Side note, why is it that Blogger is 20+ years old and owned by a company worth $3.8 trillion (enough for 336,000 M1 Abrams battle tanks which is 33 times as many as have ever been built, or 108,000 Minuteman ICBMs, each with a W87 warhead with a yield of 475,000 tons of TNT, with a combined destructive power of about half the energy of a 1.5 km asteroid, like 1862 Apollo, hitting the Earth at 15 km/s) and it still puts a non-breaking space in this form for a new post, instead of starting it out completely blank.
I guess I'm treating the number of likes on your Chirp Club account as important again, because I thought I wouldn't say anything until you did something after my previous post, and here I am saying something.
I planned to go to Japan. My friend Hime, whom I met in World of Warcraft (her real name is Anh), even suggested that we go there together, and when I said I couldn't go with her, she asked if there were any souvenirs I wanted her to buy for me. I had sent her two paintings by an Iraqi artist, including one that I had wanted to send to Mei, as well as extra Iraqi currency, which surprised Hime as she had never mentioned to me that she collected foreign currencies.
But for me, the only real reason for me to travel to Japan was language immersion, which is not a very good reason, and this is part of why I never ended up going. I have not seen anything to indicate you have the slightest interest in learning Japanese language, and I was going to say Japanese culture but then I remembered your username. But when you played Cobblemon a few weeks ago, you had forgotten basic mechanics of the Pokemon games like what determines the power of a move.
Being in one place vs being in another place: to me, it isn't that important. Maybe I am just rationalizing as I am too poor to go anywhere, but if poor people can be happy despite being poor, what's wrong with that? (Not saying that I'm happy.)
(Obviously, I am subtly implying that people who think that no one would want to work less, because everyone wants more money than they have except maybe people who give away their money, are stupid.)
Ok like so of course I remember that Sherine knows French, that she grew up in Canada just like you even though Sherine's childhood friend is Yara who is from New York so maybe Sherine lived in New York at some point, and that Sherine once posted a photo of her school textbook which was in French. And of course I remember that Mione, who made a video of her Death Knight soloing the 10-man raid Karazhan in 2008 and then went on to solo a bunch of other raid encounters that impressed people even more (like world first solo of the Lich King), is from Belgium and speaks French.
And France used to be considered the language of diplomacy, such as the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty being in French and English, with no Japanese version even though Japan was allocated more tonnage than France, or the 1901 Boxer Protocol being in Chinese and French even though France provided just 6% of the military strength for the eight-nation alliance.
I almost posted this as it is. But I remembered I was going to say some bad things about Japan. I want to reference a scene but it is from a Japanese drama, which means it would earn a copyright strike if posted on YouTube. From the original drama (2007), Ep 07: opens with the main character playing a game against the office's boss, and deliberately losing in a way that hides the fact that she deliberately lost. Then, in order to save a coworker from being fired, she challenges the boss in his kendou doujou and they fight with wooden swords in front of his young students (ages 5~10), and she once again deliberately loses.
Then I thought that the episode ended with the boss in the office late by himself, and remarking that the female main character was dangerous, but this was a false memory. The situation might have conveyed that he thought something like this, and was disturbed the events that occurred — his hand being forced, by someone who did not seem to mind if no one else realized what had happened — but he did not say anything about her.
Actual dialogue,
789I don't remember all the details of the episode after like 16 years, but basically, the section chief whom the boss disfavours is 'nice'. The one who is given more responsibility and power in this scene is a little bit more 'mean'. The overall attitude that the boss has is that a 'nice' person is not a good leader. For example, at the start of the series, the 'nice' character does not challenge the main character when she steals his seat (Ep 01 at 5:49):
00:44:20,898 --> 00:44:22,846
[Haken Bentou Business Plan]
790
00:44:22,846 --> 00:44:24,387
Department Manager,
791
00:44:24,387 --> 00:44:29,379
I will improve this business plan and advance it to the final selection.
792
00:44:29,379 --> 00:44:30,679
Me and Satonaka.
793
00:44:30,679 --> 00:44:32,799
He's no good.
794
00:44:32,799 --> 00:44:35,610
He doesn't understand the company.
795
00:44:36,146 --> 00:44:38,603
This business plan...
796
00:44:38,603 --> 00:44:39,795
You do it.
797
00:44:44,469 --> 00:44:46,293
I understand.
Just as, for example, Japan provoked China in the 1930s by invading and fighting against it, not respecting China when it was weak. When leadership and dominance is determined, at least in part, by fighting and being 'mean' (like being dishonest to gain more business share by asserting that a full-time employee did something impressive, rather than a contractor who will soon leave the company), then it's natural for people to think that it's fine to ignore things that don't seem to be their advantage, even if they would help other people. Like a solution that might help everyone in the world by a tiny amount but would take any individual significant effort to verify.