Sometimes in the discussions here, yes. Also in the media, with repeated travel programs, etc about Japan just focusing on the wierd / bad, not on the good. Like a lot of the stories comming out about people forgetting very expensive belongings, then comming back to find them still there. I had not heard any of this before....Perfice said:There are people who look down on Japan for being weird? WTF.
This is the first I've ever heard about this.
According to this: http://www.peterpayne.net/2011/03/japan-earthquake-update.html the opposite is true. People who were shopping actually waited outside with their items and then went back in to purchase them. It doesn't seem like his area got the worst of it, but I imagine the feeling is the same around the country. From what I gather, looting wouldn't be commonplace because no one would want to stand out. Then again, human nature being what it is, I wouldn't be surprised to find that there was a little crime that just got unreported.Fetzenfisch said:Well if you count "searching the rubble that once was our city for useful things" then there is indeed a lot of looting. But without stores to storm it just doesnt look like it
Well, mostly Aussie's and British people go to these forums from what I've seen so it might be a cultural thing. I've had people talk about the vending machine thing but usually they say JP is awesome for it. I lived in JP for the last two years and I've still never seen any of these vending machines personally.ph0b0s123 said:Sometimes in the discussions here, yes. Also in the media, with repeated travel programs, etc about Japan just focusing on the wierd / bad, not on the good. Like a lot of the stories comming out about people forgetting very expensive belongings, then comming back to find them still there. I had not heard any of this before....Perfice said:There are people who look down on Japan for being weird? WTF.
This is the first I've ever heard about this.
That's what I means by a bit of a negative bias, hence I wanted to make a thread to point out some of the positive.
according to the pictures in the news what i discribed is indeed the case. its just not seen as crime because everyone forgot to label all the things they had in their houses that dont exist any more. Its just more "not wasting what might still be good", but technically its still theft.Cerrida said:According to this: http://www.peterpayne.net/2011/03/japan-earthquake-update.html the opposite is true. People who were shopping actually waited outside with their items and then went back in to purchase them. It doesn't seem like his area got the worst of it, but I imagine the feeling is the same around the country. From what I gather, looting wouldn't be commonplace because no one would want to stand out. Then again, human nature being what it is, I wouldn't be surprised to find that there was a little crime that just got unreported.Fetzenfisch said:Well if you count "searching the rubble that once was our city for useful things" then there is indeed a lot of looting. But without stores to storm it just doesnt look like it
To be fair the manners here are like automatic responses. It's nice to hear the 'please's, 'thank you's and 'welcome in's, but you do feel the lack of real meaning there.this isnt my name said:If it wasnt for the tsunamis, earthquakes and nuclear reactor explosions, Japan seems like a nice place to live, aside from the fact Japan seems a bit crazy at times.
Damn I envy them. Why couldnt the UK be more like that ? Werent we big on manners, where did we go wrong T.T
Well when America was hit with hurricane Katrina, there was alot looting and raping involved.AmrasCalmacil said:Did people expect looting?
TBH, Japan is awesome... if you're Japanese. If not, prepare to feel really weird for a while. The Japanese will be really nice and polite to you, but they will take a long, LONG time to really trust you as they would another Japanese person. Add to that the very unique language and other cultural things that just go with culture shock, and it can get to be a hassle for a foreigner moving here. They don't really tell you much of anything you need to watch out for either, just trusting you'll figure it out on your own. In other words, they don't really know how to deal with anything foreign to them, and will assume you're just like the stereotypes they've seen of foreigners in the media, or exactly like the last foreigner they may have met. In a sense, they're a lot like Americans who've never been outside the country that way. Trust me, I know from experience... Also, it's expensive to live here, even compared to America.this isnt my name said:Were we always like that ?Scorched_Cascade said:Because we are less tolerant when other people arn't as polite as us. We are also very jaded and cynical as a nation and have a lack of national pride. The Japanese are very proud of their country and their people as whole.this isnt my name said:Damn I envy them. Why couldnt the UK be more like that ? Werent we big on manners, where did we go wrong T.T
Thought the victorian times was everyone had to have loads of annoying manners about everything. Why couldnt our culture just have frozen then. We dont have pride anymore, thats for sure, but we had pride. Allthough I dont see how pride is relivant here. Still I envy them, japan must be a great place to live if you get over the weird things they come out with, and also how are they big on manners ? Isnt there a real problem with groping and other pervy stuff in the trains there ?
I agree, but before it becomes a love fest, I know I would get a very different view about the Japanese from anyone who was Japanese POW during WWII. Just saying.....xPixelatedx said:Why is any of that a surprise? Japan is famous for being a clean and polite society with very little crime.
Any idea someone might have had to the contrary would be entirely based on a raciest (or otherwise illogical) assumption. What assumption that might be I haven't the slightest idea because none of the Japanese stereotypes could be relevant.
From our corporations to the every-man, we all have something to learn from Japan's example right now about being decent human beings. If anything we should be re-evaluating ourselves right now.
There's actually a condition called "Paris Syndrome" which happens to a fair amount of Japanese people when they first visit France. It doesn't match up to the stereotypes they believe about it and they go into massive culture shock consisting of:Toriver said:*snipped*[they] will assume you're just like the stereotypes they've seen of foreigners in the media, or exactly like the last foreigner they may have met. In a sense, they're a lot like Americans who've never been outside the country that way. Trust me, I know from experience... Also, it's expensive to live here, even compared to America.this isnt my name said:Were we always like that ?Scorched_Cascade said:Because we are less tolerant when other people arn't as polite as us. We are also very jaded and cynical as a nation and have a lack of national pride. The Japanese are very proud of their country and their people as whole.this isnt my name said:Damn I envy them. Why couldnt the UK be more like that ? Werent we big on manners, where did we go wrong T.T
Thought the victorian times was everyone had to have loads of annoying manners about everything. Why couldnt our culture just have frozen then. We dont have pride anymore, thats for sure, but we had pride. Allthough I dont see how pride is relivant here. Still I envy them, japan must be a great place to live if you get over the weird things they come out with, and also how are they big on manners ? Isnt there a real problem with groping and other pervy stuff in the trains there ?
Due to a) being unable to reconcile France with the picture their media has told them about it and b) how informal (and seemingly rude to a Japanese person) French society and culture is."acute delusional states, hallucinations, feelings of persecution (delusions of being a victim of prejudice, aggression, or hostility from others), derealization, depersonalization, anxiety, and also psychosomatic manifestations such as dizziness, tachycardia, sweating"
I've heard of it. The Japanese people I met in America never seemed to experience it, though, so that was good. I can't remember where I heard about it, though...Scorched_Cascade said:There's actually a condition called "Paris Syndrome" which happens to a fair amount of Japanese people when they first visit France. It doesn't match up to the stereotypes they believe about it and they go into massive culture shock consisting of:
Due to a) being unable to reconcile France with the picture their media has told them about it and b) how informal (and seemingly rude to a Japanese person) French society and culture is."acute delusional states, hallucinations, feelings of persecution (delusions of being a victim of prejudice, aggression, or hostility from others), derealization, depersonalization, anxiety, and also psychosomatic manifestations such as dizziness, tachycardia, sweating"
Japan's society is generally more polite and more communal. I don't claim to be an expert but you can tell because the Yakuza, the main criminal organisation there, was the main provider of aid at several previous natural disasters.ph0b0s123 said:In most other countries when disaster hits and supplys are short you normaly see looting. Was it obvious that this would not happen in Japan. Shops cutting their prices also seemed to be something that would not happen elsewhere.AmrasCalmacil said:Did people expect looting?
-snip-
So it begs the question, why is Japan different and is there something we can learn. And should we give Japan's supposed weirdness more respect than we do?
Germany has grown up yes but I wouldn't compare the Japenese to them. Germans are only just regaining their sense of national pride. I lived with 3 German girls over a year and this comic pretty much details what they grew up with:ph0b0s123 said:But then maybe the Japanese have 'grown up' since then. The same way the Germans have. We British are no poster children for treatment of other nationalities in the past either.