This gives a window into the buisness practices of the Japanese. They had incentives to get those people to move there to do crap jobs, and then threw quickly them under the bus when they stopped making big profits, and are unapologetic about it. They do what's best for THEIR people first.
“We should stop letting unskilled laborers into Japan. We should make sure that even the three-K jobs are paid well, and that they are filled by Japanese,” he said. “I do not think that Japan should ever become a multiethnic society.”
He said the United States had been “a failure on the immigration front,” and cited extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants.
A lot of times I disagree with your point of view, but I'm going to have to get on the bus with you on this one. I'm not sure if it is truly that the Japanese government is actively looking to take care of the Japanese citizens or it is a throw back to the "we're superior" mindset of the Japanese. Japanese politicians are still extremely conceited and self absorbed so it could simply be selfish actions on there part, but that said, it still results in legislature that protects the Japanese common people. Which is a good thing.
With the state of our Nation as it is my compassion and interest for what goes on outside our borders becomes less and less. I'm to the point that I don't give a damn who is starving, who is oppressed, who is killing who unless it falls within our borders. I mean no offense to all of the great people from other Nations. I simply feel that we need to fix
our own house first before we even consider fixing anybody else's, and our house is way broke! If the U.S. was a utopia then by all means we can
offer assistance to those who would take it, not go on some damn crusade to "SAVE" the rest of the world.