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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 1:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

tabana wrote:
lol

It gives a whole new meaning to ballot stuffing. hehe

lol

I'll say.

"A vote for my candidate means a vote for a larger cup size!" hehe rofl
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 5:22 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

tabana wrote:
Yet another "only in Japan" news. hehe

Ballot box bra takes top spot in weekly entertainment news ranking source

"Voter Turnout Lift-Up Bra," was designed to increase the turnout at the House of Councillors election in July.


My goodness. Shake Head
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tabana



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PostPosted: Thu May 17, 2007 10:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

A continuation about the baby drop box.

Japan irked toddler put in baby drop box
source

TOKYO - Japan's first anonymous drop box for unwanted babies triggered a wave of anger and soul searching Wednesday after it was discovered that a preschooler �\ and not an infant �\ was left by his father on the service's first day.Newspapers condemned the father and warned that the operation was open to abuse and could traumatize youngsters.The drop-off for infants, known as "Stork's Cradle," was begun May 10 by the Roman Catholic-run Jikei Hospital in the southern city of Kumamoto to discourage abortions and the abandonment of children in unsafe public places. The same day, a boy now believed to be 3 was found inside.

The boy, who was in good health, reportedly said he was left by his father, who was seen holding the youngster's hand as they approached the hospital. They apparently rode Japan's bullet train to Kumamoto, but it was unclear where they lived."I came with Daddy," the boy was quoted as saying by the Mainichi newspaper. Local media reported the boy was able to identify himself by name, but it was unclear whether the father had been identified. The revelation of the boy's age Tuesday triggered outrage among political leaders, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe saying that "anonymously throwing out a child is unacceptable." He urged parents to consult social workers for help if raising children gets too tough.

The hospital has refused to comment on the case, citing privacy concerns, but said there were age limits on its drop-off service. Police have decided no crime was committed because the child was left in a situation in which it was not exposed to immediate harm, Kyodo News reported Wednesday. A small hatch in the side of the hospital allows anyone to anonymously put a baby into an incubator 24 hours a day. It was created after a series of high-profile cases in which newborns were abandoned in parks and supermarkets.

"We must rethink the meaning of the baby drop-off," the conservative Sankei newspaper said in an editorial. It called the boy's abandonment "unforgivable," saying that "unlike a baby, a toddler may suffer from trauma." The Yomiuri newspaper said it was too early to judge the baby drop, but said it must be used for its original purpose of receiving newborns, not young children.
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kenjilina



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PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 6:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

some parents are so irresponsible and selfish. Shake Head
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 7:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

kenjilina wrote:
some parents are so irresponsible and selfish. Shake Head


I know! How can you give up your own child? How can you have a child and not love it? Shake Head I'm totally disgusted.
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Anime Dad



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PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 7:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

I wonder if they would take a 16-year old? rofl JOKE!

Seriously though... that's sad.
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kenjilina



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PostPosted: Fri May 18, 2007 1:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Wynter wrote:


I know! How can you give up your own child? How can you have a child and not love it? Shake Head I'm totally disgusted.


when you see some animals that defend their young to the death. us humans are supposedly better. i agree with you. Shake Head
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bmwracer



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PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2007 1:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Sobering news from Japan: Sweat

Grisly crimes alarming Japan
A series of killings in which the bodies were dismembered has unleashed a frenzy of self-examination.
By Bruce Wallace
Times Staff Writer

May 27, 2007

TOKYO �\ It's not so much the news of a 17-year-old boy stabbing his mother to death that has shocked Japan, dominating chatter on tabloid TV for the last two weeks and sending shudders through a nation that prides itself on a low homicide rate.

The greater horror lies with what he did afterward. Having killed his mother as she slept, police say, the boy cut off her arm and head with a saw. Spray-painted her arm white and stuck it in a potted plant. Put her head in a sports bag and carried it with him to an Internet cafe, where he spent two hours watching rap music videos in a private booth.

He then took a taxi to a police station in his town in northern Japan, where he surrendered the head and told the officers, "It didn't matter who I killed."

Step by gruesome step, it's hard to imagine a more grisly crime.

Yet what unsettles many Japanese is that dismembering the body of a slaying victim, known here as barabara jiken or "scattered pieces incidents," no longer seems like such an aberration. Over the last several months, there has been a series of killings in which the bodies have been cut up or disposed of in sickening ways.

The disturbing crimes have unleashed a national frenzy of self-examination, with criminologists, politicians and anyone else with an opinion asking whether some macabre virus has infected contemporary Japanese society. It has given rise to suggestions that the killers were mimicking dismemberment scenes in best-selling novels and that the cause is the increasing divide between rich and poor in a society that once prided itself on egalitarianism.

These theories, based on little more than speculation but amplified by entranced media, have contributed to a sense that a country once bound by tight family and community ties is splintering into something alien.

"These recent murders are about self-validation: people murdering someone in order to fulfill an 'empty self,' " said Jinsuke Kageyama, a criminal psychologist. "The murderers recover their lost power by killing."

The recent savagery began in December, when a Tokyo woman confessed to killing her allegedly adulterous husband with a blow from a wine bottle and then cutting his body into pieces. The parts were found scattered across two city wards; his head was buried in a suburban park.

Less than a month later, a 21-year-old Tokyo man was accused of killing his younger sister. He claimed he lashed out violently after she belittled him for his failure to win acceptance to dental school. Police said he hacked her body into pieces and stuffed the parts into four garbage bags.

In March, the strangled body of a young, female English-language teacher from Britain was discovered buried in a sand-filled bathtub in a university student's Tokyo apartment. The suspect eluded a police raid and is still on the run.

The incident occurred around the time a verdict was reached in the trial of another Japanese man in the slaying of Lucie Blackman. The British woman, who was working as a Tokyo bar hostess, disappeared in July 2000. Authorities found her remains in 2001. The body had been dismembered and the head encased in concrete. Judges acquitted real estate developer Joji Obara in her death and dismemberment, saying there was no physical evidence linking him to Blackman's body.

And these aren't the only stories dominating media coverage. They have been accompanied by what seems to some a deluge of shocking crimes, from the random stabbing of a 2-year-old child by a woman in a Yokohama shopping mall, to a couple accused of dumping their toddler son's body on a mountainside after he suffocated in the helmet compartment of their motorcycle.

The recent mayhem in a country with a low homicide rate, which has been falling, has commentators scrambling for explanations. Some criminologists argue that socially dysfunctional students go unnoticed in a school system in which docility and acute shyness are regarded as normal.

Others see a copycat syndrome, pointing to novels such as the 1998 bestseller "Out," in which a wife kills her abusive husband and then conscripts three female co-workers to help dismember the body for easier disposal.

Corporate restructuring that ended the jobs-for-life era also has been cited as a possible cause. So too the tunnel vision produced by playing violent video games. Some ruling party politicians said the burst of gore underscored the legitimacy of their campaign to restore what they say are lost Japanese values: love of family and love of country.

"We are witnessing the deterioration of Japanese society," lawmaker Tsuneo Suzuki told parliament. "We must stem this appalling destruction of family and community morals."

Yet the record shows that dismembering bodies is neither unique to Japan nor a newly arrived phenomenon. Dismemberment took place in the Edo period (1603-1868), said Mark Schreiber, an American who is a longtime resident of Japan and the author of two books on the history of sensational crime in the country. He said random slashings of innocent passersby occurred regularly during the Showa era (1926-89) and that the Taisho period (1912-26) had its record of sadistic, gory crimes.

Even the national tabloid-induced panic is nothing new. Ten years ago, a 14-year-old killer deposited the severed head of an 11-year-old child at the gates of an elementary school in Kobe, and taunted police and citizens with threats to kill again before he was finally caught.

Nor is dismemberment unknown outside Japan. The savage 1947 slaying of Elizabeth Short in Los Angeles, the Black Dahlia case, remains one of America's most infamous, and both Canada and Britain were scandalized by multiple dismemberment killings in the 1990s.

The conflict in the Middle East also has produced a numbing abundance of political and religiously inspired beheadings, many recorded and available for viewing on the Internet.

"There's a lot of mindless mayhem out there all over the world, and I don't know what you can really read into it," Schreiber said. "People are just freaking out. And they are using whatever they can get their hands on that's lethal."

Individual motives in the recent Japanese killings vary widely. The British teacher appears to have been stalked and her killer was trying to hide the evidence of his crime. The 17-year-old who killed his mother allegedly claimed any victim would do, and made no attempt to evade capture. The Tokyo wife told police that her husband was abusing her; she cut up his body, the media reported, because she simply couldn't physically dispose of him all at once.

Even if culture was the cause, the fault may not rest solely with Japan. Violence and sadism are not unique to this nation: American pop culture, from Bret Easton Ellis to "The Sopranos," also includes scenes of dismemberment.

"Sure you have Japanese kids who pour themselves into the fantasies of their computers," said Jimmy Sakoda, 71, a former Los Angeles Police Department homicide investigator who had close ties to Japanese police during his career. "But because of the Internet, these kids are just as likely to be influenced by American movies or rap lyrics as by homegrown stuff."

That's why many observers are reluctant to lay blame for such extreme cases on Japan's social ills.

"When someone dismembers a body, that's total hatred," Sakoda said. "That's when killing's not enough. It's hate beyond reason."
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tabana



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PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2007 10:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

They've been watching too many mafia movies. Sweat IIRC, the 1st guy had a schizophrenic past. We have a few of those every year, but we're as much in the whole country than Tokyo alone... Most of the time it's to get rid of the evidence and not for fun, like the 1st guy tho.

I could probably name a few ex that wanted to chop off my head. hehe Beaten
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2007 10:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Quote:
Others see a copycat syndrome, pointing to novels such as the 1998 bestseller "Out," in which a wife kills her abusive husband and then conscripts three female co-workers to help dismember the body for easier disposal.

Corporate restructuring that ended the jobs-for-life era also has been cited as a possible cause. So too the tunnel vision produced by playing violent video games. Some ruling party politicians said the burst of gore underscored the legitimacy of their campaign to restore what they say are lost Japanese values: love of family and love of country.


I used to think that people blamed videogames/movies/books etc. for such incidents mainly because they had no where else to point. I'm beginning to see their point.

I mean, I remember being 10 and hearing of a game (which was banned a month after release) where the goal was to rape a certain amount of girls within a certain duration of time. When you think about the mindset of the producers of the game... I don't see a difference with the mindset of rapers. The root is still there, whether the creators of the game actually rape in life or not. The action is just a reaction to thoughts, and the thoughts are the root of the cause.

Mind you, I play Halo and enjoying shooting people in video games (i'm a damn good sniper) but I could never imagine myself killing in life.

In the end it depends on the indiviual, and even so, this individual prolly IS inspired by graphic media.
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tabana



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PostPosted: Mon May 28, 2007 11:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Exactly! Some people have mental problems to begin with and don't really know the difference between reality and fiction. Others like to blame someone else for their own actions to avoid jail.

I play games for fun or is it because I'm single and have no life Shameful Cry and would never do that in real life. Street racing in a million dollar sports car, shoot aliens, take over the world, kill zombies in a mall with various objects or like my latest addiction, Guitar Hero 2, play guitar. hehe Beaten
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Anime Dad



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 6:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

I think you can blame just about anything for that kind of thing if you look close enough. If someone has a predisposition for violence, then NOT playing video games ain't gonna stop them from doing something violent.
I play games too (not much ATM) but don't have the inclination to shoot anyone..
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thtl



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 6:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Anime Dad wrote:
I think you can blame just about anything for that kind of thing if you look close enough. If someone has a predisposition for violence, then NOT playing video games ain't gonna stop them from doing something violent.
I play games too (not much ATM) but don't have the inclination to shoot anyone..


I'm drawing an analogy with health problems - people with certain genetic markers are predisposed to certain diseases. Exposure to certain substances may cause these diseases to manifest itself sooner. E.g. tobacco and lung cancer. The fact that we are living longer makes this phenomenon more noticeable.

People predisposed to violence, genetic or otherwise, may be aroused by 'action' games and movies. At a time when a lot of manual labor was needed these people may not have the time, or the energy, to allow their violent instincts to turn into action. However people in general have more time and less exercise nowadays, which accelerated the manifestation of the violent side of these individuals.

I don't think we can blame just the movie directors or the game producers for increasing violence, but they are not helping.


Last edited by thtl on Tue May 29, 2007 9:31 am; edited 1 time in total
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 7:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

thtl wrote:


I'm drawing an analogy with health problems - people with certain genetic markers are predisposed to certain diseases. Exposure to certain substances may cause these diseases to manifest itself sooner. E.g. tobacco and lung cancer. The fact that we are living longer makes this phenomenon more noticeable.

People predisposed to violence, genetic or otherwise, may be aroused by 'action' games and movies. At a time when a lot of manual labor was needed these people may not have the time, or the energy, to allow their violent instincts to turn into action. However people in general have more time and less exercise nowadays, when accelerated the manifestation of the violent side of these individuals.

I don't think we can blame just the movie directors or the game producers for increasing violence, but they are not helping.


My point exactly, only better stated by you. Thumbsup Mr Green
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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 7:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

I agree. But why is it that someone whose first language isn't English can state it better than others whose first language IS English? Doh!
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 8:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Anime Dad wrote:
I agree. But why is it that someone whose first language isn't English can state it better than others whose first language IS English? Doh!


Easy. Because they actually LEARN to speak English.
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Anime Dad



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 8:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Definitely, in thtl's case Smile
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Wynter



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 9:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Anime Dad wrote:
Definitely, in thtl's case Smile


English is my first language, but I never learned it. I picked it up from surroundings. I mean, we learn grammar in school, but who really takes notes?
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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 9:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

That's true. I guess i'm the same Smile
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thtl



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PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 9:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote Back to top

Anime Dad wrote:
Definitely, in thtl's case Smile


I had the good fortune of having an English teacher as the under-master of my boarding house when I was in boarding school in England. He took the time to help me with my English - we had weekend study sessions for 2 years. As boarding school can get very boring during weekends I also ended up reading a lot. In retrospect that all helped. I'm eternally grateful to my house master and the librarian.
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