Skorea is a very high trust society. I was there for work and people would leave their handphones on a table in a high flow trade convention. I wouldnt do that even in japan. And they didnt understand why i was telling them hey you left your phone behind.
The way one of them explained it to me is skorea has a huge density of cctvs so theyre not worried
Printers? That's quite funny. Who on earth brings a printer to a coffee shop?
"I get here around 11am and stay until 10pm,"
Uh what? Are you homeless or something?
Yu-jin Mo, 29, tells the BBC about her experience growing up in foster care. "Home wasn't a safe place. I lived with my father in a small container, and sometimes he'd lock the door from the outside and leave me alone inside."
The difference even in America moving from a "diverse" (black) area to a nearly white one is astounding if you haven't experienced it before.
I spent my whole youth in the South, assuming that's just the way life was. And I still remember the first time I went a McDonalds in a lily white town and the teenager sounding friendly and happy to see me was life changing. I know she probably was just putting on the attitude, but that's still monumental of a difference from a black lady looking like she will jump you for interrupting her hangout to order something.
Its the kind of thing that turns racism from a generalized feeling to a honed hatred.
I've seen the degradation in real time where I grew up and in areas where I worked where the economics of the area change and get run down. The employees get surly, what places that used to be run and entertaining (and safe) become destinations where you have to watch your back.
There was a Wendy's I used to go to for work that was one of the best run Wendy's ever for lunch time with cars around the lot and the inside always full. Then the businesses around the area started leaving/going bankrupt and the area started falling off. Last time I went for lunch the place was nearly dead, staffed by a bunch of vibrant diversity (orange haired, gold nailed), who took 20 minutes to make my chicken sandwich order while they were chatting back and forth about some gossip, finally got my to go sandwich, got back to the office and... there's no chicken in it.
I could still do this in my town up until about 2010ish. My town was about 30% black too. There used to be a stark divide between us country folks and the niggas from the projects. However overtime the ghetto overtook most of the younger crowd. I blame Obama and the rise of trap rap because that was when I noticed the shift in wanting to be like a thug from a city.
Skorea is a very high trust society. I was there for work and people would leave their handphones on a table in a high flow trade convention. I wouldnt do that even in japan. And they didnt understand why i was telling them hey you left your phone behind.
The way one of them explained it to me is skorea has a huge density of cctvs so theyre not worried
CCTVs don't do squat unless there's someone watching them who is willing to lay out the law on infractions.
Most non liberal countries do
It's unfortunate South Korea seems to be in the middle of a cold gender war turning hot. Not to mention all the cults.
If you can't win with racial marxism you use feminism. USA was just unfortunate enough to get hit with both and Japan seems to be following suit.
It's astonishing how quickly the generational values of ancestors and society can become undone.
Printers? That's quite funny. Who on earth brings a printer to a coffee shop?
Uh what? Are you homeless or something?
Ah, this explains at least one case.
The difference even in America moving from a "diverse" (black) area to a nearly white one is astounding if you haven't experienced it before.
I spent my whole youth in the South, assuming that's just the way life was. And I still remember the first time I went a McDonalds in a lily white town and the teenager sounding friendly and happy to see me was life changing. I know she probably was just putting on the attitude, but that's still monumental of a difference from a black lady looking like she will jump you for interrupting her hangout to order something.
Its the kind of thing that turns racism from a generalized feeling to a honed hatred.
I've seen the degradation in real time where I grew up and in areas where I worked where the economics of the area change and get run down. The employees get surly, what places that used to be run and entertaining (and safe) become destinations where you have to watch your back.
There was a Wendy's I used to go to for work that was one of the best run Wendy's ever for lunch time with cars around the lot and the inside always full. Then the businesses around the area started leaving/going bankrupt and the area started falling off. Last time I went for lunch the place was nearly dead, staffed by a bunch of vibrant diversity (orange haired, gold nailed), who took 20 minutes to make my chicken sandwich order while they were chatting back and forth about some gossip, finally got my to go sandwich, got back to the office and... there's no chicken in it.
Last time I went there and this was pre-covid!
Tbf you lived in the shithole that is Louisiana. Everytime I'm there someone acts like they're ready to murder me for existing
I could still do this in my town up until about 2010ish. My town was about 30% black too. There used to be a stark divide between us country folks and the niggas from the projects. However overtime the ghetto overtook most of the younger crowd. I blame Obama and the rise of trap rap because that was when I noticed the shift in wanting to be like a thug from a city.