JapanifiK

The Boards of Education are toxic cesspools of sex crimes, history lies and the deliberate dumbing down of Japan. They must be disbanded and replaced with an acceptable system that gives the kids a chance!

Archive for January, 2009

Apartheid Japan and the Untouchables

Posted by Guy on January 26, 2009

Jizōō Bosatsu has NO power over all other Japan’s ‘Gods!’

Yesterday a colleague invited my family to visit his spouse’s birthplace, a village situated a remote part of the prefecture, so that the kids could participate in the “rice cake throwing ceremony” given in honor of [I think] Jizōō Bosatsu who, they said, protects women and children.

The kids had a whale of a time [no puns intended!] Our farming hosts were very kind, generous people who showered us with gifts, homegrown fruit and crops.

As for the area, the first thing one noticed was that the fairly remote mountainous village was quite poor. A visible testament to their poverty was the ramshackle shrine they’d put together, which was in a sorry state. It felt as if Japan’s other “Gods” had forgotten the villagers, no matter how loud they sounded the shrine bells.

I have often written about the discrimination in Japan. The following article published in NY Times came to my attention this morning, which I’ll print in its entirety for the records.

Japan’s Untouchables!

Japan’s Outcasts Still Wait for Acceptance

By NORIMITSU ONISHI Published: January 15, 2009 NY Times KYOTO, Japan — For Japan, the crowning of Hiromu Nonaka as its top leader would have been as significant as America’s election of its first black president.

hiromu-nonaka

Hiromu Nonaka, second from left in the front row of a photo of Japan’s 1998 cabinet that hangs in his office, and at right last month. Mr. Nonaka rose to chief cabinet secretary, but as a descendant of a class of outcasts further advancement was blocked. Image is copyrighted.

Despite being the descendant of a feudal class of outcasts, who are known as buraku and still face social discrimination, Mr. Nonaka had dexterously occupied top posts in Japan’s governing party and served as the government’s No. 2 official. The next logical step, by 2001, was to become prime minister. Allies urged him on.

But not everyone inside the party was ready for a leader of buraku origin. At least one, Taro Aso, Japan’s current prime minister, made his views clear to his closest associates in a closed-door meeting in 2001.

“Are we really going to let those people take over the leadership of Japan?” Mr. Aso said, according to Hisaoki Kamei, a politician who attended the meeting.

Mr. Kamei said he remembered thinking at the time that “it was inappropriate to say such a thing.” But he and the others in the room let the matter drop, he said, adding, “We never imagined that the remark would leak outside.”

But it did — spreading rapidly among the nation’s political and buraku circles. And more recently, as Mr. Aso became prime minister just weeks before President-elect Barack Obama’s victory, the comment has become a touchstone for many buraku.

How far have they come since Japan began carrying out affirmative action policies for the buraku four decades ago, mirroring the American civil rights movement? If the United States, the yardstick for Japan, could elect a black president, could there be a buraku prime minister here?

The questions were not raised in the society at large, however. The topic of the buraku remains Japan’s biggest taboo, rarely entering private conversations and virtually ignored by the media.

The buraku — ethnically indistinguishable from other Japanese — are descendants of Japanese who, according to Buddhist beliefs, performed tasks considered unclean. Slaughterers, undertakers, executioners and town guards, they were called eta, which means defiled mass, or hinin, nonhuman. Forced to wear telltale clothing, they were segregated into their own neighborhoods.

The oldest buraku neighborhoods are believed to be here in Kyoto, the ancient capital, and date back a millennium. That those neighborhoods survive to this day and that the outcasts’ descendants are still subject to prejudice speak to Japan’s obsession with its past and its inability to overcome it.

Yet nearly identical groups of outcasts remain in a few other places in Asia, like Tibet and Nepal, with the same Buddhist background; they have disappeared only in South Korea, not because prejudice vanished, but because decades of colonialism, war and division made it impossible to identify the outcasts there.

In Japan, every person has a family register that is kept in local town halls and that, with some extrapolation, reveals ancestral birthplaces. Families and companies widely checked birthplaces to ferret out buraku among potential hires or marriage partners until a generation ago. The practice has greatly declined, though, especially among the young.

The buraku were officially liberated in 1871, just a few years after the 13th Amendment abolished slavery in the United States. But as the buraku’s living standards and education levels remained far below national averages, the Japanese government, under pressure from buraku liberation groups, passed a special law to improve conditions for the buraku in 1969. By the time the law expired in 2002, Japan had reportedly spent about $175 billion on affirmative action programs for the buraku.

Confronting Prejudice

Fumie Tanaka, now 39, was born just as the special measures law for the buraku went into effect. She grew up in the Nishinari ward of Osaka, in one of the 48 neighborhoods that were officially designated as buraku areas.

At her neighborhood school, the children began learning about discrimination against the buraku early on. The thinking in Osaka was to confront discrimination head on: the problem lay not with the buraku but with those who harbored prejudice.

Instead of hiding their roots, children were encouraged to “come out,” sometimes by wearing buraku sashes, a practice that Osaka discontinued early this decade but that survives in the countryside.

(Page 2 of 3)

Sheltered in this environment, Ms. Tanaka encountered discrimination only when she began going to high school in another ward. One time, while she was visiting a friend’s house, the grandparents invited her to stay over for lunch.

“The atmosphere was pleasant in the beginning, but then they asked me where I lived,” she said. “When I told them, the grandfather put down his chopsticks right away and went upstairs.”

A generation ago, most buraku married other buraku. But by the 1990s, when Ms. Tanaka met her future husband, who is not a buraku, marriages to outsiders were becoming more common.

“The situation has improved over all,” said Takeshi Kitano, chief of the human rights division in Osaka’s prefectural government. “But there are problems left.”

In Osaka’s 48 buraku neighborhoods, from 10 to 1,000 households each, welfare recipient rates remain higher than Osaka’s average. Educational attainment still lags behind, though not by the wide margins of the past.

What is more, the fruits of the affirmative action policies have produced what is now considered the areas’ most pressing problem: depopulation. The younger buraku, with better education, jobs and opportunities, are moving out. Outsiders, who do not want to be mistaken for buraku, are reluctant to move in.

By contrast, Tokyo decided against designating its buraku neighborhoods. It discreetly helped buraku households, no matter where they were, and industries traditionally dominated by buraku groups. The emphasis was on assimilation.

Over time, the thinking went, it would become impossible to discriminate as people’s memory of the buraku areas’ borders became fuzzier. But the policy effectively pushed people with buraku roots into hiding.

In one of the oldest buraku neighborhoods, just north of central Tokyo, nothing differentiates the landscape from other middle-class areas in the city. Now newcomers outnumber the old-timers. The old-timers, who all know one another, live in fear that their roots will be discovered, said a 76-year-old woman who spoke on the condition that neither she nor her neighborhood be identified.

“Me, too, I belong to those who want to hide,” she said. “I’m also running away.”

A Politician’s Roots

Mr. Nonaka is one of the rare politicians who never hid his buraku roots. In 2001, he was considered a leading contender to become president of the long-governing Liberal Democratic Party and prime minister.

Now 83, he was born into a buraku family from a village outside Kyoto. On his way home at the end of World War II, he considered disappearing so that he would be declared dead, he once wrote. With the evidence of his buraku roots expunged, he had thought, he could remake himself in another part of Japan, he wrote.

Mr. Nonaka eventually entered politics, and, known for his fierce intelligence, he rose quickly. By 2001, he was in a position to aim for the prime ministership. But he had made up his mind not to seek the post. While he had never hidden his roots, he feared that taking the top job would shine a harsh spotlight on them. Already, the increasing attention had hurt his wife, who was not from a buraku family, and his daughter.

“After my wife’s relatives first found out, the way we interacted changed as they became cooler,” Mr. Nonaka said in an interview in his office in Kyoto. “The same thing happened with my son-in-law. So, in that sense, I made my family suffer considerably.”

But rivals worried nonetheless. One of them was Mr. Aso, now 68, who was the epitome of Japan’s ruling elite: the grandson of a former prime minister and the heir to a family conglomerate.

Inside the Liberal Democratic Party, some politicians gossiped about Mr. Nonaka’s roots and labeled some of his closest allies fellow buraku who were hiding their roots.

“We all said those kinds of things,” recalled Yozo Ishikawa, 83, a retired lawmaker who was allied with Mr. Aso.

“That guy’s like this,” Mr. Ishikawa said, lowering his voice and holding up four fingers of his right hand without the thumb, a derogatory gesture indicating a four-legged animal and referring to the buraku.

(Page 3 of 3)

And so, at the closed-door meeting in 2001, Mr. Aso made the comment about “those people” in a “considerably loud voice,” recalled Mr. Kamei, the politician. Mr. Kamei, now 69, had known Mr. Aso since their elementary school days and was one of his biggest backers.

Mr. Aso’s comment would have stayed inside the room had a political reporter not been eavesdropping at the door — a common practice in Japan. But because of the taboo surrounding the topic of the buraku, the comment was never widely reported.

Two years later, just before retiring, Mr. Nonaka confronted Mr. Aso in front of dozens of the party’s top leaders, saying he would “never forgive” him for the comment. Mr. Aso remained silent, according to several people who were there.

It was only in 2005, when an opposition politician directly questioned Mr. Aso about the remark in Parliament, that Mr. Aso said, “I’ve absolutely never made such a comment.”

The prime minister’s office declined a request for an interview with Mr. Aso. A spokesman, Osamu Sakashita, referred instead to Mr. Aso’s remarks in Parliament.

In the end, Mr. Nonaka’s decision not to run in 2001 helped a dark-horse candidate named Junichiro Koizumi become prime minister. Asked whether a Japanese Obama was now possible, Mr. Nonaka said, “Well, I don’t know.”

Hopes for the Future

That is also the question asked by many people of buraku origin recently, as they waver between pessimism and hope.

“Wow, a black president,” said Yukari Asai, 45, one of the two sisters who owns the New Naniwa restaurant in Osaka’s Naniwa ward, in Japan’s biggest buraku neighborhood, reflecting on Mr. Obama’s election. “If a person’s brilliant, a person’s brilliant. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a black person or white person.”

After serving a bowl of udon noodles with pieces of fried beef intestine, a specialty of buraku restaurants, Ms. Asai sounded doubtful that a politician of buraku origin could become prime minister. “Impossible,” she said. “Probably impossible.”

Here in Kyoto, some had not forgotten about Mr. Aso’s comment.

“That someone like that could rise all the way to becoming prime minister says a lot about the situation in Japan now,” said Kenichi Kadooka, 49, who is a professor of English at Ryukoku University and who is from a buraku family.

Still, Mr. Kadooka had not let his anger dim his hopes for a future buraku leader of Japan.

“It’s definitely possible,” he said. “If he’s an excellent person, it’s just ridiculous to say he can’t become prime minister because he just happened to be born a buraku.”

Makiko Inoue contributed reporting. A version of this article appeared in print on January 16, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition. Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company 20-60

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Posted in Japan Politics, Japanese taboo, Kyoto, Taro Aso, discrimination | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Americans Wanted Change

Posted by Guy on January 21, 2009

Japan, a 1,000 years behind!

Japan lacks the acumen and moral courage to beat America in the next “war!”

Whatever the accusations against America’s almost two-party political system and the new President, the fact stands that by electing Obama as President the Americans have wholeheartedly  expressed a desire for change. Enough was enough, they said!

In contrast, Japan’s politics and forced-upon national psyche is morally and ethically at least a 1,000 years behind America’s.

And Japan wants to win the next “war” against America? That’s indeed laughable!

“Japan is the same as one thousand years ago!” —Toshihiko Abe.

Japan’s criminal education system

Yesterday the thugs from Mr Ando’s junior high school of crime stole my kids soccer ball—twice.

On my way home, I saw a pack of 6 students from Mr Ando’s crime school playing with the distinctly familiar “Ampaman” ball half way down the street. Having established that my kids ball was missing, I chased after them. The two boys fled. I managed to persuade the girls to give me their names. A bus driver which had just pulled up at a nearby bus stop refused to call the police, and so did a neighbor, despite my asking.

I returned the ball to our car space/backyard, where it was kept for the last year or so. About an hour later the ball was stolen, again!

In 2008, over a period of about 6 weeks, there were 5 major robberies in our little semi-suburban enclave of about 500 homes, according to the police. However, they were professional jobs carried out by thieves from  “other prefectures,” they said.

The multiple incidents of petty-thefts, property damage and littering that are carried out by Mr Ando’s thugs exclusively target my family in the area.

It seems like every time I write something that the LDP dislikes a whole network of people are mobilized to annoy and intimidate me by littering my home,  stealing or damaging my and my family’s property.

I believe the bullying is political intimidation and is meant to stop me from expressing my opinions against the political conspiracy in Japan. The harassment is unacceptable and MUST STOP NOW!

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Posted in Japan LDP, freedom of speech, japanese opinion, political conspiracy, political intimidation | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

‘Charity’ is Not a Japanese Word!

Posted by Guy on January 20, 2009

Japan is too infertile to ‘grow’ Charity

A much publicized legal case a few years ago was the Ministry of Health, Labor & Welfare’s decision  not to provide workers’ compensation to the wife of a Toyota company employee who committed suicide in 1988 because of overwork. [The Nagoya High Court, some 15 years later, upheld a lower court ruling that repealed the Labor Ministry's appeal. ]

Heard a rumor a few days ago about a husband and wife who, having been laid off by Toyota motors a while ago, also lost their home because they couldn’t keep up the mortgage payment.

I sincerely hope that they don’t commit suicide. But I can’t see how any other ‘option’  might be available to them. There are No safety nets. Compassion never existed in Japan.

The ‘10-rule-90 principle,’  the Okami-Shomin relationship, is not negotiable!

A society without safety nets and lacking in compassion is not a civilized society. Japan certainly has the financial ability to provide all Japanese with social security, at least food and shelter, to prevent them from taking their own lives.

However, while caring for people is within Japan’s financial grasp, it is not politically viable for the tripartite oligarchy. The gatekeepers of Japanese vertical society would never allow it!

Japanifik is not a wealthy prefecture (state.) In fact, a large number of the Japanese who migrated to the Americas were from Japanifik.

Brazilian Residents: Double Losers

It was very sad to see the Brazilian residents from the Kanto area, Aichi and other prefectures demonstrating in Tokyo about job security.

brazilian-residents
Brazilian residents march through Tokyo’s Chuo-ku to protest against poor job security on Sunday. (Source: Mainichi. Image may be subject to copyright.)

[Brazilian residents of Japan are mostly descendants of Japanese emigrants to Brazil.  Large-scale emigration of Japanese to Americas began in the early 20th century. There are about 1.5 million Japanese emigrants and their descendants in Brazil.]

About 500 protesters, walked  from Shimbashi to Ginza [3 km] waving banners reading ‘A chance for employment and education.’

Foreign workers are invariably the first to be fired. Consequently, they can’t afford to send their children to international schools.

“I took Japanese nationality in order to try and get full-time employment to look after my children,” a protester said. “But my factory is planning job cuts in March, and if I get fired it’ll be difficult to find another job.”

Former Japan national soccer team  member Ruy Ramos, a Brazilian-born, also sent a message to the protesters.

“Brazilian residents contribute to Japanese society, and we want the government to bring in measures to safeguard employment, housing and education for them immediately,” said Ramos.

‘Masters in this country will always settle the problem at the sacrifice of their servants. The principle is to have no principle.’  —Toshihiko Abe

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Posted in Ginza, Japan education, Japan national soccer team, Ruy Ramos, international schools in Japan | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Oligarchic Govt: Conspiring against Japanese people

Posted by Guy on January 7, 2009

This post was hacked; it was still blocked by Google as of January 10, 2009

How oligarchic Japan disguised as a democracy conspires against the majority

“Masters in this country will always settle the problem at the sacrifice of their servants. The principle is to have no principle.”  Toshihiko Abe

All for a few, and the few  for no one!

I was prompted to write this brief 2-part essay [heavily influenced by Toshihiko Abe] last month when a university-affiliated school in our prefecture, which is maintained by taxpayer money, failed my 6-year-old son at the entry exam.

My son ‘T’ is not as smart as Einstein. However, he is, I suspect, one of the very few 6-yer-old bilingual children in the prefecture (state).

‘T’ doesn’t know anything about special relativity, but he knows more about the force of gravity than the average junior high school student in Japan. He can read, add and subtract. He can also apply Occam’s razor to ’shave’ his way out of most confusing situations.

Why did the nitwits at school ‘Z’ fail my son?

The short answer is discrimination. But there’s a lot more to that!

Toshhiko Abe defines Japan as “tripartite oligarchy” a vertical society ruled by a handful of politicians, government officials and business leaders, who “have fully enjoyed the fruits of success” Japanese workers have brought.

“Japan’s system to restrict occupation by race,” Abe says, has not changed since the Meiji reforms. Admittedly, he maintains, “the custom of slaves following masters to the grave” has since been abolished.

“Everyone in the Klan followed occupations predetermined by the master; all were resigned to accepting their destinies. No one was allowed to show originality in creativity. An partisan painted the same designs and patterns throughout his lifetime. He became absorbed in the work of drawing a line, in the use of color… .” As a result, to this date, Japanese learn arts and artistic performances “by studying the style and pattern.” The restrictions thus imposed, prohibiting the artists to show creativity, and the resignation to accept one’s destiny, created the idea of do (way of living) in Japanese culture.

“We have do in everything: gado ( the way painters should live); shodo (the way calligraphers should live); shonin do ( the way businessmen should live); sumo do (the way sumo wrestlers should live); kendo, judo, bushido, etc.,” Abe says.

Abe cites the example of Akebono, the first American yokozuna, Grand Champion of sumo wrestling in Japan, who told Western journalists at a press conference in the American Club:  “ I wrestle. The Association takes care of the rest.” This is indeed the philosophy of do, Abe says, “I, the slave, concentrate on the work given by the master. The okami (master) takes care of the rest.” Abe elaborates on the master-slave relationship: “A similar idea is seen in the relationship between Japan and the US. Japan is used to concentrating on efforts to win international economic competition under the rules of the American okami.”

Unfortunately the philosophy of do doesn’t allow freedom and independence, he says. In the Japanese system you are not allowed to freely express your opinions or exert your “own creative power and participate in political fights to change the system without fear of suppression.”

Your life is fully and completely controlled, Abe says.  The restrictions imposed on you allow “no privacy, independence, individual success or originality.” He says. “Write a stroke of a Chinese character with a brush on a sheet of paper with great concentration as though one’s life depended on it was a way to reach spiritual perfection.”


[Maximum extent of permissible creativity: Pathetic exercise misrepresented as an art (!)]
Participants show off their writing at a New Year calligraphy contest in Tokyo January 5, 2009. About 3,000 calligraphers, who qualified in regional competitions throughout Japan, took part in the contest to celebrate New Year. The words read: “Joy of living.” Source and copyright: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon.

Japanese people had no choice. Everyone was controlled by a ruler. “Our ancestors had no choice but to surrender to conquerors if they wanted to survive. All were put under close watch by the local man who was wholeheartedly loyal to the master.” Abe says. “Speaking up was dangerous.” Japanese slave classes even developed a non-verbal methods for communication called hara gei and aun no kokyo.

What if you chose not to surrender to your masters? You would be exiled to ghettos named  bessho, sansho, kaige etc., Abe says. These were small enclaves surrounded by rivers without bridges, where defiant slaves died of starvation. “If they came out of the ghettos, they were immediately killed by farmers, which caused no legal problem, since they were subhuman.” Naturally, the government has obliterated most traces of the history of these “subhuman peoples” since it deviates from Japan’s standard history, KiKi (KiKi is Kojiki and Nihon Shoki). Abs says: “Only a few of these traditions remain today. Yet if we read the remaining materials carefully with insight, we can discover enough clues to reconstruct the truth. The study of local history is most important, yet government scholars have neglected it, since if they advocated a different view, criticizing their predecessors, it might endanger their future position in academia.”

“Indeed ignorance creates a tragic comedy.” Abe says. Even today people are still silent. “In spite of events that occurred in the war, the Japanese people stick to the doctrine that they are essentially good and have always been an agricultural, mono-racial, mono-ethnic people believing in peace, in harmony with nature and the rest of the world.” Japanese people are “taught to believe that their history is unique and they should be proud of it.”

The ruling LDP portrays Japan as a rich and clean “paradise” inhabited by “intelligent and peace-loving” people. And there is a reason why it must remain that way: The power structure behind Japan’s vertical society would collapse—a price the ruling class can ill afford!

How Japan’s vertical society operates

The main rule is that okami sets the rules and you must kowtow to his authority. Under the okami ’s rules you follow what Abe describes as “an escalator system,”  which automatically takes you up.

The first escalator starts from about the age of four. “It starts as early as education in kindergarten. I must go to a good school if I want to be successful, and it is best to enter a famous school with a complete course—kindergarten, primarily, junior high, high school and university, all of which belong to the same management. Then I can graduate university on the escalator without much effort, provided my records are average.”

“In order to pass examinations, I need to memorize hundreds of thousands of ‘right answers.’ I’m not in a position to question the board about the answers. By the time I graduate university I will be a standard Japanese; I will have the same view of emperor and empress institution as others. I believe the Japanese creed. I will be admitted to the vertical society and can have a good job in government or in a large business corporation, where I will spend most of my life until I retire. This is another escalator and it will take me to the top if I keep riding it. The escalator for government officials will take me to the office of administrative vice-minister, the highest position in the ministry. Then I can choose my second line, a may run in an election as an LDP candidate to become a Diet member and take care of the businesses I formerly controlled, or I could be employed by a large private business as a board director to help gain permits and licenses from the ministry for which I served.” Abe says.

My son didn’t go to a special kindergarten because his existing pre-school offered better values in personal and social skill.  In the case of 90 percent of all Japanese children, however, going to one of those special kindergartens is all but impossible for two reasons. First, the cost may be prohibitive; second, as both parents work during the day they cannot adjust to the half-day kindergarten hours.

But the private schools be allowed to do their business? Surely, if the parents can’t afford to send … . In a system where the taxpayer is forced to bail out private companies, no one should be allowed to operate above the people.

That said, school “Z”  that refused my son and most of the ‘good’ schools like it aren’t private schools; they are national schools fully financed by the government.

Here’s the irony: In order to enter ‘good’ national schools, your children must first go to private kindergartens, which more than 90 percent of Japanese cannot afford!

That’s how Japan’s oligarchic government conspires against 90 percent of its own population, the shomin*, by making it impossible for their children to study at “good” schools that they, the slaves, have paid for!

[*shomin is defind by Abe as: "Illegitimate people. Japanese of mixed racial origins, never legitimized by their T'ang Chinese and Korean masters."]

Okami protects the top of the herd and bestows them with good jobs despite any shortcoming that they might have, Abe says. “Management of the big company does not require special talents or entrepreneurial guts, because the company itself is on the escalator system provided by the government. Take Japanese banks, for example. The Ministry of Finance protects them from bankruptcy with heavy regulation barriers. … the fees banks charge for various services are set by the ministry at that level where the weakest bank can be profitable. For the management of a top rated bank to show a huge profit for the shareholders requires little effort. On the other hand, it was reported that each of the ten top Japanese banks at the end of march, 1993, had more than $10 billion in bad debts as a result of careless loans made to businesses during the booming economy of the 80’s,” which was  due to the government’s poor economic policy. The end result was that the shareholders lost their investment. However, not a single manager or government official ever accepted any responsibility toward the victims, Abe says.” The interests of the people have been ignored, as usual.”

What happens to these high-ranking officials and top managers who play god with people’s livelihood? Abe says the would be “honored as  good citizens who have made significant contributions to the nation. Medals will be solemnly given in ceremonies attended by the emperor, and the decorated will be invited to the imperial garden party.”

And what about the Japanese employees who dedicate the best years of their lives working selflessly for a company? what do they get out of all this?  Not much, Abe says.  “Although Japanese companies have become extremely rich, employees remain in a rather poor environment.  What happens to the children of the ‘family’ after they have been so loyal to their father?” Employee in their late 50’s  the “gray-haired warriors who fought at the front in the economic war as ‘human shields,’” reach the end of their usefulness and “are disposed of one by one,” Abe says. “After 40 years of faithful service, they must work for their family in a new company, still under the strain of loyalty. Their income is not enough to retire. They face the high cost of living.  It was expensive to educate their children. Their taxes are high, their pensions low.  Many still have a mortgage to pay. This is a new style of slavery, born of the same tradition of the vertical society. Employees dedicate their lives and the company responds with a “throwaway” tradition at the end. Though we live in a modern industrial world, employees in Japanese companies today are much like our ancestors who were hunted down from the mountains and made slave-soldiers to be used as human shields in battle. Today they fight in economic wars, but the outcome is much the same. They must use, like a slave soldiers, two swords, one in each hand, to fend off enemy arrows.”

Why are the ordinary Japanese always left high and dry? Why are they treated so ruthlessly? Because the okami does not believe shomin (the people) have any rights or interests,” Abe says. “Japan is the same as one thousand years ago!”

I find the staff at school “Z” and the university to which it’s affiliated, as well the local government employees who are responsible for discriminating against my son guilty of conspiracy against the majority of Japanese people.

On behalf of this majority who are shafted by the conspiratorial system, I demand the permanent closure of school “Z,” dismissal of its staff and the managers at the affiliated university, immediately.

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Part I - Japan: New Challenges, NO Fresh Ideas!

Posted in Japan Blogs, Japan education, Occam’s razor, discrimination in japan, taxpayer | Tagged: , , , , | 5 Comments »