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- The following article on enforced racial homogeneity in Japanese schools may be related to Japan's ingrained disapproval of race mixing.
- Children of American GIs and Japanese women have suffered painful discrimination in Japan, even by members of their own extended families.
- Japan has refused to take in world refugees. There is no Muslim population in Japan. This has resulted in no incidence of Islamic terror in the country.
- The Japanese have a fascination with Nazism. Government officials and celebrities have even praised it publicly. Although there are practically no Jews in Japan, there is a current of anti-Semitism. Japan was an ally of Nazi Germany during World War II.
Japanese Girl Sues School For Forcing Her To Dye Her Hair Black
“Even if we had a blond foreign exchange student, we would force them to dye their hair black,” a school representative allegedly told the girl’s attorney.
When a Japanese school forced a student to dye her naturally brown hair to black, she filed suit against the district in a case that began Friday.
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An unidentified 18-year-old high school student from Osaka, Japan is suing the prefecture for “mental anguish” after school officials allegedly forced her to dye her brown hair to black. Her suit amounts to 2.2 million yen (roughly $20,000 USD), The Mainichi reported. The prefecture has called for the case to be dismissed.
Since junior high, the girl was allegedly forced to dye her hair black and her mother asked the high school “to take care not to let the same thing happen in high school.” However, the high school soon ignored her mother’s request and began forcing the student to dye her hair. The girl calls the incident “bullying in the name of guidance.”
The girl claimed that teachers inflicted psychological damage on the student, accusing her of having brown hair since she is from a “single-mother household.” She was also forbidden from attending certain activities, due to her natural hair color.
“Even if we had a blond foreign exchange student, we would force them to dye their hair black,” a school representative allegedly told the girl’s attorney.
Many schools in the Osaka Prefecture have a “brown hair registry” — an annotated list of every student in the district that was born with brown hair. As long as the shade of brown-hair students does not change they are supposedly safe from disciplinary action. The mother of the student claims that the school in dispute does not have a registry.
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JAPAN'S FASCINATION WITH NAZISM
Japanese minister Taro Aso praises Hitler, saying he had 'right motives'
Finance minister forced to retract comment after criticism that he appeared to be defending Hitler’s motives for the genocide of millions of Jews.
Japan’s finance minister, Taro Aso, has courted fresh controversy after expressing admiration for the Nazis, describing Adolf Hitler as “having the right motives”.
“Hitler, who killed millions of people, was no good even if his motive was right,” Aso told a meeting of his faction of the governing Liberal Democratic party, according to Jiji Press.
Aso retracted the comments on Wednesday after criticism that he appeared to be defending Hitler’s motives for the genocide of millions of Jews during the second world war.
Earlier this week, the Simon Wiesenthal Centre said it had called for an investigation into Katsuya Takasu, a well-known plastic surgeon and TV celebrity, who highlighted the Nazis’ contribution to science and medicine, and appeared to deny the Holocaust.
The centre asked the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery to expel Takasu, whose posts, according to Cooper, “violate all norms of decency and reveal a person who is a racist anti-Semite and outright lover of Nazism”.
The academy said it took the allegations against Takasu seriously and was investigating Takasu’s comments.
Takasu posted the tweets in 2015 but they recently generated a huge response on social media after a Japanese blogger translated them into English.
After saying he had learned “how great Nazism was” while studying at Kiel University in Germany, Takasu wrote: “There is no doubt that the Jews were persecuted. But we only know it from hearsay and all of it is based on information from the Allies.”
In June, Yutaka Harada, a member of the board of Japan’s central bank praised Hitler’s “wonderful” fiscal and monetary policies, but said they had enabled him to go on and do “horrible” things.
The use of Nazi symbolism has landed Japanese celebrities in trouble. Keyakizaka46, a popular girl band set up by an executive board member of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics organising committee, was criticised last year for giving a Halloween concert in costumes modelled on Nazi Waffen-SS uniforms.
NAZI COSTUMES are popular in Japan
In 2011, the all-male pop group Kishidan appeared on primetime television wearing Nazi-style uniforms, triggering a protest from Jewish rights campaigners.
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