Tag - counterpoint

 
 

COUNTERPOINT

COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Apr 29, 2012
Reversing Japan's rising sex aversion may depend on a rebirth of hope
"If young people's aversion to sex continues to increase at the present rate, the situation of Japan's low fertility rate and rapid ageing will rapidly worsen. ... The Japanese economy will lose its vitality even more than now. If this happens, this nation might eventually perish into extinction."
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Apr 22, 2012
Stalin-era Russian writer penned part of his own death sentence in Japan
"I don't think there is another nation of people in the world like the Japanese. In Britain there is coal in Wales, but Japan makes up for the lack of such a place with an abundance of national will and national sensitivity ... a people's most hard-to-come-by resources. (These are) the country's biggest...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Apr 15, 2012
Is Putin's 'roof ' going to keep out the hard rains of his falling popularity?
Putin's in a pickle and Russia's in the soup. At least that's what many who write about the "Dear Leader" and his country seem to be saying. But is it so? Certainly there is disruption, the kind of disruption that sits just below the skin, breaks out into turmoil, then all but disappears from sight —...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Apr 8, 2012
War criminal's son and British 'railway man' bridge war's painful divide
In September 1943, eight British officers were tortured by their Japanese captors at the prisoner-of-war camp in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The camp, and a nearby bridge over the Kwai River, were later the setting for director David Lean's multi-Oscar-winning 1957 film "The Bridge on the River Kwai," about...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Apr 1, 2012
New tragedy brings to life others still painfully unresolved from long ago
On March 11, I went to Morioka, Iwate Prefecture, to deliver an address at a ceremony marking the first anniversary of the Great East Japan Earthquake and the awful tsunami it caused, which inflicted terrible destruction and loss of life along some 400 km of the Tohoku region's Pacific coast.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Mar 25, 2012
Right and justice shine through the infernal prism of wartime Poland
One of my most treasured possessions is an old photograph. Taken in 1910, in Krakow, Poland, it shows five generations of my ancestors on my mother's side, beginning with my great-great-grandfather, Joseph Pinkus Krengel, who was born in 1818.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Mar 18, 2012
There may be no time like the present — but the present's no time at all
"Japan is so small: What's the hurry?" This catchphrase, from a road-safety campaign in 1973, was created to help Japanese people slow down. In those days it was common to see drivers racing up to lights, people sprinting through a station to catch a train, or running and dodging down a sidewalk so as...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Mar 11, 2012
Japan's disasters must prompt a radical rethink of citizens' quality of life
It's a long time now since my first visit to Uluru, the stupendous sandstone formation in Australia's Red Center that European settlers called Ayers Rock, but which has now officially reverted to the name by which it was always known to the Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal people. I had never before seen any...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Mar 4, 2012
In the realms of true love and devotion, few could fault Akiko Koyama
On Feb. 21, 1996, Akiko Koyama, the actress wife of renowned film director Nagisa Oshima, received a phone call at her home in Kugenuma Kaigan, Kanagawa Prefecture. It was from an official at the Japanese Embassy in London.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Feb 26, 2012
Welcome to the world we've made but don't want to share with children
"Love ... casts itself on persons who, apart from the sexual relation, would be hateful, contemptible, and even abhorrent to the lover. ... It seems as if, in making a marriage, either the individual or the interest of the species must come off badly."
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Feb 19, 2012
Has anything changed? Americans still feel the need for moral supremacy
When he published his brilliant cartoon in the Washington Post on Dec. 12, 1961, American cartoonist Herblock, may, oddly enough, just as well have been addressing one of the primary concerns of today's political debate in the United States.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Feb 12, 2012
Depression is a national ailment that demands open recognition in Japan
The greatest public health issue facing the people of Japan today is not cancer. It is not vascular diseases than can cause heart attacks and strokes. It is not the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease in the ever-rising number of the elderly.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Feb 5, 2012
Facts, facts and more facts: 'Education' in Japan now only befits the past
Last week in Counterpoint I wrote about the three deep gaps crisscrossing this country, turning it into a kakusa shakai (society of disparities). These rifts, amply recognized today among the populace and in the media, are: the income, or wealth, gap; the goal gap; and the education gap.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Jan 29, 2012
In disparity-ridden Japan, don't mind the gaps — just get out of them
This is a nation of gaps.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Jan 22, 2012
Self-effacement is a fine thing, but does Japanese culture take it too far?
What is it that has aided the people of Tohoku in coping with the tragedy inflicted on that region of northeast Honshu by the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011? The entire world marveled at their resilience, courage and stoic altruism.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Jan 15, 2012
Recall, for inspiration, that young people made the last 'Japanese Spring'
How can Japan extricate itself from the morass it sank into two decades ago when its asset-inflated bubble burst? This is the question on nearly everyone's mind in this country today. One thing is for sure: You can't get out of quicksand by pulling on your own hair.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Jan 8, 2012
Akira 'Harry' Mimura: A life uniquely focused on both sides of the Pacific
"Iwas put in charge of this unbearably painful filming job. Even if you consider a war between two countries to be unavoidable, why, you wonder, must innocent civilians be forced to go through such suffering?
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Jan 1, 2012
For how much longer will Japan's fate remain in the hands of amateurs?
As we enter into a new year in which last year's greatest event is still, dreadfully, uppermost in the mind of everyone in Japan, let's pause to think hard about the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, the tsunami it triggered, and the release into the environment of radioactive substances from...
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Dec 25, 2011
It's time to turn over a new leaf in the sheaf of identities we carry with us
Far be it from me to put soot in Santa's chimney, but there is a pet peeve I've just got to get off my chest.
COMMENTARY / COUNTERPOINT
Dec 18, 2011
Their spirit seems willing but young Japanese are hesitant to get hitched
Back in the days of "there's gold in them thar hills," one of the prospectors' doleful refrains boasted the title "My Girlfriend's a Mule and a Mine." Across the Pacific and some 150 years on, I wouldn't be surprised if an echo of that plaintive air were not about to catch on among young Japanese males...

Longform

Akiko Trush says her experience with the neurological disorder dystonia left her feeling like she wanted to chop her own hand off.
The neurological disorder that 'kills culture'