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Some here know that I'm an American immigrant living in Japan. This is my second time living here, after moving back nearly 12 years ago. I will say that the best way to be happy living here is by mostly avoiding other foreigners. My first time living in Japan was in an apartment building owned by the city's board of education, in which all residents were either us English teachers working for the city or some foreign exchange adult students at a university or something. It was useful having others to help me learn about using the laundry machines and such, but for the most part nobody was "going native" and we all sort of lived by our own rules. I once had to go downstairs and tell everyone that the party in the parking lot was lasting past 9pm and that they ought to wrap it up. While the benefit of living there was that it was like a commune of sorts, the bad side is that it was essentially like a "gaijin ghetto." Our cohesion did not match the society's cohesion at times.

Whenever you get a bunch of foreigners together here, almost inevitably one starts griping about Japan and then it spreads. That really wears down on your mind. And I have to say that my libtard coworkers are the most vocal about griping about Japan. The whole speck in your brother's eye when you have a plank in your own kind of thing. It's rather absurd. Fortunately, I don't really see them often because we are off doing our own work every day. In any case, I have found that my ability to enjoy living in Japan is by limiting my interaction with other foreigners, and mostly associating with those who truly love Japan. I would much rather live in Japan than in America, and Japanese Christians are by far kinder and more sincere than the majority of so-called Christians in America.

So these immigrant hordes in Europe cling together, refuse to assimilate due to their numbers, create ghettos and even establish no-go zones. You don't see other immigrats behaving so violently because Islam is inherently a violent ideolgy of subjugation.

I did not come to Japan to make this country more like America. These libtard coworkers think that nationalism is somehow a bad thing, but they can't stop to consider why they'd rather live here than teaching English in Cambodia or someplace like that. It's because Japan protects its national identity, and that identity is rather beloved across the world.

Muslims have the same pattern. Immigrate, claim victim status and demand special privileges, then when they grow in numbers, the violence begins. Communism spread in China rather similarly too.

So what I'm saying is that with a population bomb, there is no hope for proper assimilation. But, that's exactly what the globalists want though. To destabilize. Sometimes they get a taste of their own medicine, like when that one (German?) politician's daughter got raped by a rapey-rapey Muslim. For the most part though, this is a problem for us peasants to deal with.

281 days ago
4 score
Reason: Original

Some here know that I'm an American immigrant living in Japan. This is my second time living here, after moving back nearly 12 years ago. I will say that the best way to be happy living here is by mostly avoiding other foreigners. My first time living in Japan was in an apartment building owned by the city's board of education, in which all residents were either us English teachers working for the city or some foreign exchange adult students at a university or something. It was useful having others to help me learn about using the laundry machines and such, but for the most part nobody was "going native" and we all sort of lived by our own rules. I once had to go downstairs and tell everyone that the party in the parking lot was lasting past 9pm and that they ought to wrap it up. While the benefit of living there was that it was like a commune of sorts, the bad side is that it was essentially like a "gaijin ghetto." Our cohesion did not match the society's cohesion at times.

Whenever you get a bunch of foreigners together here, almost inevitably one starts griping about Japan and then it spreads. That really wears down on your mind. And I have to say that my libtard coworkers are the most vocal about griping about Japan. The whole speck in your brother's eye when you have a plank in your own kind of thing. It's rather absurd. Fortunately, I don't really see them often because we are off doing our own work every day. In any case, I have found that my ability to enjoy living in Japan is by limiting my interaction with other foreigners, and mostly associating with those who truly love Japan. I would much rather live in Japan than in America, and Japanese Christians are by far kinder and more sincere than the majority of so-called Christians in America.

So these immigrant hordes in Europe cling together, refuse to assimilate due to their numbers, create ghettos and even establish no-go zones. You don't see other immigrats behaving so violently because Islam is inherently a violent ideolgy of subjugation.

I did not come to Japan to make this country more like America. These libtard coworkers think that nationalism is somehow a bad thing, but they can't stop to consider why they'd rather live here than teaching English in Cambodia or someplace like that. It's because Japan protects its national identity, and that identity is rather beloved across the world.

Muslims have the same pattern. Immigrate, claim victim status and demand special privileges, then when they grow in numbers, the violence begins. Communism spread in China rather similarly too.

281 days ago
1 score