Archive

Archive for April, 2007

Whales at the Polls?

April 20th, 2007

Not just the poles in the arctic where Japan conducts its routines, but at the voting polls. That’s right, we’re talking about whale suffrage. Hat tip to Bryan at Hot Air for this.

Presidential candidates who take a firm stand against Japanese whaling practices are more likely to gain support from swing voters, a new poll has shown.

That’s right. The Washington Times has an article out that claims that Americans’ anger at Japan’s whaling practices is large enough to comprise a swing vote. That is, that enough voters in America might swing their vote based solely on the presidential candidates’ individual stances on Japan’s whaling practices that it could change the outcome.

I find this patently absurd, as does Bryan at Hot Air. He analyzes the impetus behind the poll, as well as the organizations behind it. I think his conclusions seem are entirely reasonable.

So…half of the country’s swing voters would give up Sony, Honda, Toyota, Panasonic etc etc etc to protest Japanese whaling? Riiiight.

I have posted about Japanese whaling practices before. I got in trouble with friends for having partaken of whale flesh. It wasn’t particularly appetizing. I’ll have a followup entry hopefully soon, because I am determined to go whale watching. It’s weird to have eaten an animal that I’ve never seen alive. But I digress. The Washington Times article makes one particularly interesting anti-whaling thrust, urging the United States to return to an anti-whaling position.

Whales Need US called on the Bush administration to re-establish the United States as a country that “confronts those countries that kill whales” after the announcement of the poll results in Washington yesterday.

“We want the U.S. government to rediscover its backbone and to restore its leadership to protect whales” said D.J. Schubert, wildlife biologist at the animal-welfare institute.

Restore its leadership? Re-establish the country’s anti-whale stance? Some of you might remember that my original article was spurred on by a New York Times story that a friend sent to me…a story explaining that the United States started and encouraged the Japanese whaling practice while Japan was rebuilding post-WWII.

It comes as little surprise that foreign opposition to whaling has fueled nationalist sentiments in Japan. What is far less known is how the United States instigated, at least partly, Japan’s nationalist obsession with whaling by first encouraging the Japanese in the postwar years to hunt and eat whale meat, and then urging them to stop.

So…were we against whaling before we were for it? Or what? I’m confused. I guess I agree with Bryan’s conclusions, though.

Bottom line: I’m skeptical that the 08 vote might swing decisively on the whale question. This one poll is not convincing. But if I’m wrong and this poll turns out to be right and the presidency does hang on the end of a harpoon, expect to see a lot more whale blogging as we run up to ‘08.

Hey, if he’s right about the blog-fodder-ization of whaling as a topic, I guess I’m on the cutting edge. It’ll be an interesting thing to see unfold, anyway. No worries, I’ll keep my limited coverage running as long as the stories keep popping up.

Deas Customary Drivel, Politics, Unsolicited Commentary

Takin’ Care of Business

April 19th, 2007

I finally got my schedule from the Ehime Prefectural Board of Education. They’ve had personnel changeups there too. Anyhoo – the next couple of months have become a more solidified abstraction now. That is a comfort. I have 30 visits to schools away from my island through July (and 28 “visits” to my base school on Hakatajima). Visitations start next week, with a four day away pattern. At least I won’t be bored at my desk anymore. :-) Sorry for being a whiner about it. Ha ha. Is everyone else back in the swing of things?

By the way, I am hoping to update this weekend with some media content. Yesterday I had a surprise field trip to Fukuyama – to the same zoo that I visited with Iwagi Branch school. Awesome. I love hanging out with my kids outside of the English classroom. We also saw some exhibits at the art museum in Fukuyama. It was cool. Also – I bought a strange item from the Museum Shop. Ha ha. I’ll show you soon. I chatted with the shop lady for a while about the Murano glass display. Apparently there is a museum in Hakone that deals primarily with Venetian Murano glass. I thought that was cool, because I’ve been to the Murano glass factory in Venice. Needless to say, the museum shop doesn’t compare to an actual artisan sculpting a glass horse out of molten gunk right in front of your eyes. No contest. Anyway, what I bought is supposedly related to Murano glass…but I defy you to tell me how. Ha ha.

Also – get your entries in for this month’s Japan Blog Matsuri!

Deas Customary Drivel

First Moves

April 18th, 2007

This kind of saddens me. I wrote about the oddities surrounding the Ted Turner / Asian Pacific American flub a while back. Now the identity of Asians in America is again making news in my RSS feeds, thanks to the tragedy at Virginia Tech. After the shooting, the first moves made by a few different groups concerned me. First it was China, when the shooter was “Asian-looking” and possibly Chinese. Now the Asian American Journalists’ Association (AAJA) wants the media to stop referring to him as an Asian man.

SAN FRANCISCO (April 16, 2007) — Like the rest of the nation, we at the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) are stunned at the news of today’s shooting at Virginia Tech. Our thoughts are with the victims and their families and friends as they cope with this horrific incident.

As coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting continues to unfold, AAJA urges all media to avoid using racial identifiers unless there is a compelling or germane reason. There is no evidence at this early point that the race or ethnicity of the suspected gunman has anything to do with the incident, and to include such mention serves only to unfairly portray an entire people.

The effect of mentioning race can be powerfully harmful. It can subject people to unfair treatment based simply on skin color and heritage.

We further remind members of the media that the standards of news reporting should be universal and applied equally no matter the platform or medium, including blogs.

(Read the original.)

For those who missed it, the shooter was identified as a South Korean man named Cho Seung-Hui. (Well, ok, there was the one slip-up by a Japanese reporter who almost referred to him as African, but quickly corrected himself…) Anyway, here we have a group of people upset that the news is accurately reporting that the man was Asian. Because it will cause a backlash against Asians? Most people are more concerned about the man himself and why he did what he did than they are with his country of origin, and I have a hard time believing that a retaliatory spirit will rise in the American populace. Not everyone in America is a reactionary racist, you know. Not even in post 9/11 America. You’d think otherwise, though, wouldn’t you? Like I said, it kind of saddens me.

Hat tip to CBS’ Brian Montopoli. Sheesh.

Deas Customary Drivel, Unsolicited Commentary

Survey Says

April 17th, 2007

Don’t ask for permission. I started this post weeks and weeks ago. Due to being a responsible netizen, I have postponed publishing it until today. I made a foolish error in Japan – I asked permission to do something. The old adage about forgiveness being easier to obtain than permission rings true here. It’s completely insane. Folks who have been here for a bit understand that if you want to do something you should run with it and include people in it as it matures, or just let the payoff be shared by all. (If something tanks, bury it. Duh. That’s true everywhere.) When you ask someone permission to do something, you are inadvertantly making them responsible for your action. If they sign off on it verbally, they become part of the blame train should it go badly. Therefore, nobody wants to give you a greenlight for random ideas you might have to improve things. Ok, ok, I’m off of my soapbox. The point is, I ran this by a friend of mine at CLAIR, and it sent his world into chaos for a bit. Read more…

Deas Customary Drivel, Unsolicited Commentary

April Matsuri

April 16th, 2007

Get ready to party…another matsuri is coming! Another Japan Blog Matsuri, to be exact.

Let it be known that I am the designated host for the April edition of the Japan Blog Matsuri. Last month’s matsuri, hosted by Rising Sun of Nihon, was a great success, and is a really tough act to follow. I’ll do my best. Kudos to Bill Belew for the job he did. If you’re new to the concept, or just to this particular “blog carnival,” please refer to the matsuri’s explanation page at What Japan Thinks for rules, regulations, and general information.

The theme for this matsuri is … drum roll please … “Tourism!” Japan and tourism go together like Forrest Gump and Jenny (ok, ok, peas and carrots for you purists). I think it’s broad enough to leave you all kinds of wiggle room. I’d like to keep personal trip memories out of it unless there is some kind of commentary or content within such a post that makes it something a stranger would want to read. I hope that is understandable. I’m not trying to be mean, but we don’t want to have a list of “what I did over break” entries. There is plenty to talk about, so get writing about tourism and Japan if you’re game.

Due to Golden Week, I am extending the normal deadline. Please submit any tourism related articles and posts that you’d like to be considered by midnight on Monday, May 7th, 2007. 繰り返して、2007年5月7日23時59分59秒までに記事とポストなどを出して下さい。Everybody got that? Good. It is best if the articles and posts were written during the month of April in principle and spirit, however. We don’t want to steal from the next matsuri, now do we?

Please submit all articles and posts to me through the official submission page or the widget at What Japan Thinks. Alternatively, you can send them to me by email: deas (at) rocking in hakata (dot) com.

Encourage all of your friends to participate! Link them to this call for submissions, as well as to older examples for reference. It’s a great way to connect, discover new blogs, and interact with the greater English speaking Japan blogging community. Have fun, be safe, clean your room, and be home by 11. ;-)

Deas Announcements, Customary Drivel, JBMatsuri

Mother of Pearls

April 15th, 2007

Who’s the mother of pearls? Japan. Yup. Well, the mother of cultured pearls, anyway. I’m a big nerd, and have watched 2 foreign English language documentaries this week. Both on marine life, actually. The first one was a piece about the amazing abilities and behavioral patterns of cuttlefish. That sounds really dull, but it was absolutely fascinating. The second one was a Nova bit about the history of pearl culturing practices. It turns out that Japan is the country responsible for the emergence of the knowhow and technology for modern pearl culturing. Cool, huh? I thought I’d just post a bit of what I learned. Read more…

Deas Customary Drivel