■都の尖閣「購入」構想についての社説 産経 ・石原構想で統治強化を/対中危機意識を共有したい(19日付) 朝日 ・石原発言は無責任だ(18日付) 毎日 ・都が出るのは筋違い(19日付) 読売 ・領土保全に国も関与すべきだ(19日付) 日経 ・都が尖閣を買うのは筋が違う(19日付) 東京 ・都税は暮らしのために(18日付)違法操業疑いの中国船員、韓国官憲に刃物で抵抗
The Tokyo Vices of a Reporter in Japan ジョンソン氏とエーデルスタイン氏のバトルが激化している。文章長すぎ。j.mp/JQpUhD
— mozuさん (@mozumozumozu) 4月 29, 2012
どちらもアレなので野次馬としては相打ちの展開を希望します。
— mozuさん (@mozumozumozu) 4月 29, 2012
http://megalodon.jp/2012-0429-1511-20/globalite.posterous.com/the-tokyo-vices-of-a-reporter-in-japan
The Chrysanthemum Sniffer April 30, 2012 at 11:55 am
“And we should all give a big hand to Adelstein for taking the stand he’s taking.” Well, yes and no. Much as CJ is something of a special head-case and engages in libel throughout the article, he does actually raise some fairly legitimate points about Adelstein’s journalistic practice. He’s right in stating that some pretty well-known newspapers accepted the story about Goto that had barely verifiable sources. And in a few cases, such as the National Geographic episode, CJ seems really to have done his homework. I also had similar thoughts about the self promotional nature of Adelstein book affecting his status as a journalist, particularly in his book. Also, some of the reasons for not quoting his sources, as CJ mentioned, are pretty weak. I can’t trust what he writes, which is, let me be clear, a different thing altogether from saying he is a liar. What he writes may well be true, but the evidence is pretty thin. This kind of looks like a sort of bonfire of vanities to me, with Adelstein being the slicker operator of the two and with CJ’s name already mud.どちらもよく知らないが、しかし、Jake氏のほうがまだ、まともなような気もする。
Since Japan does not have as many journalism schools or press watchdog groups as other countries, many journalists feel that the work of NHK, Nikkei, Asahi, Mainichi, Kyodo and Adelstein's former employer, the Yomiuri, often falls below the standards of small town or even college papers at journalism schools in North America. One mainstream media article this year, about the detention of French journalists working in Fukushima, basically boiled down to this: Japanese daily cites unnamed sources making unproven accusations against unnamed journalists, whereabouts unknown. "Bokki", a commenter on www.fuckedgaijin.com, summed up what many trained and seasoned journalists feel about Adelstein:日本のジャーナリストを北米と比較して馬鹿にしておきながら、fucked Gaijinの匿名さんのコメントを情報源として引用するあたり、○○としかいいようがない。 というより、あの記事の間違いを指摘されてからの反応はゆうに常軌を逸している。 いずれにせよ、記者なら文筆で、とことんやりあって、決着をつけてもらいたい。 因みに私の印象では、日本のジャーナリストは裏とりは一応する習慣があるが、問題意識が少ないか、問題意識をもった記事を書くことを制限されているようにみえる場合が多い。他方、北米の記者は問題意識はあるのだろうが、しかし、基本的な裏とりをする習慣がないようにさえ思えることが多いし、また、固定観念・偏見がつよく、メジャーな新聞社、雑誌社でも、センセーショナリズムに走る傾向がある。
Fact-checking Japan's critics | The Japan Times Online: j.mp/IzLWIk ファクトチェックしたら氏の言説もアウトにならないかと案じます
— mozuさん (@mozumozumozu) 4月 30, 2012
いずれにせよ、事実かどうかの確認は重要。
The fate of multiculturalism in France
The unprecedented electoral success of the far-right shows the resonance of extremist and nationalist discourses.
Last Modified: 30 Apr 2012
With 80 per cent of citizens taking part in the vote, there is undoubtedly a notable presence of extremist and nationalist feeling in the ideological and political landscape throughout Europe. Germany recently allowed the re-release of the controversial Adolf Hitler book, Mein Kampf, and Norway is currently witnessing the trial of Anders Breivik, accused of murdering 77 people last year with overtly racist motives. These events reinforce the widespread fear that the old continent is increasingly giving the floor to far-right ideas.わが闘争、極右
It all started with the creation of a "ministry of immigration, integration and national identity", whereby immigration was erected to the status of an "issue". A series of anti-immigration laws were subsequently adopted. The first ones targeted mixed couples who dared to marry. According to President Sarkozy and his government, a foreigner is obviously not in love with the person he/she has decided to marry. In the name of the fight against "white marriages" - also known as marriages of convenience - mixed couples who decided to legally bind themselves had to undergo embarrassing and somehow humiliating controls to prove that they actually share their lives together and love each other. This process could involve answering questions on intimacy, telling how you met your beloved one, and all kind of personal memories one wouldn't easily share with an administration. Figures that prove "white weddings" represent such an overwhelming threat for the country have yet to be published.偽装結婚 移民検査
Citizens who may not appear to have French nationality also have suffered from stigmatisation. When it's not their religion that allegedly prevents them from fully integrating French society, they see the sacrosanct principle of equality of all citizens suddenly stop at their door. In a July 2010 speech in Grenoble, Sarkozy said that any French citizen with foreign origins who was found guilty of a murder of someone working for the public authority should be stripped of their French citizenship, in addition to the penal condemnation.外国出身 国籍剥奪
Last but not least, a 2011 decree signed by Sarkozy's minister of interior, Claude Guéant, recently caused national and international stupor by making it increasingly difficult for foreign students who had graduated from a French university to obtain a work permit, and thus pursue a first professional experience in France. The justification given was that employers should hire French citizens before foreign ones.留学生就職 The Supreme Court and Dangerous Immigration Metaphors by Mónica Novoa ShareThis | Print | Comment (26) Friday, April 27 2012
In an important paper in the Fordham Law Review, Keith Cunningham-Parmeter unpacks the U.S. Supreme Court’s three dominating metaphors: “immigrants are aliens,” “immigration is a flood,” and “immigration is invasion.” He contends that metaphors influence judicial outcomes, social discourse and the immigration debate in the United States and thus, “how we think metaphorically affects how we talk about problems and the solutions we formulate in response to those problems.” To our great disappointment this week, Justice Sonia Sotomayor and others used the terms “illegal immigrant,” “illegal alien,” and “criminal alien” during proceedings over SB 1070. It mattered that Sotomayor made the choice to use this language, because she’s made the choice to use other terminology before.The Munich nymphomaniac claims a second victim: Man found weeping in street after being lured back to sex-crazed woman's flat Woman taken to psychiatric hospital for evaluation First victim was rescued after desperate call for help By ALLAN HALL PUBLISHED: 11:51 GMT, 30 April 2012 セクス狂 'He should have been the one helping me, but he was the one abusing me': Girl, 15, raped by father who forced her to 'play wife' reveals how decade of abuse tore her apart Terrified Emma Frost, from Clacton, Essex, never informed on her father. 'I thought no one would believe me' she says Emma, now 22, is speaking out to help other victims of sexual abuse By DEBORAH ANDREWS PUBLISHED: 12:52 GMT, 30 April 2012 インセスト タブー 禁忌 近親相姦