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bolt_krank wrote:Maybe I've got the wrong idea, but it seems like they're saying "Even if they've got citizenship - they're not Japanese !"
As far as I know - once they've got Jap citizenship, it means they've renounced their previous one. Shouldn't that be enough ?
bolt_krank wrote:Going back a while, aren't Japanese decendants of Mongolians ?
BO-SENSEI wrote:What's next? Japanese baseball teams limiting foreign born baseball players.
TennoChinko wrote::three:
vBulletin wrote: You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Screwed-down Hairdo again.
Yokohammer wrote:Yes, it legitimizes the concept that even if you have acquired Japanese citizenship, you aren't actually Japanese, and that it's perfectly normal that you should continue to be marginalized as a "gaijin." Japanese-ness cannot be acquired. It is a trait only transmitted through the immutable law of blood lineage.
maraboutslim wrote:To be more accurate, it's not the blood per se. It seems to require being raised from a child in Japan and therefore acquiring all the cultural traits that come from being raised here. There is very little variation in education and family/cultural rituals here and so being raised here and learning the standard shit that everyone goes through, having these "traits" and practices ingrained into oneself via experience is the backbone of the "wa" of Japanese society.
maraboutslim wrote:To be more accurate, it's not the blood per se. It seems to require being raised from a child in Japan and therefore acquiring all the cultural traits that come from being raised here...
The belief is that if one has not been raised in this standard way, whether they are debito or a russian sumo wrestler or a pure blood japanese raised abroad, then they have not acquired Japanese-ness.
... It's precisely what happens after one is born that truly makes one Japanese in this society.
maraboutslim wrote:To be more accurate, it's not the blood per se. It seems to require being raised from a child in Japan and therefore acquiring all the cultural traits that come from being raised here. There is very little variation in education and family/cultural rituals here and so being raised here and learning the standard shit that everyone goes through, having these "traits" and practices ingrained into oneself via experience is the backbone of the "wa" of Japanese society.
amdg wrote:So why do people who were born and raised in Japan, who went to Japanese schools, who look Japanese, who follow Japanese customs, speak no other language than Japanese, get discriminated against?
maraboutslim wrote:BTW, are you guys really of the opinion that members of a group do not have the right to self-determine who meets the criteria for membership into their their group? I mean, shit, surely the Japanese get to decide who is Japanese, don't they? Why the hell else should what anyone else thinks about it matter?
This is a wholly different issue from how people should be treated and if, say, a Korean or Canadian in Japan should be treated any differently on a legal level than a Japanese (I tend to think they shouldn't). But culturally, groups should have the right to define themselves however they want and associate with whomever they want and like whomever they want, and so on.
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