Archive for the 'Japan' Category
Japanese Potty Training Video
Posted by wdporter on September 27, 2007
Posted in Japan, Video, WTF? | No Comments »
Beastiality Restaurant Opens in Tokyo
Posted by wdporter on September 27, 2007
The Cook, the Beast, the Vice and its Lover
Jitsuwa Knuckles (9/25)
A disgusting and twisted restaurant in the Tokyo entertainment district of Roppongi is enticing warped rich folk with the opportunity to figuratively have their cake and eat it, too — with animals, according to Jitsuwa Knuckles (9/25).
Roppongi’s bestiality restaurant is being regarded by its main nouveau riche patronage of young company presidents and venture capitalists as a decadent practice only possible among the wealthy.
“Apparently, the restaurant started off quietly in the basement of a building that a real estate agent in Roppongi who couldn’t find any other tenants,” an S&M club worker identified only as M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “News about the restaurant spread through word of mouth and it became popular.”
M says she visited the members-only restaurant about half a year ago after being invited there by one of her regulars, a well-heeled lawyer.
At first glance, the first floor restaurant appears fairly nondescript. When a customer goes in, they give their name to a receptionist. When they are approved, they pass through a wooden door to be greeted by another door, this one made of metal. Passing a membership card over a scanner outside the door will automatically open it. Inside is an eatery that resembles just about any other Italian restaurant.
Membership in the restaurant is open only to those with an annual salary of at least 20 million yen, and a minimum cash flow of 100 million yen.
“After we got into the main restaurant, an employee escorted us down to the basement,” M says. “The walls were pitch black and the floor covered in a blood red carpet, so I guess the place must be a refurbished S&M club.”
Once the customer feels prepared, they will be presented with beast of their choice. In the lawyer’s case, it was a sow.
“I’d been told what to expect, but when I actually saw what was happening, it was as shocking as you’d imagine it to be,” M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “Later, the lawyer told me the appeal of the place just came about because when people have got money and done everything else, they turn toward bestiality.”
Once the lawyer had finished porking the pig, the couple returned to the first floor and sat at a table to dine. M says she was totally shocked when staff members carried in roast pork — made of the same sow the lawyer had earlier been with.
“I was about to vomit,” M says. “It was the same pig that had been squealing just moments before. Now, it had been roasted whole. I managed to avoid eating it by only having salad.”
Incidentally, prices range from 200,000 yen to 500,000 yen for a chicken, dogs cost somewhere between 300,000 yen and 800,000 yen, while pigs and goats start at around 800,000 yen. Charges are higher depending on whether the creature is female and how active it is.
“The owner says he is prepared to cook up any kind of animal at all,” M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “He even said he’d prepare elephants … but I think he might have been joking about that.” (By Ryann Connell)
September 17, 2007
WaiWai stories are transcriptions of articles that originally appeared in Japanese language publications. The Mainichi Daily News cannot be held responsible for the contents of the original articles, nor does it guarantee their accuracy. Views expressed in the WaiWai column are not necessarily those held by the Mainichi Daily News or Mainichi Newspapers Co.
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/waiwai/news/20070917p2g00m0dm002000c.html
Jitsuwa Knuckles (9/25)
A disgusting and twisted restaurant in the Tokyo entertainment district of Roppongi is enticing warped rich folk with the opportunity to figuratively have their cake and eat it, too — with animals, according to Jitsuwa Knuckles (9/25).
Roppongi’s bestiality restaurant is being regarded by its main nouveau riche patronage of young company presidents and venture capitalists as a decadent practice only possible among the wealthy.
“Apparently, the restaurant started off quietly in the basement of a building that a real estate agent in Roppongi who couldn’t find any other tenants,” an S&M club worker identified only as M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “News about the restaurant spread through word of mouth and it became popular.”
M says she visited the members-only restaurant about half a year ago after being invited there by one of her regulars, a well-heeled lawyer.
At first glance, the first floor restaurant appears fairly nondescript. When a customer goes in, they give their name to a receptionist. When they are approved, they pass through a wooden door to be greeted by another door, this one made of metal. Passing a membership card over a scanner outside the door will automatically open it. Inside is an eatery that resembles just about any other Italian restaurant.
Membership in the restaurant is open only to those with an annual salary of at least 20 million yen, and a minimum cash flow of 100 million yen.
“After we got into the main restaurant, an employee escorted us down to the basement,” M says. “The walls were pitch black and the floor covered in a blood red carpet, so I guess the place must be a refurbished S&M club.”
Once the customer feels prepared, they will be presented with beast of their choice. In the lawyer’s case, it was a sow.
“I’d been told what to expect, but when I actually saw what was happening, it was as shocking as you’d imagine it to be,” M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “Later, the lawyer told me the appeal of the place just came about because when people have got money and done everything else, they turn toward bestiality.”
Once the lawyer had finished porking the pig, the couple returned to the first floor and sat at a table to dine. M says she was totally shocked when staff members carried in roast pork — made of the same sow the lawyer had earlier been with.
“I was about to vomit,” M says. “It was the same pig that had been squealing just moments before. Now, it had been roasted whole. I managed to avoid eating it by only having salad.”
Incidentally, prices range from 200,000 yen to 500,000 yen for a chicken, dogs cost somewhere between 300,000 yen and 800,000 yen, while pigs and goats start at around 800,000 yen. Charges are higher depending on whether the creature is female and how active it is.
“The owner says he is prepared to cook up any kind of animal at all,” M tells Jitsuwa Knuckles. “He even said he’d prepare elephants … but I think he might have been joking about that.” (By Ryann Connell)
September 17, 2007
WaiWai stories are transcriptions of articles that originally appeared in Japanese language publications. The Mainichi Daily News cannot be held responsible for the contents of the original articles, nor does it guarantee their accuracy. Views expressed in the WaiWai column are not necessarily those held by the Mainichi Daily News or Mainichi Newspapers Co.
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/waiwai/news/20070917p2g00m0dm002000c.html
Posted in Japan, WTF? | 2 Comments »
Polls Show Loss for Japan Ruling Liberal Democratic Party
Posted by wdporter on July 29, 2007
Polls Show Loss for Japan Ruling Party
NewsMax.com WiresSunday, July 29, 2007
TOKYO — Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling party suffered humiliating losses in parliamentary elections Sunday after a string of political scandals, exit polls showed, but Abe said he did not plan to resign.
The Liberal Democratic Party, which has ruled Japan almost without interruption since 1955, was set to lose its majority in the upper house while the leading opposition party made huge gains, according to exit polls broadcast by Japanese television networks.
Abe told reporters at his party’s headquarters that he intends to stay on despite the disappointing results, and accepts responsibility for the defeat.
“We tried our best and felt we made some progress, so the results are extremely disappointing … I must push ahead with reforms and continue to fulfill my responsibilities as prime minister,” he said. “The responsibility for this utter defeat rests with me.”
The Kyodo news agency reported that the party’s No. 2 official may resign.
“If projections are correct, we are looking at utter defeat,” Liberal Democratic Party secretary-general Hidenao Nakagawa told reporters at the party’s Tokyo headquarters after polls closed.
According to television network NTV, the polls showed the Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, the New Komei Party, emerging with 104 seats, a 28-seat loss that left it far short of the 122 needed to control of the 242-member upper house.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan appeared set to emerge with 111 seats, up from 83.
The network based its forecast on exit polls taken shortly after the voting ended Sunday night. Other networks had similar projections.
A loss wouldn’t immediately threaten the political grip of the Liberal Democratic Party. The upper house is largely ceremonial, and the Liberal Democratic Party would keep control over the lower house, which chooses the prime minister and can override most votes in the upper house.
Abe said he does not intend to call snap elections for the lower house despite the projected defeat.
But the major defeat shown by exit polls could usher in a period of political gridlock. Deep voter dissatisfaction with Abe, fueled by a series of financial and other scandals, appears to have spawned a stunning reversal of fortune for a ruling party that his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, led to a landslide in the last elections in 2005
“We must humbly accept the results of this election,” Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker Yoichi Masuzoe said after polls closed. But when asked whether Abe should step down, he said “I think we must not act hastily. We must carefully decide what is the best course of action.”
Opposition leaders immediately jumped on the results as proof the tide had turned against Abe.
“I think there was a lot of hope put on our party,” Takaaki Matsumoto, policy chief for the Democratic Party of Japan, said of the exit polls.
Abe took office less than a year ago as Japan’s youngest-ever prime minister and won points after taking office for mending strained diplomatic ties with South Korea and China.
But in the first in a series of scandals, Administrative Reform Minister Genichiro Sata stepped down in December over charges of misusing of political funds. In May, Abe’s agriculture minister killed himself amid allegations he too misused public money.
The government was severely criticized again last month, when Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma suggested the 1945 U.S. nuclear bombings of Japan were justified. Public outcry led to Kyuma’s speedy departure.
His new agriculture minister is also embroiled in a funds scandal.
In perhaps the final straw for voters, Abe brushed off warnings by the opposition late last year that pension records had been lost — inaction that came back to haunt him in the spring, when the full scope of the records losses emerged. Wiped out were some 50 million claims.
Party officials said last week they would keep Abe no matter what happens and resigning in the face of a heavy election defeat is rare, but not unprecedented in Japan.
In 1998, then-Prime Minster Ryutaro Hashimoto was forced to step down after the Liberal Democratic Party won just 44 seats out of 121, and Sousuke Uno lost his job as prime minister after winning only 36 seats in 1989. Even Abe resigned as secretary-general of the party in 2004, when the Liberal Democrats won 49 seats, two short of their goal.
NewsMax.com WiresSunday, July 29, 2007
TOKYO — Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling party suffered humiliating losses in parliamentary elections Sunday after a string of political scandals, exit polls showed, but Abe said he did not plan to resign.
The Liberal Democratic Party, which has ruled Japan almost without interruption since 1955, was set to lose its majority in the upper house while the leading opposition party made huge gains, according to exit polls broadcast by Japanese television networks.
Abe told reporters at his party’s headquarters that he intends to stay on despite the disappointing results, and accepts responsibility for the defeat.
“We tried our best and felt we made some progress, so the results are extremely disappointing … I must push ahead with reforms and continue to fulfill my responsibilities as prime minister,” he said. “The responsibility for this utter defeat rests with me.”
The Kyodo news agency reported that the party’s No. 2 official may resign.
“If projections are correct, we are looking at utter defeat,” Liberal Democratic Party secretary-general Hidenao Nakagawa told reporters at the party’s Tokyo headquarters after polls closed.
According to television network NTV, the polls showed the Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, the New Komei Party, emerging with 104 seats, a 28-seat loss that left it far short of the 122 needed to control of the 242-member upper house.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan appeared set to emerge with 111 seats, up from 83.
The network based its forecast on exit polls taken shortly after the voting ended Sunday night. Other networks had similar projections.
A loss wouldn’t immediately threaten the political grip of the Liberal Democratic Party. The upper house is largely ceremonial, and the Liberal Democratic Party would keep control over the lower house, which chooses the prime minister and can override most votes in the upper house.
Abe said he does not intend to call snap elections for the lower house despite the projected defeat.
But the major defeat shown by exit polls could usher in a period of political gridlock. Deep voter dissatisfaction with Abe, fueled by a series of financial and other scandals, appears to have spawned a stunning reversal of fortune for a ruling party that his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, led to a landslide in the last elections in 2005
“We must humbly accept the results of this election,” Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker Yoichi Masuzoe said after polls closed. But when asked whether Abe should step down, he said “I think we must not act hastily. We must carefully decide what is the best course of action.”
Opposition leaders immediately jumped on the results as proof the tide had turned against Abe.
“I think there was a lot of hope put on our party,” Takaaki Matsumoto, policy chief for the Democratic Party of Japan, said of the exit polls.
Abe took office less than a year ago as Japan’s youngest-ever prime minister and won points after taking office for mending strained diplomatic ties with South Korea and China.
But in the first in a series of scandals, Administrative Reform Minister Genichiro Sata stepped down in December over charges of misusing of political funds. In May, Abe’s agriculture minister killed himself amid allegations he too misused public money.
The government was severely criticized again last month, when Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma suggested the 1945 U.S. nuclear bombings of Japan were justified. Public outcry led to Kyuma’s speedy departure.
His new agriculture minister is also embroiled in a funds scandal.
In perhaps the final straw for voters, Abe brushed off warnings by the opposition late last year that pension records had been lost — inaction that came back to haunt him in the spring, when the full scope of the records losses emerged. Wiped out were some 50 million claims.
Party officials said last week they would keep Abe no matter what happens and resigning in the face of a heavy election defeat is rare, but not unprecedented in Japan.
In 1998, then-Prime Minster Ryutaro Hashimoto was forced to step down after the Liberal Democratic Party won just 44 seats out of 121, and Sousuke Uno lost his job as prime minister after winning only 36 seats in 1989. Even Abe resigned as secretary-general of the party in 2004, when the Liberal Democrats won 49 seats, two short of their goal.
Posted in Japan, Liberal / Communists | No Comments »
Japan Quake Causes Nuke Plant Leak, Fire
Posted by wdporter on July 17, 2007
Japan Quake Causes Nuke Plant Leak, Fire
Jul 16 04:20 PM US/EasternBy KOJI SASAHARAAssociated Press Writer
KASHIWAZAKI, Japan (AP) - A strong earthquake shook Japan’s northwest coast Monday, setting off a fire at the world’s most powerful nuclear power plant and causing a reactor to spill radioactive water into the sea—an accident not reported to the public for hours.
The 6.8-magnitude temblor killed at least 8 people and injured more than 900 as it toppled hundreds of wooden homes and tore 3-foot-wide fissures in the ground. Highways and bridges buckled, leaving officials struggling to get emergency supplies into the region.
Some 10,000 people fled to evacuation centers as aftershocks rattled the area. Tens of thousands of homes were left without water or power.
The quake triggered a fire in an electrical transformer and also caused a leak of radioactive water at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant, the world’s largest in terms of electricity output.
The leak was not announced until the evening, many hours after the quake. That fed fresh concerns about the safety of Japan’s 55 nuclear reactors, which supply 30 percent of the quake-prone country’s electricity and have suffered a long string of accidents and cover- ups.
About 315 gallons of water apparently spilled from a tank at one of the plant’s seven reactors and entered a pipe that flushed it into the sea, said Jun Oshima, an executive at Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Officials said there was no “significant change” in the seawater near the plant, which is about 160 miles northwest of Tokyo. “The radioactivity is one-billionth of the legal limit,” Oshima said of the leaked water.
Eliot Brenner, a spokesman for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in Washington, said the agency told Japan’s government it was ready to provide assistance if needed but had not received any request for help.
Brenner said he didn’t have details about the incident. But a U.S. nuclear industry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the incident was a Japanese affair, said the transformer fire and water leak occurred in systems linked to different reactors.
In Kashiwazaki city, the quake reduced older buildings to piles of lumber. Eight people in their 70s and 80s—five women and three men—died, most of them crushed by collapsing buildings, the National Police Agency said.
Kyodo News agency reported more than 900 people were hurt, with injuries including broken bones, cuts and bruises. It said 780 buildings sustained damage, and more than 300 of them were destroyed.
“I got so dizzy that I could barely stand up,” said Kazuaki Kitagami, a worker at a 7-Eleven convenience store in Kashiwazaki, the hardest- hit city. “The jolt came violently from just below the ground.”
The area was plagued by aftershocks, but there were no immediate reports of additional damage or casualties. Near midnight, a 6.6- magnitude quake hit off the west coast, shaking wide areas of Japan, but it was unrelated to the Niigata quake to the north and there were no immediate reports of damage.
First word of trouble at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa power plant was a fire that broke out at an electrical transformer. All the reactors were either already shut down or automatically switched off by the quake. The blaze was reported quelled by early afternoon, and the power company announced there was no damage to the reactor and no release of radioactivity.
But in the evening, the company released a statement revealing the leak of radioactive water, saying it had taken all day to confirm details of the accident. But the delay raised suspicions among environmentalists, who oppose the government’s plan to build more reactors.
“The leak itself doesn’t sound significant as of yet, but the fact that it went unreported is a concern,” said Michael Mariotte at the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, a Maryland-based networking center for environmental activists. “When a company begins by denying a problem, it makes you wonder if there’s another shoe to drop.”
The accident comes as the government is discussing improving the earthquake resistance of such plants, said Aileen Mioko Smith of the Japan-based environmentalist group Green Action.
The fire indicated that some facilities at nuclear power plants, such as electrical transformers, were built to lower quake-resistance levels than other equipment, like reactor cores, she said.
“That’s the Achilles heel of nuclear power plants,” said Mioko Smith, who pointed out that it took plant workers two hours to put out the transformer fire.
Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Akira Amari told the power company early Tuesday not to resume plant operations before making a thorough safety check, Kyodo reported.
The quake, which hit at 10:13 a.m., was centered off the coast of Niigata. The tremor made buildings sway in the capital 160 miles away and was also felt in northern and central Japan. Tsunami warnings were issued, but the resulting waves were too small to cause any damage.
As rescue crews dug through the rubble for survivors or more dead, focus shifted to getting food and water to evacuation centers. Many roads were impassable, though bullet train service to nearby Niigata resumed late Monday.
More than 60,000 homes in the quake zone were without water, 34,000 lost natural gas and 25,000 had no electricity as of late Monday afternoon, local official Takashi Takagi said.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose ruling party is trailing in the polls heading into July 29 parliamentary elections, interrupted a campaign stop in southern Japan to go to the damaged area.
“Many people told me they want to return to their normal lives as quickly as possible,” Abe told reporters in Kashiwazaki. “The government will make every effort to help with recovery.”
Japan sits atop four tectonic plates and is one of the world’s most earthquake-prone countries.
In October 2004, a magnitude-6.8 earthquake hit Niigata, killing 40 people and damaging more than 6,000 homes. It was the deadliest to hit Japan since 1995, when a magnitude-7.2 quake killed 6,433 people in the western city of Kobe.
The last major quake to hit Tokyo killed some 142,000 people in 1923, and experts say the capital has a 90 percent chance of suffering a major quake in the next 50 years.
Jul 16 04:20 PM US/EasternBy KOJI SASAHARAAssociated Press Writer
KASHIWAZAKI, Japan (AP) - A strong earthquake shook Japan’s northwest coast Monday, setting off a fire at the world’s most powerful nuclear power plant and causing a reactor to spill radioactive water into the sea—an accident not reported to the public for hours.
The 6.8-magnitude temblor killed at least 8 people and injured more than 900 as it toppled hundreds of wooden homes and tore 3-foot-wide fissures in the ground. Highways and bridges buckled, leaving officials struggling to get emergency supplies into the region.
Some 10,000 people fled to evacuation centers as aftershocks rattled the area. Tens of thousands of homes were left without water or power.
The quake triggered a fire in an electrical transformer and also caused a leak of radioactive water at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant, the world’s largest in terms of electricity output.
The leak was not announced until the evening, many hours after the quake. That fed fresh concerns about the safety of Japan’s 55 nuclear reactors, which supply 30 percent of the quake-prone country’s electricity and have suffered a long string of accidents and cover- ups.
About 315 gallons of water apparently spilled from a tank at one of the plant’s seven reactors and entered a pipe that flushed it into the sea, said Jun Oshima, an executive at Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Officials said there was no “significant change” in the seawater near the plant, which is about 160 miles northwest of Tokyo. “The radioactivity is one-billionth of the legal limit,” Oshima said of the leaked water.
Eliot Brenner, a spokesman for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in Washington, said the agency told Japan’s government it was ready to provide assistance if needed but had not received any request for help.
Brenner said he didn’t have details about the incident. But a U.S. nuclear industry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the incident was a Japanese affair, said the transformer fire and water leak occurred in systems linked to different reactors.
In Kashiwazaki city, the quake reduced older buildings to piles of lumber. Eight people in their 70s and 80s—five women and three men—died, most of them crushed by collapsing buildings, the National Police Agency said.
Kyodo News agency reported more than 900 people were hurt, with injuries including broken bones, cuts and bruises. It said 780 buildings sustained damage, and more than 300 of them were destroyed.
“I got so dizzy that I could barely stand up,” said Kazuaki Kitagami, a worker at a 7-Eleven convenience store in Kashiwazaki, the hardest- hit city. “The jolt came violently from just below the ground.”
The area was plagued by aftershocks, but there were no immediate reports of additional damage or casualties. Near midnight, a 6.6- magnitude quake hit off the west coast, shaking wide areas of Japan, but it was unrelated to the Niigata quake to the north and there were no immediate reports of damage.
First word of trouble at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa power plant was a fire that broke out at an electrical transformer. All the reactors were either already shut down or automatically switched off by the quake. The blaze was reported quelled by early afternoon, and the power company announced there was no damage to the reactor and no release of radioactivity.
But in the evening, the company released a statement revealing the leak of radioactive water, saying it had taken all day to confirm details of the accident. But the delay raised suspicions among environmentalists, who oppose the government’s plan to build more reactors.
“The leak itself doesn’t sound significant as of yet, but the fact that it went unreported is a concern,” said Michael Mariotte at the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, a Maryland-based networking center for environmental activists. “When a company begins by denying a problem, it makes you wonder if there’s another shoe to drop.”
The accident comes as the government is discussing improving the earthquake resistance of such plants, said Aileen Mioko Smith of the Japan-based environmentalist group Green Action.
The fire indicated that some facilities at nuclear power plants, such as electrical transformers, were built to lower quake-resistance levels than other equipment, like reactor cores, she said.
“That’s the Achilles heel of nuclear power plants,” said Mioko Smith, who pointed out that it took plant workers two hours to put out the transformer fire.
Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Akira Amari told the power company early Tuesday not to resume plant operations before making a thorough safety check, Kyodo reported.
The quake, which hit at 10:13 a.m., was centered off the coast of Niigata. The tremor made buildings sway in the capital 160 miles away and was also felt in northern and central Japan. Tsunami warnings were issued, but the resulting waves were too small to cause any damage.
As rescue crews dug through the rubble for survivors or more dead, focus shifted to getting food and water to evacuation centers. Many roads were impassable, though bullet train service to nearby Niigata resumed late Monday.
More than 60,000 homes in the quake zone were without water, 34,000 lost natural gas and 25,000 had no electricity as of late Monday afternoon, local official Takashi Takagi said.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose ruling party is trailing in the polls heading into July 29 parliamentary elections, interrupted a campaign stop in southern Japan to go to the damaged area.
“Many people told me they want to return to their normal lives as quickly as possible,” Abe told reporters in Kashiwazaki. “The government will make every effort to help with recovery.”
Japan sits atop four tectonic plates and is one of the world’s most earthquake-prone countries.
In October 2004, a magnitude-6.8 earthquake hit Niigata, killing 40 people and damaging more than 6,000 homes. It was the deadliest to hit Japan since 1995, when a magnitude-7.2 quake killed 6,433 people in the western city of Kobe.
The last major quake to hit Tokyo killed some 142,000 people in 1923, and experts say the capital has a 90 percent chance of suffering a major quake in the next 50 years.
Posted in Japan, WTF? | No Comments »