Japanese Earthquake Won't Cause Refugees, "Temporary Protected Status" Because Japanese Don't Want To Go Live In Foreign Countries And Get Welfare
03/16/2022
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See, earlier: Katrina, Sailer, And Japan

Japan has just suffered an earthquake which is 7.3 on the new earthquake scale, and power is out in Tokyo. Unlike when this happens in New York City and similar places, there won't be major looting, because, as Steve Sailer was condemned for saying at the time of Hurricane Katrina (comparing the Katrina horrors to Japanese reaction to a 1995 earthquake), "when you get down to it, Japanese aren't blacks."

See also Genes, Not "Culture"—Why the Japanese Don't Loot by Jared Taylor at the time of the 2011 tsunami.

The Japanese earthquake is pretty bad. It seems like the world in general is experiencing one damn thing after another.

Here's another thing that won't be happening in the wake of the latest Japanese earthquake: waves of refugees showing up at American airports, and Congressmen from areas with large number of Japanese illegals calling for "Temporary Protected Status" to prevent them being deported.

As far as I know, there isn't a significant number of Japanese illegals anywhere. And the "Temporary Protected Status" racket—which isn't about letting people in but not kicking illegals from war-torn or disaster-stricken countries out—isn't sought for Japanese because unlike the Nicaraguans and Hondurans who stayed in the U.S. under TPS since Hurricane Mitch in 1995, the Japanese want to stay home and rebuild any buildings that have fallen down.

Some Americans feel the same way. The late P. J. O'Rourke, in his book Parliament Of Whores, described an October 7, 1989 march against homelessness that he attended

As I was going out the door, my wife said, "Will there be lots of people from South Carolina at the housing march?" I said, "Huh?" "You know," she said, "where Hurricane Hugo just destroyed everybody's house." My wife, like many wives, is under the impression that mankind is as rational and pragmatic as wives are. I had to explain that there wouldn't be any people from South Carolina in the march demanding houses from the government because the people from South Carolina were too busy building houses for themselves.
["AMONG THE COMPASSION FASCISTS: The National March for Housing Now!," page 187]
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