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by bouncycastle 2570 days ago
Sure, the US also had a recession and it shows. But I can vouch for OP what he said about Japan. Once you step outside Tokyo/Osaka in to the smaller cities, you'll see abandoned buildings, crumbling public infrastructure and many people living off government benefits, struggling to make ends meet. Decades of recession have really taken their toll. I wouldn't call that poverty yet, but definitely there's a lot of austerity.

The beurocracy is insane. My guess is that the government crept in lots of it because it helps to keep the public servants employed. If you look in to the post office or local government ward office, there is always a whole army of office workers sending away faxes and stamping them, then stapling some papers. (They still use these weird stamps to sign their documents btw)

And yes, Japanese still use faxes, drive old taxis and generally you'll see a lot of antiqued technology that still works, but I think that's kind of charming. I especially enjoy seeing some of the old narrow guagae trains still chugging along the country side from time to time (in stark contrast to the shinkansen). Also exiting to see laser disks / VCRs / minidisks when visiting Japanese houses. Just the other day I seen an automated piano controlled by a device which seemed to be reading the data from a 3.5 inch floppy! Sometimes I can spot the odd CRT display still happily flickering, including the old vintage arcade games... The bowling alley down the block still uses what seems to be a DOS based system to manage their displays & business. Visiting a hospital is sometimes like visiting a museum... Oh, btw, got to fly in a Boeing 767 on a domestic route a few months ago, that was a pleasant surprise as I haven't been on one in years!

1 comments

>Sure, the US also had a recession and it shows. But I can vouch for OP what he said about Japan. Once you step outside Tokyo/Osaka in to the smaller cities, you'll see abandoned buildings, crumbling public infrastructure and many people living off government benefits, struggling to make ends meet.

I've been to Mississippi, Alabama, South Dakota, Michigan, and lots of other states, and it's probably much worse there.