Anonymous wrote:America is a great country. Do we have problems? Of course all nations do. And while it politically things seem dire right now, the best thing to do is stay and vote and help, not leave. Time takes time and a hundred years is just a blip on the linear course of world history. Our greatest natural resource is our young people, our children. If we can nourish that resource properly we can move to a better society.
Anonymous wrote:I understand, I want to move to England or Scotland, but citizenship in other countries is difficult to obtain.
It’s frustrating!
Anonymous wrote:Way better quality of food
Infinitely better education
WAY BETTER public transport
virtually zero gun crime
Zero school shootings
Affordable healthcare for all
Murder rate is virtual nonexistent
Obesity rate is below 5% while US is 50%
People obey the law
Virtually zero fare evaders on the Shinkansen
High speed internet and cell phones everywhere.
I do not give a crap about toxic work culture. I’d take that little zit vs school shootings and America’s unaffordable healthcare snd obesity. Do Americans realize how much it sucks to live in america?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must be a man.
Japan is still an incredibly misogynist culture. It's also deeply xenophobic. A gaijin will never fully integrate.
- Japanese woman who is happy to not live in Japan. But happy to come back for visits!
Do not care. I can deal with xenophobia than sh!ty U.S. health care, infrastructure and schools. Japan has sits, but US is rotten to its core.
PP you replied to. Then you are very naive and inexperienced and I feel sorry for you. I have lived in multiple countries. I can promise you that there is no perfect country. They're all imperfect in one way or another. It's a matter of finding which imperfection you can live with.
But I repeat: if you are a foreigner in Japan, you will never be fully accepted. This can have far-reaching consequences on your wellbeing.
But go ahead and move. It's good to experience new things.
As if I care about being gaijin vs being bankrupt for insulin or fearing being shot up simply going to the grocery store. You try to make it sound like being gaijin is something as bad as being shot up with an ar15 in school or during church, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must be a man.
Japan is still an incredibly misogynist culture. It's also deeply xenophobic. A gaijin will never fully integrate.
- Japanese woman who is happy to not live in Japan. But happy to come back for visits!
Do not care. I can deal with xenophobia than sh!ty U.S. health care, infrastructure and schools. Japan has sits, but US is rotten to its core.
PP you replied to. Then you are very naive and inexperienced and I feel sorry for you. I have lived in multiple countries. I can promise you that there is no perfect country. They're all imperfect in one way or another. It's a matter of finding which imperfection you can live with.
But I repeat: if you are a foreigner in Japan, you will never be fully accepted. This can have far-reaching consequences on your wellbeing.
But go ahead and move. It's good to experience new things.
As if I care about being gaijin vs being bankrupt for insulin or fearing being shot up simply going to the grocery store. You try to make it sound like being gaijin is something as bad as being shot up with an ar15 in school or during church, lol.
Oh I get it now. You’re a troll.
If you can’t go to the grocery store without fear of “being shot up” you should see a doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must be a man.
Japan is still an incredibly misogynist culture. It's also deeply xenophobic. A gaijin will never fully integrate.
- Japanese woman who is happy to not live in Japan. But happy to come back for visits!
Do not care. I can deal with xenophobia than sh!ty U.S. health care, infrastructure and schools. Japan has sits, but US is rotten to its core.
PP you replied to. Then you are very naive and inexperienced and I feel sorry for you. I have lived in multiple countries. I can promise you that there is no perfect country. They're all imperfect in one way or another. It's a matter of finding which imperfection you can live with.
But I repeat: if you are a foreigner in Japan, you will never be fully accepted. This can have far-reaching consequences on your wellbeing.
But go ahead and move. It's good to experience new things.
As if I care about being gaijin vs being bankrupt for insulin or fearing being shot up simply going to the grocery store. You try to make it sound like being gaijin is something as bad as being shot up with an ar15 in school or during church, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is nice, but it's super expensive and the housing is tiny, but otherwise I agree.
Actually it isn’t expensive, at all. That’s a myth left over from the 80s.