What is the real life of homeless people in Japan?

Updated on society 2024-06-16
22 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Let's tell two stories. Most of the homeless people in Tokyo are hard-boned! According to one of my good classmates, who lives in the Tama River, there are many homeless people living in paper houses under the bridge, and sometimes the paper houses are flooded at high tide, and before winter comes, ** people have come to provide them with accommodation - not a shelter where everyone opens a bunk together, but a two-room apartment for each person, no different from a nearby rental apartment - but perhaps out of self-esteem, no one accepts such a favor.

    After the 311th Congress, ** sent *** to rescue the homeless, but the homeless gathered on the river embankment and shouted into the air, leave us alone, go and rescue those who need to be rescued more! <>

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    When it comes to life in Japan, people may think of trendy Tokyo, classically elegant Kyoto, or snow-covered Hokkaido, but there is still a thriving corner under the bright neon lights of the metropolis, and they are almost forgotten because they almost never appear on the streets, and they tend to stay only in parks, under bridges, in dilapidated buildings on the banks of rivers. They also live in Japan, a developed country, but they are sleeping and moving.

    Most of the homeless people live in Oki Park in the Ishibuya district of Japan, and the accommodation is very simple, go to the supermarket and buy a few cardboard boxes, you can set up a simple tent. You can earn 40 to 50,000 yen a month doing odd jobs, which is about 2,400 to 3,000 yuan in RMB. This money is enough for them to buy food, because it doesn't cost anything else, mainly for food.

    There are many people who say that homeless people are reluctant to receive relief because of their high self-esteem. Of course, some people may be the reason for this, but it is definitely not the main factor. The most basic condition for applying for a low-income family is to have a fixed residence, and most homeless people in Japan choose to wander because they have escaped the debts of their hometown, so it is impossible to have a fixed residence and it is impossible to settle in one place for a long time.

    Because of shame, the culture of shame that the Japanese have always emphasized, makes these people unable to tolerate the shame of life setbacks, company closures, and failed exams, and in order not to cause trouble to their families, they often choose such a way to avoid the eyes of societyTherefore, in any society, there will be some problems that need to be solved urgently, and there will be some invisible shadows that are hidden from us.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    There are many poor people in Japan who are also living very unsatisfactory lives, such as homeless people who sleep on the street stalls in newspapers.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Those who have no income at all can only wander, eating food that they have picked up or discarded from the supermarket. In Tokyo, there are often wanderers living under overpasses and on the side of the road.

    Who are the people who are forced to sleep on the streets?

    Specifically, most of the homeless people are elderly, and many of them are middle-aged, and almost all of them were former company employees, but they chose to be homeless because of the economic downturn or layoffs. There are even many people who are not homeless, but choose not to go home on their own. They say that as long as you live a life of wandering for a year, you can experience the happiness of not being regulated by society.

    For the homeless in Japan, wandering is more of an option than forced wandering. As a result, they are more willing not to rely on others to take responsibility for their current lives.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The poor in Japan must be very poor.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The poor in Japan are very poor and can only live in Internet cafes in Japan.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The streets of Japan are full of homeless people. They all live in the subway or in the park.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Perhaps, like our poor people, they will probably beg for a living and sleep on the streets.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The poor in every country are the same, and life is so helpless and helpless.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    In Japan, if your income is below a certain living line, you will be paid a subsistence allowance.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Life for the poor should be more difficult, and there may be no food.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The poor live as comfortably as the rich.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Every country will have the poor and the rich, and the rise and fall of every nation will have different classes and groups, and this is also an irreversible phenomenon in human development. If the country were a developed country, then the gap between the poor and the rich would be very large. So, what is life like for the poor in Japan?

    Under the bright neon lights, there is loneliness after prosperity. The so-called loneliness here is actually those who live on the streets. Many foreigners will travel to Japan, they will travel to various scenic spots, and they will see the brilliant people, or behind this prosperity, there are many wanderers, they eat and sleep, they are displaced, they live in Japan's parks, bridges, caves, or dilapidated buildings.

    The poor in Japan are satisfied with three meals a day. These poor people in Japan also go to odd jobs, and they earn about 40,000 yuan to 50,000 yuan a month, which is equivalent to about 2,500 yuan in our yuan, which is enough for them to meet the cost of three meals a day.

    This is how the poor in Japan satisfy their diet. In the second paragraph, Lemon mentions that they will live in parks, in underground passages, or under bridges, and they will also find some cardboard boxes in the nearby supermarket to protect them from the cold, or find tents that others have thrown away, and live in them, and the sky and the earth are used as beds.

    The poor people of Japan are made up of these people. Speaking of which, many people have said why these poor people don't receive relief, in fact, most of the poor people in Japan are made up of homeless people or criminals who have escaped debts, so they sometimes can't apply for subsistence allowance or relief.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    But the lives of the poor in Japan are actually very deplorable, and their environment is particularly bad.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Most of the poor in Japan live on the streets, or occasionally do odd jobs.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    I'm afraid it's the same in every country, the poor come back to beg and live and wander, the society is so realistic, if you don't work hard, the society will eliminate you.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Clean. The toilets in the public areas are also very clean. If you look at the low-rise roofs from the upper floors of Japan, they are full of garbage and unused old things, but the roofs in Japan are absolutely clean.

    The streets too, you don't see a scrap of paper. There are also extensive subway and train connections and the JR Shinkansen. Shopping at tourist spots is similar to shopping in the city, and you won't take the opportunity to rip off customers just because it's a tourist spot.

    One-third of the people who go to travel directly are Europeans and Americans, one-third are Koreans, and one-third are Chinese, including Taiwanese-Hong Kongers. There are also so many foreign tourists in Japan that there is no need for security checks except for airplanes. Japan also has backward places, Alipay is not popular, used to paying cash, if the subway knows where to go, but does not know** it is impossible to buy a ticket, buying a ticket is input**.

    So where you go, you have to check ** to buy a ticket. It is worth mentioning that the banknotes in circulation in Japan are all fresh, and there are absolutely no wrinkled banknotes. Japan is a place worth visiting.

    If you haven't been there, don't spray it. Traveling to Japan is not necessarily a traitor, and if you don't go, you are not necessarily a traitor. China is the largest country in Japan, and China has diplomatic relations with Japan.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Japan is a place where people live.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    The Qing Dynasty was the most, when the Qing Dynasty was the most corrosive era, the soul, the Chinese woman died because of social corruption, and it was the least developed technology, plus social corruption, ghost stories, and proverbs I don't know how many, so the Qing Dynasty had the most ghosts.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    There are two kinds of poor people in Japan, one is the poor who work, do odd jobs, live in Internet cafes (independent small rooms), eat instant noodles, and bread. Spend your days drinking freely from an internet café.

    One is the poor who do not work, such as the homeless, who collect cardboard boxes in the morning, sleep on the flyover or outside the station at night (burrowing in the cardboard boxes they collect), and usually go to the convenience store to pick up the discarded expired food to satisfy their stomachs. But Japanese homeless people don't beg, and some homeless people have ** subsidies, and it doesn't cost money to see a doctor.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Japan does not have the absolute poverty of China, for the disabled and other people who are unable to work, the Japanese Ministry of People's Livelihood has a special agency to give national security, the amount of security can reach the level of general wages, and you can enjoy the basic medical care provided by the local **. It will not make life miserable for people without labor.

    There are various types of unemployment insurance for the unemployed in Japan, but the Japanese people are very strong and confident, and the vast majority of the unemployed in Japan would rather go to odd jobs than receive unemployment benefits. This is despite the fact that unemployment insurance income in Japan is much higher than that of part-time work.

    A very small number of people who appear to have nothing belong to the kind of wanderers who are ambitious and talented, and these people often belong to the kind of people who do not want to do ordinary work or stay in their hometown to inherit the family business, but want to climb to the sky in one step. They often seek opportunities in big cities such as Osaka and Tokyo, living on handouts after the closing of night-time restaurants, and living in simple dwellings provided by the municipal government. It's not that they can't work, but they don't do ordinary work for the sake of their ideals, and when they are embarrassed to go home after financial difficulties, they stay in big cities and become ronin, similar to China's Jingpiao.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Those who have the ability to work will not be poor, and those who do not have the ability to work can enjoy social security.

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