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AndIt is a undisputed fact that Japan has achieved a remarkable safe society compared to other industrialized countries, and they incarcerate far fewer than for instance the UK (with a prisoner rate 3 times higher) or the US (13 times higher). Yet it is also a carefully maintained image that ignores many darker aspect of the Japanese society. Its modern surface often doesn’t extend to social attitudes towards women in this male-dominated culture. Unlike the rare violent crimes, sexual assaults are said to be widespread and severely underreported. The existence of chikan (“perverts”, meaning men groping women in public) is a massive problem and has led to the creation of “women-only” carriages in most major cities. Japanese police are also criticized for failing to take victims of sexual crimes seriously time and again as a result of either chauvinist bias or an inability to investigate such crimes.
What are most disturbing are however arguments that the low crime is partially a result of a police culture that are obsessed with keeping crime statistics low. Former detectives claim that police is unwilling to investigate homicides unless there is a clear suspects and frequently labels unnatural deaths as suicides without performing autopsies. Coincidentally, Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
Takechanpoo wrote:AndIt is a undisputed fact that Japan has achieved a remarkable safe society compared to other industrialized countries, and they incarcerate far fewer than for instance the UK (with a prisoner rate 3 times higher) or the US (13 times higher). Yet it is also a carefully maintained image that ignores many darker aspect of the Japanese society. Its modern surface often doesn’t extend to social attitudes towards women in this male-dominated culture. Unlike the rare violent crimes, sexual assaults are said to be widespread and severely underreported. The existence of chikan (“perverts”, meaning men groping women in public) is a massive problem and has led to the creation of “women-only” carriages in most major cities. Japanese police are also criticized for failing to take victims of sexual crimes seriously time and again as a result of either chauvinist bias or an inability to investigate such crimes.
What are most disturbing are however arguments that the low crime is partially a result of a police culture that are obsessed with keeping crime statistics low. Former detectives claim that police is unwilling to investigate homicides unless there is a clear suspects and frequently labels unnatural deaths as suicides without performing autopsies. Coincidentally, Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
full of anecdotes and imaginations cloud-built by a would-be or wanna-be japannologist.
but its at least interesting as a short novel.
Russell wrote:Takechanpoo wrote:AndIt is a undisputed fact that Japan has achieved a remarkable safe society compared to other industrialized countries, and they incarcerate far fewer than for instance the UK (with a prisoner rate 3 times higher) or the US (13 times higher). Yet it is also a carefully maintained image that ignores many darker aspect of the Japanese society. Its modern surface often doesn’t extend to social attitudes towards women in this male-dominated culture. Unlike the rare violent crimes, sexual assaults are said to be widespread and severely underreported. The existence of chikan (“perverts”, meaning men groping women in public) is a massive problem and has led to the creation of “women-only” carriages in most major cities. Japanese police are also criticized for failing to take victims of sexual crimes seriously time and again as a result of either chauvinist bias or an inability to investigate such crimes.
What are most disturbing are however arguments that the low crime is partially a result of a police culture that are obsessed with keeping crime statistics low. Former detectives claim that police is unwilling to investigate homicides unless there is a clear suspects and frequently labels unnatural deaths as suicides without performing autopsies. Coincidentally, Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
full of anecdotes and imaginations cloud-built by a would-be or wanna-be japannologist.
but its at least interesting as a short novel.
Yeah, like those women-only carriages I see everyday on my commute do not really exist...
Takechanpoo wrote:if reported case does not reflect committed case, this kind of statistics are almost meaningless.
i recommend you to see the fact as it is, putting aside your gaijins k-sympathy as a reaction toward recent j-anti-koreanism.
Ha, the J-girls really are a peculiar breed of femi-nazis; maybe that's why we love themWage Slave wrote:to persecute all men.
Takechanpoo wrote:AndIt is a undisputed fact that Japan has achieved a remarkable safe society compared to other industrialized countries, and they incarcerate far fewer than for instance the UK (with a prisoner rate 3 times higher) or the US (13 times higher). Yet it is also a carefully maintained image that ignores many darker aspect of the Japanese society. Its modern surface often doesn’t extend to social attitudes towards women in this male-dominated culture. Unlike the rare violent crimes, sexual assaults are said to be widespread and severely underreported. The existence of chikan (“perverts”, meaning men groping women in public) is a massive problem and has led to the creation of “women-only” carriages in most major cities. Japanese police are also criticized for failing to take victims of sexual crimes seriously time and again as a result of either chauvinist bias or an inability to investigate such crimes.
What are most disturbing are however arguments that the low crime is partially a result of a police culture that are obsessed with keeping crime statistics low. Former detectives claim that police is unwilling to investigate homicides unless there is a clear suspects and frequently labels unnatural deaths as suicides without performing autopsies. Coincidentally, Japan has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.
full of anecdotes and imaginations cloud-built by a would-be or wanna-be japannologist.
but its at least interesting as a short novel.
matsuki wrote:Ask any decent looking J-girl that has grown up here if she's ever been the victim of chikan. Ask the same of decent looking girls from any other country. Survey says...
wagyl wrote:... because it is all to do with looks?
wagyl wrote:matsuki wrote:Ask any decent looking J-girl that has grown up here if she's ever been the victim of chikan. Ask the same of decent looking girls from any other country. Survey says...
... because it is all to do with looks?
I think it is only to do with the equipment they pack, and for some perpetrator, how the victim reacts. And there, in the reactions, is where you might see some cultural differences.
Fifteen women were arrested and eight brothels were shut down last month in northwest Dallas as part of a sex-trafficking investigation, authorities say.
Those arrested were ... Kum Shugars, 67
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Those arrested were ... Kum Shugars, 67
matsuki wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:Those arrested were ... Kum Shugars, 67
wagyl wrote:If Denis Young Kim is a Korean, then you must accept Willson Massahiro Uyesugi is a Japanese.
Or you can say that both are Brazilians.
TennoChinko wrote:
If you meant "Byran Koji Uyesugi", the convicted murderer in the 1999 Xerox killings in Hawaii,.
TennoChinko wrote:wagyl wrote:If Denis Young Kim is a Korean, then you must accept Willson Massahiro Uyesugi is a Japanese.
Or you can say that both are Brazilians.
Who is "Willson Massahiro Uyesugi"?
If you meant "Byran Koji Uyesugi", the convicted murderer in the 1999 Xerox killings in Hawaii, he was definitely American - 3rd or 4th generation Japanese American born in Hawaii with a birth certificate that probably passes more muster than the one Obama released.
According to the papers, "Denis Young Kim" is the son of two S Korean immigrants (in Brazil) and speaks Portugeuse with a thick accent; witnesses indicate they saw him yell at his victim earlier in a foreign language (likely Korean).
I guess there are still some politically-correct evangelists who will also argue that Ahmad Khan Rahami is a United States citizen and that any mention of his birthplace, religion and ethnicity are wholly irrelevant.
I'm not one of them.
TennoChinko wrote:Who is "Willson Massahiro Uyesugi"?
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