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Teenagers Spitting On Conveyer Belt Sushis.. Japan Has A Serious Problem.

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  • Опубліковано 16 кві 2023
  • Why are so many Japanese teenagers posting videos of them spitting on sushis in conveyer belt sushi restaurants, and posting them on Tik Tok?
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    I graduated from Waseda University 早稲田大学 (the alma mater of the current Japanese Prime Minister, Chairman of Samsung Group, CEO of Sony, president and CEO of Honda, etc) with a degree in Global Political Economy 国際政治経済学科 at the Department of Political Science and Economics 政治経済学部, and have lived, studied and worked in Japan for over 10 years.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 34

  • @uyennguyenmaiphuong9310
    @uyennguyenmaiphuong9310 3 місяці тому +8

    I can only speak from my own experience in another Asian country that is Vietnam, but the situation is much alike. The education that I received for 12 years in school was soul crushing to say the least. I start school at 7:30am and finish it at 4:30pm, then go to cram school to study even more till 9:00pm. When I was in high school, to prepare myself for the university entrance exam which to me at that time, was the matter of life and death, I study at cram school till 11:00pm, then I go home, eat my dinner quick, go to bed only to do all that again on the next day. I suffered a lot from academic pressure and peer pressure, and that have affected my mental health for years later on. If you don’t get good grades in school, people instantly see you as a loser, a failure. I was not a delinquent, but I totally understand why so many teenagers rebelled and gave up on their study. I went to a prestigious high school in my city, where all the art and creative subjects like music, painting were got rid off, we must only focus on academic subjects. The education does not raise children to be creative, does not provide them with important skills to communicate, to truly live and grow in life, or to achieve their dreams. It does not raise them to be sympathetic and kind people. The education is built to turn children into robots, make them memorize a shit ton of information just so they can pass exams. And those fail to pass exams are automatically seen as losers, their parents are disappointed of them and think their children must be stupid. My parents scolded me and punished me harshly when I got bad grades. I feel like at some point in life with that tremendous pressure, you reach your breaking point and go to do some crazy shit.

  • @SuperNovaRider
    @SuperNovaRider 10 місяців тому +40

    People often forget, that there's a difference between a person that is polite because he/she has to be, due to the societal pressure and a person that wants to be nice due to their inner, true self, love and respect for other people. In all of Asia, the society is the main (often even only) reason for people to act nice. Just take a look how people in Asia treat those that are socially below them, like their subordinates or homeless people. Those who are "voluntarily/truly polite" in Asia, are only around 50% at best, like in most countries. (Imagine no police in your country.)
    In Germany we have an old saying: "If you want to know who a person truly is, don't look at how he treats his equals, but his servants."

    • @Crafty_Spirit
      @Crafty_Spirit 7 місяців тому

      Is that really a German saying or a Harry Potter quote or both?

    • @SuperNovaRider
      @SuperNovaRider 7 місяців тому +2

      @@Crafty_Spirit Don't know abou HP, but it's an old German saying. It's not a saying everyone knows, but's fairly well known. There exist various versions of it as well, all with different wording, but the exact same meaning.

    • @Crafty_Spirit
      @Crafty_Spirit 7 місяців тому +1

      @@SuperNovaRider Danke, die Redewendung war mir nicht bekannt

  • @qq84
    @qq84 9 місяців тому +10

    The problem is that it doesn't get persecuted. That's why it's rampant.

  • @ctxgodsarmy
    @ctxgodsarmy Рік тому +3

    Good video man!

  • @doodadsdandy
    @doodadsdandy 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for acknowledging that this WOULD have been happening long before filming/social media being what it is today. Now that there's this ever-developing internet culture of 'rage bait' or online engagement/ popularity, one simple video of someone licking a used portapotty seat can now make someone infamous - and that may be exactly what they want. We used to do dumb stuff in front of our friends and maybe a story comes from it, but now teens are doing it strictly for an invisible audience to garner engagement and shock value - they don't realise yet that in 2-5years they'll most likely really, really regret posting it publicly. The concept of filming and essentially performing as ourselves to an 'invisible audience' is very interesting to me. We tidy up before a photo, we make sure our hair is nice, we take multiple photos to choose the best one etc. Photoshopping of photos is normalised, filters are normalised. To who? Our 12 followers? Why are we performing as ourselves, or like these kids - performing for an invisible audience in hopes to garner purposeful outrage. Especially as the younger generations are often desiring to be famous online personalities, alongside lack of parental guidance with social media now, it would be so EASY to see a video online group of friends all giggling and laughing at licking the soy sauce, and then recreating it immediately. You never sought to do this before, but look at all the views, everyone's laughing, you may find it funny in your dumb teen brain too, and boom it's on the internet forever.
    When I was in middle school, I was excused to go to the bathroom, and for whatever reason in my dumb kid brain I decided to wet toilet paper and huck it up at the high ceilings a couple times, fascinated that it stuck there. I called it a day and went back to class, not thinking anything of it. It inspired other students to do it too until there was an assembly held to tell students to knock it off. Not ONCE did I think about the custodians who would have had to get large ladders to repeatedly clean it, I - and other students - just thought it was dumb and silly, and I feel awful to this day for it (as I did it for curiosity but then it clearly inspired other students to keep doing it purposefully as a prank! whoops 🤦), I should have just aimed at the wall for easier clean up 😉hahaha
    Thank you for sharing part of your childhood too, Al, it was very insightful. South Korea and Japan are commonly referred to as strict, we hear about the suicide rates, we hear about the bullying in schools, and tiger parents but I feel like western society has just simply deemed this all as dedication, strict but necessary discipline etc etc instead of truly traumatising to the children involved.

  • @MrCZRC
    @MrCZRC 10 місяців тому +6

    Just before 5 mins in video id like to add that doing such stupids acts of criminal behaviour would be more thrilling and thus more likely to be done than without it being on video.

  • @blackadder564
    @blackadder564 11 місяців тому +3

    How are they not used to using smartphones?

  • @boygurl2619
    @boygurl2619 9 місяців тому +2

    what a lot of bs..generation now have no morals.. there are kids far worse than these brats and they chose not to go down that rd..these kids know what's right and wrong.they not small children ..just more excuses blah blah blah.. they need to feel what happens for there actions, big time.. life is hard all over.not just there

  • @JagaimoNeko
    @JagaimoNeko 9 місяців тому +1

    「愚かさには限界がない」まあ、どの国も理想的だと考えるのは愚かだろう

  • @muajin
    @muajin 11 місяців тому +17

    Maybe they were copying stupid stuff that kids in the usa are doing *licking ice cream buckets and putting them back in the market freezer etc*

    • @user-si3qc4pp5d
      @user-si3qc4pp5d 7 місяців тому +2

      No. They don't copy.
      They're just stupid.

  • @Chris3s
    @Chris3s Рік тому +11

    This is not a problem just in japan, but I believe the education provided to children, be it from schools or their parents, is not good enough. In japan especially this could be a problem since most schools are quite expensive to get into (having a free/almost free education system like in the EU helps a lot here). The parents should also be helped to provide better education for their kids, as most parents are lacking many skills and important knowledge. Not related, but it baffles me that parents expect their kids to be indepted to them later on. Parents should love their kids without expecting something back now or later, and if both parties respect or love each other, they will help each other on their own.

    • @DerFreelancerT
      @DerFreelancerT Рік тому +1

      As if love is everything. Discipline in the right moments is as important, but thats something more and more forgotten in the western world. Seeing how childcrime in the west looks, the east might still be better off.
      Its way harder to be strict compared to forgive everything in my Opinion.
      Edit: typo

    • @Chris3s
      @Chris3s Рік тому +4

      @@DerFreelancerT I never talked about love being the only part of education, please don't make assumptions. I also believe neither west nor east are without their faults.

    • @DerFreelancerT
      @DerFreelancerT Рік тому +1

      @@Chris3s It was the only thing you talked about, so my assumption went in the wrong direction, based on what ive met and heard the last years in this debate.

    • @Chris3s
      @Chris3s Рік тому +2

      @@DerFreelancerT i talked about our education systems and they need to be improved, secondly that parents assume their children will do anything they want them to.

    • @DerFreelancerT
      @DerFreelancerT Рік тому +2

      @@Chris3s I have not nearly enough knowledge about educational systems in japan and the west to talk about that. The only thing i know is that the one in my country is reformed every three years and seldom to the better.
      But school will never provide what parents can and should. And that was the part im not agreeing with you. The part about parents and child. I jope i made myself clear now. My english is not the best today, so sorry, for the missunderstandings.
      What i mean is, that parenting means more than love and in contrary to what you say parents can and should expect things from their children in return. Thats how the world works. Nobody gets anything for free. Nearly everything is a trade. That doesnt mean kids should only be seen as an old age insurance. But giving them discipline, responsibilitys and awaiting something in return is not only natural, it prepares the child for the world.

  • @teamunderground1420
    @teamunderground1420 Рік тому

    Really good content are you half Japanese

  • @5ifty6ixmediauk
    @5ifty6ixmediauk 9 місяців тому +2

    Its not just Japan. We must consider the recent (years) behaviour of UA-camrs, Twitch streamers, Tiktokers etc etc who have mocked traditional Japanese behaviour. Japanese teenagers maybe feel the need to immitate or "keep up with" western behaviours.

  • @JM-mh1pp
    @JM-mh1pp 5 місяців тому

    Oh no... teenagers act like...well... teenagers...

  • @Flitalidapouet
    @Flitalidapouet 8 місяців тому +1

    Simply Western habits (US, UK, France, China) seeping in Japan trough their admiration for western culture, including all it's flaws.

    • @MoxJosie2
      @MoxJosie2 Місяць тому

      OR maybe youth on a global scale aren't motivated to do well because their world is deteriorating. Globally, many countries are suffering economically, ecologically and politically and it's making younger generations apathetic.

    • @Flitalidapouet
      @Flitalidapouet Місяць тому +1

      @@MoxJosie2 80% of the world is getting better, THE MAJORITY, only the west is dying. And it's boot on the neck of other countries (IMF, World Bank, Swift treats, sanctions, military, Blackrock) is getting weaker and weaker, permitting other countries to thrive.... at last.
      Fun fact, US forced Japan to kill it's economy in the 90's, using sanctions and 50 000 soldiers stationed in Japan as a treat.