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It is midnight in Tokyo. Downtown streets are filled with pedestrians, strollers abound in the park, bicycles sit unchained on the street, many front doors are unlocked, and children under eight years of age are even seen riding alone on the subway. As much of a culture shock as this may be to a visitor from the United States, an additional surprise comes the next morning when virtually no crimes are reported. Tokyo has the lowest rates of murder, rape, robbery, and theft of any major city in the world. A comparison of crime rates in the United States and Japan per 100,000 inhabitants shows that the United States has about six times as many serious crimes. Yet Japan has fewer police officers per capita: 1 for every 557 residents, compared with 1 for every 357 residents in the United States.
Why is there so little crime there?
Do you trust the police in your community as much as the Japanese do their police? Why or why not?

2007-03-06 06:29:13 · 3 answers · asked by xraytech75 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

The police in Japan actually know what they are doing, and they take great pride in their work. They are well trained. Not to mention parents in Japan know how to raise their children to be respectful. Not to mention there is more of a consequence for when a crime is commited in Japan. In the US, all you get is a slap on the wrist or probation. None of that does anything to deter crime.

Where I live, the police Department for my area don't do their job. I'm convinced that all they do is show up just to be able to say that they drove a police car. Now don't get me wrong, I have nothing but respect for people who risk their lives everyday to protect their community, which is why I myself am choosing a career in law enforcement. But at the same time, the police department that covers my area does not care about their job, nor will they ever do their job. I had to call them recently because someone we hired to work on the house became hostile. Not only did they take their time in showing up, but all they did is tell the guy not to come back to the property. They didn't even write a police report, or make a note of it.

Maybe the US police could learn a lesson from the Japanese Law enforcement.

2007-03-06 06:44:05 · answer #1 · answered by Kikyo 5 · 1 0

If the US may well be unfold skinny then i might prefer to paintings out the Russians interior this type of the conflict. the US has a million.5 million lively troops to Russia's a million million to boot to a further a million.5 million reservists to Russia's 800,000. the US has 11 plane distributors to Russia's a million and has over one hundred escort vessels to Russia's 25. meanwhile the US Airforce has 5,500 plane to Russia's 4000. the US exceeds Russia not in trouble-free terms numerically yet to boot technologically, logistically, in conflict training and intelligence accumulating. because of the reality the tip of the chilly conflict the Russia protection tension has very almost controlled to maintain muddling by way of having to handle drastic money cuts. Russia is on the on the spot contemporary technique a streamlining technique to create a properly-straightforward and useful yet smaller tension. So Russia is neither on the on the spot nor foreseeable a substantial risk to the US. Likewise this way of conflict may well be somewhat unlikely to take place by way of the two factors having considerable nuclear applications.

2016-12-18 07:03:32 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I believe if you commit a crime in Japan, you will face much more serious consequences than if you committed the same crime in the west. I don't think the japanese trust their police, they fear them and the prisons.
Crime is higher in the west cause criminals have rights too.

2007-03-06 06:38:54 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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