt have to walk on eggshells because of their race. There are numerous instances of a harsher punishment and restriction placed on minorities compared to the majority, in schools, in the military, in the courts. It's crazy. No matter what you say, the scales are NOT even. Only time will even it out, but its still a pain in the ass to go through.
Jack wrote:
By the way, it is true that far from being singled out for recrimination, foreigners are allowed an unusual amount of leeway in Japan like you would never see in France, Italy or the US. You can do whatever you wnat in Japan and people will shrug and say "he's a gaijin and doesn't know better, it's not his fault".
For one thing, how do you know, in France, who is a foreigner (at least until they start to speak)?
Resolute Optimist wrote:For one thing, how do you know, in France, who is a foreigner (at least until they start to speak)?
There are many people in France who, regardless of whether the person was born in France or elsewhere, will always consider anyone with coloured skin and other caracteristics to be a foreigner. Maybe the French aren't so different to the Japanese in that respect.
I also think that some things can be compared even though they are different.
blackcat wrote:Lets face it most japanese that hear of a crime oftem think of foreigners
jez wrote:For one thing, how do you know, in France, who is a foreigner (at least until they start to speak)?
ramchop wrote:jez wrote:For one thing, how do you know, in France, who is a foreigner (at least until they start to speak)?
errr.... Hhow do you know, in Japan, who is a foreigner (at least until they start to speak)?
blackcat wrote:JEZ
Yeah They do blow out of proportion the crimes commited by non japanese, whereas japanese on japanese crime is reported but japanese on non japanese crime(reporting) is evaded like the plague...(or sars now).
you see japanese are always the victims...no matter what. thats what they teach and want to believe....thats whay this type of reporting is so dangerous, it confirms their myths and sterotypes.
yes virtualy ALL very violent crimes are commited by japanese..but you wouldnt think so listening to the media.(Jez's italics)
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