Here are 7 reasons why Japan is just better!
1. Strikes
When public transport workers go on strike, rather than cause problems to the general public by completely stopping the transport service, they continue to run the service but refuse to charge commuters a fare. This way the only inconvenience caused is to the transport company that has to pay for gas but receives no money from the tickets.
2. Nature.
In Japan, nature is respected. The Japanese are aware that they aren’t just living on Planet Earth, they are a part of Planet Earth. For this reason, if a tree is in the way of a new road or building site, they won’t just chop it down, they will carefully dig it up and plant it elsewhere.
3. Cleanliness.
Japanese schools don’t have janitors or cleaning staff, instead, the students are taught how to clean up after themselves, this not only teaches the students to be clean and organized but also to respect their surroundings.
4. Hospital Food.
Nobody likes being in a hospital, when you are there, you are suffering and you’re surrounded by others who are suffering too.
So why does Hospital food have to add to the misery of an already bad situation?
well, in Japan, it doesn’t! Fresh fruit and veg, homemade pastries, and sushi, yes, it seems a healthy diet makes for a healthy body.
Mens sana in corpore sano!
5. Nature.
Yes, we know this is the second time nature’s on the list but the Japanese really do respect it!
Turtles from the Suma Aqualife Park in Kobe were either getting squashed by trains or caught in the rail-switching mechanisms when they tried to cross the railway, so the West Japan Railway Company got together with Suma Aqualife Park to identify the main places the turtles would cross, they then constructed several Ecoducts beneath the tracks to allow turtles and other wildlife safe passage across the tracks.
6. No One Is Left Behind.
Based in Tokyo, Diverse Avatar Working Network, or DAWN, is a cafe that is staffed by robots. These robots are controlled remotely by people with severe physical disabilities, this allows people who are bed-ridden or have diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis to still form a part of society, interact with others, and earn a wage.
7. Efficiency.
In 2016 a massive sinkhole 30 meters by 30 meters by 15 meters deep opened up in Fukuoka, Japan, destroying power and phone lines, gas and water pipes, and sewage works.
48 hours later, everything was reconnected, the hole filled in, and the road was tarmacked and painted! 48 hours! In any other country, it would take that long just to get permission to fix the hole! and only after various other organizations had investigated and signed a variety of different forms declaring that the hole did, in fact, actually exist, and was, indeed, requiring a repair.
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5 Comments
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Love Number 1
The Far East is the best!
I would love to live in Japan, but I am too old to move. Ah well, hopefully in my next life!
I would love to visit Japan!❤️🇯🇵