Showing posts with label Japanese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 August 2015

Japanese protesters rally against controversial security bills that could see troops fighting abroad

Japanese protestorsPHOTO: Protests in Tokyo against Japan's Prime Minister controversial security bills attracted tens of thousands.
Tens of thousands have rallied outside Japan's parliament to protest against planned new laws that could see troops in the officially pacifist nation engage in combat for the first time since World War II.
A growing number of people, including university students and young parents, have joined a swelling opposition against the controversial bills as prime minister Shinzo Abe's ruling party gears up to pass them before the current session ends late next month.
Holding placards reading "No war", "Peace not war" and "Stop the security bills", chanting demonstrators filled the street in front of the Diet building in downtown Tokyo despite drizzly weather.

The debate over Japanese pacifism


Japan is divided over removing Article Nine from its constitution, but the debate reveals much about Japanese spirituality, Janak Rogers reports.
A huge banner reading "Abe should step down", adorned with black and white balloons, was carried through the crowd.
"I cannot stand idly by when I think of the excesses of the Abe government — Japan could become a country capable of going to war again," protester Kenichi Ozawa said.
Under the planned changes the military, known as the Self-Defence Forces, would be allowed to fight to protect allies such as the United States, even if there was no direct threat to Japan or its people.
Under a US-imposed constitution following WWII, Japan's military has been limited strictly to self-defence.
While the restrictions were ushered in by an occupying force, many Japanese have become strongly attached to their country's pacifism over the decades — outlined in Article Nine of the constitution — and they fear any change to that status will lead them down a dangerous road.
"For 70 years, thanks to Article Nine of our constitution, Japan has not engaged in war or been touched by any aggression," demonstrator Masako Suzuki said.
"Article Nine is our foundation." Bills necessary to deal with China, North Korea
Organisers said about 120,000 people took part in the rally in Tokyo, but police put the figure at 30,000. Similar demonstrations were held across Japan.
In the central city of Nagoya, a group of mothers staged a rally near the main train station as they shouted "Protect our children!". Abe and his supporters say the bills are necessary for Japan to deal with a changed security environment in the face of a rising China and unpredictable North Korea.
Washington has welcomed the move to change what some see as a one-sided security alliance that compels the US to protect Japan if it were attacked.
But opponents said the reforms would drag Japan into distant American wars, and many legal scholars have said they are unconstitutional.
The legislation is deeply unpopular among the general public and support for the Abe government is declining.
Among the protesters on Sunday were popular Japanese musician and composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and opposition party leaders including Katsuya Okada, head of the Democratic Party of Japan.
Relatively small street demonstrations are frequent in the capital. But on Thursday a group of Tokyo university students staged a rare hunger strike outside parliament to protest at the legislation.
They said they would continue as long as possible.
On Wednesday the national bar association took part in a Tokyo protest rally with academics and citizen groups.
The controversial bills cleared the powerful lower house last month and are now being hotly debated in the upper house.

Saturday, 29 August 2015

Japanese railway station replaces much-loved station master cat

A Japanese railway station famous for its stationmaster cat has appointed another feline as its replacement.
The station's previous cat, Tama, was mourned at a lavish funeral after she died from heart failure in June having patrolled Kishi station, south-west of Osaka, for eight years.
Tama quietly patrolled the station dressed in a custom-made cap and uniform and became a popular mascot who attracted tourists from across Japan.
The new cat — reportedly named Nitama — will take over where its much-loved predecessor left off.
The station hopes the new cat will continue to bring more visitors to the struggling local railway.
Female cat "Tama" wearing a stationmaster's cap at a Japanese train stationPHOTO: Tama, who wore a custom-made cap, and uniform became a popular mascot for the Kishi station in Japan.

Saturday, 8 August 2015

The Japanese Have Just Perfected The Skateboard

Japanese Perfected Skateboard

And it looks amazingly fun

A Japanese engineer just invented a nifty new way to travel: A transporter called a “WalkCar” that’s small, light and apparently easy to use.
The product is battery powered and is about the size of a laptop. And although it looks like it can hold much weight and is made from aluminum, it can apparently have as much as 265 lbs on board.
VentureBeat reported that it can go up to 6.2 miles per hour for up to 7.4 miles. It needs three hours to charge.
Creator Kuniako Saito told Reuters in an interview, “‘What if we could just carry our transportation in our bags, wouldn’t that mean we’d always have our transportation with us to ride on?’ and my friend asked me to make one, since I was doing my masters in engineering specifically on electric car motor control systems.”
Per VentureBeat: Saito says customers will be able to reserve their own WalkCars from autumn 2015 on the crowd-funding website Kickstarter. The futuristic skateboard will have a price-tag of around 100,000 Japanese Yen (approx. $800 USD). Shipping is expected to begin by spring 2016.

Friday, 7 August 2015

North Korea Is Creating Its Own Time Zone to Spite The ‘Wicked Japanese Imperialists’

North Korea Is Creating Its Own Time Spite The ‘Wicked Japanese Imperialists’

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un applauds during a photo session with the soldier-builders who performed labor feats in building the Wonsan Baby Home and Orphanage
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un applauds during a photo session in Pyongyang


It will return the country to the time standard it used prior to Japanese colonization

North Korea’s state media isreporting that on Aug. 15 the country will abandon the time zone it shares with Japan and South Korea and create its own.
Pyongyang Standard Time, as it were, will be 12 and a half hours ahead of the Eastern United States — 30 minutes behind Japan Standard Time, which both Koreas have used since Japan colonized the Korean Peninsula in 1910.
“The wicked Japanese imperialists committed such unpardonable crimes as depriving Korea of even its standard time while mercilessly trampling down its land,” said KCNA, North Korea’s state mouthpiece.
The decision serves to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Korea’s independence, which enabled the political rise of Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founding father and grandfather to Kim Jong Un, the country’s third and current supreme leader. South Korea briefly returned to its precolonial time zone in 1954 before embracing Japan’s standard in 1961, citing diplomatic benefits.