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Celebrating ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’
In honor of the opening day of New Moon, the latest film in The Twilight Saga, we thought we ...
The Cheryl Behind the Cheryl
Known to many as the long-suffering (ex)wife of funnyman Larry David, the man behind Seinfeld, ...
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Chaklet Coffee Books
10/20/2009 5:07 PM UTC
Words cannot express my gratitude to you and Otto for the beautiful interview. Thank you again.Mimi
The Gay Mentor
9/29/2009 11:42 PM UTC
Hello In Like, I appreciate you stopping by and listening. I hope you continue to do so. I wish you joy and pleasure.
IDOESFUKIT ZONE
7/6/2009 6:37 AM UTC
KEEP DOIN YA THANG!!!
PPC1
6/7/2009 5:31 AM UTC
HI
Delicious Talk
3/1/2009 6:53 AM UTC
This was another awesome show you and Otto brought it again this week.the interview with Mimi was sooooo personable and down right professional.This show will be my "Rest Stop"
3/1/2009 6:49 AM UTC
Oh my God, Penelope and Otto, I had such a great time on the show! thank you for giving me the opportunity to share. Mimi
et1173
3/1/2009 6:40 AM UTC
Yes..it was a very informative show...very well done
2/26/2009 12:54 AM UTC
The show was awesome.Thanks for the interview. You and otto are professional and personable.I will be visiting your show often...Smooches!!!
2/24/2009 7:53 AM UTC
Loved the interview with Gayle! Awesome show.
BBW Lita Moonsinger
2/1/2009 6:37 AM UTC
An outstanding show!!
The Dave Jones Show
9/27/2008 2:52 PM UTC
I LOVE THE SHOW, KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK. I HOPE TO HERE FROM YOU VERY SOON. DAVE.
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9/27/2008 1:49 PM UTC
Thanks for the Friend Request...
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9/18/2008 2:17 AM UTC
Thank you for tuning in to DeLeon Dialogue. Have a blessed weekend. deLeon
Drama Hour
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THANKS FOR ALL THE LOVE COME CHECK US OUT AT BLOGTALKRADIO.COM/DRAMAHOUR
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2/19/2008 12:11 AM UTC
**FREE-DOWNLOADABLE-MUSIC-GIFT** PRODUCED BY ME...VIRGO SMITH* JUST A SMALL GIFT FOR MY WOMEN SUPPORTIVE LISTENERS. "A RARE-FIND/AND A GOOD KEEP!" (Song Titled: YES FINALLY!) http://www.myspace.com/virgosmith PEACE & THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! MS. PENELOPE FLYNN (WRITER/AUTHOR/?) -FIN
Astromancer
2/2/2008 5:56 AM UTC
How do I get on your friends list? I'm new at this...
1/15/2008 9:47 PM UTC
"....We are dealing with issues that cannot be solved without the nation spending billions of dollars and undergoing a radical redistribution of economic power." —Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
1/14/2008 4:11 PM UTC
My people we must continue to stand as one. For as you all know it is together that we are most powerful. It was together that our people fought, went to jail, and even died for our sake. So it is now more than ever that we must stand taller than ever, and keep the fight that they started alive in 2008 !!!!!!!!!!!
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1/5/2008 12:44 AM UTC
Very Interesting Show!! Powerful topics... I WILL be coming back... Come check me out again... Looking forward to hearing from you soon! Michele
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1/4/2008 9:51 PM UTC
Keep it Dangerous in '08!
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10/29/2007 3:11 PM UTC
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Discussions of All Things Social and Sexual - open talk for open minds
Date / Time: 11/18/2009 8:04 PM UTC
Date / Time: 11/18/2009 7:18 PM UTC
Date / Time: 6/2/2009 1:09 AM UTC
Date / Time: 4/26/2009 5:46 AM UTC
LEAVING LOST WAGES - AS A RESULT OF THE WORLDWIDE ECONOMIC DOWNTURN, JAPANESE GOV’T PAYS BRAZILIAN WORKERS TO GO HOME! The Washington Post’s EUGENE ROBINSON scores Pulitzer Prize for commentary on the Obama campaign. DO LOOKS MATTER? Do people presume that good-looking people are better? Should this type of cheating require more punishment? And Errett Thomas talks to us about “Mind Control.” All this and more tonight on In Like Flynn!!
LEAVING LOST WAGES - JAPANESE GOV’T PAYS BRAZILIAN WORKERS TO GO HOME!
HAMAMATSU,
Japan — Rita Yamaoka, a recently jobless mother of three, faces a heart-wrenching decision. The Japanese government has offered to pay thousands of dollars to fly her family home to Brazil . Skip to next paragraph Multimedia A Cash Offer to Leave Japan Related Hime Island Journal: A Workers’ Paradise Found Off Japan’s Coast (April 22, 2009) Franck Robichon for The New York Times Sergio Yamaoka, left, and his wife, Rita, came to Hamamatsu from Brazil with their three children three years ago, at the height of the export boom. But in recent months, the Yamaokas both lost their auto factory jobs. More Photos » But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again. The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. “I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program. “We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.” Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs. The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials. Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers. “It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
Skip to next paragraph Multimedia A Cash Offer to Leave Japan Related Hime Island Journal: A Workers’ Paradise Found Off Japan’s Coast (April 22, 2009) Franck Robichon for The New York Times Sergio Yamaoka, left, and his wife, Rita, came to Hamamatsu from Brazil with their three children three years ago, at the height of the export boom. But in recent months, the Yamaokas both lost their auto factory jobs. More Photos » But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again. The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. “I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program. “We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.” Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs. The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials. Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers. “It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
Multimedia
A Cash Offer to Leave Japan Related Hime Island Journal: A Workers’ Paradise Found Off Japan’s Coast (April 22, 2009) Franck Robichon for The New York Times Sergio Yamaoka, left, and his wife, Rita, came to Hamamatsu from Brazil with their three children three years ago, at the height of the export boom. But in recent months, the Yamaokas both lost their auto factory jobs. More Photos » But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again. The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. “I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program. “We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.” Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs. The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials. Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers. “It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
Related
Hime Island Journal: A Workers’ Paradise Found Off Japan’s Coast (April 22, 2009) Franck Robichon for The New York Times Sergio Yamaoka, left, and his wife, Rita, came to Hamamatsu from Brazil with their three children three years ago, at the height of the export boom. But in recent months, the Yamaokas both lost their auto factory jobs. More Photos » But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again. The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. “I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program. “We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.” Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs. The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials. Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers. “It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
Franck Robichon for The New York Times
Sergio Yamaoka, left, and his wife, Rita, came to Hamamatsu from Brazil with their three children three years ago, at the height of the export boom. But in recent months, the Yamaokas both lost their auto factory jobs.
More Photos » But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again. The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country. “I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program. “We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.” Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs. The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials. Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers. “It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
But if she takes the money, Mrs. Yamaoka and her husband, Sergio — a Brazilian national of Japanese descent — must agree not to seek work in Japan again.
The repatriation offer is part of a new drive to encourage Japan ’s sizable pool of Latin American factory workers to leave the recession-wracked country.
“I tell my husband that we should take the money and go back,” said Mrs. Yamaoka, 36, her eyes teary after a town hall meeting where local officials laid out the terms of the program.
“We can’t afford to stay here much longer,” she said. “I feel immense stress. I’ve been crying very often.”
Mrs. Yamaoka and her family settled in the industrial town of Hamamatsu , in central Japan , three years ago, at the height of Japan ’s export boom. But in recent months, both she and her husband have lost their auto factory jobs.
The Yamaokas are undecided on whether to leave. But at least 100 Latin American workers have agreed to leave Japan on the understanding they will not return, according to Japanese officials.
Critics denounce the program as short-sighted and inhumane, and a threat to what little progress Japan has made in opening its economy to foreign workers.
“It’s a disgrace. It’s cold-hearted,” said Hidenori Sakanaka, director of the Japan
Immigration Policy Institute. “And Japan is kicking itself in the foot... we might be in a recession now, but it’s clear it doesn’t have a future without workers from overseas.” Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations. In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan . The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.) But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years. So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls. “ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ” Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change. But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws. The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums. “It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.” Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section. Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return. The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage. Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages. But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole. “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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants. At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room. “Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted. “That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly. Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said. “I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said. Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month. “They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October. “But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.” He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June. “We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.” _________________ EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
Japan’s repatriation offer is limited to the country’s Latin American guest workers, whose Japanese parents and grandparents emigrated to Brazil and neighboring countries a century ago to work on coffee plantations.
In 1990, Japan — facing growing industrial labor shortage — started issuing thousands of special work visas to descendants of these emigrants. An estimated 366,000 Brazilians and Peruvians now live in Japan .
The guest workers quickly became the largest group of foreign blue-collar workers in an otherwise immigration-adverse country, filling the so-called three-K jobs (kitsui, kitanai, kiken — or hard, dirty and dangerous.)
But the nation’s manufacturing sector has slumped as demand for Japanese goods evaporates worldwide, prompting job cuts and pushing the jobless rate to a three-year high of 4.4 percent. Japan ’s exports plunged 46 percent in March from a year earlier, and industrial production is at its lowest level in 25 years.
So Japan has been keen to help foreign workers go home, thus easing pressure on domestic labor markets and getting thousands off unemployment rolls.
“ Japan ’s economy has hit a rainstorm. There won’t be good employment opportunities for a while, so that’s why we’re suggesting that the Nikkei Brazilians go home,” said Jiro Kawasaki, a former health minister and senior lawmaker of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
“Naturally, we don’t want those same people back in Japan after a couple of months,” Mr. Kawasaki said, who led the ruling party task force that devised the repatriation plan, part of a wider emergency strategy to combat rising unemployment in Japan. “Then Japanese taxpayers would ask, ‘What kind of ridiculous policy is this?’ ”
Under the emergency program, introduced this month, the country’s Brazilian and other Latin American guest workers are offered $3,000 toward air fare, plus $2,000 for each dependent — attractive lump sums for many immigrants here. Workers who leave have been told they can pocket any change.
But those who travel home on Japan ’s dime will not be allowed to reapply for a special “Nikkei” work visa. Stripped of that status, most Japanese-Brazilian workers who left would find it all but impossible to return to work here under Japan ’s strict immigration laws.
The plan to fly immigrants out of Japan has come as a shock to many here, especially after the Japanese government introduced a number of measures in recent months to help jobless foreigners, including free Japanese-language courses, vocational training and job counseling. Guest workers are eligible for limited cash unemployment benefits, provided they have paid monthly premiums.
“It’s baffling,” said Angelo Ishi, an associate professor in sociology at Musashi University in Tokyo . “The Japanese government has previously made it clear that they welcome Japanese-Brazilians, but this is an insult to the community.”
Facing a storm of criticism from immigrant communities here, Japan is prepared to consider letting some repatriated immigrants re-enter the country after an unspecified period of time, said Kazuyoshi Matsunaga, an official at the Foreign Ministry’s consular affairs section.
Still, it is unclear whether workers who leave will be allowed to return.
The program comes despite warnings that the aging country needs all the foreign workers it can attract to stave off a impending labor shortage.
Japan’s population has been falling since 2005, and its working-age population could fall by a third by 2050. Though manufacturers have been laying off workers, sectors like farming and elderly care still face shortages.
But Mr. Kawasaki, the former health minister, said the economic slump was a good opportunity to overhaul Japan ’s immigration policy as a whole.
“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 multi-ethnic society” like the United States , which “has been a failure on the immigration front,” Mr. Kawasaki added. That failure, he said, was demonstrated by extreme income inequalities between rich Americans and poor immigrants.
At the packed town hall meeting in Hamamatsu , immigrants voiced disbelief that they would be barred from returning. Angry members of the audience converged on town officials. Others walked out of the meeting room.
“Are you saying even our children will not be able to come back?” one participant shouted.
“That is correct, they will not be able to come back,” a local labor official, Masahiro Watai, answered calmly.
Claudio Nishimori, 30, said he was considering returning to Brazil because his shifts at a electronics parts factory here were recently reduced to three days a week. But he felt anxious about going back to a country he had left so long ago, he said.
“I’ve lived in Japan for 13 years. I’m not sure what job I can find when I return to Brazil ,” he said. But his wife has been unemployed since being laid off last year, and he can no longer afford to support his family, he said.
Others have made up their minds to leave. About 1,000 of Hamamatsu ’s Brazilian inhabitants left the city before the aid was announced. The city’s Brazilian elementary school closed last month.
“They put up with us as long as they needed the labor,” said Wellington Shibuya, who came to this industrial city six years ago and lost his job at a stove factory in October.
“But now that the economy is bad, they throw us a bit of cash and say goodbye.”
He recently applied for the government repatriation aid and is set to leave in June.
“We worked hard, we tried to fit in. Yet they’re so quick to kick us out,” he said. “I’m happy to leave a country like this.”
_________________
EUGENE ROBINSON Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago. Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black. After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
EUGENE ROBINSON
Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary Monday, but the newspaper's lone award represented a much smaller haul than the six it earned a year ago.
Robinson received journalism's top prize for his columns about the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the first African-American to win the nation's top job. Robinson, a former foreign correspondent and assistant managing editor for the paper, also is black.
After winning the award, Robinson told colleagues gathered in the Post newsroom that he was particularly pleased to have won for his coverage of "the biggest political event of my lifetime, and one that has personal meaning for me," according to a story on the Post's Web site. Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The
Last year, the newspaper, a unit of The
Washington Post Co. (NYSE: WPO), won six awards, its most ever, including the commentary award for business columnist Steven Pearlstein. This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/ ___________________________
This year's other winners included The New York Times, which won five Pulitzers, including one for breaking news coverage for the prosititution scandal surrounding former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The Las Vegas Sun won the public service award, and the Los Angeles Times won for explanatory reporting. _______________________ See Trouble the Water (2008) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1149405/
___________________________
Date / Time: 3/29/2009 3:48 AM UTC
Date / Time: 3/22/2009 5:16 PM UTC
Join Penelope & Otto on "In Like Flynn" <br/> 11pm CST Saturday March 21, 2009<br/> <br/> <a href="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Penelope_Flynn"><img id="BTRButton" style="border-right: 0px solid; border-top: 0px solid; border-left: 0px solid; border-bottom: 0px solid" alt="Listen to In Like Flynn on internet talk radio" src="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/img/180x60_wht.gif" name="BTRButton"/></a> <br/> <br/> <font size="3">;
Tonight Penelope & Otto discuss sex and politics - Has the history channel gone off the deep end??!!! A-Rod - Is it all in the Details? TV Minstrelsy - Cartoons or reflections of real life. Call us at 718/508-9683 or join us in the chat room.</font><p></p>
Date / Time: 3/15/2009 3:52 AM UTC
THE FLYNN-TERVIEWS Motivational author Errett R Thomas, Jr. joins Penelope & Otto on "In Like Flynn" 11pm CST Saturday March 14, 2009 to tell us how to "MAKE ONE MILLION DOLLARS IN ONE YEAR"!!
Well-known achievers like artist Boris Vallejo applaud it. The straight-forward approach pulls no punches. For those who truly desire success, the book provides a direct and logical path. This focused guide develops the reader's insight into his/her own wealth-creating abilities and reveals that we really do have the tools in hand to control our economic destinies.
"It’s not rocket science and I prove to those who read my book they can have everything they want in life." ~Errett J. Thomas, Jr.
For anyone seeking success in their chosen path but can't quite seem to pull it all together, Errett R. Thomas, Jr's book provides no nonsense tools for focusing one's talents and abilities. Join us Saturday Night 11pm CST via phone or the Chat room to speak with the author and really learn how to Make One Million Dollars in One year!
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