@@chrisfrench9257 nope, never! here in the US 🇺🇸 you have to click/select the button corresponding to the desired floor. At least that’s been my experience. I personally find it interesting how these meaningless things can be absolutely different in other countries. For example, vehicles having the driver side on the right side instead of the left side is super odd but actually quite interesting at the same time.
@marycelalopez Why is that interesting? It's the same concept. In both scenarios, the driverside is still on the interior side of the road while the passengerside is on the outside. I'm from the USA, by the way. You can select whatever floor you wish to go to without issue. However, you can select any floor you wish, even if you aren't going to that floor. That's why being able to unselected a floor is an interesting and potentially good idea. The elevator will go to the floors in order of selection. Double tapping a floor to remove the selection seems thoughtful, but it does create another issue. However, most people aren't that rude to simply change your selection in front of you, and the ones who are will find a foot up there ass eventually.
As a woman living in Japan it’s really odd to hear other people unfamiliar with the country saying it’s the safest place on earth. The woman in the video obviously was able to walk around at night w her bf, but this place can get really gross and scary when alone, especially as a woman. While there aren’t much robbery and similar crimes, SA is rampant, and not to be too depressing, but I don’t know a single woman above 18 here that hasn’t experienced something uniquely horrible connected to SA. It’s incredibly normalised, not talked about enough, and to everyone staying in Japan, please stay safe. Edit: thank you for the kind wishes and for sharing experiences. I wanted to make something clear. I know Japan is very safe in other regards, but what makes Japan feel unsafe for SA victims is the complete disregard for taking victims seriously, and how useless the police is in helping and solving cases. If you get groped on the train, there is a very big chance no one will do anything. You can be a middle schooler, high schooler, Japanese, non-Japanese, woman, man, anything, and no one will help you. The Japanese women I know have a hard time speaking up, both because of the way they’re raised culturally, and the fact that even if they do, sometimes no one helps them anyway. Japan fetishises rape, non-con and schoolgirls, and does near to nothing to actually acknowledge it and actually do something. Of course this is a deeper issue, but as I mentioned, this place just gets gross in my opinion. This is a bigger problem for Japanese people, and foreigners will probably be lucky enough to escape it. As a white, tall and blonde woman (clearly not Japanese nor east-Asian) there are still many gross things happening to me by both Japanese men and foreign men, but it was at its absolute worse when I was a high school student here, a child, clad in uniform, and this disturbs me. And finally, to those telling me to bring a weapon to protect myself, a foreign friend of mine tried to defend herself by punching a Japanese guy who was sexually assaulting her, and she was deported as the police took the side of the Japanese man, as they often do. Again, stay safe, believe victims, help those in need, and thank you for reading my thoughts on this.
It’s probably your neighborhood honestly. Not to invalidate your experiences but I lived in both poor and wealthy neighborhoods and while I’ve had my share of paranoia nothing really happened. And a most people I know too. There are neighborhoods or districts known for having lots of cases, and SA cases are definitely rampant but I lived in Japan for 4 years as a teen and I could walk home for 20 minutes at night without anything happening. But yeah it’s a huge problem in japan.
Also again. Foreigner perspective greatly limits experience. I don’t mean to say every foreigner is safe and that people won’t try things to foreigner but if you are anything but East Asian (but specifically visually non-Asian) you’re chances for being physically harassed I’ve noticed tend to extremely decrease. It paints Japan as being very crime free and better because this idea ‘I didn’t experience it’ when really there is a much less target on your back to ignore so many of the extreme problems of SA.
@@UnhappytimeaperAnd, of course, the "crime free" label is easier to hold if you don't criminalise or refuse to investigate/prosecute predatory behaviours that factor into the crime statistics in other countries. Behaviours that seem to be normalised (unwanted touching, stalking, ...) and Japanese women are told to just "put up with it". I'm glad that there seems to be some movement to crack down on that, recently. Unfortunately only after a lot of media pressure. It's still true that you're much safer from violent crimes and property crimes in Japan as opposed to the USA.
I love you mentioned this. The sexualization of women in japan IS EXTREMELY normalized, especially through anime and manga. I mean, how many manga/anime can you think of that sexualizes all or most of the female characters, even the minors! I think its harder to think of one that doesn't. The sexualization of teens in those is most disturbing.
@@loulou785741 Most french trains have heating. They are mostly near the floor bc yhe hot air goes up. It's not always very visible since its on the side of the trains
@@mangotuna9197 What kind of train? TGV? TER? RER? Paris métro? I've seen the heater beside the window on TGVs but never a leg heating system like she mentions in the video.
@loulou785741, that's my bad. I didn't see what she meant. I thought she just meant heating near the ground on a train. I didn't understand that it was directly on the legs
@LilJunnie There's murderers in every country, but the 2023 murder rate in Japan is 0.2 murders per 100,000 people, compared to 4.96 per 100,000 for the US and 1.20 per 100,000 for the UK. So, people are 25 times more likely to get murdered in the US, and 6 times more likely to get murdered in the UK, when compared to Japan. Source: world population review website, which gets it's statistics from each countries government.
To those women who are aware & opening our eyes to reality about SA, thanks very much! A city is entirely different after dark, and it’s never a good option to be alone.
Interesting bc when I was in the UK last summer if I was walking in a crowded area, like a busy sidewalk, I couldn't figure out which side of the crowd to be on.
In Sweden, most of these are pretty common too! The unclickable button, the cashier thing, the eleva rule and that children take themselves, most children take the bus, bike or walk to school
And also in rush hour it literally isn’t the safest and fastest way because people line up at the entry instead of going on the ‘walking’ side, also there are safety reasons why people are warned against walking on escalator. I’d know as HK is literally the same with this rule.
@@yechengzheng4997technically the rule in Tokyo at least is that you're not supposed to walk on escalators. It's supposed to be stand and wait on both sides. Basically everyone breaks the rules.
Regarding the kids, they have alarms hanging from their backpacks just in case, also some shops and houses have stickers on their doors indicating they are safe for kids and they can go ask for help in an emergency. Plus quite a few other things to make everything safer
@@archgirl7797nope, it’s an extensive process to have a sticker approved. Background checks, monitoring, paperwork, but most people who file for one around schools are either grandparents who’s adult children moved away and want to help kids, or parents who send their kids to school
Yes! There were stories on this not long ago, about how kids were going missing from trains and it was a big deal because taking the trains on their own is a huge part of Japanese life. That’s why there are the alarms and safe places. Some tourists really are too ignorant of things.
i thought the escalator thing was kinda worldwide. everyone stands on the right (or left, depending on the generally agreed side) and the right is free to walk up
@@ravenapat It was a joke because they *actually* opened up extra registers. They do sometimes in the US, and they're supposed to, but since stores are often so short staffed they either don't bother or can't open up extra during rushes. It's a joke because it was a 'jab' at what the US supposedly does, but showing Japan actually doing it well/consistently. Sarcasm.
"The rest of the world got it all wrong" Having lived in both the Netherlands and Sweden, I can say that at least half of these are normal there as well.
a lot is normal when you live in three of the least diverse countries in the world. socialism works when 95% of the country is of like minded indivuduals with the same goals.
Bro Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands are not three of the least diverse countries by a long shot. Germany is the second most immigrated to country in the world, Sweden is famous for its Liberal policies towards asylum seekers, and while the Netherlands isn't quite as good as those two, about 1 in 4 people in the Netherlands aren't Dutch. That doesn't hold a candle to places that are actually monoethnic like China, Poland or South Korea.
The escalator thing applies in London too: I just went there and you stand on the right, walk on the left. This in particular applies in the metro system.
Some of this is Scandinavian too. Children taking public transport, there's self checkout at stores you don't need to stand in line or wait for a cashier. And people respect the lines in escalators. You stand in the right unless you are in a hurry, so you can easily just run through it in the left lane.
Same, although I hate to say it but the traffic etiquette definitely stops when it comes to escalators, I don't think you would enjoy the overall Japanese driver experience LOL.
Please don't take whatever this woman's words seriously, I'm a 24 year old Japanese woman from Tsurui-Japan and my area here is safe but alot and alot of places are NOT SAFE AT NIGHT. it's absolutely horrific and alot of kids go missing, killed, or raped so please be careful where and how you walk through our streets! ❤
Yeah when she mentioned that it sounded like torture lol. Pretty much every train I’ve ever been on in the winter in Europe has too much heat , and they don’t have leg warmers
I still had instances when I was alone at various times of day as a student, and followed onto trains or almost grabbed on the street by drunks. Everyone’s experience is gonna be different and the positive experiences shine harder than the negative but I definitely felt on edge as a woman at night still. They would stare me down so hard I felt disgusting but still safer than being confronted every minute. I hope if you read the comments, don’t feel discouraged to go! I loved Japan I loved being out at night in the city with my friends and meeting people, the night life is where it’s at! I feel safer there at night than in America but just stay safe. Find friends or stay in communication with someone as much as possible. Also validate those with SA experiences they matter.
The problem is all of women who consider a man making a pass at them or even complimenting them to be sexual assault. They marginalize and diminish the women who actually have experienced violent physical assault.
A privacy button for the public bathrooms is a genius idea. I absolutely cannot stand when it’s dead quiet, especially if I’m using a bathroom next to random strangers. 😭
I don't understand. So what if someone hears you shit its a public toilet, what did they expect? Hell, if I hear someone really let one go in the public toilet I'll say something like: "that was so big even I feel better"
@@carhoarder602 It’s not that lol I’m just not a fan of complete silence. For example, I’m just talking about the difference between having zero sound versus turning on an exhaust fan or something with SOME type of noise, or just music lightly playing overhead? It’s like whenever I get home and there’s not any air conditioning or fan turned on and there’s no tv or music so it’s just extremely quiet. I hate that. I need at least a fan running for that little amount of noise it produces.
@@aebalc No it has nothing to do with them hearing me using the bathroom, I just hate COMPLETE silence with no noise from a fan or anything so it’s just weirdly quiet. That’s how I feel about anywhere I go, not just for using a public bathroom.
you ever tried asking the other side "does it feel as good for you as it does for me" or something to that degree? gonne make your day, i can promise :D
“It’s literally safe enough for them to do so” says someone who clearly didn’t grow up in Japan. Sexual assault on trains is RAMPANT. Look it up. An uncomfortable amount of children will say they’ve been sexually abused on a train at least once, whether that’s being groped, touched, or more.
Yes, obviously nowhere is perfect;- but its not as bad as NY or LA or London, in regards to violent sexual crime. Thats the only criticism people bring up when it comes to Japan... The truth is its one of the safest countries in the world. They all share the same values and culture. They said no to diversity and mass immigration and as a result they still have their cultural identity and they have the third largest economy and they're the worlds largest creditor. Please... we in the west should be so lucky.
I live here and… 1. Never seen unclickable buttons 2. Don’t more cashiers come out in other countries? I remember they did in UK/Germany and most EU countries 3. There are places at night in big cities where I would certainly NOT feel safe. It’s generally advised to be careful no matter what. 4. People break these rules all the time during rush hour 😭
In America, it is not uncommon for many stores to only have 2 employees on staff in total. One will be the cashier, and the other a manager either doing paperwork or other tasks in the back. Some chains, like Dollar Tree, do not allow more than 6 total employees to be hired at a given time in order to keep payroll costs down. (which is a shame, these chains can often out price other local stores that have 20+ employees out of business, leaving 14 people forced to change careers or remain unemployed)
I worked at Walgreens before. When the line gets 3+ we get on the intercom and say “IC3, IC3”. Get it, I see three people. That means the stickers have to come and man some registers.
Here in the Philippines, we also have the unclickable buttons and the bidet, as well as the convenience store (7-Eleven). I don't know why this video made it seem like only Japan has it and no country in the world does. Some malls in our country also have a guideline for escalators to walk on the left and stand on the right, but nobody follows them, lol 🤷♂️
@@BellalisDopeIC3 IS SO SMART!! we had “code red” to mean “theres more than 3 people in line and i need help up here” but it started scaring the customers i laugh even thinking abt it now 😭😭
As a teenager living in Poland, I haven't been daily dropped off and picked up from school the moment I started the 2nd semester of 4th grade. Most places in europe actually have safe public transit. Like- they started to teach us public transport etiquette in 1st grade if not earlier.
Same in Québec. I _never once_ was walked to school, not ever. Same for everybody else. Grades 1 to 4 were a short walk away, afterwards it was public transportation until high school when there were school buses. It was a different time.
I want the lamp to be lit when a person has pushed a wall button on a passing floor. The passenger(s) inside will still be able to "unselect" the stop and pass the floor if the elevator is too full - or someone is in a real hurry..
"You can walk around at 3 at night feel completely safe" In my same scroll i literally saw how there are posters on how to not sexually harass a woman, separate train cars for women and well just how sad the situation is
@@grahamlopez3742you watch too many Japanese porno lol no there is no SA on the streets in Japan. I walked around Tokyo during 1-6am all the time no problem.
Japan is beautiful as a tourist but my sister works as an IT consultant there and she has faced SA issues while commuting through train due to ehich she had to shift jobs closer to home and start travelling with bicycle She also loves Japan but for an extrovert like her she admits that Japan is very depressing and that she might move onto the next country her company assigns her to when given the chance
As an indonesian, 1. We can unclick elevator buttons 2. All toilets have bidets 3. We can get solid meals in convenience stores 4. More cashiers come out if the line gets too long 5. We can use our public transportation cards for everything Most countries in asia are similar, but Japan is just really really disciplined!! Theyre amazing people
I saw on Takashi that young kids going somewhere alone will wear little yellow hats which signify that they may require a little bit of help getting to their destination. 🥺
Here in East London I go to the train station every day with my friends and get back in the dark walking through a dangerous common And worrying for my life But in Japan it’s just so much nicer
There was a a girl from the UK in my class and while we were walking to carpool, she was explaining to me how she found the transportation system odd because in the UK, they take public transportation home instead of individual busses, and she said that It'd take like an hour or so to get home. I thought that was odd, but seeing this video make me realize that the United States is literally so unsafe that kids like me are just used to it and would rather question why that's safe rather than why the united states is unsafe. It honestly kind of sad that kids in the US are just desensitized to this and dont even realize how bad it is. Edit: i just asked my mom and she thought the exact same thing that i did. We really need to fix a lot of things in the US, society really is fucked up, i don't even know if theres any saving society anymore.
I mean a lot of stuff like the cashier, elevator and kids getting around on their own is pretty normal in Europe. The last is common like everywhere except North America. I walked myself to preschool. Kids are just little humans and capable of a lot more than North America trusts them with.
In fairness though, most of the US and some other parts of North America aren’t super walkable or don’t offer a ton of options for public transport. They’re specifically designed for movement by cars. Honestly though, even if it was I wouldn’t be surprised if cars or school buses would be used anyways lol
@@Laurel_Lemon I mean the mentality is so different. There is this RU-vid that talks about city planning (I don’t remember the name) that got sued for letting his 8 & 10 year olds uns public transport on trained routs. In Canada. Like that’s normal in the rest of the world and in Canada it’s child neglect🤨
It's wild to me that people do that, because that's how your child ends up going missing. I mean preschool? That is just insane. You don't have the reasoning skills as a five-year-old, to understand what is dangerous and what is not like you do when you are teen and older. 💀
@@Sandfrauthat's insane to let a child that young do that.... I think about myself at that age, and how I just didn't understand danger like I did as I got older. That is so terrifying. All it takes is one person, to do something to your child. You only need to look up the sex offender registries around the world, to understand how serious of an issue it is...
NO PLACE on this earth is SAFE. Please never say this. Young women especially hear it so much they assume it’s okay to not use their normal precautions and bad things happen.
True. All vulnerable ppl need to be very careful wherever they go. All these countries that used to claim to be safe have been invaded by ppl of other cultures wh calls for a change of strategy when out and about.
In a lot of states in the USA, you aren’t able to walk around at 3 am safely and I think that is just horrible and same with the kids being able to just go to school by themselves.
In Bulgarian we have some of these things. One, every single kid in Bulgaria goes to school alone with the public transport. Two, almost all of the subways have heated under the seats, so your legs don’t freeze during the winter. And three, when you’re on an elevator, you stay on the right side, so that people can walk on the left one.
I'm in Switzerland and thought the same thing! I love trains having heating in the winter and AC in the summer, people standing on the right side of an escalator so others can pass by easily or more cashiers coming out when the line gets too long.
I live in Japan here are some thoughts. 1. Un-clicking elevators are not exclusive to japan. It’s more depends on the manufacturer. I once used a Schindler elevator in Germany that has this feature as well. 2. Western toilet ( those high tech toilet ) is very common in big cities but not rural parts of japan. But most of them have already caught on. 3. Standing at one side of escalator is a MUST. Which side to stand is depending on region, but never block the walking side especially in metro stations if you don’t want to get cold shouldered by Japanese commuters.
Why are you devaluing every positive thing she said about Japan?? What on earth…your comment reeks of animosity and it is very uncomfortable to observe. Either leave this beautiful nation or seek therapy to figure yourself out. Wtf did I just read…Western toilets??? Nowhere in the US did I find these toilets except private homes where the tenants BOUGHT them. Huh?? The buttons in elevators are COMMON in Japan…and UNCOMMON elsewhere..,that is the point 😂😂🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🙄🙄
Most kids in NYC also take themselves to school. It's an accessibility thing. In most of America, it's unsafe for kids to walk around due to too much car infrastructure, which in turn makes public transit less reliable. So parents HAVE to drive kids to school. But add public transit and safer streets and kids can take it or walk.
I went twice - I would say it’s pretty safe. I wouldn’t say it’s the safest. I’m a woman and went on vacation with my female friend. And we had a guy stalk us to our Airbnb. It was frightening. The positive thing was that we went to a 711 and they helped hold us there and offered to help.
I agree the main reason why they left her alone was because she seemed to always be with her male companion which makes sense. I traveled there for a work trip and as an afro-latina woman I was stalked and leered at often. At one point it felt like I was back home in Latin America with the aggressive sexual interest and it showed so two of my gay male colleagues took pity on me and started hanging out with me to protect me. With two males that weren't interested in me the trip was much more fun since I got less attention from creeps. It was awkward fun being the third wheel in a gay love affair though, I wanted them to enjoy time on their own even though they insisted they were afraid for me so we worked around it so we had a balance since they wouldn't leave me alone after I came back to the hotel shooked up from being groped in the trains. Other than that it's truly such an unique, fun country that I think people should try to experience even once since it does feel like visiting another planet. No one knows how to enjoy every little thing in life like these people do.
This is outsiders perspective which may seem amazing but to live it is a different matter. I grew up there but I removed myself from Japan because of these things. In order to be part of that society, you are stripped of individuality. Japan has the highest conviction rate in the world. This means anyone accused of a crime, you will end up in jail. There are no innocent until proven guilty. More like guilty even innocent. The accusations alone, you will be excommunicated from the community. All the services you were privileged to have will be gone.
Is it safe to say Japan is amazing compared to most other countries? I assume the person that created the video isn’t considering Japan as “heaven” where everything is “perfect.”
The conviction rate isn’t that high because they just convict everyone who’s arrested. It’s that high because they only arrest people who they have enough evidence to guarantee a conviction. So, yeah, you’re going to be an outcast because everyone knows they must have some serious shit on you if you got arrested.
In America, the reason another cashier doesn't come out is because they understaff on purpose to reduce budget. If you don't like it, stop shopping there. The only reason they're doing it is because they're still profiting.
As an American cashier who's worked in retail over 6 years...we do actually do this. XD Maybe not everywhere, obviously I can't speak to every store. But at least ours does, it's a major chain and it's also company policy.
Most of the things mentioned are not just in Japan. I live in the UK and I started going to school myself when I was 9. The first time I ever went out myself I was around 6. The escalator rule is a massive thing in UK, particularly the London Underground. The only people who break it are tourists or people who are new to the system, and they quickly get politely cussed at and trampled over by people in a rush who are late to work. Also, I've been on many lifts where you can unpress a button, so definitely not just in Japan. In literally every supermarket and lots of corner shops here you can get a meal deal for around £3, which is basically a drink of your choice, a snack/side of your choice, and a main of your choice which can be pastas, salads, sandwiches, wraps, sushi, or something else of your choice. Not just Japan.
Same here in Belgium, this is just an American that left the US and is surprised that stuff is different and people respect eachother in other countries. Literally- Thing anywhere else in the world: "ugh so lame, stupid, unoriginal and boring..." Thing in Japan: "omg so awesome, cool, unique and innovative!!!"
ok so that like first clip with the tori gates, its like this huge shrine near kyoto, and i js got back from japan, anyways those gates go all the way up the mountain, and the climb is supposed to take like 3-4 hours but i did it sub 1 with some friends, anyways if you are in japan its well worth the trip cant wait to go back. also mnt fuji is amazing, and i love the escilator thing
Believe it or not I once took the Greyhound from Orlando to Pittsburgh and when the bus broke down, we were near a convenience store that had coolers w all sorts of decent real meal foods and it was open very late. I avoid convenience stores except for an occasional morning coffee while traveling or on vacation, but except for Texas where lots of migrant workers live (that's legitimate migrant workers, not invaders) where they have hot food counters & booths or tables & chairs, I've never seen real food or good food at a convenience store in the States.
The kids taking themselves to school is legit. We were at a train station, gosh I forgot where in Japan, and I saw a four year old girl, nice and sharp in her school uniform, walking alone to her train. I was simultaneously flabbergasted and impressed.
In Germany the kids start going to school alone at age 6 to 7 🤔 a four year old seems a bit too young, because especially when the way is a bit longer (experience from my own 4 year old) they can’t remember the ways completely accurate and that leaves room for getting lost 😅 (and to be clear here: my sons way is 6 stations with one bus, he knows the part where we go by foot very good but on the bus his orientation is not as good and sometimes he mixes up the bus stops. That’s why I think he is still too young.)
Well, 10,000 kids go missing a year in Japan sooo maybe it's not the safest place on the earth and people should reconsider letting their kids travel alone. Guarantee that's when they get snagged by some creep.
I don't think that Japanese children can get to school earlier than 6-7 years. Maybe, you mistook the kindergarten uniform for school? That one with yellow hat.
@@gerax16 I think they're referring to the fact she confidently stated that as a woman you can safely walk around at 3am, despite sexual assault being one of if not the most common crimes in japan
I think the fact that you were with your boyfriend played a huge factor in how safe you were. I went with a group, but almost every time I went out by myself in the evening, I got grabbed or had my ass smacked 😢
@agarsrish It was, but I also had pictures taken of myself and my legs while I was going through the countryside 🤷 and I was with guys as well. I'm snow white with red hair, so I suppose you could say it was due to fascination, but still 🤦♀️
@@desertrose3511 as a japanese person who lives here, SA does not happen all the time on trains lol. you just hear about it online a lot because thats the only common crime that happens in japan.
Late but shes from the us i think forgieners dont realizes just how fucked up the US is can be some of our citys like baltimore has 60-70% of the city as a huge ghetto full of gang violence i have storys my freinds have storys of us walking through really bad parts of european citys and not even knowing that the area was dangerous. Look up baltimore ghetto or kensigton avenue and compare that to japense ghettos there a dinffrance.
If you think japan has it better than the “rest of the world” you haven’t traveled or researched best quality of life. Visiting japan ok. Born in japan deals with shame ,overwork, nearly impossible to date for some, high suicide incidences etc.. every place has similarities and differences but no place is utopia. Weeaboos love the japanese more than the japanese revel in each other, creating (along with anime and manga) a huge hype in western culture that gets excited about every japanese difference- like …wow! Elevator buttons!! Amazing!!! Ooooo!! Ahhhh!!! I’d be more excited about countries with mandatory 8 weeks of vacation, good quality of life. BTW Lots of countries are safe enough for kids to go to school on public transportation. You must be comparing it to the usa to be so astounded.
Why tf is everyone suddenly criticizing Japan all the time. Everyone used to hate Asians, now they love Japan cuz of anime, now everyone’s over that so they go back to criticizing every single thing. Yeah, it’s not a good country but no country is good. Every country sucks and Japan isn’t special
@@bookwormd8627It’s in response to the romanticization of Japan. It’s important to remember that every country has its problems, and those problems should be highlighted so that greater awareness can be brought to them, and hopefully fixed in the future.
@@bookwormd8627its not critisisung. people(especially jaoenese) are tired of the blind glorification of japan when it has igs problems like everywhere else. its like if your dad abuses you but guests who only visit keeps raving about how hes amazing and must be a great advanced modern kind dad!
yeah exactly, they make it sound really amazing when it's cool but not that cool. Also the misconception about how "safe" it is at night whilst walking with her boyfriend at night.
Oh, you're so innocent. Japan is most certainly NOT a safe place, especially for women. Sexual assault is common in Japan, but is severely underreported. If you're a woman walking with your boyfriend/husband, or even just a close male friend, you'll be okay. But if you're traveling as a solo woman, you definitely need to keep an eye on the people around you. Pay attention, keep yourself safe.
I was about to talk about the SA that happens there, but someone already covered it. I was also going to talk about how shit the pay tends to be and the working system but someone already covered that too. Its good to see people informing others.
The escalator thing we have here in Sweden too, although some people deviate from it sometimes, but generally you walk on the left side and stand on the right of it
When I was working in a Japanese company, it had a very demanding job, it was tough. However, the toilet was really great and clean that it was my source of comfort. They polished it every day. The toilet paper was always folded neatly. It smelled really good, too. I haven't seen any better toilets than what I had in there. 😂
Over-compensating “nice conveniences” by Japanese government are some of the tradeoffs for working salaried careers an wageslave jobs for the corporations at 60,80, even 100 hours PER week. The structural worker-bee enslavement system instituted in Japan and other countries literally makes many business men’s lives just working 12 hour workdays 5-6 days/week. It is no way to live long term as free human beings as a westerner imo. Japan is a buddhist, shinto, atheistic/agnostic nation and is very different from the West. There are great things about the Japanese culture, it’s food, and of course it’s great people, however I think the fringes of Japanese society are already approaching a big-tech “distopian cyberpunk” like nature, which is mass surveillance, cameras, and monitoring of it’s citizens. I believe it is one of the nations that has provided the real life blueprint example for the globalists/nwo of using big tech, policing control, business corporations/monopolies and government laws to regulate polite behaviour, non-violence, and utmost respect for authority figures, bosses, etc. All the strict guidelines (some necessary) place 100+ million peoples into a very small space area wise on the map. It’s no wonder that there has to be Sooo many entertaining distractions like outrageous tv shows, neon lights, eating, shopping, drinking, pron industry an prostitution areas that can resemble the main strip in Las Vegas. To placate the masses brave new world style, you need all sorts of fun an outrageous gameshows, neon entertainment, hyper-aesthetic food plating an display, vices, novelties and escapes to distract from the structural underbelly of the corporate system in place. Many americans or westerners couldn’t handle it.
The staying on the one side of escalators so others can walk past you rule is actually in my college campus. I wish it was everywhere, it helps when you are on a rush
I was in Tokyo for a 2 week course and I was having a quick lunch outside and I saw a group of kids walking down the street in two lines. I kid you not but the whole street parted for those kids so they were walking down the middle. The kids were so cute and happy with their matching yellow hats and everyone smiled when they walked past.
The Netherlands has most of these too Trains/metros usually have heating busses too. Kids go to school themselves (I thought this was everywhere?) Escalator rules are also a thing in the Netherlands. Stores also have full meals in the Netherlands (once again thought this was everywhere?) Check out line thing is also in the Netherlands
As a customer, it is great to have shops open at 3 am and employees ready whenever it gets busy, but those employees are probably working overtimes and underpaid because that is the work culture of Japan.
We do the escalator rule in England too, you have to stand on the right side so people on the left can run up if they have somewhere to go. We can easily tell if someone is a tourist because they stand on the left😂
Wish it was like this in the US Instead, you have a bunch of people running right up the middle or standing in the middle of exit and entryways staring at their phones.
To be fair half this stuff also happens in Australia. I’ve been to 16+ countries and I’m currently in Indonesia and the fact I can’t unselect lift buttons has really really annoyed me at the hotel especially when people press the down one and get annoyed as it takes ages and walk the stairs and I’m going up and can’t unselect down.
After 7 years total in Japan, I've never encountered an elevator that had such buttons. I guess newer elevators allow you to unclick buttons, but not all of them for sure.
In Australia, there is the escalator rule. Also, students always travel to and from school by train and it is legit so normal, no one twitches an eye. After school, trains in my area are 99% filled with students in uniform...
and not just trains either..not uncommon for kids to ride their pushies (pushbikes) great distances to school. I was abt 11 i think when I rode to my primary school and recently retraced the way I took in my car and it was up and down hills and a long way 😂 but we just did it, kept us fit and we liked it! ❤
When she says kids I think she means very little kids. When I was in Japan I saw kids as young as 6-7 years old taking trains on their own. They’re taught from a young age to be independent
In São Paulo, Brazil, we have that escalator rule because we are very hasty. It mirrors driving patterns (the lanes in the left have a higher speed limit) it's quite common for us, but people from other regions find it weird lol
they did however say you could just walk around at night because it is that safe in Japan. Which it is not unless you're either male or in a group. @@alphavegas1
Americans don’t let their children walk around like that because of numbers of children that disappeared and were ‘found’ during the golden age of serial killers. And on top of that, fears of predators and rumors of child traffickers kidnapping children have added to that 6 decades old fear. My parents used to trick or treat in the late 60’s as children by themselves, until a couple of children a few years in a row throughout their state (FL) went missing on Halloween and were found…well you can easily find those stories if you’re interested, but they’re f*cked up and graphic. After that in the 70’s, my grandparents refused to let them trick or treat alone and made them go with friends. And they couldn’t go without a TRUSTED adult or group of adults who could keep an eye on them. My mom’s mother was especially insistent on that. My mom continued that with my older sister and I, and we’d either go to her mothers house and trick or treat with my cousins, or they’d come over to our neighborhood. That’s a standard practice now for Americans on Halloween, or you have parties where you can safely give them candy. But you never let go by themselves anywhere like in Japan, you’re asking for them to become a morbid statistic.