Sorry if a thread on this topic already exists; couldn't find one. There's a tedious debate at JapanToday about Belgian soccer fans shouting "Kawashima, Fukushima" at Lierse goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima:
http://www.japantoday.com/category/sports/view/belgian-soccer-match-halted-after-fukushima-taunts
The comments seem to have bifurcated into opposing camps along these lines:
Camp 1: Oh, those Euro soccer fans are savages and proles.
Camp 2: Boy needs to toughen up! Take a few lessons in self-control from that French homo Zidane.
I say: everyone's a winner! "Fukushima" is absolutely fair game to taunt a nipponeser with; "we Japanese" are quick to take credit for our exceptional culture when it suits us, but when it causes disasters that fuck the planet up, well, how racist of you to blame it on Japanese culture. That was the thesis of some Japanese hack academic in the badlands of England a couple of months ago. He didn't complain when the foreign media was applauding the putative lack of looting by the stoic, restrained Japanese, but when the galactically incompetent reaction of TEPCO and the J-govt to the Daiichi disaster was attributed to Japanese cultural traits, he really got his knickers in a twist.
So: maybe 1000 square kilometers of NE Japan is going to be more-or-less permanently uninhabitable: own it, "we Japanese"!
-catone
-of course, the soccer fans should've taken pains to stress that they meant "Fukushima, the Daiichi Disaster," and not "Fukushima, the earthquake and tsunami." But that kind of nuanced approach doesn't lend itself well to chants.