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Japan Shocked By Marijuana Scandals

LogicSoDeveloped

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 12, 2010
Messages
3,429
TOKYO -- Japan appears to be in the midst of a marijuana epidemic of unprecedented proportions.

In the past six months alone, four sumo wrestlers have been kicked out of the sport for using the drug and a player on the national rugby team was banned for life. In addition, police have arrested a rock star and staged high-profile raids at some of the nation's top universities, arresting students and confiscating Ziploc bags full of suspicious substances.

To many non-Japanese, the thought of sumo wrestlers smoking weed to foster the munchies and pack on the pounds may seem like the punch-line of a joke. And the idea of rock stars or university students partying with illicit drugs hardly seems scandalous in celebrity circles or on university campuses.

But in Japan, these incidents have shocked the nation. They received front-page coverage. And they prompted television exposes and editorials like the one in the Asahi Shimbun newspaper earlier this month that said, "Our incipient cannabis pollution must be contained at all costs."

The penalty for the possession and use of marijuana in Japan is severe -- not only in terms of prison time (Paul McCartney famously spent 10 nights in jail here after being arrested for possession in 1980). When a player for Japan's national rugby team tested positive for marijuana earlier this month, he was banned from the national team forever and the professional team he also plays on, sponsored by electronics maker Toshiba, has suspended all team activities until the end of March and has withdrawn from the ongoing national championship out of shame. Smoke on that, Michael Phelps.

Late last year, after four Waseda University students were arrested for marijuana possession, university administrators called a press conference, bowed deeply to the dozens of reporters assembled and issued a formal apology. "We are sorry for causing so much trouble," Tomoki Waragai, the humiliated executive director of the university, told reporters.

They vowed to conduct a comprehensive survey of the student body to determine the extent of the problem. And university administrators sent an email to all students warning them that students "foolish enough" to try marijuana "all too often end up physically and mentally ruined, perhaps leading lives of crime. There is no 'innocent' or 'harmless' way to take illegal drugs. In Japan, possession alone is sufficient to lead to the most dire of social punishments. Engaging in drug-related activity is utter stupidity."

This comes at a time when Japanese society's whole-hearted acceptance of another mind-altering substance -- alcohol -- is at center stage. Recent events highlight the contradiction between this country's treatment of marijuana and its treatment of alcohol. The same week that the rugby team pulled out of the championship because one of its members used marijuana, Japan's Minister of Finance Shoichi Nakagawa stole the limelight at an otherwise staid press conference at the G-7 meeting in Rome with this apparently drunken behavior, now a viral hit on YouTube:


After the debacle, Japan's Prime Minister Taro Aso initially stood by Nakagawa and only accepted his resignation three days later, when opposition parties complained that Nakagawa's behavior had embarrassed the nation.

"Attitudes towards alcohol are incredibly lax here," explained Jeffrey Kingston, the director of Temple University's Japan Campus. "Alcohol facilitates the frank exchange of opinions and views in a society where communication can be quite stilted."

In this conformist society, seemingly laden with rules about everything, says Kingston, alcohol is the acceptable method for relaxation. "There is no wiggle room on this."

So alcohol, even hard liquor, is on offer from vending machines throughout Japan's cities in the same way vending machines offer Doritos in the U.S. And public drunkeness is considered normal. So much so that Tokyo's late night trains are populated night after night by masses of inebriated businessmen, many of whom have to be physically removed from the train after passing out.

Japan's National Police Agency declined to comment for this story, other than to point to crime statistics. In 2003, just over 2,000 people were arrested for marijuana-related crimes. Last year's figure, though not yet final, is expected to top 2,800. Although the number is clearly on the rise, drug use here remains far below the levels in the U.S. or Europe. Polls in the U.S. indicated that 46 percent of Americans say they have tried banned substances. In Japan the figure is only 3 percent.

Police are quick to point out that increasing numbers of Japanese -- including in one instance a Buddhist monk -- are trying their hand at cannabis cultivation. The number of green thumbs arrested for cultivation has doubled in the last decade. But the total number of arrests for that crime still doesn't top 200 per year.

The Asahi Shimbun editorial explained, "surely, we don't need to try to catch up with the west in drug use."


source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/...-marijuan_n_170568.html#.UWNmqrGIGN4.facebook
 
In this conformist society, seemingly laden with rules about everything, says Kingston, alcohol is the acceptable method for relaxation. "There is no wiggle room on this."

So alcohol, even hard liquor, is on offer from vending machines throughout Japan's cities in the same way vending machines offer Doritos in the U.S. And public drunkeness is considered normal. So much so that Tokyo's late night trains are populated night after night by masses of inebriated businessmen, many of whom have to be physically removed from the train after passing out.

And that's better than a little weed how?
 
Japan is one of those developed Asian countries that I'll not set foot in unless I'm forced to. Others include Malaysia, Indonesia and the UAE.
 
Population of Japan: 128million
Number arrested for marijuana: 2,800

Population of America: 314million
Number arrested for marijuana: 757,969(2011)


8o Real pandemic they have on their hands....8)
 
I haven't found any cannabis since I moved to Japan 5 years ago.
Rumors circulate, but nothing real.
I would be pretty scared to obtain any, even if I found it, since I have a family and job.
When I lived here in the 1990s, I could often get hash from foreign friends. But now, can't find it, too scared to buy it if I did.
So I stick to the dreaded neurotoxin (alcohol), as well as caffeine - which they have no qualms about giving to babies here in the form of green tea. (But not too much of either for me.)
 
Last edited:
Population of Japan: 128million
Number arrested for marijuana: 2,800

Population of America: 314million
Number arrested for marijuana: 757,969(2011)


8o Real pandemic they have on their hands....8)
Do that many people really get arrested for weed in the US? That fucking sucks.
I'm sure if you get 'caught' smoking weed over here you'll maybe get a fine at most. Hopefully most people here get let off with it.

These drug laws are absurd. I've had beer in public many times and had police walk past like it's nothing but smoke a plant and you're a criminal.
 
Do that many people really get arrested for weed in the US? That fucking sucks.
I'm sure if you get 'caught' smoking weed over here you'll maybe get a fine at most. Hopefully most people here get let off with it.

These drug laws are absurd. I've had beer in public many times and had police walk past like it's nothing but smoke a plant and you're a criminal.
Sadly yes. It's getting better in some places. Not in my state sadly. We almost got medical marijuana in '06, can't remember the vote count but it was really close. Currently we have 18 states with some sort of MM, and 10 pending. That still doesn't stop the DEA from coming in and arresting people though. America is a really messed up place. Might be better then a lot of places...but it's not what it's made out to be. Not anymore.
 
This kind of news story is a very good example of a national government using the press to spread fear in the population. I remember seeing these kind of "Our nation is in the midst of a drug epidemic!" (read: Use drugs and we'll kick in your door.) news stories in China a lot too.

The Confucian cultures really do not tolerate mind-altering (or more to the point, behavior-altering) drugs, because their social orders are all about staying in your proper and painstakingly cultivated behavioral roles at all times. Alcohol and the xanthine alkaloids in tea get a free pass because their entrenchment in these cultures long predates Confucianism, and Confucianism accommodated their use as it developed and spread.

With the exception of southwestern China or Xinjiang, I just don't think East Asia is a good place to be a drug tourist.
 
The Confucian cultures really do not tolerate mind-altering (or more to the point, behavior-altering) drugs, because their social orders are all about staying in your proper and painstakingly cultivated behavioral roles at all times. Alcohol and the xanthine alkaloids in tea get a free pass because their entrenchment in these cultures long predates Confucianism, and Confucianism accommodated their use as it developed and spread.

I seem to remember methamphetamine being pretty big in Japan in the WWII/ post WWII years... Also, opium was used pretty heavily in China for a period. I'd say the current drug situation is more a result of the USA and its global drug policy than you're giving credit to.
 
Crime in Japan is definitely UNDER-REPORTED. Everyone always wants to pretend that everything is all G. Parents probably talk the cops or whatever out of arresting their kid and "ruining their family name forever just because a STUPID KID made a STUPID mistake--don't we all?"

For those of you who don't know, Waseda University is one of the top universities in Japan--think of it like a Harvard. Talk about BIG FUCKEN DEAL, right? The school probably tried their best to contain it but then it just exploded (so hard nowadays with all this media!)

In Japan, they try to never arrest nor report on crime because if they just act like no one is doing it then no one will be doing it, right? Lol. That being said, I love Japan. But honestly, when you go there--there isn't a cop in sight! Expect in the train station.. where they just stand... to announce their presence. Hehe. xP.

I know a guy who was arrested in Japan for mailing buds from the US to Japan. He was living in America but was Japan citizen. Japan caught him and was like, you're lucky America didn't get you! Mwuahahaa. So, yeah, idk. But he's in jail there now for who knows how long....(making paper bags.. lol--did anyone see locked abroad?)
 
All the while alcohol continues to destroy the lives of 120 million people worldwide. But for some reason, we tolerate that and offer support for alcoholics instead of throwing them in jail.
 
Here are just some statistics about alcohol crimes I pulled off Google. Keep in mind this is from America in 2008.


5.3 million adults − 36% of those under correctional supervision at the time − were drinking at the time of their conviction offense
40% of state prisoners convicted of violent crimes were under the influence of alcohol at the time of their offense − the more violent the crime, the greater the likelihood that alcohol was involved
25% of state prisoners given a standard questionnaire to screen for alcoholism tested positive


Nearly 13,000 people are killed each year on U.S. roadways in alcohol-related accidents

Hundreds of thousands more are injured

Alcohol-related crashes cost American taxpayers over $100 billion

Nearly 1.4 million people are arrested for a DWI each year and 780,000 are convicted
Of those convicted, one-third are sentenced to community corrections
Two-thirds of those sentenced to incarceration are repeat offenders
 
My boyfriend and I were actually talking about why maybe alcohol isn't a issue in Japan-- DUIs. Because majority of the population uses the trains and other modes of transportation (since driving is always so crazy)-- DUIs don't happen as often as in the US. Also, it's so merged in the culture, like drinking with your boss after work. So normal that it's hard to see as bad since Japan is such a high- stress level place to work.
 
Yeah I live in Japan and one of the main things I noticed about Japanese drunks vs. Western drunks is that the lack of violence. Sure, there's creeps feeling up girls on the trains and people acting obnoxious in the streets, but I've yet to see a bar fight between Japanese men (except Yakuza I guess lol)
But I'm pretty sure it's easy to get away with drugs here, as like someone stated, there's not that many police around. Hard part is getting the drugs since it's an island secured by crazy strict customs.
 
Interesting my friend lives there and said weed was insane expensive but that most people, including cops, dont even know what it smells like. I wouldn't do any drugs in any country with draconian drug laws. You cant bribe your way of a drug bust in japan either.
 
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