#Japan: Rechter Tiefschlag für Regierungskoalition

Die #Sansei-Partei zog mit dem offen fremdenfeindlichen Slogan "Japan zuerst" in den Wahlkampf und warf der Regierung eine "Politik der verdeckten Einwanderung" vor.

https://www.dw.com/de/nach-oberhauswahl-in-japan-rechter-tiefschlag-f%C3%BCr-regierungskoaltion/a-73345972

Japan: Rechter Tiefschlag für Regierungskoalition

Trotz des Verlusts der Parlamentsmehrheit will Premierminister Shigeru Ishiba im Amt bleiben. Seine Minderheitsregierung könnte zunächst funktionieren.

Deutsche Welle

7.3: They Sent Us to Camp: My Family's Experience of Internment During WWII

If you meet a Japanese American, it’s also a pretty good bet, they probably won’t spontaneously start talking about what they or their family went through, how they feel about it, and how they or their family recovered from the ordeal.

I (Christina) wanted to rectify that by sitting down with my old friend Chie Furuya, whose parents (as tiny children), grandparents, and other family members were “sent to camp”, to ask her about it. The answers and stories she had for me were both fascinating and unexpectedly heartening. Her people are a resilient, cheerful people and I feel like there are life lessons for all of us here, in terms of withstanding and recovering from severe injustice (and coming out on top).

Ariel’s addition to this episode description is to point out that Japanese internment occurred in Canada in the early 20th century as well. We (by which she means Canada, or perhaps so-called Canada, as she likes to call it) aren't some bastion of anti-racism and tolerant plurality (if we ever were). Check out our blog post for links for further edification if you are interested or want to know more about the Canadian side of the story.

https://youtu.be/nI3FJIJNkak

#episode #season7 #solarpunk #SolarpunkPresentsPodcast #podcast #InterviewPodcast #StopAsianHate #StopAAPIHate #JapaneseAmericans #Nisei #Sansei #Internment #WorldWar2 #JapaneseAmericanInternmentCamps #xenophobia #politicalXenophobia #USpol #USpolitics #AmericanPolitics #History #Histodons #Racism #RacialTension #AssumptionOfGuilt #JailingAmericans #Citizenship

7.3: They Sent Us to Camp: My Family's Experience of Internment During WWII

YouTube

#Elezioni Giappone
Exit poll di Yomiuri/NNN sul voto degli elettori indipendenti:

#CDP|Centro-sinistra: 25%
#DPFP|Centro-destra riformista: 17%
#LDP|Grande tenda conservatrice: 15%
#Ishin|Destra libertaria federalista: 11%
#Reiwa|Sinistra populista: 11%
#JCP|Sinistra: 6%
#Komei|Centro buddista: 5%
#Sansei|Estrema destra populista: 5%
#SDP|Centro-sinistra: 2%

@OsservatorioEsteri

#Elezioni #Giappone
Seggi attualmente assegnati dall'NHK:

#LDP|Grande tenda conservatrice: 112
#CDP|Centro-sinistra: 90
#Ishin|Destra libertaria federalista: 19
#DPFP|Centro-destra riformista: 18
#Komei|Centro buddista: 14
#Reiwa|Sinistra populista: 6
Altri: 5
#JCP|Sinistra: 5
#SDP|Centro-sinistra: 1
#Hoshu|Estrema destra: 1
#Sansei|Estrema destra populista: 0

Incerti: 194

@OsservatorioEsteri

#Elezioni #Giappone
Exit poll di NHK:

#LDP|Grande tenda conservatrice: 153-219 seggi
#CDP|Centro-sinistra: 128-191
#Ishin|Destra libertaria federalista: 28-45
#Komei|Centro buddista: 21-35
#DPFP|Centro-destra riformista: 20-33
Indipendenti: 9-17
#JCP|Sinistra: 7-10
#Reiwa|Sinistra populista: 6-14
#SDP|Centro-sinistra: 1
#Hoshu|Estrema destra: 1-4
#Sansei|Estrema destra populista: 0-4

@OsservatorioEsteri

#Elezioni #Giappone
Exit poll di ANN:

#LDP|Grande tenda conservatrice: 200 seggi
#CDP|Centro-sinistra: 142
#Ishin|Destra libertaria federalista: 35
#Komei|Centro buddista: 27
#DPFP|Centro-destra riformista: 27
Indipendenti: 14
#JCP|Sinistra: 8
#Reiwa|Sinistra populista: 8
#Sansei|Estrema destra populista: 3
#SDP|Centro-sinistra: 1

@OsservatorioEsteri

Monument to Japanese American WWII detainees lists more than 125,000 names

Japanese Americans who were incarcerated on U.S. soil during World War II are being commemorated at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles. A massive book, called the Ireichō, lists the names of the more than 125,000 people who were detained in the camps nationwide. It will be on display at the museum until Dec. 1. Visitors can honor detainees by leaving by a mark under their names using a Japanese stamp called a hanko. The project was conceived by a team of researchers led by a Buddhist priest at the University of Southern California and took more than three years to complete.

AP News