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jim katta wrote:...On the bright side, for all you rogues, this guy's story would seem to indicate that if he could squeeze a year and a half out of the 3 month visa, it seems like 9 months might be a lock. If you can't find your way into a visa in 9 months, you should probably go home anyway.
Taro Toporific wrote:He stayed in Japan for more than 1.5 years by renewing a 90-day tourist visa (while occasionally working illegally):violin: .
GomiGirl wrote:Actually I don't think he was working at all..... I gave him a few options (start a company, free lance, journalists visa) and I even put him in contact with a laywer or two but we are not in contact anymore and I am not sure what he decided to do. A nice guy and I am sorry that he was not able to sort out something in order to stay.
foreign in Japan:
j o u r n a l i s t 's
v i s a
August 2001:
When I planned to move to Tokyo for a year, I figured I would need permission from the Japanese government to reside in that country. Sure I could come and go on the flexible 90 day tourist visas, like most of the footloose reporters and business people I know. But what if I was caught and questioned by the police after a street art performance? What if I am coming and going from Korea to renew my visa, and they detain me at the border or ask me to return to Korea? That would make renting an apartment in Tokyo an expensive waste....
...So I set about getting a visa to live in Japan for one year. It's immediately apparent the the process, at least from the Japanese perspective, is designed to prove that you are affiliated and upstanding. Affiliated - some company or established group is sending you as a representative...
Turns out "freelance" is a tough legitimate claim to have. It's a strange status - freelance writer - by nature there are few affiliations. ...more....
Taro Toporific wrote:Justin of http://www.Links.net described his visa fun in very similar situation to Steve's but with a much better resolution.
Charles wrote:Well that was a very odd story. If I read it correctly, Justin went to all the trouble to get a 1 year journalist's visa and then left the country after only 2 months. Seems like he could have gotten by on a tourist visa.
Wikipedia wrote:Blogging
.....Justin Hall, who began eleven years of personal "blogging" in 1994 while a student at Swarthmore College, is generally recognized as one of the earliest bloggers....
Taro Toporific wrote:(No, I'm not his friend of Justin or a stalker. He went to school with my cousin in Chicago and Justin's family lived in the neighborhood.)
Taro Toporific wrote:Nope, the near Northside.
" wrote:6/08- bad news.
I'm leaving Japan for awhile. The Visa Ministry will be conducting one of their periodic investigations of my crimes and subversive activities, and if they decide to let me back in, then I'll have a party and you're all invited. Until then, I will be living in America, continuing to study Nihongo, and updating my Kanji website periodically.
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