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Most pregnant woman work every day through the 1st and 2nd trimester, at actual jobs. She…
Posted in: Meisa Kuroki cancels appearance at March 4 event for fans
serendipitious, I am only human and civilized enough to have compassion and smart enough to have…
Posted in: Official defends secrecy over worst-case nuclear disaster scenario
Of six categories measured, California-based Apple ranked top in financial performance, products & services, vision &…
Posted in: Apple dethrones Google as company with most respected image in eyes of consumers
Obviously he took the cabbie's cell phone to prevent him calling in the theft right away.…
Posted in: Passenger robs taxi driver, then steals cab in Ibaraki
What a sad end for a "Gangster" - getting gunned down in a cheap-as-chips family restaurant.…
Posted in: Former gang member shot dead in Denny's restaurant in Chiba
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Eurasiatrash
This is a world wide thing. There was an incident in Sweden a number of years ago where a guy executed a family. The chicks loved him because he was 'sooooo hot' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikita_Fouganthine
He's not hot, he's a murderer.
Posted in: Airhead female fans can't get enough of 'cool' accused killer Ichihashi
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Eurasiatrash
Woo-hoo! Magic underwear!
Posted in: Mormon church to build 5 new temples worldwide, including one in Sapporo
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Eurasiatrash
mindovermater - what you state is simply untrue. Japan does NOT limit foreign ownership of publicly traded companies like a lot of other countries do. A couple of examples that spring to mind just off the top of my head are Thailand and India, where you have a special foreign board where the stock trades for non-domestic entities. One quick look at the holders list for JAL shows the 11th biggest shareholder as a foreign fund. A lot of other countries opposes foreign ownership of power companies and infrastructure, something that is NOT limited in Japan.
As to the question of whether the J-gov't should allow JAL to fail, why not ask the public? In the end it will be your taxes paying to bail the company out. Another question to ask would be, will it be cheaper in the long run to support JAL? Letting the company fail might have greater implications as a bankrupcy not only affects the company in question, but all other companies, foreign and domestic, affiliated with JAL. Not to mention all the job that are likely to be lost.
Posted in: Should public funds be used to bail out big companies like JAL?