I'm surprised we don't have more Japanese members...

Welcome to our community

Be a part of something great, join today!

SlyPokerDog

Woof!
Staff member
Administrator
Joined
Oct 5, 2008
Messages
126,876
Likes
147,515
Points
115
Japan has a worrying number of virgins, government finds

Japan's demographic challenges are well-known: It's home to the world's oldest population and has a shrinking birthrate and an astonishing number of single people. And it seems that, despite government efforts to incentivise marriage and child-rearing, things aren't quite trending in the right direction.

According to the Japan Times, a new survey of Japanese people ages 18 to 34 found that 70 percent of unmarried men and 60 percent of unmarried women are not in a relationship. It gets worse: Around 42 percent of men and 44.2 percent of women admitted that they were virgins.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ber-of-virgins-government-finds-a7312961.html
 
More facts.
100% of the Japanese men are truthful about their sexual experience.
39.2% of the Japanese women “fudge” about their sexual experience.

Go to Japan, (if you can afford it) you will not be able to keep your dick dry. The only complaint you will hear from Japanese women about white men is. Our dicks are too big.
 
Last edited:
More facts.
100% of the Japanese men are truthful about their sexual experience.
39.2 of the Japanese women “fudge” about their sexual experience.

Go to Japan, (if you can afford it) you will not be able to keep your dick dry. The only complaint you will hear from Japanese women about white me is. Our dicks are too big.
I'm going now, I want to experience having this problem for once lol
 
Speaking of that, I always thought they blurred Japanese porn for moral reasons. Now that I've seen more uncensored I realized they were just embarrassed.

I liked it better blurry, I could imagine it was me being blurred out.
 
Japan has a worrying number of virgins, government finds

Japan's demographic challenges are well-known: It's home to the world's oldest population and has a shrinking birthrate and an astonishing number of single people. And it seems that, despite government efforts to incentivise marriage and child-rearing, things aren't quite trending in the right direction.

According to the Japan Times, a new survey of Japanese people ages 18 to 34 found that 70 percent of unmarried men and 60 percent of unmarried women are not in a relationship. It gets worse: Around 42 percent of men and 44.2 percent of women admitted that they were virgins.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ber-of-virgins-government-finds-a7312961.html
@jonnyboy are you surprised?
 
Japan has a worrying number of virgins, government finds

Japan's demographic challenges are well-known: It's home to the world's oldest population and has a shrinking birthrate and an astonishing number of single people. And it seems that, despite government efforts to incentivise marriage and child-rearing, things aren't quite trending in the right direction.

According to the Japan Times, a new survey of Japanese people ages 18 to 34 found that 70 percent of unmarried men and 60 percent of unmarried women are not in a relationship. It gets worse: Around 42 percent of men and 44.2 percent of women admitted that they were virgins.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ber-of-virgins-government-finds-a7312961.html
Asian women are terrific and I can say that they make terrific wives. Let me modify that, it all depends on the woman but they have a head start on the rest of the world.
 
Asian women are terrific and I can say that they make terrific wives. Let me modify that, it all depends on the woman but they have a head start on the rest of the world.

I hear they're great!

Which model did you get?

Just making a point, not criticizing Lanny's post and we all know he's sincerely offering praise, but if a Trump supporter said the same thing...?
 
The reason for the death of births in Japan is countywide impotence from 9 years of exposure to Fukushima radiation through the water, the food, the air...

Get ready for more Japanese members since Japan is the largest owner of private land in Oregon.
 
I hear they're great!

Which model did you get?

Just making a point, not criticizing Lanny's post and we all know he's sincerely offering praise, but if a Trump supporter said the same thing...?
My friend is married to a Japanese girl. Fucking nightmare for him. They have a zero interest car loan. She decided on her own to put 10 grand extra towards it and 2 weeks later quit her job.
 
The reason for the death of births in Japan is countywide impotence from 9 years of exposure to Fukushima radiation through the water, the food, the air...

False, obviously. Japanese birth rate has been low for decades.

Get ready for more Japanese members since Japan is the largest owner of private land in Oregon.

False, obviously. The largest private landholders will be timber companies and ranchers, seriously doubt any significant percentage is owned by Japanese (much less by Japan).


Your ideas are intriguing to me and I'm glad that I subscribe to your newsletter.

barfo
 
False, obviously. Japanese birth rate has been low for decades.



False, obviously. The largest private landholders will be timber companies and ranchers, seriously doubt any significant percentage is owned by Japanese (much less by Japan).


Your ideas are intriguing to me and I'm glad that I subscribe to your newsletter.

barfo

Your assumptions that Japanese can't cut trees and herd cattle are disgusting to me.

Commercial buildings in cities do makeup a larger block in value though.
 
My friend is married to a Japanese girl. Fucking nightmare for him. They have a zero interest car loan. She decided on her own to put 10 grand extra towards it and 2 weeks later quit her job.

Sounds like she's a Fire Horse Woman. Was she born in 1966?

Why did so many Japanese families avoid having children in 1966?
Posted on May 8, 2016 by Randy Olson Posted in data visualization
Last week, I was presenting at a conference and discussing the merits of animated visualizations vs. small multiples. On one of my slides, I presented the following chart that shows the total fertility rate (i.e., the average number of children born per woman) for the U.S.A. and Japan over a 60-year time period.



After the talk, one of the audience members came up to me and asked why there was that weird blip in Japan’s fertility rate in 1966. It turns out that there’s a fascinating explanation — an explanation that finds its roots in astrology and superstition.

Astrology and superstition
If you were born in the U.S. (or many other Western countries), you were probably assigned an astrological sign based on the day you were born: Aries if you were born between March 20 and April 19 (roughly), Taurus if you were born between April 19 and May 20, and so on. Each of these signs are associated with personality traits and various other features.

The Japanese use a similar astrological system, but one instead based on the Chinese zodiac. Along with assigning an astrological beast based on your birth year, each year also has one of the Five Elements associated with it—all that dramatically affect what your astrological sign entails.

Astrologers would like us to believe that our personality—and even our entire lives—are guided by these signs, but most people don’t take these predictions too seriously. In 1966, however, many Japanese families were still quite superstitious—and that’s why we see that blip in fertility rates in 1966.



You see, 1966 was the year of 丙午 (Hinoe-Uma), or the “Fire Horse.” As one source describes:


Girls born in [1966] became known as ‘Fire Horse Women’ and are reputed to be dangerous, headstrong and generally bad luck for any husband. In 1966, a baby’s sex couldn’t be reliably detected before birth; hence there was a large increase of induced abortions and a sharp decrease in the birth rate in 1966.


Instead of taking the risk of raising a “Fire Horse Woman,” whose headstrong nature would bring bad luck for her future husband, many Japanese families avoided having children entirely in 1966. In essence, superstition was embedded so deeply in Japanese culture that we could measure its effects on a macro-population scale.

Time will tell if superstition will strike again 10 years from now in 2026, the next year of the “Fire Horse” in its 60-year cycle. Given that Japanese is already below the replacement fertility rate (i.e., roughly an average of 2 children per woman), the result could be disastrous.

http://www.randalolson.com/2016/05/...anese-families-avoid-having-children-in-1966/
 
Your racist assumptions that Japanese can't cut trees and herd cattle are disgusting to me.

Ha ha. I imagine they can do those things just fine, I've just never heard of them doing so in Oregon at any scale.

Commercial buildings in cities do makeup a larger block in value though.

Oookay. I don't think one would normally interpret "largest owner of private land" to mean most expensive buildings, but let's assume that was what you meant. You are still wrong.

barfo
 
The reason for the death of births in Japan is countywide impotence from 9 years of exposure to Fukushima radiation through the water, the food, the air...

Get ready for more Japanese members since Japan is the largest owner of private land in Oregon.
My parents once had some property for sale near Council Crest. A representative for a Japanese buyer who's company was relocating him to Portland wanted to buy their property but he balked at the price which would now be considered a once in a lifetime steal. What a cheap ass. They sold to lot to another buyer for full price. It was a good deal even for 1996. The representative and the Japanese man he was representing are probably still kicking themselves in the ass.
My wife and I were reviewing our lot next to that lot when the rep. came by. He started talking to us and I mentioned how some raccoons lived in the ravine in the rear of the lot. Right after I said that a mama raccoon and two of her babies ran about 10 feet in front of us and up a tree. His mouth hung open. Should have told him about the rabbits and the pheasant that lived there or the retired Forest Ranger who lived on the other side of the ravine and cared for the woods. It was a slice of heaven. All this and ten minutes from Meier and Frank, maybe 6 or 7 minutes from Portland State.
 
Ha ha. I imagine they can do those things just fine, I've just never heard of them doing so in Oregon at any scale.



Oookay. I don't think one would normally interpret "largest owner of private land" to mean most expensive buildings, but let's assume that was what you meant. You are still wrong.

barfo

Meant to say private real estate, and I'm right.

Anyway that's what my Oregon State Real Estate License course taught me in 2007.

To be more accurate, my best recall is that they said was Japanese citizens, Japanese businesses and the Japanese government owned more private real estate in Oregon than Oregonians owned.
 
I hear they're great!

Which model did you get?

Just making a point, not criticizing Lanny's post and we all know he's sincerely offering praise, but if a Trump supporter said the same thing...?
I love my wife completely and 40 years of loving marriage backs that up.
I can live without anything, I don't need lots of money, an expensive house, nice jewelry, expensive clothes, nice restaurants, an expensive car or expensive wine but I absolutely cannot live without my wife. If I've got her everything else is just so much fluff.
Our arguments are that we want the other to have cash on hand and we don't need it ourselves. We also argue over who loves who the most. We hold hands frequently even at our old age. We hold hands whenever we go outside to a restaurant or the grocery store or the Blazer games.
Not trying to say anything negative about your post, just taking an opportunity to shout out my love for my wife.
 
Meant to say private real estate, and I'm right.

Anyway that's what my Oregon State Real Estate License course taught me in 2007.

To be more accurate, my best recall is that they said was Japanese citizens, Japanese businesses and the Japanese government owned more private real estate in Oregon than Oregonians owned.

I have no doubt that's what they told you, but of course it wasn't - and isn't - true.

barfo
 
I have no doubt that's what they told you, but of course it wasn't - and isn't - true.

barfo
Im curious if either of you can provide links or something that at least provides some sort of evidence...
 
I would guess that the statement that he is probably remembering wrong is that of foreign entities that at one time owned land in Oregon, owners who were based in Japan held the highest % of land compared to other foreign land owners. It was a common smear tactic back in the 80's to blame the Japanese for timber jobs being lost, because they would just 'buy up' the land, and take the jobs from Real Americans. This seems no different.

Tho I suspect most of the land owned by non US Citizens is probably owned by Canadians, and much of the land owned by people not living in the US is held by Ex Pats or people living abroad.

But I'm sure Maris knows hundreds of Japanese people who own land in Oregon, much like he knows "hundreds" of liberals.
 
Last edited:
Tho I suspect most of the land owned by non US Citizens is probably owned by Canadians, and much of the land owned by people not living in the US is held by Ex Pats or people living abroad.

But I'm sure Maris knows hundreds of Japanese people who own land in Oregon, much like he knows "hundreds" of liberals.


:biglaugh:
 
Im curious if either of you can provide links or something that at least provides some sort of evidence...

Back when the question was land, rather than real estate value, I did a little research and found that the total foreign ownership of land in the US is about the same as the amount of private land in OR. [~27 million acres vs ~25 million acres] Which doesn't prove anything but is interesting.

Ok, one link. Here's something that claims that FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) accounts for 5% of the jobs in Oregon. That's all foreign countries, not just Japan.
You'd think, if Maris' claims were true, that number would be a lot higher.

But basically, his claim defies common sense. What is it that the Japanese own? The majority of real estate value in the state is residential, according to this link. Are the majority of houses in your neighborhood owned by Japanese? And are there big buildings downtown owned by Japanese? Which ones? The big employers, Intel, Nike, OHSU, Fred Meyer, etc.. - are they Japanese?

barfo
 
Back when the question was land, rather than real estate value, I did a little research and found that the total foreign ownership of land in the US is about the same as the amount of private land in OR. [~27 million acres vs ~25 million acres] Which doesn't prove anything but is interesting.

Ok, one link. Here's something that claims that FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) accounts for 5% of the jobs in Oregon. That's all foreign countries, not just Japan.
You'd think, if Maris' claims were true, that number would be a lot higher.

But basically, his claim defies common sense. What is it that the Japanese own? The majority of real estate value in the state is residential, according to this link. Are the majority of houses in your neighborhood owned by Japanese? And are there big buildings downtown owned by Japanese? Which ones? The big employers, Intel, Nike, OHSU, Fred Meyer, etc.. - are they Japanese?

barfo
I was doing some research too and I found it pretty to hard to find what I considered good data. It seems like a weird claim and probably not true, but I wasnt getting very far. Thank you for the links.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top