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jingai wrote:You foreigners shall never be allowed to soil Japan's purity....Just more brown-eyed black-haired, fair-skinned people running around. Conformity is heavenly.
Already, the construction industry makes wide use of immigrants, mostly from other Asian countries, to fill the most dangerous and low-paying jobs.
"We have already reached the point where the Japanese economy cannot function without foreign workers," said Mioko Honda, a leader of the two-year-old Union of Migrant Workers. "The construction companies use Thais and Filipinos by day, because they are inconspicuous, and Africans and others are used at night, or in factory work."
Shibuya Me wrote:Check this out...I lived in Hawaii for a very long time. I had friends from Tokyo to Osaka. Girlfriends who looked like top models. I come to Japan and guess what?
I am a foreigner.
Go figure!
Armandeus wrote:I understand your point, but I am responsible only for myself. If being responsible in that way indirectly gives someone a good impression of "all foreigners" then fine, but that is not my responsibility.
Lumping all foreigners together is an overgeneralized mistake in the first place, and many of you here in this forum seem to agree when you complain about "foreigners are seen as criminals" or "foreigners are refused apartments" or whatever. The only thing that makes you a foreigner is the fact that you are not a native Japanese citizen. That's obvious, of course, but nothing beyond that can be taken for granted or generalized.
If foreigners dislike being lumped together in such discriminatory ways, then the flip side of that is not to accept the "representative" thing either. Why is that even necessary? Isn't being a responsible individual enough? Why should Foreigner X's actions, good or bad, reflect on me in any way? Foreigner X and his behavior are totally irrelevant for me, especially since he is someone I don't even know.
Being seen as the "representative" of a non-group like "all foreigners" is just more of the "we Japanese" vs. "you foreigners" mentality that is the result of a lack of real internationalization in this country, and accepting it, even for "good," is accepting not being recognized as an individual but only as a member of a stereotypical group. Sorry, but that's not for me.
kotatsuneko wrote:this is just my opinion
but the foreigners as a group thing has never, and will never ever change here
there arent too many foreigners in hokkaido, let alone sapporo you know..
most of them seem to be koreans/chinese/thais there arent too many latinos blacks or whites
so we are terribly noticeable
due to that, yes, i do feel that i am seen as part of the group seen as gaijin
attitudes towards us here , in sapporo are largely backward and i am very jealous of you lot living in tokyo/osaka as i guess you have an easier time, albeit with the usual stress of being a gaijin..
i dont really think of my self image, i dont give a flying fig what anyone really thinks of me, outside work, i only care about how i feel about me and my mental/physical health.. but im all to aware that people here dont really meet gaijin often, if ever, so they dont imho think of a gaijin as an individual, but rather as part of a group, them vs us.. if you will
this is just the way i see it![]()
hopefully ill meet those street punks again, and start finding out some real answers.. they seemed very open to discourse...
i mean, ive read so much from foreigners experience in japan, a mini library if you will, but i want to hear from japanese people what they think about issues, maybe ill even try to incorporate some discussions into my future site.. and i want to hear from people not some nihonhinron book.. kind of like that doctor who taped discussions from people in his area, tales of silk and straw i think it was called..
i dont know if this could be seen as a hijack of the thread, i hope not, more of an ofshoot.. i think the peoples views on this forum, coming from situations all around japan are vvvv interesting, and are all of equal merit.. thats why im addicted to this place ^^
Personally, I never think of "our image," only my image. I am not the representative of all foreigners, and I am a resident, not a guest.
"Did you ever think that it is possible that people don't want your brand of internationalization? No, I guess the world has to choose your way or the highway. Of course, you don't complain at all when people are biased in your favor do you? Japan has a lot to offer so quit your whining..."
"...think I have changed the thinking (if only slightly) of some close Japanese friends in Japan..."
Armandeus wrote:Gaidatsuraku"Did you ever think that it is possible that people don't want your brand of internationalization? No, I guess the world has to choose your way or the highway. Of course, you don't complain at all when people are biased in your favor do you? Japan has a lot to offer so quit your whining..."
I am not whining. I am offering constructive criticism. Go ahead and keep your stereotypes and generalizations, and act as the representative of all foreigners if it makes you happy. Play the stooge. I really don't care. I'll remember to forward all the "can you eat natto" questions to you. As I said, what you do or think is irrelevant to me, because I am not in your "group." And I'm not a newbie to Japan, so don't patronize me.
Naniwan Kid"...think I have changed the thinking (if only slightly) of some close Japanese friends in Japan..."
That's the whole point. If as an individual you do not play along with stereotypes, and you tactfully make it known to those who try to enforce them on you, you change things one person at a time.
Armandeus wrote:Kiss my ass, Gai. I've been here for 17 years. How about you, moron?
Armandeus wrote:Not counting Army years, which I spent every non-working hour off-post, I have been here for 14 years, you wet-behind-the-ear loudmouthed tourist waste of carbon.
Gaisaradatsuraku! wrote:PS: Specifically, I predate your first footsteps in Japan by approximately 13 years.
Armandeus wrote:Gaisaradatsuraku! wrote:PS: Specifically, I predate your first footsteps in Japan by approximately 13 years.
It makes no difference, because a) you were probably in diapers and you could have been in Egypt and it would not have made a difference to you, and b) coming to Japan for a couple weeks at a time over a period of several years as a clueless outsider and living here continuously for 17 years are totally different. So you lose.
While were having a pissing contest, which you are sorely losing, how about this. I bet you can't read and write Japanese, much less speak it, past the first few pages of the worn-out phrasebook of broken foreigner-talk in your back pocket.
You're messing with the wrong man, Gai.
Armandeus wrote:Gaisaradatsuraku! wrote:PS: Specifically, I predate your first footsteps in Japan by approximately 13 years.
It makes no difference, because a) you were probably in diapers and you could have been in Egypt and it would not have made a difference to you, and b) coming to Japan for a couple weeks at a time over a period of several years as a clueless outsider and living here continuously for 17 years are totally different. So you lose.
While were having a pissing contest, which you are sorely losing, how about this. I bet you can't read and write Japanese, much less speak it, past the first few pages of the worn-out phrasebook of broken foreigner-talk in your back pocket.
You're messing with the wrong man, Gai.
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