Sashimi Report: Japan News, Raw!
Reform is in the air in Japan these days. You name it, and Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi wants to change it. Banks. Road-building. Elections. Haircuts.
But we at the Sashimi Report have a few things we'd like to reform -- with one
firm calligraphy stroke -- and they won't cause any loss of jobs or affect the
country's GDP. They include:
Garbage collection
Solution: Garbage bins with lids.
Crows
Solution: Shoot them!
Schoolchildren's bags
Solution: Nylon.
Morning coats.
Solution: Yukata, the lightweight cotton kimonos. They're Japanese through and
through, they're comfortable and they don't make the wearer look like a stuffed
shirt.
The amplified sound trucks used by right-wing nationalists.
Solution: Force the right-wing nationalist groups who operate these trucks to
listen to the heartthrob boy band SMAP 24 hours a day for a week.
SMAP.
Solution: Draft the boys into the Self-Defense Forces.
Vacations, part I.
Solution: Start with the bosses. Force them to take at least three weeks off
every year. If they refuse and come to work, change the locks.
Vacations, part II.
Solution: Sell people discount tickets with destination "to-be-announced."
Train etiquette.
Solution: Anyone caught being rude is sentenced to a day-long train ride with a
hungry crow, 5 Diet members wearing nothing but yukata and a right-wing
nationalist screaming the lyrics to SMAP songs over the public address system.
O.K, now we feel better.
For a culture as sensitized to cleanliness and order as this one, there's a
curious cognitive dissonance about picking up the trash. Briefly, this is how it
works. Householders put their trash out on the street on certain days of the
week. One day is for "burnables" -- paper and biodegradable food and such.
Another day is for plastics and other "non-burnables." Another day is for
recyclables. All that sounds nice and eco-friendly. But where it all falls apart
-- literally -- is that the garbage is set out in plastic bags. So the streets
are turned into stinky, messy mazes of garbage, ripe for the pickings of Tokyo's
nuclear-mutated crows that are bigger than many toddlers.
See No. 1.
At many schools, children wear leather upholstered backpacks that appear heavier
than the frames of the small children forced to wear them. Plus, they are
expensive. And they use animal products, needlessly.
Are we the only people who think the long, tailed morning coats and pin-striped
pants worn by members of the Diet (Japan's parliament) for official functions,
look a bit ridiculous? Lose the top hat and tails, unless you plan to dance like
Fred Astaire.
We're all for free speech, but does it have to be so loud? We asked an organizer
of one of these groups (he was wearing a military suit, jackboots and a scowl)
why the volume has to be cranked up so high. His answer: "To intimidate people."
O.K., we're scared. Now, turn it down!
The problem: People don't take them. Koizumi is on the right track here, taking
a week plus off to relax in the hot-spring baths at Hakone. One executive we
know loves to brag that she hasn't taken a vacation in six years. That "boast"
should be cause for demotion.
The problem: The people who do take vacations take them at the same time.
Namely, all of Japan disappears during Golden Week in late April/early May and
during Obon Week, in August. And everybody goes to the same places. So it's not
like vacation at all, it's just the usual, humdrum life with all the usual
humdrum people exported to some other place.
The problem: Commuters refuse to yield or give seats to old people, pregnant
women, children or anyone with a physical handicap.
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