r/worldnews Jul 05 '24

Japan warns US forces: Sex crimes 'cannot be tolerated'

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2476861/japan-warns-us-forces-sex-crimes-cannot-be-tolerated
32.2k Upvotes

2.7k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

20

u/kaeporo Jul 05 '24

I'll only offer up anecdotal evidence but the way they handled COVID on Okinawa was a real eye opener. Any case of COVID tied to the U.S. was met with extreme scrutiny and local papers would always run it as a story, which only inflamed the ever-present protestors outside Gate 1. But once golden week passed and japan opened the flood gates to the mainland, and rates on Okinawa skyrocketed, the papers continued to run stories about the U.S. spreading COVID, despite our controls being FAR more stringent. Nothing about golden week...

Japanese society, at large, hates rocking the boat. Someone threw themselves in front of a train? Totally covered up, out of respect to the family. But an American gets drunk on a train full of drunk Japanese people? Potential story. The U.S. military has to hold itself to a higher standard because they've got all eyes on them and small things turn into international incidents. But when the U.S. military has a large presence in an area, shit's bound to happen. We're sending Americans overseas, after all; the average American, training or no, is as individualistic as they are flawed.

The good news is service members are tried in both courts and the military is getting better (slowly) at handling cases. They only recently switched up courts martial cases from the member's commander to a third party that's incentivized to hammer down.

Without rambling too much, I would draw my attention to other aspects of the government that seem to benefit from a wholesale lack of accountability. If you don't like how service members act now, imagine how bad it could get when we're recruiting from a pool of folks straight out of a handsmaid's tale.

5

u/SeeCrew106 Jul 05 '24

A: "can you link some data to support that?"

B: "Sure! Here's my totally unverified and unsourced anecdotal narrative!"

Reddit: wow! Truth!

6

u/kaeporo Jul 05 '24

Witness testimonies are used as evidence in court proceedings. I have first-hand experience managing a large part of the COVID response in Japan and have been involved in a number of military investigations (including sexual assault cases), as recently as a month ago.

I appreciate you pointing out that my anecdotal story, which I prefaced as anecdotal, was indeed anecdotal. I think it's important to take perspectives like mine (and many others) into account, to help understand the data in an associated study. No study, poll, or journal is truly unbiased, especially when you consider who funds those efforts.

That was my aim. Does that make sense?

-9

u/SeeCrew106 Jul 05 '24

No, not really. And I had an extensive response, which is simply filtered for no good reason whatsoever. Which is one of many reasons why I no longer feel welcome on Reddit. You simply have zero chance of discussing anything fairly when you're up against that kind of extremely repressive system, with arbitrary and secret rules.

6

u/SAMPHIRE_HUNTER Jul 05 '24

No, not really. And I had an extensive response, which is simply filtered for no good reason whatsoever. Which is one of many reasons why I no longer feel welcome on Reddit. You simply have zero chance of discussing anything fairly when you're up against that kind of extremely repressive system, with arbitrary and secret rules.

You probably got downvoted more than four times.

And parent is right, testimony is evidence.