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A foreigners point of view? -
04-21-2010, 07:44 PM
I thought this was just a little bit cheeky. Tell me what you think?
Japan - The Strange Country (Japanese ver.) on Vimeo English version - YouTube - Japan - The Strange Country (English) |
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04-21-2010, 09:35 PM
Pretty amusing. If you can be unbiased about it all, it's fun to watch.
Most of its information sounded valid. Though, I do find number-per-minute calculations to be misleading. It isn't necessarily every 4 seconds that a person dies from starvation or every 16 minutes that a Japanese person commits suicide; it's averaged out. I think a lot of our diehard Japanese fans should watch things like this. I can't tell you how much "I am L from Deathnote" acts irritate me. It butchers much of what should be appreciated about Japan. No offense? |
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04-21-2010, 10:54 PM
Whoa, definetly a good watch!I wonder what people say about America now XD
I have no Friends- The cats have scratched and destroyed all of the DVDs! I always owe someone- In fact I put two os in it! I always ruin my clothes with Bleach!- The show is so dom suspensful I spill my grape soda on them! But . . .I'll live. |
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04-21-2010, 11:45 PM
Cheeky? I think it was really harsh. Its strange for someone to wanna beat up on their own country like that.
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04-22-2010, 12:44 AM
Quote:
Quote:
The reason all those disposable chopsticks come from China is that there have been a bunch of "environmental protection" movements to stop their production in Japan... The thing is, when they were produced in Japan, they were made from wood culled from managed forests to stimulate growth and to prevent overcrowding. Without being able to cull wood from the managed areas, more trees end up dying and being wasted - which is why it`s so common now to find areas in planted forests that have completely died. "Protecting" the Japanese forests has actually had the opposite effect. The large amount of food thrown out in Japan actually has little to do with normal people and their consumption. 80% of it is food disposed of prior to sale or processing... And of that 80% I believe most of it is government action to raise the value of food. A few years back there was too much cabbage produced so to keep the market from being flooded more than two thirds of the cabbage produced was bought by the government and left to rot. You can`t try to fix a problem without having the roots and reasons brought to attention. I don`t know. I guess I just think that a lot of these figures are brought up to make people feel responsible and change their habits... Even though those habits are a very very tiny part of the issue and there would be much more effective ways to change things. It`s like telling someone their humming is noise pollution so they should keep it down... Even though it would be much more effective to get them to come with you to ask a neighbor to turn down the 100 speakers he has pointed at the street. |
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