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Thai Prosecutor and Daughter Arrested in Japan for Assaulting Airport Staff


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Posted

As much as I may enjoy a good Thai bash, I'd have to see the instant replay.  Some airline employees are real snowflakes.

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Posted
1 hour ago, impulse said:

As much as I may enjoy a good Thai bash

 

Are you suggesting that anyone criticising these people for assaulting airline staff would be "Thai bashing"?

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Posted
4 hours ago, impulse said:

As much as I may enjoy a good Thai bash, I'd have to see the instant replay.  Some airline employees are real snowflakes.

HEY ... I resemble that, employee, not snowflake part.  

 

Never argue with someone who has control of where you sit on a plane, until you have your boarding pass :cheesy:

 

Unless you want to sit in a center seat, exit row area that doesn't recline, or bulkhead with no leg room 😎  

Posted
7 hours ago, Cuchulainn said:

Don't you know who I am?

 

Similar to the high ranking person (I can't remember who) who slapped a security guard at Suvarnaphummi Airport for wanting to do a security check on him.

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Posted
5 hours ago, BangkokReady said:

 

Are you suggesting that anyone criticising these people for assaulting airline staff would be "Thai bashing"?

 

If I haven't seen the video, I don't know what they did. 

 

Keep in mind that the legal hurdle for "assault" is putting someone in fear.  Like maybe misgendering them.  It doesn't even require contact.  And I've seen airline employees go bonkers and call for security when someone tapped them on the shoulder to get their attention.

 

So I'll wait to see the video.

 

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Posted
10 hours ago, impulse said:

As much as I may enjoy a good Thai bash, I'd have to see the instant replay.  Some airline employees are real snowflakes.

 

For example...

Posted
6 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

 

Key word is Japan. It is a nation where people bend over backwards to be polite. Even the Japanese hiso are polite to 7-11 clerks.

Keep in mind that Japan is a socialist country / society. Everybody is equal, everybody is the same level.

Posted
11 hours ago, impulse said:

As much as I may enjoy a good Thai bash, I'd have to see the instant replay.  Some airline employees are real snowflakes.

 

Possibly... Thai tourists, unfortunately, tend to carry a rather poor reputation in Japan. Over the past five years - particularly since the introduction of visa-easing measures - there’s been a marked increase in Thai visitors, alongside an even more significant influx of Chinese tourists. This surge has arguably intensified a growing local resentment towards mass tourism in general in Japan.

 

Japanese airline ground staff, especially at check-in counters, can be astonishingly pedantic. They enforce regulations with almost robotic precision - a single kilogram over the baggage allowance or a centimetre beyond size limits can incur additional fees, no exceptions.

 

I once found myself in such a situation. My bag, containing ski equipment, measured 191cm - just 1cm over the stated limit. What followed was a minor circus with multiple staff members getting involved over the 1cm drama..

... I stood the bag up, shook it, laid it down, asked them to re-measured...  it was declared acceptable.

 

And therein lies the issue: what in Thailand might be overlooked as a trivial discrepancy is, in Japan, handled with rigid formality. Pair that cultural contrast with a simmering frustration over ‘over-tourism’ and perhaps a sense of entitlement or a “Do you know who I am?” attitude from some visitors... and you’ve got the perfect conditions for the kind of incident we so often read about.

 

As for the matter of the man grabbing the woman’s arm - it’s inappropriate and very wrong, I don’t condone it. But to label it as assault seems to be rather a stretch... 

 

 

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Posted
2 hours ago, scorecard said:

Keep in mind that Japan is a socialist country / society. Everybody is equal, everybody is the same level.

What? Japan is certainly not socialist. Nor is everybody equal in Japan.

The means of production are in the control of the private sector, not government. it is a system of collective capitalism.  You have misinterpreted the societal and cultural norm of harmony and  conciliation. 

You also misinterpret the concept of politeness and respect  to mean equality. Social cohesion  does not mean that everyone is at the same level. Children are taught at a young age to respect authority figures including the elderly, which results in a greater respect for order. 

 

There is also a distinct social caste system, where social position and family history is a differentiating factor. Non Japanese, particularly black people are at the bottom of the hierarchy. Ex-cons, undertakers, morticians, and slaughterhouse workers, and others who work with  dead animals or decaying flesh are considered low class dirty people and are to be avoided.  The university one attends  makes a big difference. Tokyo Institute of Technology and University of Tokyo  graduates  get priority  for hiring at businesses and with the government. People with tattoos are still banned from some of  the onsens and sentos. Even water parks and  work district hotels will not allow entry to people with visible tattoos.   The social differentiations  are nuanced and can be subtle, and are easily missed by foreigners who do not appreciate how important decorum and manners are to the Japanese.

 

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