I've never been, but I'll be there very soon. I don't travel much, but Japanese are good people. Unlike, their neighbors, literal niggers of the orient. I respect the history and what they are a part of, and they are, to me, allies. I have a great opportunity to learn more by visiting, and I was curious whether there was anyone here that would be able to provide some information regarding places to visit or things to experience that would be useful and helpful in our journey.
"Japanese people are kind, polite and beautifully racist"
Absolutely perfect, my kind of race! Tokyo Skytree is definitely locked in! I'm not too fussed about Tokyo, I will visit it for sure. What's more important to me is it's non-jew'ed culture, so, I'd like to visit the country, landscapes, and even little based regions and prefectures.
The lack of gates can be confusing for tourists from nations infested with niggers.
If it's late at night and the streets are empty, enjoy these beautiful temples from the main council footpath and you'll be fine.
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If you'll be spending time on trains, I recommend taking a physical book to teach yourself Kanji.
Kanji is a common Chinese-based written language you'll see in Tokyo which is made from glyphs that have contextual meanings like individual entire words.
Kanji is a fascinating langue and super easy to learn the basics because the gist of Kanji messages can generally be understood even if you know only a fraction of the individual glyphs.
For example, 口 (Kuchi) means MOUTH, 入 (Iri) means ENTER and 出 (Shutsu) means OUT.
You'll see these Kanji signs at all Japanese train stations:
入口 means path to the mouth of an entrance
出口 means path to the mouth of an exit
Even if you only knew 口 and you saw that in a train station, you'd know the context of the sign indicates a pathway to something specific.
Teach yourself one Kanji character each day just for fun, based on the characters you see most often. You'll be able to amuse yourself by struggling to read complex Kanji messages while sitting on the train. Knowing stuff is fun.
As you learn, you'll be able to understand more and more of what signs say. This is exactly how Japanese children learn: they start by understanding the basic context of the message based on their limited knowledge of characters and as they learn new characters, they learn to understand more context about the messages.
男 (otoko): Men. For men's restrooms.
女 (onna): Women. For women's restrooms.
Now you know Kanji. :-)
The commonly used derogatory term for black person is:
黒んぼ (kuro n bo)
... But I'm unsure how to translate it because I don't know enough contextual Kanji... my best guess is something like "blacks are inferior (crude)", but it has more nuanced meaning than that.