Today, I want to talk about two letters about Japanese discrimination. First letter, Views From The Street, is about comments and examples of it. Second one, Ebb and flow of discrimination, is an opinion against the first letter.
The problem between these letters is people of first letter say Chinese are discriminated well, but the author of second letter says American, too.
Dewood, the author of second letter, says it depends on place. In Nagasaki, American people are also discriminated. I’ve never heard American people are discriminated hard, but if the things Dewood says are true, discrimination may be not for Chinese people and depends on place.
However, when thinking which people are more discriminated, it must be happened more often to Chinese. I often saw Japanese complain or got sullen when they saw Chinese speak on a train.
Now, I insist that people who are discriminated are not only Chinese but also Korean and North Korean. Korean and North Korean people seem to be discriminated more often than Chinese people. In Japan, there is a word “chonkoh.” This is used to discriminate Korean and North Korean, and most people know this word.
To make a thing worse, the problem of North Korea made a nuclear bombs and threatens Japan also would be a cause of discrimination.
Japanese people exactly discriminate people from other countries. People who are discriminated depend on place. However, Korean and North Korean people must be discriminated more often than Chinese and American people on Japan.
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