Japan develops anti groping badges

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http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/fe...ssault-japan-girl-victim-170307101413024.html

Tamaka Ogawa was about 10 years old when she was sexually assaulted for the first time. It was a public holiday and she was on the subway. A man standing behind her pulled down the band of her culottes and underwear, touched her bare bottom, then pressed himself against her. She recalls feeling shocked and physically sickened. When she reached home, she repeatedly washed the spot where he had pressed himself against her, although she was conscious of not spending too long in the toilet, in case her family noticed that something was wrong.

Some years later, on her first day of senior high school, she was groped on the commute home. After that, the groping and sexual assaults - men would often stick their hands inside her underwear - became a regular occurrence as she made her way to or from school in her uniform. Each time, she would run away, unsure of what to do.

"I thought of myself as a child," she reflects. "I could not understand that adults were excited by touching me."

It would be improper to express anger towards an adult, she thought, and she worried about attracting attention. Besides, her parents had never spoken to her about such things and how she ought to handle them.

She recalls one incident particularly clearly. She was about 15 and on her way to school. A man began to touch her, putting his hand inside her underwear. He was aggressive and it hurt, she remembers. When the train stopped, she got off. But he grabbed her hand and told her: "Follow me." Ogawa ran away. She believes that people saw what was going on, but nobody helped.

She felt ashamed and complicit, she says.

"He seems to have thought that I was pleased with his act," the now 36-year-old reflects.

"When I was in high school, every [girl] was a victim," says Ogawa. "[We] didn't think we could do anything about it."

Today, Ogawa, a writer and cofounder of Press Labo, a small digital content production company in Shimokitazawa, an inner-city Tokyo neighbourhood, often writes about Japan's gender inequality and sexual violence issues.

In 2015, she began writing about the country's long-standing problem with groping - or chikan, in Japanese - often experienced by schoolgirls on public transportation. Many victims stay silent, unable to talk about their experiences in a society which, by many accounts, trivialises this phenomenon.

But, in the past two years, that has begun to change as more people speak up against it.

Yayoi Matsunaga is one of those people.

One morning in late January, the 51-year-old arrived at a coffee shop in the bustling neighbourhood of Shibuya with a suitcase of badges.

The round badges, designed to deter gropers, feature illustrations such as a schoolgirl peering angrily from between her legs, or a crowd of stern-looking rabbits and include the messages, "Groping is a crime" and "Don't do it". Each comes with a leaflet instructing the wearer to clearly display the badges on their bags, to stand confidently and to be vigilant.
 
It's almost like 40,ooo years of patriarchal rule has somehow degraded the equal standing of women in global culture. Weird right?
The article said that Japan was less patriarchal before the 19th century. Then Confucian values intensified.
 
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The reason there's so much kink factor in anime is partly because of the repressive culture in daily life, where men are expected to study long hours in school and work long hours to support their families. This is also one of the reason that it was discovered that Islamic Pakistan is actually the leading country in the world on gay porn searches.

Granted Japan is no where near as Puritanical as Saudi Arabia or Iran, but in a lot of ways it's daily culture is more similar to the 1950s "Leave it to Beaver" style society in the US.
Comparing Islamic shitholes and gay porn searches to Japan with 1950s American-style work culture and kinky hentai is misleading. Japan is one of the most irreligious developed countries outside Scandinavia. It's "conservative" culture is based on avoiding much change unless necessary, with post-war and Meiji Western-style cultures still being underlying factors when it came out of isolation for centuries. After years of economic prosperity followed by its crash in the early 1990s, declining birthrate, competition it and the West faces since the post-war days, and many trial and error fixes which failed, it's changing slowly, for better or worse. Contrarily, we're changing, hopefully for the better with Brexit, Trump, etc.

Japan also has less abortion than the USA.
It's self-explanatory when people are having less sex and you don't have as many people you don't want shitting out children, because they're illegal and/or bound to be welfare leeches on society.
 
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Are you sure these will work?
Is there porn of them yet?
 
why don't they just combat the gropers with violence?

Because even if this was the solution to the problem, go ahead and try to identify the culprit in a train shitpacked to the brim. Hell, it might be extremely hard to find them in a moderately filled train. Unless you can be 150% certain that you will always hit the right person, violence is definitely a bad idea.
 
Sex positive? Japan is super repressive regarding sex, especially towards women.
Let these people hold hands in public, it might help.

While in the US, being too sexually 'libertine' is what leads to welfare generations of section 8 baby mommas pumping out taxpayer-subsidized spawn - obvious there has to be some balance between the extremes:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Fj7y-_aIbNw
One could argue this has more to do with societal low expectations and a lack of self-respect.
 
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