Japan Today

Angus McGillicuddy comments

Posted in: Tokyo Gov Koike reelected, beating opposition Renho, rising ex-mayor See in context

60.62%? In other news, they said only 34.12% which make sense 60% is too high for Japanese.

The news you read is here:

https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/politics/election/20240707-197252/

Where it says that was as of 6pm, when the polls were still open.

-2 ( +0 / -2 )

Posted in: Costco Japan wages provide pathway to firing up nation's low pay, economy See in context

That is a monthly salary of 240.000 yen per month.

Single men and woman get taxed to death in Japan you might take home 180.000. Then your heath insurance.

The income tax is 5% on the first 1,950,000 you make, then 10% of what you make between 1,950,000 and 3,300,000.

240,000 a month comes to 2,880,000 a year, which comes to 190,500 a year, which is 15,875 a month, or just under 7% of their monthly income.

Of course, there are local taxes, but you're taxing them at 25% (60,000)!

9 ( +12 / -3 )

Posted in: Do you think political correctness will be the death of comedy? See in context

The kind of people who say this are some of the most humourless people you could hope to meet.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: Death penalty sought again in retrial of 88-year-old man acquitted of 1966 murders See in context

Justice should have no expiry date. Four people, including two kids, were brutally murdered

And they've spent half a century torturing an innocent man, while the real culprit has lived freely, and will probably never be known.

19 ( +25 / -6 )

Posted in: Death penalty sought again in retrial of 88-year-old man acquitted of 1966 murders See in context

11 hours less than they gave their victims!

Hakamada is the victim. Did you not read the article? Jesus.

5 ( +19 / -14 )

Posted in: Japan lower house OKs bill to reform foreign trainee program See in context

That's another way to say, Japan want cheap young labor but don't want them and other foreigners to stay that long in Japan or even thinking to retire in Japan.

In other words, you didn't read the article. The bill provides a path towards permanent residence:

As the new system would help increase the number of permanent residence permits...

The new program aims to develop foreign trainees over three years to a level where they can shift to the specified skilled worker system, launched in 2019, that allows for stays of up to five years with the potential for obtaining permanent residency.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

Posted in: Eyes on Bank of Japan as unions announce big wage hikes See in context

@proxy Like many people, you're confusing UBI with GBI. GBI is just another way of doing welfare; UBI is a total rethinking of a nation's complicated, expensive, and inefficient systems of tax collection and social payments.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Posted in: Tokyo's controversial Yasukuni Shrine picks ex-admiral as chief priest See in context

"more than 250 years of isolation"

The isolationist policies began in the 1830s under Tokugawa Iemitsu, the third Tokugawa shogun. The Edo period lasted more than 250 years; the isolation did not.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Posted in: The Japanese government is offering families 1 million yen to relocate from Tokyo in an effort to revitalize towns across the country. Do you think this is a good idea? See in context

To be clear, the programme explicitly defines 東京圏外 as outside Tokyo, Chiba, Saitama, and Kanagawa.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: The Japanese government is offering families 1 million yen to relocate from Tokyo in an effort to revitalize towns across the country. Do you think this is a good idea? See in context

All the comments here are jumping to the conclusion that people are being encouraged to move to remote rural areas. The term being used is 東京圏外, which just means "outside the Tokyo area". This includes urban areas with six- or seven-digit populations.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: Everyone has a home office now. So who's paying for it? See in context

This website is called "Japan Today", but these stats don't seem to be Japanese, and the article also doesn't bother to tell us what country they're talking about (though I assume it's American?) This article doesn't seem to be aimed at most JT readers, who most likely reside in Japan, and are also likely not Americans.

3 ( +4 / -1 )

Posted in: A Japanese government panel has proposed amending the juvenile law to put 18- and 19-year-old criminal suspects on trial as adults. Do you agree with this? See in context

http://asaa.asn.au/japans-youth-crime-wave-subsides-to-a-ripple/

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Posted in: A Japanese government panel has proposed amending the juvenile law to put 18- and 19-year-old criminal suspects on trial as adults. Do you agree with this? See in context

In a country with the death penalty? The only reason to do this is for sadists to put more people on death row. And to feed the fears of those who believe the thoroughly debunked canard that "youth crime is on the rise" (it has plummeted precipitously over the past several decades in Japan).

Otherwise, I'd say the cutoff between age of minority and agree of majority was arbitrary, whether 18, 20, 21, or whatever.

-24 ( +3 / -27 )

Posted in: 80% of Japan mayors oppose, wary of shift to Sept start of school year See in context

There is negligible reason for Japan to feel any pressure to change their school year ...

You haven't been following the news, then. It was proposed to make up for the three months of school that have been lost due to the school shutdowns. Other reasons include moving exam season out of the flu/allergy season, etc. There are actually quite a few reasons to do it that have nothing to do with foreign "pressure".

4 ( +8 / -4 )

Posted in: Ruling bloc to urge gov't to retain April start for academic year See in context

Abe and his Nippon Kaigi, buddies were not going to allow anything like this to happen

What are you talking about? Abe was one of the loudest supporters.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: 4 era names the gov't rejected before deciding on Reiwa See in context

Since when is "orderly" a translation of 令?! Can anyone give even a single example of this?

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Posted in: Japan's whalers back treaty withdrawal See in context

Gotta love them delicious subsidies! They more than make up for the utter lack of demand!

0 ( +7 / -7 )

Posted in: Osaka cuts sister city ties with San Francisco over 'comfort women' statue See in context

Woohoo! Watch them bridges burn!

7 ( +12 / -5 )

Posted in: Japan to propose resuming commercial whaling at IWC meeting in Sept See in context

So, you buy the line that whale is this ancient, traditional Japanese cuisine. While whaling has existed in Japan since prehistoric times, it did not become widespread until the 20th century, and eating whale did not become common until the late 1940s, when whale meat was introduced into school lunches to make up for nutritional shortages in the post-WWII period. By the 1970s the population had already moved on from whale meat---today, most Japanese who didn't grow up in the post-war period have never even tried whale meat. Those who have, typically consider it inferior to other meats, such as beef. It cave 5th this state of affairs a generation before the moratorium cane into effect.

Don't be fooled. Pushing for whaling is strictly political.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Posted in: What do you think of the planned revision of the Civil Code to lower the age of adulthood in Japan from 20 to 18? See in context

What is the obsession JT commenters have with tying age of majority to age of drinking/smoking? How common is that, even? In the States it's 21, in many Canadian provinces it's 19, and in many parts of Europe it's 16.

The rest of the world doesn't care. Get over yourselves.

-1 ( +2 / -3 )

Posted in: Do you believe marijuana, which was legalized in California on Jan 1, is a harmless drug? See in context

Loaded question—no drug is "harmless", including all the prefectly legal over-the-counter drugs that aren't criminalized.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: Emperor greets cheering crowd at palace for new year See in context

Emperors have rarely abdicated in Japan, the last time being 200 years ago.

Just because it's been 200 years since the last one doesn't make it rare. It used to be common practice.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Posted in: No. of death row inmates in Japan stands at 123 See in context

Like girl_in_tokyo says, there's is virtually no dialogue amongst the Japanese on the issue. By far the most common pro-death penalty excuse I hear from Japanese people is that it "deters crime"---usually followed by "and crime is on the rise"---statements which are both empirically false. It's trivially easy in the internet age to verify both statements, but because there is no dialogue on the subject, it would never cross most people's minds to.

8 ( +11 / -3 )

Posted in: Japan tells S Korea no other option but to stick to 'comfort women' deal See in context

A deal's a deal, and there are two sides to the deal. On the Japanese side, the deal is recognition—permanent recognition—of the atrocities committed. Japan is reneging on this aspect of the deal. Denialism and revisionism must be dealt with or the deal is void.

If the Japanese government is working in good faith, then why demand, for example, the removal of statues?

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Posted in: Japan tells S Korea no other option but to stick to 'comfort women' deal See in context

Whatever you think of Korea, Japan's "apologies" don't mean anything when they keep retracting them, as well as teaching revisionist versions in which the women supposedly "volunteered".

-25 ( +12 / -37 )

Posted in: International call for Japan to halt Antarctic whaling See in context

I'd have a lot more respect for them if they just said " we eat whales so go buzz off".

Except they don't eat whales. I was once at a seminar with about 45 people in the room, and the subject of whaling came up. The speaker asked the room who had ever tried whale in their life. I was the only one to raise a hand (I've tried a bite).

Every once in a while, my local supermarket sticks some whale or dophin on the shelf. It sits there unsold for days, gets marked down, and then tossed out. Nobody eats this stuff, outside of areas where they do whaling and have had the stuff forced into kids kyūshoku. Most people I know who've even tried it say they don't like it.

1 ( +16 / -15 )

Posted in: Japan's Constitutional Democrats: A little party with big ambition See in context

But he was a top LPD acolyte until not so long ago ...

Can you elaborate on this? His Wikipedia article at least doesn't say anything about the LDP.

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Posted in: Diet panel resumes debate on amending Constitution See in context

@Kobe White Bar Owner: I don't know if that PDF was in response to what I wrote, but the PDF I'm talking about was put out by the LDP itself, highlighting their proposed rewordings.

4 ( +4 / -0 )

Posted in: Diet panel resumes debate on amending Constitution See in context

The LDP wants to change more than Article 9, though. I remember reading (in Japanese) a pdf with the LDP's proposed changes to the constitution, by I can't find it now ... does anybody know where to find it?

5 ( +5 / -0 )

Posted in: Man arrested for dumping body of mother-in-law in Shizuoka forest See in context

Gotta double-check those kanji: 大谷 in this case is "Ōya", not "Ōtani"—that's a forest in Ōya, in the vicinity of Shizuoka University.

4 ( +4 / -0 )

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