Laner said:I doubt it will happen.
A few years ago they let in 12 refugees. Two of them beat and raped a woman in a public bathroom. The collective hysteria of hate was channeled 24/7 so the next years they took zero.
I was there once when the Turkish elections were happening. There were riots in the streets as one side of Turkish voters squared off with the other side. People were aghast, and the NHK news cycle was dominated by this for days.
The Japanese have no issue with feeling like they are better than others. They like that they have lost and founds where tens of thousands of dollars of forgotten things get returned. They love watching their young children gather in the park before school as the yellow hats congregate and bounce off to school, not an adult present. Not a care.
If this happens, it is because Japan owes something to someone. There is zero reason to let in cheap Pakistani workers. At this point, they are having enough problems with the Indians enslaving each other to think about bringing in another volatile element.
Simeon_Strangelight said:Laner said:I doubt it will happen.
A few years ago they let in 12 refugees. Two of them beat and raped a woman in a public bathroom. The collective hysteria of hate was channeled 24/7 so the next years they took zero.
I was there once when the Turkish elections were happening. There were riots in the streets as one side of Turkish voters squared off with the other side. People were aghast, and the NHK news cycle was dominated by this for days.
The Japanese have no issue with feeling like they are better than others. They like that they have lost and founds where tens of thousands of dollars of forgotten things get returned. They love watching their young children gather in the park before school as the yellow hats congregate and bounce off to school, not an adult present. Not a care.
If this happens, it is because Japan owes something to someone. There is zero reason to let in cheap Pakistani workers. At this point, they are having enough problems with the Indians enslaving each other to think about bringing in another volatile element.
The Japanese have to bow their heads to the globohomos - often giving lip-service and a few token actions. But from what I know you cannot become a Japanese citizen without some blood - meaning that you need to marry and then your children may be called Japanese even if they are mixed.
kosko said:From what I understand Japan has stringent work visas which are not a pathway to citizenship. You get in, get money (in exchange for labour) and then get out. If you control the quota and where these workers go they will have minimal impact. I'm not for workers import but the horse has left the barn with the unchecked globalization push.
El Chinito loco said:Elmore said:What could possibly go wrong
One whitepill about this. I think Japanese are a lot less tolerant towards the idea of Muslim rape gangs roaming Tokyo than Brits or the commonwealth. I think the language and cultural barriers are still significantly non Jewed or western enough that they will react with violent backlash at some point.
Heads of state like Abe and a few other leaders may be subverted but Japanese can be quite fierce when awakened. They have more significant remnants of their martial and cultural spirit intact than european nations.
Elmore said:El Chinito loco said:Elmore said:What could possibly go wrong
One whitepill about this. I think Japanese are a lot less tolerant towards the idea of Muslim rape gangs roaming Tokyo than Brits or the commonwealth. I think the language and cultural barriers are still significantly non Jewed or western enough that they will react with violent backlash at some point.
Heads of state like Abe and a few other leaders may be subverted but Japanese can be quite fierce when awakened. They have more significant remnants of their martial and cultural spirit intact than european nations.
Rape Gangs ala Rotherham are only one aspect of it. Even "good" (lol) multiculturalism leads to deracination of the host country, its traditions & culture.
El Chinito loco said:Elmore said:El Chinito loco said:Elmore said:What could possibly go wrong
One whitepill about this. I think Japanese are a lot less tolerant towards the idea of Muslim rape gangs roaming Tokyo than Brits or the commonwealth. I think the language and cultural barriers are still significantly non Jewed or western enough that they will react with violent backlash at some point.
Heads of state like Abe and a few other leaders may be subverted but Japanese can be quite fierce when awakened. They have more significant remnants of their martial and cultural spirit intact than european nations.
Rape Gangs ala Rotherham are only one aspect of it. Even "good" (lol) multiculturalism leads to deracination of the host country, its traditions & culture.
Japan has no history of colonialism on the subcontinent and thus no weird guilt complex when it comes to these street shitter subcontinental people.
Their tolerance will be a lot lower. Globohomo Jewish stuff may be able to infiltrate this through cucked elites pushing this on them at the moment but I think the people will eventually react.
These hindu and muslim rape gang types will exist on the social fringe and there will be nowhere near the infrastructure set up like it is in the guilt ridden west which caters to them.
Japan is intrinsically ethnocentric. At some point if it gets out of hand they will push back hard.
I feel that I understand their historical character a lot more since i've spent so much time reading and researching about asian history.
They will snap at some point and that's how their military far right imperialist movement gained power to begin.
They will tolerate it to a point..but then they will snap it will be violent and bloody.
The Battle of Imphal took place in the region around the city of Imphal, the capital of the state of Manipur in northeast India from March until July 1944. Japanese armies attempted to destroy the Allied forces at Imphal and invade India, but were driven back into Burma with heavy losses. Together with the simultaneous Battle of Kohima on the road by which the encircled Allied forces at Imphal were relieved, the battle was the turning point of the Burma campaign, part of the South-East Asian Theatre of the Second World War. The Japanese defeat at Kohima and Imphal was the largest up until that time, with many of the Japanese deaths resulting from starvation, disease and exhaustion suffered during their retreat.
In September 1936, Wingate was assigned to a staff officer position in the British Mandate of Palestine, and became an intelligence officer. From his arrival he saw the creation of a Jewish State in Palestine as being a religious duty, and immediately put himself into absolute alliance with Jewish political leaders. Palestinian Arab guerrillas had at the time of his arrival begun a campaign of attacks against both British mandate officials and Jewish communities.
Wingate became politically involved with a number of Zionist leaders, and became an ardent Zionist himself. He always returned to Kibbutz En Harod—because he felt familiar with the biblical judge Gideon, who fought in this area, and used it himself as a military base. He formulated the idea of raising small assault units of British-led Jewish commandos armed with grenades and light infantry small arms to combat the Arab revolt. Wingate took his idea personally to Wavell, who was then the commander of British forces in Palestine.
After Wavell gave his permission, Wingate convinced the Zionist Jewish Agency and the leadership of Haganah, the Jewish armed group. In June 1938, the new British commander, General Haining, gave his permission to create the Special Night Squads, armed groups formed of British and Haganah volunteers. The Jewish Agency helped pay salaries and other costs of the Haganah personnel.
kosko said:From what I understand Japan has stringent work visas which are not a pathway to citizenship. You get in, get money (in exchange for labour) and then get out. If you control the quota and where these workers go they will have minimal impact. I'm not for workers import but the horse has left the barn with the unchecked globalization push.
Cobra said:Japanese won't tolerate village idiots, Indian, Pakistani or white.
They're a conservative culture and South Asians that work hard and keep to themselves will do just fine there. Just like they do in the west. Personally, while I've had minor issues, I've done just fine.
The west is a whole different animal in that it's overly tolerant and lump the freeloaders in with the hardworking people. It's commie identity politics. Same thing in these threads. People want to generalize and lump an entire group of people as the issue because they're easy targets. Easier to blame someone else than fix your own devolving culture I guess. It's always someone else's fault. That just comes across as tryhard to me.
The Japanese know better. They have a strong culture and they band together. They're respectful of other cultures but that doesn't mean they're changing their own. I wish the west was more like that and not tryhard like they are.
Cobra said:Japanese won't tolerate village idiots, Indian, Pakistani or white.
They're a conservative culture and South Asians that work hard and keep to themselves will do just fine there. Just like they do in the west. Personally, while I've had minor issues, I've done just fine.
The west is a whole different animal in that it's overly tolerant and lump the freeloaders in with the hardworking people. It's commie identity politics. Same thing in these threads. People want to generalize and lump an entire group of people as the issue because they're easy targets. Easier to blame someone else than fix your own devolving culture I guess. It's always someone else's fault. That just comes across as tryhard to me.
The Japanese know better. They have a strong culture and they band together. They're respectful of other cultures but that doesn't mean they're changing their own. I wish the west was more like that and not tryhard like they are.
For decades, Ms. Gordon said nothing about her role in postwar Japan, at first because the work was secret and later because she did not want her youth — and the fact that she was an American — to become ammunition for the Japanese conservatives who have long clamored for constitutional revision.
But in the mid-1980s, she began to speak of it publicly. The release of her memoir, “The Only Woman in the Room,” published in Japanese in 1995 and in English two years later, made her a celebrity in Japan, where she lectured widely, appeared on television and was the subject of a stage play and a documentary film, “The Gift From Beate.”
In recent years, amid renewed attacks on the Constitution by Japanese conservatives, Ms. Gordon spoke out ardently in its defense.