Bro, this is getting out of control.
In Anjo City, Aichi Prefecture, a man in his 40s was stabbed in the stomach at a factory. The suspect, described as a “foreigner-looking man,” ran away.
About an hour later, a Brazilian man in his 50s set fire to his own apartment two kilometers away. He was arrested on the spot for arson. He also had injuries that looked like he had been stabbed.
Police are now investigating whether he’s connected to the stabbing.
This kind of thing keeps happening. Violent crimes involving foreigners are becoming more noticeable, especially in certain areas.
Japan is supposed to be a safe country. But when you bring in large numbers of people without proper screening, these kinds of incidents start piling up.
Japanese people are the ones who end up living with the consequences.
Bro, this is actually getting ridiculous.
Lately, places like the Pakistani Embassy and the Japan Imam Association have been making one controversial move after another toward Japanese people.
And what’s even more annoying is how they respond afterward.
Instead of just saying a simple “sorry,” they start making excuses, shifting blame, or acting like they did nothing wrong.
In Japan, when you mess up, you’re expected to own it and apologize properly. That’s basic decency here.
But these groups seem to think they can keep causing problems and then talk their way out of it.
That kind of attitude doesn’t build trust. It just makes people more frustrated and confirms what a lot of Japanese already feel — that genuine coexistence is extremely difficult when one side refuses to take real responsibility.