I mean, to be fair, that's also an example of a country, that's balls deep in debt. Highest debt to GDP ratio in the world. Italy or Greece are nothing in comparison.
@@martinbruhn5274At least the debt has gone to better the lives than of its people unlike our debt in the US. Also most of Japanese debt is held domestically. It’s a problem but not as dire as a country that depended on foreign debt.
IF they could pull this off eventually. Given Japan's recent track records (2011 earthquake and tsunami, the aftermath of which is still, to this day, nowhere near being 'rebuilt', not to mention Fukushima; how they handled the pandemic; how they failed the Indian bullet train project; numerous other frauds etc), this isn't looking too promising. It's interesting that western media get PUMPED with everything Japanese. I mean, gotta give it to the propaganda department of the Japanese government lol
People need to understand that they see a very superficial level of a place when they spend a week as a tourist there. There’s a great video of a guy talking about his dumb girlfriend saying she wants to live somewhere they went on vacation. Like yeah, no shit you think it’s a paradise, you spent a week in a hotel eating out for every meal.
Tbh i've been to Japan a few times for holiday as well as work and in my opinion it's far better there than for example in Europe. Infrastructure is far better, housing way cheaper, work hours are getter better every year (taxation is also not as high). Still i would never wan't to live in Tokyo, there are far to many people there, during rush hour u can't move in any public transport and thanks to tourism every train in the city is completely full all das. 10 years ago, if u took a train outside of rush hour they were basically empty, same for streets and Restaurants, today the city is completely full. Also it's kind of embarassing to see how other Western people are behaving themself...
If there was asteroid impact. They could seal entrance and place containers of food and fresh water to the ceiling. You need a place to protect food for few days when outside 200C-400C
I liked the word play they are using for the tunnels they are building for the floods called "jikan", it's only a matter of time for the next disaster.
@@warlordop713 Tunnel was cool. But massive underground chamber was cooler. Not like I'm the only one who thought the same thing and made the same connections.
@@cmflyer Welcome t othe same tech giants wth billionaires. Except evne outside of that massive companies it's a general ideal of theirs to put workloads on their people and students to gain the highest suicide of all peoples. Not even america pulls that off. I'll take my generations of family with hundreds spanning 4 or 5 generations that still fully comes together multiple times a year from distances japan can only manage if they used all of china to also go travel to pull it off. but they'll use the same practices to make thousands instead of billions. Enjoy some hard facts. Mike might have a lemonade to help you out.
Ok this is crazy, you're releasing this now, and Abroad in Japan is releasing a documentary tomorrow on the same subject but across all of Japan. Two incredible creators talking about the same issue is fantastic.
The best infrastructure UA-camr and the best Japan UA-camr covering the same subjects and releasing 1 day apart... and they didn't cross paths? We were on the verge of greatness, we were _this_ close!
THIS is the type of government spending that is needed in many cities around the world. Japan is on another planet. They take pride in their land and care for their people. I was stationed there for 3 years when I was in the Navy and would move back there in a heartbeat.
@AS-np3yq My apologies for not walking around the midwest looking like the Statue of Liberty's pimp. Patriotism is about more than "talk" which many Americans love to do.
Not only that, they care for the world outside of Japan. Recently the government has reimbursed over 100,000 people outside of Japan that were involved in the Mt Gox bitcoin scandal the best they could. I personally received money from them in Australia because of the selfish action of one man.
That was incredible. Where to even start? I loved the scripting, the story being told, the music, the locations, the engineering, Fred's barely-contained excitement and, of course, the wacky details. Massive congrats to the entire team for another excellent long-form documentary.
Details of Japanese emergency infrastructure is what gets me. Reason why every JP airport and JP school has their name on roof or field in giant letters, because in tsunami or quake and everything is leveled. JSDF or Rescue can use them as land marks. And every bridge in Japan is chunky Boi with reinforcement. Japan makes for great vacation for engineers. 😅
Interesting, my comment was either hidden or deleted, I wonder why. So here it is: This is wonderful if they could actually pull this off in the end. Given Japan's recent track records (2011 earthquake and tsunami, the aftermath of which is nowhere near being 'rebuilt' to this day, not to mention the power plant thing; their failed Indian bullet train project; numerous other frauds by major corps), this isn't looking too promising. It's interesting that western media get PUMPED with anything Japanese. I mean gotta give it to the propaganda department of the Japanese gov lol
You have to keep the dolts interested with flashing lights and lots of colours. How else are we going to keep them away from Truth Social and Fox News? The rest of us watch documentaries because we want to learn, however we do appreciate the BM1 above all others!!
@@donskuse2194 Thankfully we don’t those networks in my country. Last time I watched B1M all the way through Fred had thankfully stopped over-emphasising the “B”illions when talking about costs. Haven’t yet got the bravery to continue watching this Tokyo one all the way through the hyperbole but hopefully that trend has continued to improve.
I think that is one of the reasons that the phoenix became the emblem of the Japanese Imperial household. This emblem can be seen on the Toyota Century. The car that is made exclusively for the Imperial household and other VIPs in Japan.
Unlike California where the government always pretends they had no idea these disasters could happen and so decided to spend hundreds of billions on sending out stimulus checks instead of getting LA ready for these fires.
As a Japanese, I learned more about the city I live in in 39 minutes than 7 years living in the city. I also found it interesting that you chose "震災" as translation for earthquakes rather than "地震." Former means "disaster caused by earthquake" (like blackouts, fire, etc) while latter means literal "earthquakes." I think the former word fits more in the context of this video, so translator really did a nice job here.
I’ve been living here 10 years and hadn’t heard about the Resilience Project. I’d seen video of the huge storm water drainage systems but can’t believe they’re building even more larger systems now and to handle river flooding. Amazing. Although I live on the other side of Tamagawa so I’ll probably not be saved 😂
Now this is the kind of project that every nation needs. Japan is setting a very high bar for assisting and protecting the public with few financial constraints. The B1M have really outdone themselves with this video...
That's so true. This video actually made me a bit sad, comparing Tokyo with São Paulo, cities that are oddly similar in some points, like for example being so massive compared to other cities in the country. São Paulo is completely left to rot, with pollution, drug dens, favelas, crime... The list goes on and on. The city also has massive floods dozens of times a year, and the government does nothing to prevent disasters, since promising to fix the issue gives more votes than actually preventing the issue from happening. It's eye-opening just how distinct both cities are, almost as if they were on opposite sides of the planet, haha.
As someone who gets anxious in crowds, this was a very beautiful and relaxing first trip ever for me. I had never traveled before and decided to go to Japan in November. 5,400 miles from home, for 10 days. I miss it and am planning to return for 1-3 months this year
Hmm as long as you stay outside or avoid weekday rush hours i guess. The trains get very crowded at peak hours. I did stay 1 month at some airbnb and as long as you walk by yourself its pretty nice. But using public transport, while clean and efficient does get stressing.
I was on holiday in Tokyo two months ago. I stayed in the Shinjuku area and had eight days to explore the city, and I've got to say it was one of the greatest cities I've ever visited. It truly was such a wonderful place to stay. Everything was clean and organized, the people were friendly, and there was so much to do. I would love to go back again.
Yes, Taoo, you are right. The Tohoku earthquake was a real awakening for Japan. All trains stopped in Tokyo. But actually, if you ever watch the videos of the earthquake, I never saw any buildings fall from the earthquake. (Maybe there were a few, but most stood). Sadly it was the tsunami that killed most of the people. 😞 And now the region has prepared for that, as Tokyo is raising their seawall as stated in this video. More countries need to prepare for global warming as Japan is doing.
So amazing to see how far your content has developed in scale, quality, depth and more! Love you and your teams work and look forward to more content like this
it’s amazing how much more advanced Japan and their people are in terms of technology, architecture, engineering and etc. what’s they’re doing in Tokyo is amazing….NYC could never. which makes me sad.
Btw, 50% of all traffic signals are centrally controlled in Tokyo, so when a disaster strikes, "prevention" mode will instantly kick in and prevent all inward traffic into Tokyo except for emergency vehicles.
One of the shield plates from the original TBM is on display outside the main drainage facility. It's kept in such incredible condition, it looks fake.
All construction projects are like that in Japan. It’s truly a wonder to watch. No dirt, no rubbish, no dust, dedicated people to control the flow of pedestrians around the construction. Amazing really. Compare that to places like India…. It’s night and day.
I’m from Tokyo but I was not aware of this project. I am MOVED by this video the content, the production, everything was beautiful, makes me cry tbh. It made me proud to be Japanese but at the same time made me sad because we know the great earthquake is bound to happen. Thank you for this video!
I've visited Tokyo a few times, each time several years apart, and it is a city that truly mesmerizes me that despite its size, it seems to be so organized and clean, more so comparing it to NYC or Mexico City.
My Grandpa was a missionary in Indonesia. He was treated like royalty by the government of Bali as thanks for his help in their country. About 10-15 years ago he was taken to Tokyo to meet some politicians and they took him for a tour of the underground water silo's so that he could bring the same infrastructure to a few islands in Indonesia. We have a photo album of his trip to Tokyo. He was giddy like a kid in a candy store every time he talked about it. Such good memories! Thank you for the video!
Christian missionaries are one of the most disgusting things to have happened to Asia. It's an amazing continent with diverse and ancient history with a wealth of religions. It's absolutely abhorrent that westerners came over and tried to evangelize a wonderful continent.
I don't really understand what the help is from a missionary, but that sounds like an awesome photo! Very cool that he brought such useful infrastructure ideas
@ytpanda398 when he first started the mission he taught people how to grow food and build better houses. They were borderline nomadic people due to the tsunamis constantly destroying their grass huts. So essentially in the beginning his mission was food and housing. When I was born he started taking in children on the island of Sumba. People on the island were not able to care for their children so they would abandon them. The children's home quickly grew into a huge operation where my grandpa spent most of his time. This was around about when he went to Tokyo to get some ideas for an upgraded building to withstand earthquakes and tsunamis. When he went back to Sumba he built a compound where the whole building had a concrete water storage silo below to slow the flooding and to store water for the dry season. Before being told he needed to return to Canada for his health, he finished a few schools and churches and expanded the children's home to have 2 more compounds (one for teen boys and one for teen girls). He built roads connecting everything to eachother and to the main town on the island. The mission now mostly runs itself since many of the first children are in their 30s but there are still volunteers from Canada going every year to help. It is nice that no one needs to live there long term to help anymore though. My grandpa lived there for half his life and still today doesn't know many of his grandkids. But that's the sacrifice he made I guess. If you made it this far, thank you for reading my rambling!
In 2015, Japan spent a long time carrying out geological and other studies for the Indonesian high-speed railway, but the Indonesian government handed over all the study materials to China, and a Chinese company was chosen to build the project. Since then, Japan has had negative feelings towards Indonesia.
Going to Japan next week. Although I’ve lived there and been back since, whenever I watch fantastic stories about their dedication and humbleness towards each other, I wonder why I left. Thank you B1M for this extraordinary story.
If you compare Tokyo as it was 400 years ago, when it was called Edo, with the Tokyo of today, you can see how much time and effort went into developing the barren wetlands into a huge city. In the Edo period, Tokyo was a water town with a network of waterways like Venice, and it was constantly battling the risk of flooding. The ultimate example of this is the huge underground waterways of today.
I came back from Japan a few weeks ago and you don't really know how much of a different world Japan is until you visit there yourself. Their infrastructure was an absolute joy to experience and something I could only wish my city in the US could even try to achieve let alone care.
The only thing the USA cares about is the military. Japan spends it's resources on infrastructure. America spends it's resources entirely on military. America has crumbling roads and overcrowded airports.
Lol I see you skipped the usual Europe step. Usually Americans come to Europe & get their mind blown re trans/subways/cycling etc, and us Europeans look at Japan/China & moan re how we haven't invested in our old infrastructure....you skipped the middle man & went to the top boss. USA is living off it's former glories, the recent infrastructure bill helps, but it's only just a band aid, expect the new administration to also take 2 further steps back. Sadly even in Europe our politicians are too scared of budgets/short term elections to invest in the future, we've also fell behind.
@@d.b.cooper1 An "infrastructure" bill with no infrastructure payment helps infrastructure? And European politicians like Americans are too busy spending taxes on foreign
Being an HSE advisor, I must say the level of preparation Tokyo is doing, is on another level. So much to learn and implement in other parts of the world. I am fortunate to work with some of Japanese. They go into incredible level of details and are very professional. On the another hand, good to see Fred all beefed up. Looks like he is going for Hollywood auditions too. And the quality of video is certainly a big plus now. Keep up the amazing work 😊
You did good on Tokyo infrastructure. Even after 24 years living in Japan, I am in awe of the extent the government and industry has taken to ensure safety. Every time there is a major earthquake, housing codes change. Every ten years, we are encouraged to remodel our homes to meet the new standards. People do not resist or question the science and policy. The good of the nation is good for the individual when it comes to safety.
I'm from India, I don't know why but I always get amazed by japan and always pray God slightly inside my heart to protect japan from any kind of natural disasters We should learn from japan that even after these much of natural disaster vulnerability they are developed, developing.
If you want to see the state of British infrastructure engineering, look at HS2. At its grandest, it doesn't even hold a candle against what Tokyo is doing, and yet it's just dragging on and on and on, with more and more issues.
Recently visited Japan and I fell in love. So in love I’m returning next year for a month. It’s an incredible country with even more incredible people. Happy to see a society investing in infrastructure that will protect its people and way of life and commerce.
@@Trixiestar0 no country is perfect. So please let’s not engage in the whataboutisms. America has gun violence and tourism hasn’t dented. Just like it abuses its citizens with police brutality and kills them with crap food and bad healthcare. I’m well aware Japan chooses to have a homogeneous society - that doesn’t bother me. Their country. Their rules. Doesn’t mean I still can’t enjoy it as a tourist.
The Japanese really do the biggest mega projects to absolute highest standards possible. I'm constantly in awe at what they can achieve. Their public projects really are next level. Great video B1M. The information presented was expertly explained while also being throughly entertaining, even with the extra runtime. Really hope yous do more long form videos like this.
I FREAKING LOVE! People being so passionate and eeager to share. Their passion, their knowledge, their projcts. It truly is contagious. Marvelous enginering and persistance
In fact THEY DO have to worry about Godzilla. The uSA has a base in Okinawa and is a nuclear threat (which is what Godzilla represents). uSA is the only country to use atomic bombs on another country and they will use it again to try to keep their control over the world. The uSA invades other countries with their hundreds of bases around the world (including nuclear bombs in other countries), overthrow governments, engage in proxy wars and try to control countries with severe sanctions. The uSA government (oligarchy) is becoming more unhinged and is a true nuclear threat to the rest of the world.
I was lucky in my life and could visit Tokyo 4 times.... I just say that: save up all the money you can and make a once in a lifetime trip for 1 or 2 month to Tokio and Japan. Is worth a million times more than a yearly trip to a shitty beach somewhere else...
Try traveling countryside next time. From Hokkaido to the Sea of Japan, Seto Inland Sea, Wakasa Bay, Tosa, and Kyushu, all have different and delicious foods.(^o^)
This is in my opinion the best video B1M has ever made. Almost 40 minutes of content about my most favourite city in the world Tokyo, other than my hometown KL. Christmas has come early! 🎄
Very nicely done. I've been living in the Tokyo area almost 10 years now, and while the disaster mitigation infrastructure is actually everywhere, it's amazing to me how much it just blends into the background. If you look for it, it's all over, but you'd probably never notice unless you went looking for it.
I'm so glad this channel covered this. Every project that I read about in a textbook in social studies class at a young age, now being presented to the international audience. Tokyo gets a lot of attention for bling, size, order and overground construction, but I personally appreciate the back story to why the city keeps running the way it does. So thank you, Fred. Also that ending bit before the conclusion was very funny.
Thank you for covering this and I can't believe you said you barely scratch the surface 😮. A huge congrats to the whole team for this very well done production. Japan has been on my bucket list for some time now.
Excellent production work. Thoroughly enjoyed the attention to detail and the narrative. I didn’t even skip the sponsor message. (Mainly because I’m a sucker for a unified view) 20 years since I visited Japan so for me it is always great to see this amazing country, its progress and resilience with inspiring attitude toward recovery after an event.
This was an exceptional piece on Tokyo. I’m certain that the citizens of this City would be very proud of its content and the manner in which their City was presented. Very nicely done!
Had the chance to travel all around the world too but Tokyo and Japan is out of this world! An organised chaos with amazing people You will never be the same after visiting it and will struggle to get back to your ordinary live wherever you're living!
This is inspirational. To see a country proactively work to safeguard society against known threats (using the most sophisticated technology available) is very encouraging.
I learned a lot of things that even I, a Japanese person, didn't know. And while both hard and soft measures are important in the event of a major disaster, it is also very important for everyone to cooperate and help each other in an orderly manner when a major disaster occurs. This video was not just about the technical aspects, but also showed the strong will of people to minimize disasters and protect people's lives, making it a good video for moral education.
I had the exact same thought. Lets hope the Japanese wont dig much deeper in Order to try and Protect their city, they might wake something ancient in the depths...(Godzilla)
17:21 This tunnel build by Taisei Corporation. The company is also building the Marmaray Tunnel in Türkiye and the Palm Genera undersea road tunnel in Dubai.
Spectacular video by B1M team . As someone staying in Tokyo for more than 2 years, I feel impressed by Japanese government and the effort they put in to secure Tokyo ❤🤲🏼🙌🇯🇵
I’m in in literal awe of people when I watch shit like this. People are truly incredible. I can’t build children’s Lego. So to me this is real life magic. Thank you to the engineers and construction workers of the world who make these projects happen. It’s truly incredible 👏🏼
I am an American married to a Japanese woman and I live an hour away in Chiba prefecture. Coming from the Manhattan where I worked all my life I never thought I find a city that I love as equally or even more than New York but here I am to say it is so . Tokyo has everything New York has and more plus it’s quieter and not as aggressive and loud , it’s almost as if New York were lying down or taking a rest . The train stations alone blow me away as do the the whole,subway system and the cleanliness .
And I'll bet its crime rates are a lot lower too, because they don't care how much the west claims diversity is a strength. Stay homogeneous Japan, stay homogeneous.
Incredible video, amazing editing too! Love Japan and Tokyo such an incredible place to visit and to learn more about its protection systems was amazing as an engineer myself. Thank you
As a Japanese guy living in Tokyo, I am very happy that the B1M crew has featured Japan in such a cool way. Also, I am amazed how thorough your work is as usual.
The Japanese continue to innovate and amaze the world with their ideas and designs. This got me thinking though that this similar design could be used to help combat the forest fires in western U.S. & Canada. Given that California doesn't recieve a lot of rain (or flooding) but collection areas in Alberta and British Columbia where it recieves plenty of percipitation ( Alberta gets a lot of snow in winter) could be used to store and be piped along the areas that produce the most fires. Stored water could then be quickly sent to the affected areas helping to diminish or even put out said fires before wiping out large selections of land. This would be something that both countries would have to invest in and for sure, they can both afford it.
It’s impressive how clean and well lighted the head of the tunnel TBM head is. If this was an American project the front of the tunneling TBM area would be poorly lit and full of mud, noise, dirty air, dangerous dangling wires and hoses. The Japanese methods and attention to a clean working environment is impressive.
30:00 that is absolutely amazing to think about. All of those being installed / integrated into the frame of that building. What a true marvel of engineering
Tokyo is without a doubt my favourite city in the world. It's astonishing, and the attention they have spent on managing everything, you'll notice immediately. Because a lot of the time you'll get there and be amazed that it isn't that busy, or at least doesn't appear to be. Because it works. The first time I went to cross the road in Ginza, I just couldn't believe how much traffic there wasn't. It's so damned efficient. Anyway, 100 billion dollars is a lot of money but considering it's tackling so much and over 100 years projected life, that'snot bad at all.
I keep repeating this in comments because it applies to almost every person here, a person’s understanding of a place is extremely superficial when they spend a week there as a tourist. Your opinion would be substantially different if you lived in Tokyo. It is not nearly as efficient as you think it is.
@@conor7154 You haven't been to Tokyo. Quit repeating your ignorant comment everywhere. I've been here so many times for months on end and it IS EXTREMELY efficient. TRAVEL the world instead spewing misinformation.
WELCOME TO TOKYO 🙌🏗🇯🇵
We are glad that you are here
Someone pin this comment!
よくいらしゃいます
i NEED to know what music you used in the intro, its SOO GOOOOOOOOOD
Can you do jakarta next? Jakarta is also one of the most flooding cities in the world
This video is a prime example if a country cares for the safety of their people. They will spend the money to ensure so
Correct, this is what real "national security" looks like, not bombing other poorer nations oceans away.
I mean, to be fair, that's also an example of a country, that's balls deep in debt. Highest debt to GDP ratio in the world. Italy or Greece are nothing in comparison.
@@martinbruhn5274At least the debt has gone to better the lives than of its people unlike our debt in the US. Also most of Japanese debt is held domestically. It’s a problem but not as dire as a country that depended on foreign debt.
@@cboy0394 I know, but there also is a reason, why Japan has been in stagnation since the 80s.
IF they could pull this off eventually. Given Japan's recent track records (2011 earthquake and tsunami, the aftermath of which is still, to this day, nowhere near being 'rebuilt', not to mention Fukushima; how they handled the pandemic; how they failed the Indian bullet train project; numerous other frauds etc), this isn't looking too promising. It's interesting that western media get PUMPED with everything Japanese. I mean, gotta give it to the propaganda department of the Japanese government lol
Visited Tokyo this year and was completely blown away by the infrastructure. Truly a modern marvel.
been the modern marvel since the 1960s
People need to understand that they see a very superficial level of a place when they spend a week as a tourist there. There’s a great video of a guy talking about his dumb girlfriend saying she wants to live somewhere they went on vacation. Like yeah, no shit you think it’s a paradise, you spent a week in a hotel eating out for every meal.
Tbh i've been to Japan a few times for holiday as well as work and in my opinion it's far better there than for example in Europe. Infrastructure is far better, housing way cheaper, work hours are getter better every year (taxation is also not as high).
Still i would never wan't to live in Tokyo, there are far to many people there, during rush hour u can't move in any public transport and thanks to tourism every train in the city is completely full all das. 10 years ago, if u took a train outside of rush hour they were basically empty, same for streets and Restaurants, today the city is completely full.
Also it's kind of embarassing to see how other Western people are behaving themself...
@@conor7154 relax brother
Except freaking exposed power lines.
Let's not kid ourselves, this is where they'll be keeping the Evas after the Second Impact
"Get in the Eva Shinji!!!"
This is just what they're showing to the public, Geofront is probably already in construction.
*squaresoundsnoises coming from an Ocd driven Angel*
If there was asteroid impact. They could seal entrance and place containers of food and fresh water to the ceiling. You need a place to protect food for few days when outside 200C-400C
I liked the word play they are using for the tunnels they are building for the floods called "jikan", it's only a matter of time for the next disaster.
Japan: Plans for 100 years
America: Plans until the next election cycle
America: Completed the Fallout Vaults already. Japan: Going all Neon Genesis Evangelion.
@@AJB4D calm down it’s a water drainage tunnel 😂
@@warlordop713 Tunnel was cool. But massive underground chamber was cooler.
Not like I'm the only one who thought the same thing and made the same connections.
Japan: honor, family, community
America: more billionaires
@@cmflyer Welcome t othe same tech giants wth billionaires. Except evne outside of that massive companies it's a general ideal of theirs to put workloads on their people and students to gain the highest suicide of all peoples. Not even america pulls that off. I'll take my generations of family with hundreds spanning 4 or 5 generations that still fully comes together multiple times a year from distances japan can only manage if they used all of china to also go travel to pull it off.
but they'll use the same practices to make thousands instead of billions. Enjoy some hard facts. Mike might have a lemonade to help you out.
こういう作品をもっとテレビで流すべき。日本の安全を深く考えて大変な仕事してくれるエンジニアさん皆に感謝の気持ちしかないです。
日本を守ってくれてありがとうございます
だね、少しでも多くの子どもがこういう職業に憧れを持ってくれるような機会をもっと増やすべき
Nhkではやってるよ。民間はボランティアじゃないからなかなか放送難しいんじゃない?
@@ぐっしゃ いい言葉言いますね。世界中立場でもすごく魅力的な日本の一点やと思います。こういうの見てやはり日本いいなと改めて感じます。
OpenAI???
@@おすし-f5zNHk批判されがちだがこう言うビデオはしっかり作ってる
Ok this is crazy, you're releasing this now, and Abroad in Japan is releasing a documentary tomorrow on the same subject but across all of Japan. Two incredible creators talking about the same issue is fantastic.
i'd love to see them do Japan related infrastructure content together, it would be the collab of the year!
The best infrastructure UA-camr and the best Japan UA-camr covering the same subjects and releasing 1 day apart... and they didn't cross paths? We were on the verge of greatness, we were _this_ close!
Now I know who made the animations at 36:07
What's even crazier is that he went to Gcans too, just came from that video
wow thats crazy, its almost like the Japanese government is making a PR push for this exact subject lol
THIS is the type of government spending that is needed in many cities around the world. Japan is on another planet. They take pride in their land and care for their people. I was stationed there for 3 years when I was in the Navy and would move back there in a heartbeat.
you need patriotism..
@AS-np3yq My apologies for not walking around the midwest looking like the Statue of Liberty's pimp. Patriotism is about more than "talk" which many Americans love to do.
they are importing migrants as we speak right now
Not only that, they care for the world outside of Japan. Recently the government has reimbursed over 100,000 people outside of Japan that were involved in the Mt Gox bitcoin scandal the best they could. I personally received money from them in Australia because of the selfish action of one man.
@@GarageSupra Yes! I read about that!
That was incredible. Where to even start? I loved the scripting, the story being told, the music, the locations, the engineering, Fred's barely-contained excitement and, of course, the wacky details. Massive congrats to the entire team for another excellent long-form documentary.
I don’t like the hyping everything up all the time “this city shouldn’t even be here blah blah.”
Turns me off watching.
Details of Japanese emergency infrastructure is what gets me. Reason why every JP airport and JP school has their name on roof or field in giant letters, because in tsunami or quake and everything is leveled. JSDF or Rescue can use them as land marks. And every bridge in Japan is chunky Boi with reinforcement. Japan makes for great vacation for engineers. 😅
Interesting, my comment was either hidden or deleted, I wonder why. So here it is: This is wonderful if they could actually pull this off in the end. Given Japan's recent track records (2011 earthquake and tsunami, the aftermath of which is nowhere near being 'rebuilt' to this day, not to mention the power plant thing; their failed Indian bullet train project; numerous other frauds by major corps), this isn't looking too promising. It's interesting that western media get PUMPED with anything Japanese. I mean gotta give it to the propaganda department of the Japanese gov lol
You have to keep the dolts interested with flashing lights and lots of colours. How else are we going to keep them away from Truth Social and Fox News? The rest of us watch documentaries because we want to learn, however we do appreciate the BM1 above all others!!
@@donskuse2194
Thankfully we don’t those networks in my country.
Last time I watched B1M all the way through Fred had thankfully stopped over-emphasising the “B”illions when talking about costs.
Haven’t yet got the bravery to continue watching this Tokyo one all the way through the hyperbole but hopefully that trend has continued to improve.
It's so refreshing to watch a high quality produced documentary on UA-cam that is completely free. I am a subscriber now!
its not free at all, with all of the annoying advertisments !!
Thanks!
I feel like Japan is like a phoenix it's always rising from the ashes and becomes stronger and smarter.
I also thought the same thing, Japan in the near decades will eventually rise again.
I think that is one of the reasons that the phoenix became the emblem of the Japanese Imperial household. This emblem can be seen on the Toyota Century. The car that is made exclusively for the Imperial household and other VIPs in Japan.
That's what constant earthquakes do to a people psychologically. They constantly have to rebuild everything.
Unlike California where the government always pretends they had no idea these disasters could happen and so decided to spend hundreds of billions on sending out stimulus checks instead of getting LA ready for these fires.
@zam023 And the Second generation model is the only Japanese car to have a V12.
As a Japanese, I learned more about the city I live in in 39 minutes than 7 years living in the city.
I also found it interesting that you chose "震災" as translation for earthquakes rather than "地震." Former means "disaster caused by earthquake" (like blackouts, fire, etc) while latter means literal "earthquakes." I think the former word fits more in the context of this video, so translator really did a nice job here.
I agree, the Japanese translation was very accurate and it wasn’t awkward.
I’ve been living here 10 years and hadn’t heard about the Resilience Project. I’d seen video of the huge storm water drainage systems but can’t believe they’re building even more larger systems now and to handle river flooding. Amazing. Although I live on the other side of Tamagawa so I’ll probably not be saved 😂
Yeah.
Now this is the kind of project that every nation needs. Japan is setting a very high bar for assisting and protecting the public with few financial constraints.
The B1M have really outdone themselves with this video...
It’s an investment in the country’s most valuable area. I can show you plenty of places that have been completely neglected.
Except government in other countries doesn't care.
@@conor7154Ofc but again, is it not a good thing to prioritise what is most valuable?
@@conor7154yep it's often the most neglected and abandoned plans
That's so true.
This video actually made me a bit sad, comparing Tokyo with São Paulo, cities that are oddly similar in some points, like for example being so massive compared to other cities in the country.
São Paulo is completely left to rot, with pollution, drug dens, favelas, crime... The list goes on and on. The city also has massive floods dozens of times a year, and the government does nothing to prevent disasters, since promising to fix the issue gives more votes than actually preventing the issue from happening.
It's eye-opening just how distinct both cities are, almost as if they were on opposite sides of the planet, haha.
As someone who gets anxious in crowds, this was a very beautiful and relaxing first trip ever for me. I had never traveled before and decided to go to Japan in November. 5,400 miles from home, for 10 days. I miss it and am planning to return for 1-3 months this year
Hmm as long as you stay outside or avoid weekday rush hours i guess. The trains get very crowded at peak hours. I did stay 1 month at some airbnb and as long as you walk by yourself its pretty nice. But using public transport, while clean and efficient does get stressing.
Thanks
I was on holiday in Tokyo two months ago. I stayed in the Shinjuku area and had eight days to explore the city, and I've got to say it was one of the greatest cities I've ever visited. It truly was such a wonderful place to stay. Everything was clean and organized, the people were friendly, and there was so much to do. I would love to go back again.
Keep coming back! You sound like a person well suited for Tokyo and would enhance the city rather than detract from it.
Fantastic documentary. Absolutely loved this video; I think this is my new favourite B1M video. Keep up the good work!
Especially that intro music in beginning was spot on 👍🏽
日本の防災対策を詳細に解説してくださりありがとうございます!
「天災は忘れた頃にやって来る」
日本人なら必ず聞いたことのある言葉です。
防災、減災のためには、これらの対策を実行するだけでなく、日本国民一人一人が意識を高めることが重要ですね
Yes, Taoo, you are right. The Tohoku earthquake was a real awakening for Japan. All trains stopped in Tokyo. But actually, if you ever watch the videos of the earthquake, I never saw any buildings fall from the earthquake. (Maybe there were a few, but most stood). Sadly it was the tsunami that killed most of the people. 😞 And now the region has prepared for that, as Tokyo is raising their seawall as stated in this video. More countries need to prepare for global warming as Japan is doing.
@@rabbit251原発の扱い方や耐震のあり方を考え直す良い機会になった。そして世界中の国々からの支援や応援のありがたみを痛感した😊
You should be, I would be too if my city and people built wonders like this
So amazing to see how far your content has developed in scale, quality, depth and more! Love you and your teams work and look forward to more content like this
it’s amazing how much more advanced Japan and their people are in terms of technology, architecture, engineering and etc. what’s they’re doing in Tokyo is amazing….NYC could never. which makes me sad.
Btw, 50% of all traffic signals are centrally controlled in Tokyo, so when a disaster strikes, "prevention" mode will instantly kick in and prevent all inward traffic into Tokyo except for emergency vehicles.
In a disaster alot of people won't be looking at traffic signs or care about driving rules 😂
@@Christina23 I think in a civilized country like Japan they just might...
@@Christina23luckily enough the Japanese are unlike us in the west 😂
@Christina23 Japan doesn't have Urban Scholars
@@Christina23 but... this is Japan. 😂
19:00 what's most impressive about that TBM is how clean it is ! No dust, no dirt, no stains, no scratches. Just pristine out of it's shrink wrap.
Yes it is. None of the other can do it except japan.
@@thomasluk4319 OCD
One of the shield plates from the original TBM is on display outside the main drainage facility. It's kept in such incredible condition, it looks fake.
there's a popular saying that goes something like "take of the/your tool(s) and they'll take care of you"
All construction projects are like that in Japan. It’s truly a wonder to watch. No dirt, no rubbish, no dust, dedicated people to control the flow of pedestrians around the construction. Amazing really. Compare that to places like India…. It’s night and day.
I’m from Tokyo but I was not aware of this project. I am MOVED by this video the content, the production, everything was beautiful, makes me cry tbh. It made me proud to be Japanese but at the same time made me sad because we know the great earthquake is bound to happen. Thank you for this video!
I've visited Tokyo a few times, each time several years apart, and it is a city that truly mesmerizes me that despite its size, it seems to be so organized and clean, more so comparing it to NYC or Mexico City.
this channel just gets better and better.
My Grandpa was a missionary in Indonesia. He was treated like royalty by the government of Bali as thanks for his help in their country. About 10-15 years ago he was taken to Tokyo to meet some politicians and they took him for a tour of the underground water silo's so that he could bring the same infrastructure to a few islands in Indonesia. We have a photo album of his trip to Tokyo. He was giddy like a kid in a candy store every time he talked about it.
Such good memories! Thank you for the video!
Christian missionaries are one of the most disgusting things to have happened to Asia. It's an amazing continent with diverse and ancient history with a wealth of religions. It's absolutely abhorrent that westerners came over and tried to evangelize a wonderful continent.
I don't really understand what the help is from a missionary, but that sounds like an awesome photo! Very cool that he brought such useful infrastructure ideas
@ytpanda398 when he first started the mission he taught people how to grow food and build better houses. They were borderline nomadic people due to the tsunamis constantly destroying their grass huts.
So essentially in the beginning his mission was food and housing. When I was born he started taking in children on the island of Sumba. People on the island were not able to care for their children so they would abandon them. The children's home quickly grew into a huge operation where my grandpa spent most of his time. This was around about when he went to Tokyo to get some ideas for an upgraded building to withstand earthquakes and tsunamis. When he went back to Sumba he built a compound where the whole building had a concrete water storage silo below to slow the flooding and to store water for the dry season.
Before being told he needed to return to Canada for his health, he finished a few schools and churches and expanded the children's home to have 2 more compounds (one for teen boys and one for teen girls). He built roads connecting everything to eachother and to the main town on the island.
The mission now mostly runs itself since many of the first children are in their 30s but there are still volunteers from Canada going every year to help. It is nice that no one needs to live there long term to help anymore though. My grandpa lived there for half his life and still today doesn't know many of his grandkids. But that's the sacrifice he made I guess.
If you made it this far, thank you for reading my rambling!
@JustinJamesJeep fascinating story, thank you
In 2015, Japan spent a long time carrying out geological and other studies for the Indonesian high-speed railway, but the Indonesian government handed over all the study materials to China, and a Chinese company was chosen to build the project. Since then, Japan has had negative feelings towards Indonesia.
Going to Japan next week. Although I’ve lived there and been back since, whenever I watch fantastic stories about their dedication and humbleness towards each other, I wonder why I left. Thank you B1M for this extraordinary story.
Why did you leave
If you compare Tokyo as it was 400 years ago, when it was called Edo, with the Tokyo of today, you can see how much time and effort went into developing the barren wetlands into a huge city. In the Edo period, Tokyo was a water town with a network of waterways like Venice, and it was constantly battling the risk of flooding. The ultimate example of this is the huge underground waterways of today.
No it’s climate change not the fact they built a massive city where water once was…..
I was just checking the old videos
And I can't say how much this channel's changed
In an amazing way
Love the B1M
I'm a Tokyo resident and had no idea this stuff was happening around me. Thanks for both terrifying and reassuring me, Fred.
I came back from Japan a few weeks ago and you don't really know how much of a different world Japan is until you visit there yourself.
Their infrastructure was an absolute joy to experience and something I could only wish my city in the US could even try to achieve let alone care.
The only thing the USA cares about is the military. Japan spends it's resources on infrastructure. America spends it's resources entirely on military. America has crumbling roads and overcrowded airports.
The US increasingly resembles a third world country. Japan is just next level.
@skyvanisher1639 We spend NASA budgets on Urban Scholar's EBT
Lol I see you skipped the usual Europe step. Usually Americans come to Europe & get their mind blown re trans/subways/cycling etc, and us Europeans look at Japan/China & moan re how we haven't invested in our old infrastructure....you skipped the middle man & went to the top boss. USA is living off it's former glories, the recent infrastructure bill helps, but it's only just a band aid, expect the new administration to also take 2 further steps back. Sadly even in Europe our politicians are too scared of budgets/short term elections to invest in the future, we've also fell behind.
@@d.b.cooper1 An "infrastructure" bill with no infrastructure payment helps infrastructure?
And European politicians like Americans are too busy spending taxes on foreign
Ate and left no crumbs with this production 🥳
the non-stop quick cuts are going to give me a seizure
@@GFkilla17 Agree, it's awful.
No it was good @@TheLotusManFILMs.
@@GFkilla17 stopped watching it, hope this isn't their new style
@@gravytrainwithbiscuitwheels Certain cuts were excessive and over done, but the majority of feedback has been positive
As a concrete guy and bridge builder for almost 30 years the labor involved in that concrete and the craftsmanship is incredibly impressive
Being an HSE advisor, I must say the level of preparation Tokyo is doing, is on another level. So much to learn and implement in other parts of the world. I am fortunate to work with some of Japanese. They go into incredible level of details and are very professional.
On the another hand, good to see Fred all beefed up. Looks like he is going for Hollywood auditions too. And the quality of video is certainly a big plus now. Keep up the amazing work 😊
You did good on Tokyo infrastructure. Even after 24 years living in Japan, I am in awe of the extent the government and industry has taken to ensure safety. Every time there is a major earthquake, housing codes change. Every ten years, we are encouraged to remodel our homes to meet the new standards. People do not resist or question the science and policy. The good of the nation is good for the individual when it comes to safety.
in america they question mask wearing lol
I'm from India, I don't know why but I always get amazed by japan and always pray God slightly inside my heart to protect japan from any kind of natural disasters
We should learn from japan that even after these much of natural disaster vulnerability they are developed, developing.
Thank you ro much for your kind words
Meanwhile the UK can't even fix a blocked drainage system...
The UK can't even fix it's government to begin with
If you want to see the state of British infrastructure engineering, look at HS2. At its grandest, it doesn't even hold a candle against what Tokyo is doing, and yet it's just dragging on and on and on, with more and more issues.
@ I drive past part of it everyday. Slow and costly…
@@yingyang-i8s *"I drive past part of it everyday. Slow and costly…"*
But enough about your driving! 😂😂
@ 😂😂😂
Amazing as always, both Japan and B1M ❤
Steve Jobs really admired Japan, that's why Apple is so cool.
Recently visited Japan and I fell in love. So in love I’m returning next year for a month. It’s an incredible country with even more incredible people. Happy to see a society investing in infrastructure that will protect its people and way of life and commerce.
do you know about the other side of japan?
Few days left till our departure to japan. But as always japan has many problems you dont see or dont care about as a foreigner in your holidays.
Stay the whole 90 days if you can!
There are so many great places to visit in Japan.
@@J.J.J.J.J.J.J ah I’ve already purchased my ticket for the entire month of July 2025.
@@Trixiestar0 no country is perfect. So please let’s not engage in the whataboutisms. America has gun violence and tourism hasn’t dented. Just like it abuses its citizens with police brutality and kills them with crap food and bad healthcare. I’m well aware Japan chooses to have a homogeneous society - that doesn’t bother me. Their country. Their rules. Doesn’t mean I still can’t enjoy it as a tourist.
The Japanese really do the biggest mega projects to absolute highest standards possible. I'm constantly in awe at what they can achieve. Their public projects really are next level. Great video B1M. The information presented was expertly explained while also being throughly entertaining, even with the extra runtime. Really hope yous do more long form videos like this.
38+ mins of the B1M? Yes please!
I FREAKING LOVE! People being so passionate and eeager to share. Their passion, their knowledge, their projcts. It truly is contagious. Marvelous enginering and persistance
Holy cow the number of jump cuts in this is insane. I cant finish it.
Luckily they don't *actually* have to worry about Godzilla attacks.
Or do they?
No. 6 on the list. [Classified]
*VSauce Music Plays* @@davidroberts4306
That's why that control room was classified. They monitor Big G sleeping in some cave ;)
In fact THEY DO have to worry about Godzilla.
The uSA has a base in Okinawa and is a nuclear threat (which is what Godzilla represents).
uSA is the only country to use atomic bombs on another country and they will use it again to try to keep their control over the world. The uSA invades other countries with their hundreds of bases around the world (including nuclear bombs in other countries), overthrow governments, engage in proxy wars and try to control countries with severe sanctions.
The uSA government (oligarchy) is becoming more unhinged and is a true nuclear threat to the rest of the world.
I was lucky in my life and could visit Tokyo 4 times.... I just say that: save up all the money you can and make a once in a lifetime trip for 1 or 2 month to Tokio and Japan. Is worth a million times more than a yearly trip to a shitty beach somewhere else...
Try traveling countryside next time. From Hokkaido to the Sea of Japan, Seto Inland Sea, Wakasa Bay, Tosa, and Kyushu, all have different and delicious foods.(^o^)
This is in my opinion the best video B1M has ever made. Almost 40 minutes of content about my most favourite city in the world Tokyo, other than my hometown KL. Christmas has come early! 🎄
KL?
King's Landing?
kl also need this idea to fight flood that always happens when rain come
Kuala Lumpur is an absolute magic. Not less than any other big metropolitan area
Very nicely done. I've been living in the Tokyo area almost 10 years now, and while the disaster mitigation infrastructure is actually everywhere, it's amazing to me how much it just blends into the background. If you look for it, it's all over, but you'd probably never notice unless you went looking for it.
This might be the most high production B1M video I’ve ever seen. Amazing 🤩
I lived in Tokyo for 6 years. Amazing place, I love Tokyo. So many amazing experiences there. Japan was very good to me :)
Fred’s face while looking at the guy speaking Japanese just priceless 😂 19:00
😭
I'm so glad this channel covered this. Every project that I read about in a textbook in social studies class at a young age, now being presented to the international audience.
Tokyo gets a lot of attention for bling, size, order and overground construction, but I personally appreciate the back story to why the city keeps running the way it does. So thank you, Fred.
Also that ending bit before the conclusion was very funny.
Nice avatar
It’s always nice to see how much Fred gets a hard on when seeing these engineering marvels. A presenter with true passion
Impressive project -- and impresssive B1M video!
Tokyos infrastructure is truly next level and so is this video. Nice vid B1M
Thank you for covering this and I can't believe you said you barely scratch the surface 😮. A huge congrats to the whole team for this very well done production. Japan has been on my bucket list for some time now.
Forget Tokyo, I want to know the modern marvel of a video editor who cut together this masterpiece! As a daily video editor this was a treat to watch.
Man, B1M is amazing. And this project rocks.
Fred, this production quality is through the roof. Huge props to the editors who worked on this video. Incredibly well done.
Mindblowing. Japan is beautiful and Tokyo is incredible. One of your very best videos by far.
One of the most well made documentaries I've ever seen on UA-cam
Fred, just want to commend the production value of this video. 10/10, no notes! Keep up the amazing work
Excellent production work. Thoroughly enjoyed the attention to detail and the narrative. I didn’t even skip the sponsor message. (Mainly because I’m a sucker for a unified view)
20 years since I visited Japan so for me it is always great to see this amazing country, its progress and resilience with inspiring attitude toward recovery after an event.
This was an exceptional piece on Tokyo. I’m certain that the citizens of this City would be very proud of its content and the manner in which their City was presented. Very nicely done!
that's a whole lot of work. They are passionate people. I absolutely wish them the best !
Yeah if Africa had this much ambition, intelligence, and passion, they wouldn't have to just fantasize about Wakanda.
Had the chance to travel all around the world too but Tokyo and Japan is out of this world! An organised chaos with amazing people You will never be the same after visiting it and will struggle to get back to your ordinary live wherever you're living!
This is inspirational. To see a country proactively work to safeguard society against known threats (using the most sophisticated technology available) is very encouraging.
I learned a lot of things that even I, a Japanese person, didn't know. And while both hard and soft measures are important in the event of a major disaster, it is also very important for everyone to cooperate and help each other in an orderly manner when a major disaster occurs. This video was not just about the technical aspects, but also showed the strong will of people to minimize disasters and protect people's lives, making it a good video for moral education.
Look how clean the city is, amazing!!
Now this is what I call disaster preparedness. Bravo to JAPAN
All I can think of watching this is how much that storage tank looks like Khazad-dûm
I had the exact same thought. Lets hope the Japanese wont dig much deeper in Order to try and Protect their city, they might wake something ancient in the depths...(Godzilla)
Woooowww this video is as crazy good as the disaster project!!
Nicely and a well done job 🎉🎉❤❤
Amazing stories, production, presentation and entertainment. You Sir, have a new subscriber!
17:21
This tunnel build by Taisei Corporation.
The company is also building the Marmaray Tunnel in Türkiye and the Palm Genera undersea road tunnel in Dubai.
The generator is also isolated from the floor so it minimises vibrations transferred to the building itself.
Tokyo preparing for kaijus🙏
Tokyo seems to be some kind of lightning rod for those critters.
If Tokyo ever makes the mistake of embracing DEI, it'll bring them to their knees faster than any kaijus.
Spectacular video by B1M team . As someone staying in Tokyo for more than 2 years, I feel impressed by Japanese government and the effort they put in to secure Tokyo ❤🤲🏼🙌🇯🇵
I’m in in literal awe of people when I watch shit like this. People are truly incredible. I can’t build children’s Lego. So to me this is real life magic. Thank you to the engineers and construction workers of the world who make these projects happen. It’s truly incredible 👏🏼
Great work Fred & video production team, really high finish on this one.
I am an American married to a Japanese woman and I live an hour away in Chiba prefecture. Coming from the Manhattan where I worked all my life I never thought I find a city that I love as equally or even more than New York but here I am to say it is so . Tokyo has everything New York has and more plus it’s quieter and not as aggressive and loud , it’s almost as if New York were lying down or taking a rest . The train stations alone blow me away as do the the whole,subway system and the cleanliness .
Keep this a secret so all the New Yorkers don’t move there pleaseee
@ won’t happen 😝
I'm glad you've gotten to enjoy both worlds.
Tokyo has Asians in it, New York has another Demographic in it.
And I'll bet its crime rates are a lot lower too, because they don't care how much the west claims diversity is a strength. Stay homogeneous Japan, stay homogeneous.
Tokyo is and will always be my number one city in the world. ❤
Outstanding as always. I could have watched this for about 2 hours. 👏🏻
Incredible video, amazing editing too! Love Japan and Tokyo such an incredible place to visit and to learn more about its protection systems was amazing as an engineer myself. Thank you
Production budget on the rise 📈
Japan is “Next Level” & Beyond 👍
This might just be the best video you folks have made I can’t wait to see what’s you have in store for next year 👍
Thank you so much!!!
it was amazingly filmed and produced!
Excellent documentary ! Thank you.
14:29 "to me, this is cinema"
absolute kino, credit to the videographer
thank you for the video, man, it is so impressive when a city takes infrastructure and preparedness so seriously rather than reacting after the fact
As a Japanese guy living in Tokyo, I am very happy that the B1M crew has featured Japan in such a cool way. Also, I am amazed how thorough your work is as usual.
The Japanese continue to innovate and amaze the world with their ideas and designs. This got me thinking though that this similar design could be used to help combat the forest fires in western U.S. & Canada. Given that California doesn't recieve a lot of rain (or flooding) but collection areas in Alberta and British Columbia where it recieves plenty of percipitation ( Alberta gets a lot of snow in winter) could be used to store and be piped along the areas that produce the most fires. Stored water could then be quickly sent to the affected areas helping to diminish or even put out said fires before wiping out large selections of land. This would be something that both countries would have to invest in and for sure, they can both afford it.
At this point, I'd just be happy to know the politicians weren't intentionally causing the fires. We can take other steps from there.
It’s impressive how clean and well lighted the head of the tunnel TBM head is. If this was an American project the front of the tunneling TBM area would be poorly lit and full of mud, noise, dirty air, dangerous dangling wires and hoses. The Japanese methods and attention to a clean working environment is impressive.
The way you have access to all these crazy projects is amazing ❤
Thank you so much 😀
@@TheB1Mhow do you get access?
That is the cleanest TBM i have ever seen...
You know what, that actually sums up a lot of Japan pretty well. "It's the cleanest XYZ I've ever seen"
Well done! Love how the country cares for the safety of all their people, not just the wealthy! ❤️🇨🇦❤️
30:00 that is absolutely amazing to think about. All of those being installed / integrated into the frame of that building. What a true marvel of engineering
As a foreign resident of Tokyo who didn't know about this project it was really cool to see and hear about it. Loved the video! Thanks!
Tokyo is without a doubt my favourite city in the world. It's astonishing, and the attention they have spent on managing everything, you'll notice immediately. Because a lot of the time you'll get there and be amazed that it isn't that busy, or at least doesn't appear to be. Because it works. The first time I went to cross the road in Ginza, I just couldn't believe how much traffic there wasn't. It's so damned efficient.
Anyway, 100 billion dollars is a lot of money but considering it's tackling so much and over 100 years projected life, that'snot bad at all.
I keep repeating this in comments because it applies to almost every person here, a person’s understanding of a place is extremely superficial when they spend a week there as a tourist. Your opinion would be substantially different if you lived in Tokyo. It is not nearly as efficient as you think it is.
@@conor7154 It is miserable to go mad with jealousy
Well said!!
@@conor7154 You haven't been to Tokyo. Quit repeating your ignorant comment everywhere. I've been here so many times for months on end and it IS EXTREMELY efficient. TRAVEL the world instead spewing misinformation.
@@socks_cat356 Hahaha, well said.