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nottu wrote:...I could continue with an intelligent conversation about this but most would probably be bored...
Catoneinutica wrote:...executions of the hapless Japanese drug mules (I have no doubt that they were in the thrall of loansharks) in Dalian....
nottu wrote:What a load of fucking horseshit diarrhea. Is this best you got?
Go back to reading your loser economist blogs.
Japan will have the last laugh in front of Western decay.
idiot
AruOjisan wrote:...Look no further than countries like Sweden/Scandanavia and Switzerland, to see the future of Japan IMO. Small, homogenous societies with very limited immigration...
Mulboyne wrote:You might want to rethink your comparisons. None of the countries you mention has limited immigration.
Immigrants as a % of population:
Sweden: 12%
Norway: 7%
Denmark:7%
Switzerland: 23%
In 2005, there were 1,555,505 foreign residents permanently residing in Japan, representing 1.22% of the Japanese population.
A significant portion of these foreign residents are in fact the descendants of Korean and Chinese labourers, who, in many cases, despite being born in Japan and only speaking Japanese, are not necessarily classed as Japanese citizens. Most Koreans in Japan have never been to the Korean Peninsula and do not speak Korean.
Since the Japanese population census asks the people's nationality rather than their ethnic background, naturalized Japanese citizens and Japanese nationals with multi-ethnic background are considered to be ethnically Japanese in the population census of Japan. Thus, in spite of the widespread belief that Japan is ethnically homogeneous, it is probably more accurate to describe it as a multiethnic society.
nottu wrote:Immigrants from where?
Samurai_Jerk wrote:...Though I know that have their third-world laborers, Switzerland for example has a lot of millionaire tax "refugees" and people from the same ethnolinguistic group of a particular region who just happened to have been born on the other side of the national border.
Mulboyne wrote:You might want to tell the Swiss that.
AruOjisan wrote:This, in fact, goes back to an assertion I saw ridiculed earlier: that Japanese aren't racist. Based on my limited knowledge/experience, I would tend to agree with this, when defined exclusively in terms of actual race/ethnicity. My understanding is JPN shun those who act differently. And if JPN discrimination is indeed based on how one acts rather than how they look, I'd prefer it 1000x over the US situation--i.e., I'd rather be judged according to something I can control (i.e., culture) than for something I can't (i.e., race).
AruOjisan wrote:...could you please elaborate a bit?
Mulboyne wrote:You might want to tell the Swiss that.
AruOjisan wrote:This, in fact, goes back to an assertion I saw ridiculed earlier: that Japanese aren't racist. Based on my limited knowledge/experience, I would tend to agree with this, when defined exclusively in terms of actual race/ethnicity. My understanding is JPN shun those who act differently. And if JPN discrimination is indeed based on how one acts rather than how they look, I'd prefer it 1000x over the US situation--i.e., I'd rather be judged according to something I can control (i.e., culture) than for something I can't (i.e., race).
Samurai_Jerk wrote:You also have to look at how ethnic Koreans who were born and raised in Japan and are physically and culturally indistinguishable from the Japanese have been treated. Cut off from good jobs and good schools and only able to make it by completely hiding their ethinic origins.
BigInJapan wrote:I have heard similar stories about Zainichi Koreans and Chinese in Japan in the past, but how true is this in 2010?
I have personally met a woman of Korean descent, born and raised in Japan, and she is the head of the language dept. at a Japanese university (and she uses her Korean full name).
And how about the female politician "Renho" (goes by her first name only) who has a Taiwanese mother and Japanese father? Her ethnic background has been brought up, but it didn't stop her from becoming a politician.
Recent story on Renho in the Japan Times.
Just curious, but can you name some good jobs and good schools for reference?
BigInJapan wrote:I have heard similar stories about Zainichi Koreans and Chinese in Japan in the past, but how true is this in 2010?
I have personally met a woman of Korean descent, born and raised in Japan, and she is the head of the language dept. at a Japanese university (and she uses her Korean full name).
And how about the female politician "Renho" (goes by her first name only) who has a Taiwanese mother and Japanese father? Her ethnic background has been brought up, but it didn't stop her from becoming a politician.
Recent story on Renho in the Japan Times.
Just curious, but can you name some good jobs and good schools for reference?
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I was giving a historical perspective and not neccessarily talking about the actualy situation on the ground now. However, if it were no longer an issue it wouldn't be the sensitive topic it still seems to be.
Anyway, my point was that the Japanese care just as much about ethnic origin and physical appearance as they do about how one behaves in determining ones Japaneseness. That's why companies and other institutions are no longer allowed to ask about honseki and it's not printed on the face of your drivers' license.
nottu wrote:It's not real complicated.
Japanese is Japanese, not Japanese is not Japanese,
Cleveland is Cleveland.
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