<p>UCLAri, but the issue here is that at least in Europe and in the USA there are many more human rights and anti-discrimination movements and these are actively listened to (to a certain extent?) by their respective governments.</p>
<p>Are there any Japanese people who actively form groups to protest against discrimination? (I’m asking this in a non-rethorical sense, i.e. I’m asking this to know whether they exist or not)</p>
<p>Is that discrimination or fascination/shock at seeing someone who looks completely different?</p>
<p>That’s not entirely different than what an Asian person experiences in Eastern Europe.</p>
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<p>Exactly. </p>
<p>Those unnaturally “large eyes” don’t represent “Caucasian” features - but rather the cutesy large eyes one sees in Disney animation of animals (Bambi, etc.).</p>
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<p>Otoh – anti-immigration right-wing parties (basically, non-white immigration) have seen a huge surge of popularity in Europe (i.e. – Switzerland) and it is not uncommon, for example, for black soccer players in Europe to hear mocking ape/monkey noises from opposing fans and to have banana peels thrown at them.</p>
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<p>Really? Then why do the Japanese (generally) treat a white person better than a fellow Asian (who isn’t Japanese)?</p>
<p>And where do you think the dichotomy in how Asians view whites and blacks comes from?</p>
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<p>And I’ll bet he/she has a lot less problem w/ you marrying a white person (maybe even less than you marrying an Asian who was say, Cambodian).</p>
<p>Wouldn’t surprise me …I know a guy who has natural red hair (half Japanese), and he said when he goes back to visit people openly stare and some even take pictures and ask to touch it.</p>
<p>I’ve been to Japan and I didn’t sense any racism at all. (I’m white) When we toured a school everyone was freaking out and some were even crying because they were so excited! It was a really small town with barely any white people, though.</p>
<p>Being treated better is still discrimination-- it’s just not the type that most people find problematic. I was often treated “better” in Japan, but it didn’t make me feel any more welcome. It made me feel even more like an outsider.</p>
<p>Yeah, discrimination can also mean when you treat certain foreign populations like Gods and other foreigns like slaves.</p>
<p>Generally I think, though, that tourists rarely face racism in any place of the world (except when there’s a strong political sentiment about Western tourists).</p>
<p>The point, however, is that this was an active form of discrimination that is less present in other societies.</p>
<p>This is, at least to some extent, contrasted with someone living in the US or another more “heterogeneous” society. I know, I know, we have discrimination here as well, and blah blah blah, but I rarely see Americans (at least in major cities) freak out and act like there’s a werewolf standing next to them if a Japanese person steps on a train car.</p>
<p>I’m also wondering about this, because I’d like to travel to East Asia in college. Naturally, I would expect some stares, kind of like when I’m at an Asian supermarket. But I’m a little worried that some people will be outright racist and say rude things about me, which I don’t really want to deal with. There will probably be a lot who will think: non-Asian + Japan = otaku. Which isn’t true in my case.</p>
<p>Also, what’s it like in South Korea? Taiwan? In urban areas, I mean.</p>
<p>They’re not really. They’re just kind of sort of xenophobic. I heard Citibank didn’t really succeed there because they refused to change their logo to something in Japanese or something like that. And this is coming from my mom who used to work for Citi.</p>