Number 3
Posted by ampontan on Thursday, August 12, 2010
THE Institute for Economics and Peace recently released its 2010 Global Peace Index ranking of 149 countries. The rankings include 23 peace indicators, such as safety and security in society, and 32 other factors, among them civil liberties and hostility to foreigners/private property.
Japan ranked third, behind New Zealand and Iceland.
Everyone knows Japan is a safe place, but I thought this was particularly noteworthy:
Japan has some of the most honest people in the world, too. Figures recently released by the Metropolitan Police Department said that 2,332,904 items were handed in as ‘found items’ in Tokyo in 2008. Among the most common items were umbrellas, clothing, wallets, ID cards and mobile phones. The amount of cash among the lost property totalled 2.7 billion yen which equates to approximately AU$34.5 million.
Yet some people would have you think xenophobic Japan is a potential threat to regional security whose leaders become insincere cynics whenever they apologize for the country’s behavior more than three generations ago.
It’s a funny old world.
Like this:
This entry was posted on Thursday, August 12, 2010 at 3:00 pm and is filed under Social trends. Tagged: Japan. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.










mac said
Given that the population of Iceland is 320,000, and there are about 80 cities in Japan larger than it, I would say Japan is in a different league.
New Zealand … it is just so damned far away from anywhere.
21st Century Schizoid Man said
May be contradictory to my earlier reply, sometimes I wonder why so many of Japanese people dare to report found personal properties to police/train station employees/teachers. 1) We have been told that if we do not do so, we are plain thieves, criminals. 2) We do not like something which should not be there stay there. 3) Reporting is easy and the rest is handled by people with authorities (or so we believe, taking the load off of our shoulders?).
I forgot my business bag in a taxi and next day the taxi driver came to my place (in front of where I got off, naturally)and handed the bag to my mom (I was absent, of course, working in my office). 22 or 23 years ago, though.