I think I would quite like that actually. At this point I'll gladly accept some bigotry and be the "stupid gaijin" in exchange for cleaner streets, better cars, beautiful architecture, and more social propriety.
Plus
way better sushi.
For those that don't know: (gaijin [simply means]=foriegner {outside person})
Having been there 3 times a year for 3 weeks to 3 months at a time from 2004-2017, some observations: cars are replaced at 50K kilometers by the government substantially raising the taxes on the car every year after it reaches that. In order to posses a "classic" car (even their own brands) costs an incredible amount of money. Better cars? They tax the hell out of any imports to keep them out. No matter where they are from: Mercedes, Audi, Ferrari, Fiat US made, where ever. THAT IS HOW THEY KEEP THEIR DOMESTIC INDUSTRY GOING. FULLY LIMITING IMPORTS. The minimum legal compensational fine for causing a traffic death is on the order of 32,000,000 yen (about US$380,000). Better have very good insurance. If you are a gaijin, you are wrong. PERIOD! Motorcycle theft is not uncommon. To drive from (round trip 152.4 miles, $19 in fuel, $120 in tolls, 2 hours 58 min) from Sasebo to Fukoka to go to eat at the restaurant under the Opera House. By bus: $50, 4 hrs (& you'll need an expensive taxi ride), by train: $90, 4 hours (and you'll need a very expensive taxi ride). The meal was $890 for 5 people. Yes the streets are clean because all the plastic bags (and other debris) are in the water coming to shore with the tide and stuck in the bay's. (at least at the bay in Sasebo and on the other side of Japan at Hiro, it's pretty nasty too) around Japan. IF you are away from the bays, it's pretty clean. There are many places (usually higher class restaurants, bars, stores, etc) that, no matter how well you are dressed, you will not be allowed in because you are not Japanese. I was able to go to many of these places because I had a Japanese Dr. friend who would take me as his guest: to fine restaurants, piano bars, etc. Food: for me (I greatly like Chinese, Vietnamese & Thai food, Japanese food, not so much. Overall they collect and throw things away in a rapid cycle, creating massive amounts of waste. Stuffed things with any sort of connection to a character of some type (movie, Hentai, whatever) seem to be incredibly popular and a few years later are trashed for something new. Perhaps because the homes are so small they have no place to put things. But life seems to revolve around getting new stuff all the time, because not having the latest & greatest as promoted by the manufacturers, would be to lose face. If you are a gaijin male, the men are generally polite to your face. But that is not the reality. If someone wants you dead they simply make sure that you get hit by a truck, are bludgeoned to death or just disappear. The people I worked for banned us from the going to certain clubs in certain areas because these things happened to some gaijin's.
I can think of many places that are a better place to be: Singapore comes to mind because the cleanliness is much better than the Japanese, the transportation is much better & inexpensive, the cultural diversity of people and FOOD is huge, the people are genuinely friendly. Also, Thailand: same with people, food, not quite as much diversity (Thai, Chinese, Vietnamese, Cambodian & very good street food) while the big cities are definitely not as clean, great Jazz clubs (and other music rock, blues), low transportation costs, borders with
Myanmar,
Cambodia,
Laos and
Malaysia & any climate you want (long as it doesn't involve snow): high mountains, a central plain, an upland plateau and from bottom to top, more than 2000 miles of coastline. In fact, that is where my wife (who is Chinese) and I will be moving to in the future. Having been in more than 20 countries many times, for at least 3 weeks at a time, sometimes for 4 months+, there's my take.