Countries like Japan and South Korea are majority pro themselves and normally not fond of outsiders even while their anti China pro America governments are now trying to flood themselves in with Vietnamese, Indonesians, and other undesirables to own China being 91% Han and not bowing to American wokeism.
There has been a uptake of foreigners living in Japan to leave Europe or the US behind since they see it as better than staying in the multicultural post Nation state and also them trying to push for more of them to live in Japan and make themselves forced into being seen as Japanese.
I grew up in Japan, and as a kid, more than anything, I longed to be like everyone around me. Yet as the child of a Japanese mother and a British father, I was considered hafu, a term used to describe people who are ethnically half Japanese.
I spent much of my young life proving how Japanese I was. I would grow angry when people praised my impeccable Japanese. Too often I felt I didn’t belong in my own society. It was all too much. Always standing out felt so suffocating that at 19 years old, I moved to New York.
Japan was closed off from the Western world until the late 1800s. For much of the country’s history, mixed-race children were uncommon, particularly outside Tokyo. In the post-World War II era, derogatory words like “ainoko” and “konketsuji” were used to describe children born of a Japanese and foreign parent. It wasn’t until the 1980s that interracial marriages became more common.
But as Japan becomes more diverse, necessary changes in its society may come not through a reckoning with how biracial people are viewed but through an evolution of what it means to be Japanese. As much as we wish for a change in how society views us — and yes, Japan is evolving, slowly but surely — we should focus instead on how to navigate being seen as not quite Japanese, so that we don’t allow people’s views to override our identities.
Sarina Yasumoto, who is Australian and Japanese, is grateful that she gets to experience the best of both worlds. As I grew older, I started feeling the same way.
That is because no matter how much you dress, act, talk, or behave like a Japanese person. Japanese people will only see you as a foreigner in their own land or some bastard child of some tourist.
This concept has been eradicated from everywhere else since you can be fresh off the boat and be seen as American or European as the native White people and even better since you are replacing the White people that were around from the beginning.
These types or articles aren’t about trying to solve racism in Japan its to make them open the floodgates with millions of immigrants and normalize race mixing.
To these mutts they see Japan being monogenous and successful which contradicts the approved narrative that mixed race and open borders are better. They seek it turn Asia into the same multicultural crime wave ridden shithole like the rest of the Western World.

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