Culture


Just because the so called Mayan 2012 prophecy failed to send us to a fiery hell doesn’t mean people will give up on stupid religious predictions or soothsayer divinations. In fact with technology increasingly entering our lives one of the biggest Christian doomsday harbingers, The Mark Of The Beast, will be “seen” by more and more true believers.

The Mark of the Beast as told by the bible speaks of a day when the Second Beast, The False Prophet, will force everyone to wear something (a symbol, a number, a hat) to buy or sell anything. This symbol is known as The Mark of the Beast

Revelation 13:15-18
It also forced all people, great and small, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hands or on their foreheads, so that they could not buy or sell unless they had the mark of the Beast.

No one can really agree on how to interpret this text, whether to take it literally or figuratively but it seems just about everyone has their own idea of what it means. On January 9, 2013 a Texan student, Andrea Hernandez, famously lost her legal battle not to wear a RFID tag (#2 on this list) to her school, claiming she couldn’t wear the badge on religious grounds, saying it was the “mark of the beast”. RFID is only the tip of the iceberg though and so here are Top Ten Technologies that will soon be called the Mark of the Beast:

10. Money


Coin
In the year 66 while Emperor Nero ruled Rome the Jews revolted and as a symbol of their revolt issued their own coinage. The Greek word for Mark of the Beast is χάραγμα, which also can be translated as coinage or money. From there it’s not a great jump to interrupt some huge change in the money system as the coming of the Mark of the Beast.

9. The process to get photo ID


tumblr_lw3r0cBu5C1qldo5po1_500
Now when you get photo ID the DMZ or government official that takes your picture aims the camera device at your forehead, sometimes even shinning a laser pointer on your forehead to make sure the camera is aimed right. In the future a photo ID or ID that you had to be “marked” by the camera could be an all in one ID/wallet/train pass something that you would need if you didn’t have any cash.

8. Retinal Scan


Iris Scan for Identity Confirmation
Of course in the future we might not even need photo ID, instead much like Tom Cruise’s character in the Minority Report everyone would just have their eyes scanned into a computer database just like how the American government did millions of Iris scans during the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Even in peaceful governments, like India, this process is coming to maturity. India hopes to eventually scan all 1.2 billion Indians and has already in their pilot program entered 30 million, just under the entire population of Canada. Soon Indians who have their eyes scanned could purchase items just by having their eyes scanned.

7. Universal Translator


universaltranslator
In the Bible before the Tower of Babel everyone spoke the same language. Then God got angry at this abomination and spread man across the world and “confounded” our languages. Now technology is returning us to the time before Babel. Already Japanese mobile phone operators offer real time translation through their smart phones. A few years in the future we could have a sort of universal language if a device either attached to our head or arm provided seamless, instantaneous translation. This would allow someone to buy and sell through out the world, as language would be no barrier.

6. Medical Tattoos


ht_tattoo_medical_record_wy_120412_wblog
What if in the future disease has swept through our cities? Medical technology might progress to a point where cures are developed automatically either at the local doctor bot or in the comfort of your own house. To provide this medicine to the population they would need a safe deployment method.

That future is already being developed. Scientists are developing a sensor that will be placed under the skin and would glow or change color if your body needed medication like a diabetic noticing that his sensor was glowing and as such needed an insulin shot. Once this system is set up cue the religious to scream about how something we would need to survive new diseases or bio-weapons is the Mark of the Beast.

5. Fingerprint Tech


biometric-fingerprint-access-control-image
Fingerprint technology is on the verge of becoming so cheap that it could replace keys, passwords and even our wallets. Already in Japan you can access your bank with your palm print, in Omaha students buy their lunch via thumb scans. A true believer might put themselves in the mind of our friendly 1st century prophet when he was having one of his visions. Through his eyes our future world he might notice that people are always touching devices when they buy something. He would assume that there is a device, a Mark of the Beast, when in actuality the Mark is just technology reading humanity’s fingerprint.

4. Dattoos


frog-dattoos
Dattoos are Tattoos powered by the body and act like a smart phone, security ID, and wallet all in one. It would be like a smart phone that is part of you, a smart phone organ, which allows you to connect and survive in the New Economic Order. To buy anything you would just scan or have your Dattoo scanned. Hartmut Esslinger, founder and co-CEO of Frog Design has already designed the device and is just waiting for the technology to catch up.

3. Microchip Implant


The hand of microchip implant hobbyist Amal Graafstra, just after an operation to insert a chip into his hand.

The hand of microchip implant hobbyist Amal Graafstra, just after an operation to insert a chip into his hand.


During the early days of Obama care there was an email campaign to suggest that the ominously sounding HR3200 clause would require citizens to get chips implanted into their bodies. It was all just an urban legend but as computers get smaller and smaller Microchips or minicomputers implanted into your skin are becoming real possibilities. Already Mexican officials are getting microchips that allow them to access restricted government facilities.

2 RFID chips


rfid
RFID chips are already everywhere in our society. Implanted into our clothes, pets, and food it is only a matter of time before we will be given either an RFID chip or some sort of RFID tattoo or mark. A Texas school in 2012 caused outrage when they threatened a student with suspension after she wouldn’t use a RFID pass carried like a pass card. The school in an effort to cut down on skipped classes was requiring all students to use a pass card when entering the classroom. This provided a real time account of where all the students were. One student, Andrea Hernandez, refused to use the system saying that “As an Evangelical Christian who believes that any sort of tracking technology is a ‘mark of the beast,’ she believes it violates her religious freedoms.”

1. Implanted Phones


Nokia-haptic-tattoo-patent
15 years ago it would have seemed Orwellian if I had told you that in the future you would carry a device that would allow you access to the Internet but at the same time tracked and recorded your comings and going. Not only does the iPhone do this but people don’t care. Not only do they not care but a lot even volunteer their location via Twitter updates or Four Square Coordinates. So how does a cell phone become the Mark of the Beast? When it is implanted into you! In early 2012 Nokia created headlines when it was revealed that it was patenting a process of “stamping or spraying ferromagnetic material onto a user’s skin and then pairing it with a mobile device. “ The future is now.

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Japan’s Nuclear Weapons Program

“In our country the lie has become not just a moral category, but a pillar of the state.” -Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Nuclear power has done a lot for Japan and it’s going nowhere.  The first commercial reactor went online in 1966, and since 1976 Nuclear power has been given the high throne of national strategic priority.  Before 2011/03/11, an estimated 30% of Japan’s power needs were met by nuclear means and it has been projected that by 2030 50% of power in Japan will be Nuclear.

As of late there have been protests in abundance and many an outcry demanding a move away from nuclear power, but this is all completely in vain.  Japan as an entity has invested too much time, money and hope in the dream of nuclear power to simply turn away from it.  The old guard sitting on the hill won’t let this happen just like they won’t let women forget what they’re here for.

Keep up the good work, Japan.

And why should they?  To all the protesters that posted pictures on Facebook taken with your iphones and digital cameras, who is going to make up the difference when all the nuclear plants are shut down?  You? Are you going to reach into your pocket to fund the construction of massive fields of alternative energy producing facilities?  Are you going to pay the insane tax on the imported coal and oil and wear a mask so you can breath outside due to what will be absolutely beyond belief rampant air pollution?  No?

Then shut the fuck up.  You were all OK when things were “safe”.  You’ve all enjoyed the growth and development that came hand in hand with nuclear power.  So unless you’re willing to pony up a massive amount of cash and drastically change your lifestyle, shut it.

That having been said, Japan has nuclear weapons.

“What pretty colors.”

A lot of people, including most Japanese, will tell you something different, but don’t drink the Kool-Aid.  These weapons exist.

If you came into my house, and in an extra room, sort of off to the side of the living room, you saw a bunch of shelves, and on these shelves, you found the following materials: tons of cold medicine, Hydrogen peroxide, Lithium batteries, rubbing alcohol, Acetone, Coolers, coffee filters, aluminum foil, aquarium tubing, camping fuel, drain cleaner, road flares, dry ice, gas additives and ammonium sulfate; you might come to the logical conclusion that I am, in fact, cooking up a shit ton of crystal meth in the trailer out back.

And you wouldn’t be wrong!

“Occupation? Scientist!”

Hey, perhaps I’m simply an amateur chemist or I am just an incredibly unlucky hoarder. Or maybe I own an aquarium and have a really bad cold, enjoy making homemade root-beer on Halloween, own an old car, dye my hair and like to be prepared. Maybe.  Although “correlation equals causation” might be a logical fallacy, and we have all left com hoc ergo prompter hoc well in the dust, the reality remains; correlations between one thing and another can be very telling.  Particularly when these connections begin to pile up.

So now allow me to propose another thought experiment.

Let’s say you walk into another house and in a side room you find the following: Weapons grade plutonium and a reactor that performs little other function than turning spent nuclear fuel into weapons grade gear,  a highly functional three stage solid fuel rocket with proven re-entry capability, the engineering prowess to turn screw drivers and put it all together and a steady stream of politicians and military advisers that have supported a nuclear weaponized Japan.

What conclusion would you logically come to after seeing all these goodies in that room?

“Wrong conclusion, guys.”

The Fuel

In 1995, Japan said that it had about 4.7 tons of good ole plutonium.  That’s enough to make about 700 nuclear war heads, give or take an Apocalypse or two.

The Reactor

In picturesque Tsuruga, Japan, alongside the container port, the bulk terminal, the coal-fired power plant, the two textile mills and the 20 bronze statues, located in the bustling downtown district, of “popular” anime characters from the 1970′s hit Uchu Senkan Yamato, one can also find the Monju Nuclear Power Plant.

Monju is a very special power plant, because it actually produces very little power.  What FBRs do, or Fast Breeder Reactors, is they reprocess largely spent uranium/plutonium. Basically the idea is for these to produce more fissile material than they consume.  Great right?  Sure it is.  Especially considering that the most common reprocessing technique, called PUREX,  “is generally considered a large proliferation concern because such reprocessing technologies can be used to extract weapons grade plutonium (or Uranium) from a reactor operated on a short refuelling cycle.”

But these facilities are heavily monitored both by agencies within Japan and by international groups such as the IAEA. Right? Correct.  Hence an extensive system of surveillance which consists of Modular Integrated Video Surveillance (MIVS) and advanced radiation monitoring systems.  With all this surveillance and these safe guards, there would be no way for fuel to be misplaced and hence, this FBR could never be used as a”laundry” to make weapons grade 235U.

Well, what if there was an accident and video was lost and a cover up ensued?

“….”

I only ask because in 1994 Monju went critical and there was an accident and video was…well…lost and a, um…cover up ensued.

And this matters because according to a Japanese paper on the subject of security and monitoring of FBR facilities “In fast breeder reactors and advanced thermal reactors, there exist difficult-to-access areas where direct verification of the inventory of fuel in the reactor core is impossible.”  This means that after the “accident” and the lost video and the cover ups etc, it was impossible to tell if anything was actually missing.

Two other compelling pieces of circumstantial evidence exist that further tip the scales indicating Japan’s military agenda.  One is that the countries that have or have had Fast Breeder Reactors, are all states that are armed with nuclear weapons or were armed.  France, Germany, India, UK, USA, Russia and China.

The Second point is that the CIRUS facility in India, a FBR facility, is not under civilian oversight but rather that of the military.  If it was being monitored by the correct  civilian agencies both domestic and international, the production and extraction of weapons grade material would be much more difficult, so India just said “Fuck that Noise” and made it a military installation independent and unaccountable to anyone outside of the war mongers club.

The Missile

If one has a nuclear war head and wants to get it from point A to point B one needs a delivery method because throwing it probably won’t cut it.

Enter the MV Rocket!

This baby is a Japanese solid fuel rocket design for “launching satellites”, respectively.  Solid fuel matters because these can sit around inactive for a pretty long time and then be launched on very short notice.  This is why Japan has maintained their solid fuel technology over the years despite liquid fuel and hybrid rockets being more efficient for space launch endeavors.

In addition to having a rocket, Japan has also shown its technological prowess in the realm of re-entry.  This is critical when sending something into space, because for it to then kill lots of people, it has to RE-ENTER the atmosphere and hit someones hometown or a Taco Bell.

This, according to former lieutenant-general Toshiyuki Shikata, was the point of the fifth MV Hayabusa launch and capsule re-entry.  “It demonstrated that Japan’s ballistic missile capability is credible.”

The Engineers to turn screw drivers

This is incredibly clear: Japan has the technical prowess to make Nukes.  In the 1998 Selig Harrison/ Rumsfeld commission it was determined by the United States that:

There is a considerable speculation that Japan has aspirations to become a nuclear power.  and it could develop nuclear weapons, on short notice if it has not already done so.

The report further went on to discuss Japan’s “advanced technology in the atomic field” and it’s “stock piles of plutonium”.

‘Nuff said.

“Your Missile’s SO BIG…and I love your Re-entry Technology! Mmmmmm.”

Steady Stream of Military advisers and Politicians down with WMDs

We already mentioned our homeboy Toshiyuki Shikata above, but there is a long line of powerful people in Japan that think nuclear weapons are a valid option.  Former Prime minister Koizumi was quoted as saying while discussing nuclear weapons “it is significant that although we could have them, we do not.” This was considered a kind of endorsement of a nuclear armament by the man who continually visited Yasukuni Shrine during his time in office.  Shinzo Abe also said that the Japanese constitution did not necessarily ban the possession of nukes as long as they “weren’t used” and were kept to a minimum.  Even Yasuo Fukuda, the spineless gutter snipe, said similar things.

“I wear these to keep the Nuke glare out of my eyes. Now launch those puppies!”

The prevailing argument within Japan is that the nuclear industry must be maintained not only for the commercial power it produces which keeps Japan afloat, but also to maintain the “readiness” of Japan to quickly develop a nuclear weapon.  This is considered a valid deterrent to invasion and to military intervention in Japan’s national interests abroad by aggressive countries.  Basic Deterrence theory.

Within this doctrine is where the problem with Japan’s subterfuge lies.  According to the Deterrence theory, which the Japanese have discussed at length, in order for it to work “a country must preserve its ability to retaliate either by responding before its own weapons are destroyed or by ensuring a second strike capability.”

Even if Japan’s Engineers could cobble together a launch-able ICBM with a Nuclear warhead in a week, that would be about 6 days and 23 hours too late.

Japan knows this.  China knows this. The USA knows this.  And this is why Japan has surely developed and built launch-able Nuclear missiles already.  You can have the coolest gun in the world, but if it has no bullets then it’s largely useless.

That is a gamble I do not see Japan being willing to take.

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As I talked about in the past I sometimes get paid to be an extra in movies and TV here in Japan. Since Japan is in love with 40s historical dramas 90% of the time I play an American GI in the 8th Army Occupation force of Japan.

Read: How to become Big in Japan

I always wear the same uniform, usually a private first class (I apparently don’t have the face of an officer). The pay sucks but it’s great to go out hang on a movie set. A lot of the time there is a big group of people and I always get a kick out of how there are never any real Americans to fill the roles and so the movie extras playing GIs are made up of Brazilians, Italians and Russians; lots of Russians. Sometimes, I’ll meet some cool people, but most of the time they’re totally insane.

Read: Avoiding crazy people in Japan

Anyway, the badge on the army shoulder is this red and white emblem that I always thought was weird as it stands out, but an occupation army wears different symbols than one in the jungles of Asia. They look like this:

I didn’t notice at first but someone on the set pointed out that the 8th Army badge looks a lot like the Umbrella Corporation symbol from Resident Evil.

A lot like the 8th Army Badge

I couldn’t find any interviews with the makers of the game but it makes sense considering Resident Evil was developed in Japan and the American occupation had a huge affect on Japanese culture from creating a national market for whale meat or, as wonderfully pointed out by Embracing Defeat’s John W. Dower, the sexuality of Japanese Tits.

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7 English Loan Words (that are Secretly Dirty in Japanese)

by Nanya

The English language is a pastiche of words amassed from various countries and cultures over whole eras of history. “Assassin”, “envelope”, “amok”… “pastiche”; without loan words for these concepts, what would we have called them? The rampant use of loan words is no different in Japan, where many foreign words (and people) come to lose their function, purpose and all original meaning.

Some English words in Japan, maintain their literal meaning, but none of their nuance, like in the way that “crazy” 「クレイジー」 only has the meaning of “insane” in Japanese. Some words or phrases take on a completely different meaning from their origins altogether, like “high tension” 「ハイテンション」 meaning “energetic”. But, there are a handful of Japanese-English loan words that, once innocently uttered in their correct English context, can cause misunderstandings of a more perverse nature. Here are 7 examples.

1.      “AV”

For the seasoned perv or general internet low-life (surely no one who reads GJA), the alternative meaning of AV may already be apparent. But, for the less depraved reader, long gone are the days when AV meant Mr. Stringbean Nerdlinger daintily rolling the movie projector into 3rd period Chem lab. AV is no longer synonymous with the business of setting up films, but rather the biznasty shown in them.

Say what?!? 

Though the Japanese acronym AV does relate to movies, it is not “audio-visual” as in English, but rather “adult video”. That gives a whole new meaning to the phrase “AV equipment”, amirite?

“You don’t wanna know where these things have been…”

Japan’s porn industry has had a long history spanning all the way back to things like graphic ukiyo-e woodblock prints, while today it is regarded as the largest producer of pornography in Asia. Soon after the advent of the video tape deck when porno flicks became more readily available to the average consumer, the phrase ‘adult video’ came into existence and made its way to Japan.

This short acronym was probably chosen as a euphemistic name for the product because plain English initials, being neutral and representative of no exact meaning inherently, easily masks the inherent filth associated with calling something “porn” or “adult video” outright. Using (made-up) English words or phrases to mask things that are uncomfortable to talk about outright is a common trend in Japan and is thought to be the only form of communication available to eikaiwa counselors.

“Mr.Kubota-san is CHO energish guy DESU DESU!!!!”

Take AV for a spin in the old search engine. If you were to search for 「AV機器」the Japanese equivalent of AV equipment, you would get speakers, amps and the like, but typing the search terms “Japan” and “AV” in the same search box will result in nothing but tentacle-molested, bukkake-sprayed, school girl cosplay bondage. But then again, I’m guessing you knew as much. In such a search, the only AV Club Nerdlingers you will come across will be the patrons of such sites, not to mention the site developers themselves. I guess not much has changed after all.

In short, think twice before telling your Japanese pen pal that you were in the AV Club in school. Then again, you probably shouldn’t divulge that sparkling gem of your bygone nerd past to anyone anyway. Dork.

2. “Boing-Boing”

Obviously, we’ve sprung in to onomatopoeia territory with this one. The “boing-boing” sound effect is a cartoon staple that the likes of Hanna-Barbera, Looney Tunes, Walt Disney and countless other animators and cartoonists used to build the soundscape of our childhood imaginations. You can thank Japan for molesting your inner child and leaving you feeling appropriately dirty and used.

Say what?!? 

To demonstrate the innocence lost due to the misunderstanding of “boing-boing”, I present a true tale from the annals of gaijindom.

A good friend and, at the time, fellow newcomer to Japan – we’ll call him “Randy” to keep with our theme – was out in a shopping area in Osaka when a mother and her toddler came near. With the giggling child taking a liking to him, Randy’s lack of Japanese fluency left him unable to communicate with the little guy besides in gestures and funny sounds. Nonetheless, the mother was no doubt pleased that her young child had the chance to interact with a foreign person. That is, until Randy saw a manicured bush – again, we have a theme going – in the shape of a sphere and said “boing-boing” to the child while pretending to bounce it like a ball. The mother scooped up her child immediately and stormed off. What happened?

If only Randy had known that of the plethora of onomatopoeia words in Japanese, 「ボインボイン」 (pronounced “boin boin”) can be construed as the sound of bouncing boobs, and is in fact how it is often used in all types of manga and anime, from mainstream to hentai. Poor Randy was unwittingly fondling breasty foliage at that hapless child. I bet people in the vicinity were able to physically hear that mom’s brain switch gears from “lovely international exchange” to ‘save the child and GTFO’ mode. Intentional or not, we here at Gaijinass applaud such gaijin asses and the annals from which they spew.

“Every single page is stuck together and the book is stuck to that carpet.”

3. “Hostess”

Delving into the true nightlife of Japan requires navigating the often crusty back alleys of entertainment districts, complete with their pestering touts, FUBAR salary men, gangsters accompanied by their lackeys and various other stock characters of sleaze. If you enter an establishment in this playground asking for a hostess to seat you, you may find one – just not the type you would’ve expected. Sure, the hostess will be a young, desirable female eager to seat you at a table, but this one will join your party too.

Say what? 

For those interested in the ins and outs of the world of hosts and hostesses (also referred to as “kyabajo”) in Japan, there are plenty of resources around. Check out (http://neojaponisme.com/2009/08/11/kyabajo-japan/) or even (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Happiness_Space:_Tale_of_an_Osaka_Love_Thief) and surely you’ve read GJS’s own pieces on this topic

But, allow me to give just a short summary. Hostess clubs (and host clubs staffed by males) are like a classier “Coyote Ugly”, where instead of bar-top dance routines, the female staff join customers at their private tables to pour drinks and entertain them and pander to their bullshit. In other words, they are like modern-day geishas.

“The bleached hair is a development, but the caked on makeup hasn’t changed at all.”

Though very many types of hostess clubs (or “kyabakura” as they are sometimes called) exist with varying rules of conduct (no touching; formal dates with the girls allowed, etc), hostesses are by no means thought of as sex workers, despite a prevailing and inaccurate belief amongst gaijin that generally aren’t admitted to must hostess clubs. Even so, it would still be quite an insult if you told a Japanese friend that his wife had been a gracious hostess. To be sure, some of the regular usages of ‘host’ and ‘hostess’ are known in Japan, but these words have become so attached to those night-time establishments that uttering them will bring to mind those bleach-haired, perfume-doused party kids well before a Trebek or Sajak type. Though Vanna is not too far off the mark.

4. “Dutch Wife”

In a place like Japan, with its bevy of discreet perversions and alternative sexual preferences, it would be a shame to unknowingly share a name with something vile or dirty. For instance, the name “Gary” sounds very similar to 「下痢」 “geh-ri”, the Japanese word for “diarrhea”. Tough break, for that guy. Also, “panko” a type of bread crumbs exported and used by chefs worldwide, also means “slut” in Japanese slang. Though the alternate meaning of those two are pretty bad, what might be infinitely worse than sharing a name with something sketchy, would be sharing holy matrimony with an unavoidable sex joke. No offense to the great Dutch people, but there wives are the Japanese cum-catchers of yesteryear.

Say what?!? 

“Dutch wife” on these shores means blow up dolls, “real dolls” or any other makeshift female body that a samurai might use for sheathing his Hanzo. The origin here seems to be Dutch-controlled Indonesia where, having to leave their wives back in their homeland, Dutch traders opted to sleep with what is called a “bamboo wife” or 「竹婦人」 in the original Japanese. A “bamboo wife”, was a name for a human-sized length of woven bamboo made in Indonesia which the lonely, newly single Dutch traders would snuggle with in place of their wives. After being made fun of by the “men’s men” of the Tokugawan Era for being nutless simps, these Dutch suckers-for-love were immortalized in Japanese through this derogatory insult. Nearly 150 years later the Japanese are still using this phrase to stick it to the Dutch. Well, mostly just to their wives.

“Anyone willing to stick their gear into a giant Chinese Finger Trap deserves whatever they get.”

5. “H”  

Shorter than even the acronym “AV” above, the letter H may seem ominous here. Being a standard letter of the English alphabet, any of us have a one in twenty-six chance of saying this letter with total ignorance to its Japanese meaning. So, what in the H does H mean?

Say wHat?!? 

Now, despite being a slang word for heroin in English, “H” – pronounced “etchi” -  is the most common word for “sex” in Japanese besides, well, “sex” 「セックス」. But, why “H”?

Think about it, folks – What’s an infamous Japanese word which starts with “H” and relates to sex?

If you guessed “hentai”, give yourself a pat on the back. You might also want to go ahead and erase your browser history while you’re at it, Bubba.

“And for finger-fucking sake, go outside once in a while!”

I can’t imagine a scenario in which you might offend someone by saying “H” at an inopportune moment, but how about the opposite scenario? How about if you missed out on some hot H because you didn’t know what the letter stood for? Japanese or not, a woman is not just going to spell it out for you. Of all the possible misunderstandings on this list, one resulting in missing the chance for some unsolicited poon-sampling seems like the most embarrassing of all.

6. “Snack”

Snacks can cost a pretty penny in Japan. If you don’t watch your p’s and q’s, you can run up quite a tab or, even worse, get caught having an affair as well.

Say what?!? 

Don’t get it twisted: Snacks – the type of food – are also called snacks in Japanese, especially when referring to salty ones, like peanuts and pretzels. However, “snack” is also the term for a common type of watering hole in Japan’s major cities which function as a more low-key version of the hostess clubs mentioned previously. These establishments are run by a madam-like older woman, who makes sure the business runs smoothly and that everyone has a good time by pairing up female staff and lonely male customers. By sharing chats at the bar and singing karaoke altogether, there is a down-home type of atmosphere, complete with the eponymous bowls of snacks offered to customers.

Most of these places have menus with no prices listed, so the final tabs can be decided at will by the house. They also tag on a pretty hefty “seating charge”. This isn’t a code word for “extra services” either; the only wad being blown is when you pay exorbitantly for good ole wholesome companionship. To be fair, some patrons do eventually get to bed the staff, but this all happens outside the snack and according to the staff members prerogative. Being Sugardaddy Longpockets seems to help sway their minds, though.

“Can I interest you in some blue balls?”

Getting to the point, I would just like our readers to be aware that, when looking for a bite to eat in Japan, a “snack” bar is not the best place to grab a Snickers, and certainly not the place to get your hotdog relished. (boom-tish, ay!)

7. “Bitch”

Thanks to the limitless reach (read: stranglehold) that Hollywood has on the planet, our curse words are everywhere. You’d be hard-pressed to find a person in Europe who doesn’t know the words “fuck” , “shit” or even the phrase “Oh my god”. The case is no different in the land of the rising radioactive levels. But, as was the case with our other points on this list, some words that are already inappropriate can become even worse when picked up by the Japanese. Even a word as commonly accepted as “bitch”. Call a woman a bitch in the West and get your face clawed off. Call a woman one in Japan and lose the respect of everyone around you.

Say what?!? 

“Bitch” in Japanese does not actually carry any of the meanings that we English speakers know and love the word for: 1) a female dog 2) a rude, crab-assed woman 3) a verb, meaning to complain or nag (usually incessantly)

“4) Your broseph, when he is being a douchenozzle.”

Here, it has one meaning and one meaning alone, and that is “slutbag”, a word so near yet so far from the original it is severely off-putting. With this new meaning, an offhanded comment about your female boss being a bitch could be seen as borderline sexual harassment. Japanese people, who tend to avoid voicing their complaints aggressively and still show subservience to work superiors, would definitely see calling the boss a dirty tramp as pretty foul slander. Think now, could you even back up such a claim? Would you want to?

How did this fetal mutation of the word bitch become a thing? Most likely rap music – paternity test pending. Don’t forget that it was through the lyrics of rappers like Snoop Dogg and Too $hort that “bitch” became a term of endearment for referring to ladies in the first place. If we consider how hard it is for even most native speakers of English to understand rap lyrics, we can see how the word “bitch” could easily be misconstrued for Japanese hip-hoppers, who have almost no idea what the rappers are saying.

“You’re finna bizzle my wizzle?!”

When it’s all said and done, it aint no thang whether non-English-speaking people can understand the sophisticated intricacies of “Jenny From the Block” or the riveting tapestry of sound that is Silkk Da Shocker’s “Charge it 2 da Game.” However, more than any other word on this list, “bitch” is the one that I cannot bear to have stripped from my lexicon in order to be more P.C. What can I say; a little bitch lives inside of me. And, in my humblest of opinions, any supposed language that is without the full capacity of the usage of  this word, might as well be Elvish, whatever the hell Balky spoke or recordings of penguin orgies spliced and played in reverse.

Conclusion:

Well, what have we gleaned from these rantings? Well, for one, English speakers in Japan, and anywhere abroad really, should watch out for the completely unpredictable clusterfunks that their everyday English can cause. Also, we can see that people of non-English-speaking countries should be careful in the way that they manhandle English before stuffing it in to their language boxes. But, most importantly, I think we can all agree that language is quite the shifty strumpet: She will lay down with anyone, let people have their way with her and is completely unfaithful to whatever men call her their own. Adulterous, incestuous, promiscuous; here’s to “mother tongue” always leaving a bad taste in your mouth.

More of Nanya’s writing and original art can be found at his site ‘PointXPoint’: www.pointxpoint.blogspot.jp

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