E, Shanai System Subete Wan'ope shiteiru Watashi wo Kaiko desu ka? - Vol. 1 Ch. 6

Active member
Joined
Feb 1, 2018
Messages
86
page 7 dialogue should be
”Well, I mean y’see,
y‘think there’s anything in it for me?
And you’re leaving soon anyway, right?”
GLnLzidbwAAnbvo
 
Double-page supporter
Joined
Dec 31, 2018
Messages
163
I don't want to be or sound judgemental, but... is Japan highly sexist?
Another thing is, she might be highly "frank", and it might be seen as unprofessional in corpo 'culture'.

Either way, expecting perfect communication from programmer is a mistake, as greatest/best programmers are those that will be crass, frank and no fucks given...
Yes.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Jan 17, 2023
Messages
1,559
I don't want to be or sound judgemental, but... is Japan highly sexist?
Another thing is, she might be highly "frank", and it might be seen as unprofessional in corpo 'culture'.

Either way, expecting perfect communication from programmer is a mistake, as greatest/best programmers are those that will be crass, frank and no fucks given...
Here's a book about Japanese Patriarchy.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Nov 28, 2020
Messages
238
I went to Italy recently and even for a tourist attraction it's insane how little diversity I saw compared to normal towns and cities in the US. I mean granted the US has a much larger population than most countries, but it's crazy how bad it is in so many "developed" nations and beyond that how little anyone cares.
Europe wasn't populated through centuries of global mass immigration like the US was, of course the population is gonna be a lot more homogenous. Thinking that is somehow bad or racist is such a crazy take... For all your talk about travelling and understanding the world, you've actually got a very nasty case of US-centrism.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Mar 25, 2019
Messages
462
but often the US centric (and this is on a global) mindset is that we're somehow the only ones with social problems. In reality we're one of the few places where our social issues are called out and fought against and there's ongoing change.
You're right on this. But I want to specify that a cause of those perceptions is that many US citizens either are ignorant with, or being underfed with situation abroad, while believing otherwise.

Ironically, from outsider POV, the best way to have US (and the west) attention at societal problems in a developing country is to be opposition to US.

I bet people here know, superficially of course, more about Iran patriarchy than Japan's or South Korea's. More on oppression of free speech in China than SEA. And more of religion conflict in middle east than in south Asia. Even superficial knowledge might be better than no awareness, in this case.

But that is all I wish to say about geopolitics here, thank for reading my rant.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Jan 20, 2018
Messages
1,758
Not really unusually. I feel like people don't fundamentally understand how progressive the US actually is. Like I'd really like people to travel more often. That's not to say the US doesn't still have a LONG way to go, but often the US centric (and this is on a global) mindset is that we're somehow the only ones with social problems. In reality we're one of the few places where our social issues are called out and fought against and there's ongoing change. Most other developed nations don't have nearly the diversity and progressive movements present in the US (which really puts it into perspective how far we have to go globally).

The US is constantly in the news for having the conversations, but a lot of other countries don't. Most just have far more homogenous societies and bury any ethnic minority issues. Sexism is REALLY bad in Japan and South Korea along with racism (traveling while black is a real and incredibly uncomfortable thing). I went to Italy recently and even for a tourist attraction it's insane how little diversity I saw compared to normal towns and cities in the US. I mean granted the US has a much larger population than most countries, but it's crazy how bad it is in so many "developed" nations and beyond that how little anyone cares.
Normally I'd wholly agree with you on many of the aspects you're talking about here, but one thing you said stood out and kinda poisoned the entire discussion:

What do you mean by "little diversity" when you went abroad?

I mean, do you go to an african village and complain because of the lack of white people? Do you go to a latin-american town and complain for the lack of asian people?

The US has an impressive history of open borders and massive inmigrations, which combined with the slave population that was shipped there and got emancipated later made the melting pot that helped make your country into what it is now; expecting the same thing to happen in other countries, civilized or not, is simply being ignorant of history, theirs and yours.

For now, as someone who actually is from outside the US and has (what I hope) a neutral outlook on things, just appreciate that the "racism" you see abroad isn't the same racism you see in the US; they don't see black or white, they see either countrymate or outsider, with the only inbetween being the amount of money they have/bring to their country.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top