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50 Facts That Prove Japan Is Unlike Any Other Country (New Pics)
Right near the top of our bucket lists is visiting Japan someday (hopefully soon). It’s a fascinating country that sometimes seems more at home in a fairytale book than on Planet Earth. There’s a sense of excitement, modernity, and love for its people present there that’s almost unparalleled anywhere else in the world. It’s far from just about anime, manga, samurai, and Sony—concentrating just on those would do the culture a disservice.
Our team here at Bored Panda wanted to show you some of the most interesting aspects of life in Japan, so we’ve lovingly curated this list for you that proves that it’s a country that’s both extremely technologically advanced and deeply magical and wondrous at its core. Check out the coolest facts about Japan below, upvote your fave pics, and let us know what you personally love the most about the country and Japanese culture.
By the way, when you’re done enjoying this list, have a look through our earlier ‘Facts about Japan’ article series right here: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.
This post may include affiliate links.
A Cafe In Japan Is Hiring Paralyzed People To Control Robot Servers In Order To Still Make An Income
This is caring to the max, giving people of all situations a way to serve the community
Bus Drivers In Japan, Striking In Such A Way That People Don't Suffer
Tree In Japan Being Relocated To Make Way For A Road
Earlier, Japanese language expert Kotryna Kvietkauskaitė, from Lithuania, explained to Bored Panda that the Japanese are very welcoming of foreigners who put in the effort to speak their language and absorb their culture.
“In Japan, when a foreigner speaks Japanese, they can often get praise for their language skills, even if they simply introduced themselves which is one of the first things that students learn to do,” she said that you’ll often get points for trying, even if what you’re saying isn’t at native-level standards yet.
This Is A Rice Paddy. Farmers In Japan Plant Specific Rice Species To Make These Amazing Artworks
This is just plain amazing. Rice to see them putting their artistic skills to the best.
Long Walkway Covered In Semi-Transparent Umbrellas In Moominvalley Park, Saitama Prefecture, Japan
Penguin Soap Opera In Kyoto Aquarium
Those charts also show family relations, friendships, enemies, colleagues, classmates and what the characters think of each other. So while the text is too small for me to read, there’s probably also a whole lot of stuff like “hates because he stole her fish one time”.
Language expert Kotryna said that learning any language, including Japanese, is a personal experience. Everyone moves at their own pace and we shouldn’t be in a rush to compare ourselves to others in our own journeys.
“One person might take 5 years until they learn to read Japanese fiction without any problems while another person might take 10 years. In other words, there isn’t a clearly-defined point that can be reached after which a person can confidently state that they know Japanese as well as the average native,” she said. That’s why you shouldn’t wait for the ‘perfect’ moment to visit the country (i.e. when you know the language well enough): you ought to embrace the culture and absorb the language by going there in person as soon as you can.
Train Tracks In Japan Have Special Pathways For Turtles Under Them To Avoid Turtle Casulaties And Train Delays
That's really thoughtful. I commend the people who thought of this idea.
There Is A Phone Booth Known As The “Telephone Of The Wind" On A Hill Overlooking The Ocean In Otsuchi Town In Northeastern Japan. It Is Connected To Nowhere, But People Come To "Call" Family Members Lost During The 2011 Earthquake And Tsunami
This 400 Year Old Bonsai Tree Survived The Bombing Of Hiroshima In Japan
400 years of history: so this tree saw the rise of Japanese industrialization, the Meijing Dynasty, the war with China, both World Wars, and the rise of anime. Now that's crazy.
The world’s full of fans of Japan and its culture. There’s nothing wrong with being a Japanophile, considering the huge impact the 126-million-people strong country has had on the entertainment and tech industries.
However, there are times when your love for a foreign country can be taken to extremes and go from kawaii to cringey. One example when you can take an obsession with Japan too far is when you end up with people getting tattoos of Japanese kanji done without knowing what the symbols actually mean.
On Many Japanese Toilets, The Hand Wash Sink Is Attached So That You Can Wash Your Hands And Reuse The Water For The Next Flush. Japan Saves Millions Of Liters Of Water Every Year Doing This
These should be more common worldwide. Just think about the amount of water it would save across the globe.
Hospital Food In Japan
Geez Louise. Our hospital food is more like what prisoners get, which is already shameful. But seeing this just makes ours look like pig slurry.
There's An Ancient Japanese Pruning Method From The 14th Century That Allows Lumber Production Without Cutting Down Trees Called “Daisugi”
Or a foreigner who’s just started learning the language (and just managed to painstakingly memorize the hiragana alphabet) suddenly starts pretending that they know the language better than actual experts. In their love of the culture, some folks end up making fools of themselves because they’re too eager to demonstrate that they’re bigger fans than anyone else.
However, the vast majority of Japanophiles love the country and culture enough to be humble enough with their knowledge and not jump up at every opportunity to show it off. After all, if we’re all in love with Japanese culture, why turn it into a competition for who loves it the most? Rather, it’s best to share your favorite aspects with others and listen to others share theirs.
Japan Repair A Sinkhole In Fukuoka City In 2 Days
Now that's great dedication and work. Hard hats of to you Japan.
Sadly this isn't true... 1) It took 6 days, english medias didn't take a second look at their informations (look in japanese) 2) It was so fast the ciment/asphalte wasn't "ready" when car/bus were again allowed, the road started to sink again (a little but still sinking) so they had to work on it again later.
6 days is still impressive. I've seen roads under construction for years and that's just paving couple blocks.
Load More Replies...2?! DAYS?! But but but how?? Civil service apparently can function, at least in one place on the globe.
The road would be closed for a year in England, well done getting it fixed so quickly
One day where I live I happened to see a public sidewalk being made. There were about 15 guys in the city crew but only about 5 guys were actually doing any work at any given time!
This would take two months in America. One guy works while the others just watch
In my country we would have a public procurement bid. Then losing companies would sue. It would drag on for years, cost twice as much in litigation fees than it would have cost to fix it in the first place. And then it would be declared economically unviable to fix it.
America couldn't dream of doing something like this, it would take 6 months
Impressive. I don't know a lot about Japanese infrastructure so I hope that it wasn't done dodgily like some Asian areas.
I'm thinkin' 3 months minimum in US if in summer, else 4-6 months in winter. . . and then, only if they could divert traffic for a 4 block radius.
Now there I give them credit. In the US it takes months just to complete the environmental impact statement.
A city in my country, Surabaya, fixed similar sinkhole in three days. Not much different.
In America that would take at least a year. Most days there would be over 150 workers and 148 actually working and they would "fix" it with a 3 inch steel plate to give drivers a nice hard bump. The longer the job last the more hours they get paid for.
We have so many potholes in Pennsylvania and they never get fixed
That is amazing ! The stupid highway outside my neighborhood has been under construction for two years , and they aren't even close to done . Although, it is providing a lot of jobs for construction workers
There are a couple sinkholes in my city -- not too close to me, fortunately -- that have been sitting unrepaired and ignored for years. Japan really knows how to put us to shame just by being efficient and conscientious....
6 days is mind-blowing. It took a years and more than a few deaths at the corner of my workplace before the city installed a turn light.
Meanwhile here in Minneapolis, we have had the same giant potholes for years.😑
In South Africa that street would have been closed for a year while the politicians and contractors argued about the kick backs and hand outs . Then they would have skimped on the cement and would have cracked within months!
https://twitter.com/Kashaverak/status/798328343833677824?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E798328343833677824%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.n-tv.de%2Fpanorama%2FKommt-der-Riesenkrater-zurueck-article19209596.html
Meanwhile there is a highway here in Houston that has literally been under construction for 10 years….. it’s 12 miles long.
Meanwhile the rich and powerful USA has been fixing the i95 in Miami now for 17 years and still not finished!! No wonder we're sinking more and more down the list...pun intended... Pathetic!!!
As opposed to the UK, where after 60 years, the A14 still looks like this: the-a14-60...790ed2.jpg
Can you "repair" sinkholes? I though they just kept on growing down and outward!
UK - we all just eventually sunk into the mass anointing potholes and live underground now.
Where i live you can have like 10 guys repairing a pothole and only 5 will be doing work. 2 months later they will be back to work at that same pothole
And Hawaii is taking over 8 years to build a stupid rail that goes nowhere
They know a thing or two because they’ve seen a thing or two. (Not a Hiroshima reference... earth quakes....)
Whereas in Manchester they had a sinkhole that was about 15ft across and it took them about 12 months to fix...
Is that even possible anywhere else? It takes almost a whole year to get a single pot hole filled in some cities.
In the UK that hole would still be there with some fencing around it while four men in high vis jackets stand around discussing how best to fix it while drinking tea before clocking off for the day only to return the following day to do the exact same thing.
I'm VERY curious whether they repaired the infrastructure below (cables, water lines, sewers) or somehow constructed a "roof" over the infrastructure to continue while they did further work below. I can imagine paving a road -- even with all the layers needed -- in two days. But repairing that infrastructure FIRST then paving the road all in 2 days? UPDATE: The street was functional again within two days, but temporary infrastructure was used because waiting for permanent replacements for damaged infrastructure would hold up repairing the street. What is shown is the street after 7 days. This is not to diminish the awesome work, but explain how. The street eventually subsided several inches, but this was considered within acceptable limits. This was a man-made disaster, caused by mistakes building a subway line below. Some work continued from below from the subway line.
Even a few weeks would be impressive... would take a year in the UK.
Born In Japan, 1751 And Died In July 7, 1977 At A Grand Old Age Of 226, Koi Hanako Was The Oldest Koi Fish Ever Recorded
Somewhere In Kyoto, Japan, There’s This Man And His Dog. He Plays The Flute, The Dog Is Cute, And That’s How They Earn Some Loot
While Waiting At Kyoto Station This Guy Asked If I Want To Play Two Player Game Boy With Him. 30 Mins Well Spent
This Train Stop In Japan Has No Entries Or Exits, It Has Been Put There Merely So That People Can Stop Off In The Middle Of A Train Journey And Admire The Scenery
Some train stops in Final Fantasy make much more sense now, knowing this!
Train Seats In Japan Facing Outwards So You Can See The Scenery
Those are scenic trains with big windows and glass ceilings on specific train routes. They mostly run in seasons as hanami or autumn foliage in breathtaking scenery. There is also a train stop in a mountain gorge where you get of to admire the scenery and take pictures while on a platform. The platform has no exit, you can only arrive and leave by train. Day-to-day commuter trains and shinkasen are just normal trains with standard size windows. Although in some trains you can rotate the seats so all passengers can ride the train facing forward. Edit: https://m.jrpass.com/blog/resort-shirakami-train Not this one but another scenic route - scroll down and you can „walk“ through the carriage with Google Maps. Train travel in Japan is pure joy! Efficient, spotless clean, on time, incredibly fast or scenic beauty-slow. And you can buy delicious bentos at bigger stations proudly featuring the regions specialities. Can‘t wait to go again!
In Japan Some Restaurants Are Really Private, You Are Sitting In A Corner, Where No One Sees You, A Door Opens In Front Of You, The Chef's Hands Come Out And Serves You Without Looking
At Japanese Airports, The Baggage Handlers Arrange Luggage By Color So It’s Easier For You To Find Your Bag
This isn’t usual - normally passengers just grab their own bag off the belt like anywhere else.
The Gum I Bought In Japan Comes With A Stack Of Paper For Easy Disposal
Flood In Japan, Just Realized There Are Barely Any Floating Trash And Debris
These Sprinklers On The Road Near The Ski Resort I’m At In Japan To Keep The Road From Freezing Over. (Salt Water If You Were Wondering)
Japan's Fans Cleaning Up Their Sections After Their Match vs. Ivory Coast. Much Respect
Subways In Japan Have Women Only Cars
For those of you who is going to say that this is discrimination against women, this subway is specifically design to protect women from the rise of groping and raping problems in Japan. Don't judge the invention without knowing its story.
My Package From Japan Just Came In And The Owner Sent Me A Note With Some Origami
This Is How Smooth The Bullet Train Is In Japan
When You Need Help At A Train Station In Japan, Station Staff Will Literally Pop Out And Help You
This Is Not The Food From A High-End Restaurant. This Is Hospital Food In Japan
“Pets” Button On A High End Residential Building Elevator In Tokyo
Those who ride the elevator with a pet press it so an HEPA filter purifies the air and a silent alarm alerts those with allergies to avoid riding it until the air is clean again.
These Square Watermelons In Japan - Grown In Boxes To Shape Them While On The Vine - For Convenient Stacking, Shipping, And Refrigerator Storage
In The City Of Shimabara On Japan’s Kyushu Island, The Drainage Canals Are So Clean They Are Home To Hundreds Of Koi Carp
Aogashima Is An Isolated Village In Tokyo That Is Inside A Volcano That Has Another Mini Volcano Inside It
The Picture Of The Japanese Movie Advertisement Is Printed On Two Sides Of The Newspaper, So The Full Picture Could Be Seen Under Light
That's so clever. I like it. I also haven't watched Your Name but I'm planning to watch it.
Flight Delayed Due To The Rain Storm, Employees Of Japan Airlines Bow Sorry Passengers
What a delightful moment. The reason I love Japan for its behavior, cleanliness and warm hearted people. There is so much to learn from this country. Salute to them.
There are so many stories like this. There was a story I heard that a train conductor bowing down to say sorry because he was a few seconds EARLY. Then there is a hotel whose wifi went out from a whopping ONE MINUTE at 4AM.
A Relaxation Drink In Japan, The Opposite Of An Energy Drink
Floating Solar Power Plant In Japan On The On The Yamakura Dam Reservoir
This Pizza Box In Japan That Has A Handle In The Middle To Keep The Pizza Flat
I Bought Eye Drops From Japan And The Owner Decided To Write A Thank You Note With It Because Of The Covid Delay And Included His Favourite Tea And Sweets
A Museum In Japan That Has Rocks That Look Like Faces
Hiroshima, Before When It Got Wiped Off The Map And Less Than A Single Lifetime After
Economy Class Meal On Japanese Airline
A lot of Asia/Pacific airlines have really good food even in economy.
Kintai-Kyō Arch Bridge, In The City Of Iwakuni, Japan
These Fish Socks From Japan
The "Solar Ark", A Massive Building In Japan Comprised Of 5,046 Solar Panels
A Vending Machine In Japan That Sells Solder And Resistors, For Your Late-Night Circuitry Cravings
This Driverless Roving Sales Vehicle In Japan
Anti-Theft System For Bags I Found In The Space In Front Of The Toilet At Shinjuku Station This Week And I Really Like It
This is nice, BUT what about unzipping baggage and getting valuables out of it ?
Car Is Parked In The Driveway Which Is Built Over A Small Stream In Kyoto, Japan
Crystal Cola? Is Being Sold Here In Japan
"Facts That Prove Japan Is Unlike Any Other Country" --> and then you find lots of similarities with, for example, S. Korea. I get the sensationalist titles, but I'd appreciate the more realistic ones, like, "interesting facts about Japan", or something like this.
Sigh Bored Panda back at it again with their Japan boner... Yes Japan is very innovative and thoughtful, but it also has faults just like any other country, so please refrain from romanticizing or idolizing it (specifically the "All my problems would be fixed if I could just move to Japan" type idea). It's okay to appreciate the surface level stuff, but skimming over larger issues all the time won't end well for anyone. Similar to the USA hate posts, no country is as one dimensional as bp makes it out to be, so try to get information from other sources as well.
True, sadly they have some serious issues such as a high suicide rate, partly due to the immense social pressures to excel at nearly everything you do.
Load More Replies...I loved Japan and can't wait to go back one day. Things that could be on this list - amazing packaging, incredible cake art, sense of order in the most crowded of places. If you are travelling from city to city you can send your suitcase ahead overnight and it will be waiting for you at your hotel the next day. Only need to carry a small overnight bag from place to place instead of a large suitcase.
Listen, Japan is a pretty neat place, and I feel lucky to live here, but putting it up on a pedestal like a lot of aspiring tourists (or cultural obsessives) tend to do is not in any way constructive. There are a lot of deeply-ingrained problems, despite the economic "miracle" of the post-war bubble economy until the early 1990s. It's true that one's often wowed by the little (and sometimes big) differences between Japan and the west at first, but it's really not some unique, mystical land, and, once that glamour fades, it's just another place where people live (and with one of the highest suicide rates in the world, for a plethora of very obvious reasons). The quirkiness of the vending machines (of which I almost never see anything other than regular drink and snack ones), or the small quality-of-life conveniences like good customer service, efficient public transport, and good public safety, really don't make this some sort of mythical realm. It's just a place. Regarding the specifics of this article, not only are many of these things extremely rare in Japan (some of which I've only seen once or twice, and nearly all of them NEVER), but the headline phrase, "It’s a fascinating country that sometimes seems more at home in a fairytale book than on Planet Earth," is a completely idealized whitewash of a complex and imperfect country and culture. This is just straight-up weeaboo fantasy. If you want to come here and explore, by all means, do so, but do it with your eyes open, not pulled taut into some sort of racist caricature to fit your preconceptions. And, for the love of all, don't embarrass us expatriates. We already have a hard enough time dealing with the fallout of the often ignorant and rude tourists, and, while the new form of COVID has been an absolutely terrible thing, the dearth of tourism has been a wonderful reprieve for us that actually live here. Please act responsibly when you come here.
Thank you for sharing the insight of someone really living there...
Load More Replies...Ikizukuri - the eating of LIVE fish ... "prepared so the guest can see the gills still move while they eat the fish"... disgusting in my opinion. They might have fun with technology, but still have the childish cruelty
Yep, plus all the dolphins caught in tuna nets, plus whaling.
Load More Replies...The one about turtle protection is wrong, that is simply an overflow channel. You can see that there is no place for turtles to get out at the end nor would this design guarantee any animal, especially a turtle, to get into the channel when a train is coming.
1, just recently Tokyo changed the rule that required high school students to dye their hair if it wasn't black enough. 2, husband and wife are required to have the same surname; in 96% of all cases, the wife changes hers and does all the paperwork.
Yeah I'm not sure why people romanticize Japan so much. Their crime stats are made up. If someone is raped the Police decide if they want to investigate, most rapes never make it to prosecution. One of their number one books is a guide on how to grope woman on trains. For a country that's banned guns they have a lot of gun crime. They are also incredibly racist. Most mono cultured countries are.
Load More Replies...I lived in Japan for a short while and miss it every day. A truly wonderful country and I hope we can be more like it.
What surprises me is that there is no vandalism or general destruction and theft that would be quite usual in many states in the US. Most of these items that are displayed or created would be totally destroyed by vandals for no reason at all.
There is a lot of vandalism, particularly spray paint, all over the big cities. My mother-in-law had her phone stolen out of her purse last year on the train in Osaka. Fake news and part of the mythologizing of Japan.
Load More Replies...I have a Han Chinese friend who speaks Japanese so well the Japanese didn't know he is Chinese. The problem was he didn't go to elementary or high school there, so he didn't have the contacts to get good jobs or make friends. He said in ten years there, he never made a friend.
Load More Replies...Favorite isn't the right word byh far, but for me the Japanese innovation thant stands out farthest is vending machines that sell used schoolgirls' underwear.
I fell in love with Japan when my husband and I vacationed there! I really want us to go back soon :3
Nowhere is perfect but Japan does seem to go out of its way to keep harmony with its environment.
That's like any other country my dude. They're not better or worse for it.
Load More Replies...In Tokyo we were walking on some walk-path and after a while I realized I don't even know what was it made of. Not rubber, not plastic, probably some sort of composite... that kind of things only in Japan.
it would be so nice to take the things out of lists like these for every country and make a new country with all the best things from each country~~
This article is getting a little outdated, but, as a person that actually lives in Japan, let me tell you about some of the things that are really cool about this place. I take issue with a lot of the sensationalist stuff that people like the editor of this article put together, but there are some really interesting things that I notice on a nearly daily basis (having moved here from the US, after having spent a lot of my early life in Europe, and a lot of time in Latin America): (1) Kids are really well-behaved, and seemingly happy. I'm still trying to figure out exactly what's going on here, especially now that I'm working on raising my own child here, but children in Japan seem to be very independent, not prone to tears, and happy. Compared to the US, they also really like to play outside a lot, and don't whine to their parents in stores about buying things for them. This obviously isn't true across the board, but it's very obvious. Along the same lines, when it comes to public
safety, I've often been taken aback by seeing kids younger than 10 years old out riding the trains or buses on their own, or just out for a casual bike ride at 9PM (saw what looked like a six year old by herself just riding her back at 830PM last night; not an isolated incident). (2) The quality of customer service. In the US, a lot of people make bullshit complaints or requests, and also perfectly valid ones, and either may have to deal with myriad pushback from employees. Here, the concept of "the customer is always right" is taken to a nearly religious level. For good or ill. (3) The food is always so good. The concept of "Japanese quality" is deeply engrained, as per the previous point. But, as an example, I've had a number of good barbers and stylists throughout my life, but my current barber never fails to spend more than an hour on my hair (pretty short, I'm a guy). He took great pride in saying, in English, "Japanese quality," when I first commented on it. I feel like
Load More Replies...These are cool, but all very expensive. Probably explains Japan's extremely high debt per capita.
Japan seems to be a great place to visit, for many good reasons, unfortunately, I can no longer travel, so much beauty to see, and good people, after this post, I expect their tourism will increase tremendously !!!
Japan basically took everything that you've ever thought off and made it a reality. Imagination made reality. I hope I can visit one day.
Weird,cool,clean,safe,beautiful and a heaven for introverts.I want to visit Japan
Imma learn how to speak Japanese, immigrate there, get my citizenship and live my best life.
People in the comments coping with their inability to just enjoy a bit of positivity for one f***ing second! Japan still has better art, aesthetics, and technology. And yes, yes, yes, we all know that "grass is greener on the other side". Congratulations on being such hardcore realists. Go enjoy some good anime!
Yes, it only provides you with a free 12 years of education, individual legal rights, including your right to diss it, voting for all, clean water and enough cheap food that you can throw out a third of it, medical insurance, vaccinations for diseases that are still rampant in undeveloped countries and disfiguring or killing children, and laws against child labor so you don't have to go work in a Nike or Apple factory while still being able to buy Nikes or Apple products. It's tragic, really.
Load More Replies...You may be correct that Japan received a lot of help from American/Western Civilizations after 1945, but that was a long time ago. You have to give them credit for learning lessons from WWII. You have to give them credit for valuing science, education, and art. Many of the examples of this post are about aesthetic beauty and style, which you seem to be totally ignoring. Japan has a ton of unique qualities and beauty. Many more of their marvels are due to their culture. Your comment seems to be trying to take away from that.
Load More Replies..."Facts That Prove Japan Is Unlike Any Other Country" --> and then you find lots of similarities with, for example, S. Korea. I get the sensationalist titles, but I'd appreciate the more realistic ones, like, "interesting facts about Japan", or something like this.
Sigh Bored Panda back at it again with their Japan boner... Yes Japan is very innovative and thoughtful, but it also has faults just like any other country, so please refrain from romanticizing or idolizing it (specifically the "All my problems would be fixed if I could just move to Japan" type idea). It's okay to appreciate the surface level stuff, but skimming over larger issues all the time won't end well for anyone. Similar to the USA hate posts, no country is as one dimensional as bp makes it out to be, so try to get information from other sources as well.
True, sadly they have some serious issues such as a high suicide rate, partly due to the immense social pressures to excel at nearly everything you do.
Load More Replies...I loved Japan and can't wait to go back one day. Things that could be on this list - amazing packaging, incredible cake art, sense of order in the most crowded of places. If you are travelling from city to city you can send your suitcase ahead overnight and it will be waiting for you at your hotel the next day. Only need to carry a small overnight bag from place to place instead of a large suitcase.
Listen, Japan is a pretty neat place, and I feel lucky to live here, but putting it up on a pedestal like a lot of aspiring tourists (or cultural obsessives) tend to do is not in any way constructive. There are a lot of deeply-ingrained problems, despite the economic "miracle" of the post-war bubble economy until the early 1990s. It's true that one's often wowed by the little (and sometimes big) differences between Japan and the west at first, but it's really not some unique, mystical land, and, once that glamour fades, it's just another place where people live (and with one of the highest suicide rates in the world, for a plethora of very obvious reasons). The quirkiness of the vending machines (of which I almost never see anything other than regular drink and snack ones), or the small quality-of-life conveniences like good customer service, efficient public transport, and good public safety, really don't make this some sort of mythical realm. It's just a place. Regarding the specifics of this article, not only are many of these things extremely rare in Japan (some of which I've only seen once or twice, and nearly all of them NEVER), but the headline phrase, "It’s a fascinating country that sometimes seems more at home in a fairytale book than on Planet Earth," is a completely idealized whitewash of a complex and imperfect country and culture. This is just straight-up weeaboo fantasy. If you want to come here and explore, by all means, do so, but do it with your eyes open, not pulled taut into some sort of racist caricature to fit your preconceptions. And, for the love of all, don't embarrass us expatriates. We already have a hard enough time dealing with the fallout of the often ignorant and rude tourists, and, while the new form of COVID has been an absolutely terrible thing, the dearth of tourism has been a wonderful reprieve for us that actually live here. Please act responsibly when you come here.
Thank you for sharing the insight of someone really living there...
Load More Replies...Ikizukuri - the eating of LIVE fish ... "prepared so the guest can see the gills still move while they eat the fish"... disgusting in my opinion. They might have fun with technology, but still have the childish cruelty
Yep, plus all the dolphins caught in tuna nets, plus whaling.
Load More Replies...The one about turtle protection is wrong, that is simply an overflow channel. You can see that there is no place for turtles to get out at the end nor would this design guarantee any animal, especially a turtle, to get into the channel when a train is coming.
1, just recently Tokyo changed the rule that required high school students to dye their hair if it wasn't black enough. 2, husband and wife are required to have the same surname; in 96% of all cases, the wife changes hers and does all the paperwork.
Yeah I'm not sure why people romanticize Japan so much. Their crime stats are made up. If someone is raped the Police decide if they want to investigate, most rapes never make it to prosecution. One of their number one books is a guide on how to grope woman on trains. For a country that's banned guns they have a lot of gun crime. They are also incredibly racist. Most mono cultured countries are.
Load More Replies...I lived in Japan for a short while and miss it every day. A truly wonderful country and I hope we can be more like it.
What surprises me is that there is no vandalism or general destruction and theft that would be quite usual in many states in the US. Most of these items that are displayed or created would be totally destroyed by vandals for no reason at all.
There is a lot of vandalism, particularly spray paint, all over the big cities. My mother-in-law had her phone stolen out of her purse last year on the train in Osaka. Fake news and part of the mythologizing of Japan.
Load More Replies...I have a Han Chinese friend who speaks Japanese so well the Japanese didn't know he is Chinese. The problem was he didn't go to elementary or high school there, so he didn't have the contacts to get good jobs or make friends. He said in ten years there, he never made a friend.
Load More Replies...Favorite isn't the right word byh far, but for me the Japanese innovation thant stands out farthest is vending machines that sell used schoolgirls' underwear.
I fell in love with Japan when my husband and I vacationed there! I really want us to go back soon :3
Nowhere is perfect but Japan does seem to go out of its way to keep harmony with its environment.
That's like any other country my dude. They're not better or worse for it.
Load More Replies...In Tokyo we were walking on some walk-path and after a while I realized I don't even know what was it made of. Not rubber, not plastic, probably some sort of composite... that kind of things only in Japan.
it would be so nice to take the things out of lists like these for every country and make a new country with all the best things from each country~~
This article is getting a little outdated, but, as a person that actually lives in Japan, let me tell you about some of the things that are really cool about this place. I take issue with a lot of the sensationalist stuff that people like the editor of this article put together, but there are some really interesting things that I notice on a nearly daily basis (having moved here from the US, after having spent a lot of my early life in Europe, and a lot of time in Latin America): (1) Kids are really well-behaved, and seemingly happy. I'm still trying to figure out exactly what's going on here, especially now that I'm working on raising my own child here, but children in Japan seem to be very independent, not prone to tears, and happy. Compared to the US, they also really like to play outside a lot, and don't whine to their parents in stores about buying things for them. This obviously isn't true across the board, but it's very obvious. Along the same lines, when it comes to public
safety, I've often been taken aback by seeing kids younger than 10 years old out riding the trains or buses on their own, or just out for a casual bike ride at 9PM (saw what looked like a six year old by herself just riding her back at 830PM last night; not an isolated incident). (2) The quality of customer service. In the US, a lot of people make bullshit complaints or requests, and also perfectly valid ones, and either may have to deal with myriad pushback from employees. Here, the concept of "the customer is always right" is taken to a nearly religious level. For good or ill. (3) The food is always so good. The concept of "Japanese quality" is deeply engrained, as per the previous point. But, as an example, I've had a number of good barbers and stylists throughout my life, but my current barber never fails to spend more than an hour on my hair (pretty short, I'm a guy). He took great pride in saying, in English, "Japanese quality," when I first commented on it. I feel like
Load More Replies...These are cool, but all very expensive. Probably explains Japan's extremely high debt per capita.
Japan seems to be a great place to visit, for many good reasons, unfortunately, I can no longer travel, so much beauty to see, and good people, after this post, I expect their tourism will increase tremendously !!!
Japan basically took everything that you've ever thought off and made it a reality. Imagination made reality. I hope I can visit one day.
Weird,cool,clean,safe,beautiful and a heaven for introverts.I want to visit Japan
Imma learn how to speak Japanese, immigrate there, get my citizenship and live my best life.
People in the comments coping with their inability to just enjoy a bit of positivity for one f***ing second! Japan still has better art, aesthetics, and technology. And yes, yes, yes, we all know that "grass is greener on the other side". Congratulations on being such hardcore realists. Go enjoy some good anime!
Yes, it only provides you with a free 12 years of education, individual legal rights, including your right to diss it, voting for all, clean water and enough cheap food that you can throw out a third of it, medical insurance, vaccinations for diseases that are still rampant in undeveloped countries and disfiguring or killing children, and laws against child labor so you don't have to go work in a Nike or Apple factory while still being able to buy Nikes or Apple products. It's tragic, really.
Load More Replies...You may be correct that Japan received a lot of help from American/Western Civilizations after 1945, but that was a long time ago. You have to give them credit for learning lessons from WWII. You have to give them credit for valuing science, education, and art. Many of the examples of this post are about aesthetic beauty and style, which you seem to be totally ignoring. Japan has a ton of unique qualities and beauty. Many more of their marvels are due to their culture. Your comment seems to be trying to take away from that.
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