Tokyo is BANNING Drinking in Public (and it doesn't make much sense)
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- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
- Shibuya - one of Tokyo's biggest nightlife districts - is banning public alcohol consumption. Goodbye, Shibuya Meltdown.
Edited by Luke: / lukecraigphoto
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no drinking
fox only
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Fox only😂
Read first two: "oh I'm not gonna get this" Read others: "Oh some ppl aren't gonna get this"
Actually, nice Old Lady's GOSSIPING UP A STORM on their Apartment Building Stoops. Drinking Small Asahis, Sapporos, & Sojus. WILL BE THE ONE'S TO PUSH BACK THE MOST ! They will absolutely VILLIFY ANY COP who attempts to Ticket, Fine, or Scold them !...Local Tokyo LDP will likely get Classist and insult said Old Ladies & Retirees and further screw up !
Not the comment I expected, but the comment we deserved
This comment makes me so happy 🥹
The "Shibuya Meltdown" may still indeed happen; the ban is on 'drinking in public' not 'being drunk in public' - so there is still plenty of opportunities to meet people who are already "gassed up" as it were. Especially if they are slamming down beers to keep from getting their drinks confiscated.
just drink in a pub. most countries dont allow public drinking. whats the difference between drinking outside and drinking in pub. i agree with this. because now we wont have so many drunken idiots in the street
@@gamer4ever838 The difference is that it costs ten times more and you're in a stuffy room having to wait for the waitress, etc.
Sitting in a beautiful park with great weather is just better in every way. They have loads of spotless public toilets everywhere in Tokyo as well.
The drunken idiots or sleeping people won't magically vanish either...
Yeah go inside your hotel room. get drunk. then go outside and wander around. This is what all the broke tourists will do. Other people with actual lives and arent broke while on vacation will just do what everyone else does. want to interact with people drinking? Go to a bar.
@@gamer4ever838 in perth, australia, bars are about 2-6x more expensive for most types of drinks, especially spirits, vs buying at a bottle shop. but buying drinks in a bottle shop is already about 3x more expensive than american or european countries with comparable income due to the taxes and import fees. the end result is that a 30mL shot of spirits costs ~AU$10 which is about $6 USD. 1L bottle (33x 30 mL serves) is usually AU$50-70 ($33 - $45 USD). you are paying >6x more to drink in a bar. I looked it up and in some US states you can get an entire bottle of vodka for the price of 1 shot of the stuff in a bar in Australia. It might even be more expensive in the eastern states than perth, and dont get me started on airports (2x price of bars. - I looked it up, one spot in perth airport is doing stein mugs of tap beers for ~AU$30 ≈ $20 USD for 1 GLASS.)
most normal people who dont spend wildly would limit themselves if they know they have to drink in a bar simply because of the cost. thats probably what the law is going for.
@@DerRabenbarde I get that, but this is just the way the government is going about addressing the issue in the first place. I mean, if you have a suggestion that could result in a win-win for all parties involved then go for it man. They go for an approach like this because being nuanced and pedantic about a place as a big as Shibuya would require too much manpower, funding, coordination and all that jazz to be efficient and effective with it. Might as well just ban it altogether for the time being
Just put your booze in a reusable Starbucks cup
Modern problems require modern solutions 🤣
tell me the difference between an ice tea bottle with ice tea and an ice tea bottle with whiskey.
Wine in a coke can 👌🥸
Ah so Japan is catching up with the brown paper bag loophole like in US.
@@theshadowman1398 Sadly doesn't work that way
Japans local police commonly target people that look like Joey
This puts biracial, and mixed japanese citizens at more risk then they are already placed in
Japan isn't so fortuanate to be as centered in that manner like in the US
Friendship ended with Shibuya meltdown. Now Suginami meltdown is my new best friend
Please don't become one of those annoying foreigners. Don't get deported.
Sydney guy here with a fridge full of Asahi and burst out laughing when you mentioned Aussie's drinking from like 10am and my eyes darted to my windows clock and it literally clicked over to 10am. Beer'o'clock has just started.
It's fine to drink at home in Japan. The problem arises when people seek loopholes in the law to cause trouble in public places. Joey seems to be encouraging this behavior.
@@gotakazawa408 That only is happening because of the nonsensical laws being put in place. Shibuya is creating it's own problems for itself.
@@DaftRaincloud Your thinking is completely mistaken. You've been brainwashed by Joey's biased videos, haven't you? The measures taken by Shibuya this time are experimental. However, if there are many people looking for loopholes in the law, this regulation could be expanded nationwide in Japan, and restrictions on foreign entry could become stricter.
@@DaftRaincloud public intoxication ain't nice to see
@@gotakazawa408 Nationwide? Highly doubt that.
joey on youtube: talking about japanese news
meanwhile aki his gf on youtube: torturing her self in old japanese style
The duality of man
Truth
*chefs kiss* duality at its finest ❤
There goes my hopes of Konbini Confessions coming back…
fml
@@mr.jellyfish5544 man... konbini confessions is a youtuber.
FFR 😭
So long it’s not in Shibuya ;)
the osaka episodes are something else though
One of the laws that doesn't get enforced but will definitely be slapped on if you get arrested
With police being reactive to foreign looking citizens this is sure to isolate them more from society despite being natural biracial or mixed raced japanese citizens
Poland did that maybe around 10 years ago and didn't change anything. There stil lare drunk people walking around and making noise, they only get drunk in bars, pubs and clubs.
“If there is a rule most Japanese people will follow it” except when talking about traffic laws, both for bicycles and cars, mostly I just see them ignoring it, especially outside of the main centers 🙄
@Yuberich bikes shouldn't be in cities tbh
@@longiusaescius2537 How about places like the suburbs and smaller cities. My city is 2 hours outside of Tokyo by train, and people CANNOT drive here. I watched a person literally crash into the median and then drive off in their busted car.
@@TakaComics then you improve rail, subway regional and tram
@@longiusaescius2537no, cars shouldn't be in cities
@@Hugo-pj4bm arterial roads should have a single one way car lane, tram lanes on both sides one contraflow, 7ft wide bike lanes one way on each side then 15ft wide or more sidewalks.
Most people should use walking and railway tram & subway instead of bikes or car
To be fair, alcohol consumption is banned in many public places in the US... except in parts of Orlando apparently.
So? That's American affairs- Japanese affairs aren't American affairs
yeah because the US and Japan have a lot in common, specially public transport and the omnipresent need of a car to go anywhere
Ignore the people being salty because you stated a fact
@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 u can't even drink in Saudi Arabia 🙄 whats your point
Depends if it's at a resraunt or walking a drinking than yea
I believe they assume that people drinking outside leads to drunk behavior outside which is false because people cna still get shitfaced inside, and then go have a "meltdown" outside.
and if anything, people who like to get wild or just lose their shit more easily when drinking if anything- would avoid the streets and stay behind closed doors because out on the streets, especially in japan, the police will quickly be called on you if you're giving anyone trouble, but in bars and such, you're more likely to be tolerated.
Yea I see a lot of comments saying this is a good thing and will increase public order lol it won't really. This is just to make people drink in bars and spend more money which is more money for public officals tax revenue.
Correct sir, thats how it is pretty much everywhere. People get shitfsced inside and go ham in the street afterwards. This law will not change a damn thing, except for maybe loitering.
You literally have to conceal or put your alcohol in paper bags to drink alcohol. I'm not surprised but recreational drinking bans are pretty common around the world.
That's not the fundamental issue.
Banning drinking to a legal hardworking adult in public is mearly a distraction that puts responsability on the wrong people. Their authority should have reformed, not their people
If like in europe Japan encourages paper bag usage- the local police (as joey has stated) would disproportionally target biracial, mixed, or ("""foreign looking""") Japanese citizens
it's a holistic issue
Which is why it's hard to explain with little words or without getting off topic and recentering
But sadly it would feed into the discrimination natural japanese citizens experience- isolating them if it's further implemented nationally
This person is right. Public drinking is banned in a lot of countries
@@tapper9151 People still drink through loopholes
For example in Europe people use paper bags
In Japan though, the police are reactive over proactive so if the paper bag method were to implemented, as Joey stated before- the police disproportionally go up to ""foreign""-looking individuals such as himself
This puts bi-racial, mixed race, or ""foreign"" naturalized Japanese citizens into another precarious situation
They already get their transportation passes and IDs checked disproportionally as well
It sacrifices the ease of life for the citizens instead of placing the responsibility on the local authority
And that’s part of what makes Japan fun for foreigners
I'm from the US and when I was in Japan, I drank when I felt like it..with my jet lag I'd wake up at 2am and went to the closest Torikizoku to drink and eat. I never really drank in Shibuya but I'd get smashed at Yoyogi Park in Shinjuku from Jim Beam highballs and then hit up my favorite pizza spot "Lads Dining". I was by myself and tried to be mindful of others and not act out, but it also lead me into lots of friendships by drinking at random times in the day.
As long not overly done
Didn't the japanese government say in recent year young people aren't drinking enough. Governments love to have this fine control over people. Similar to how in Calgary Canada the mayor told everyone to drink beer to conserve water (this is not an exaggeration, she said this....... they are going through a 5-6 week water shortage)
It may actually be more to address tourists and garbage on the streets that they are trying to indirectly deal with.
@@MizuShinobi303That’s just an excuse they perfectly found themselves.
@@Senaru I agree. More and more they are also trying to find ways to control people not of their country.
@@MizuShinobi303this is likely the case. In reality the majority of people drinking late night on the street are Japanese and they too are littering and making a mess in general. Tourist are largely there to go to bars, restaurants and clubs because they have money to spend. Japans economy is not doing well so many of their youth can drink for much cheaper on the street. The Japanese govt even encouraged the youth to drink more just a couple of years ago to boost the economy lol
I'm guessing the Calgary mayor doesn't know that beer actually dehydrates you?
Most people in Shibuya weren't actually drinking in public, they were being drunk in public.
Being forced to discard your alcohol is actually a harsh punishment. 😢
For beer lovers 🍺
"Fine officer, I'll discard my alcohol." chugs the drink down
@@RedOneM not if you are Japanese. The culture wouldn’t allow for such behavior.
@@RedOneM not if your actually japan3se. Doing that sly move is not the norm culturally.
Found the alcoholic
NOT THE CUPCAKKE "GULP GULP GULP GULP" LMAO
That’s fucking lame. Drinking while walking around was one of my favorite things to do in Tokyo. Lame.
They concern of people that trash the can and be drunked making loud noise or start fighting xD
Drinking in public in Japan really sucks. I had a drunk old man literally throw his full strong zero can at me for no reason. And all the drunk people in public make places feel unsafe. I support the ban. Drinking in public is the worst part of Tokyo. So glad I moved away from the nightlife to small town kyushu.
It's banned in half of europe so it's not surprising and it does make sense. Countries where it's legal have considerably more cases of drunk driving.
Banning nighttime alcohol sales in Germany reduced simple assault and aggravated assault by more than 8%, alcohol-related hospitalizations among adolescents and young adults by about seven percent, car accidents by 20%.
That's good
@@Ron0189Theres a reason why Prohibition doesnt work. Same logic used to enforce that law
@@traplover6357 This isn't prohibition, just a regulation.
@@traplover6357 When will this meme die? Prohibition has been shown to work extremely well when done properly.
Idk I seen a lot of news of people vandalizing and doing weird things to structures with importance as of recently. People have gone crazy to have number go bigger online.
Many countries like for example Lithuania in EU have complete public drinking bans - that is one can only drink at home or bars-restaurants.
It isn't especially outrageous or anything and keeps public order.
Not when it's engrained into society and they are the country that made a word for passing from overworking
Do they want their public to keep finding reasons to not find it all worth it?
All they're gonna do is make it sneakier to do but it's not addressing the actual issue which has been the trend in Japan for years
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 Lithuania is probably top5 in the world in alcohol consumption and public drinking is still banned. Japan merely adopted the alcohol, Lithuania was born in it.
You do this in the UK and society will collapse
@@Rainnnny And? Japan founded the word for overwork and ie. It's no competition about drinking- this is about citizens finding a reason for the next day after their hardwork
The fault shouln't be placed on their citizens, this should've been the local authorities better initiative, not another burden for their locals
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 Ever heard of whataboutism? The fact that it's already a regulation in quite a lot of first world countries, and nation-wide there on top of that, means there's a lot of data to go by. Meanwhile, this time it's just a regulation for a very small area in Shibuya, yet people are acting like their own freedoms are being taken away, even though many people here aren't even personally affected by it since this is a channel for an international audience.
so what im hearing is Tokyo is entering their Prohibition Era.
Japan's way of solving issue is basically that stick a tape to cover hole water tank meme
It makes perfect sense. Look up ANN news clip 渋谷の路上飲み実態 about 路上飲酒 and you see there's just loads of foriengers treating Shibuya like a trash bin leaving empty cans on the street and making a lot of noise. It doesn't even feel like Japan... They can go and drink inside and be civil. Japan is not a place for those type of personalities, if they want to drink and make 騒ぎ on the streets they can go to Ibiza or something.
@kougamishinya6566 just deport them tbh
one thing that can help is to require a VISA for USA citizens traveling to Japan. That'll weed out some of the more trashy tourists. Right now anyone w/ a US passport can enter Japan for 90 days. Not sure how it works for UK and Australia.
@@ChimpoLust or just require N5
Tokyo’s Shibuya celebrations of Halloween and New Year’s Eve will never be the same!
They weren’t since corona anyways
By the time when I will be visiting Japan, all the "tradicional" and "hot stuff" will be banned for tourists and the worst part for the japonese people themselves...🤦♂️
Please don’t jinx it 🥺
Welcome to the world "RIGHT-WINGERS" want !
you can thank your fellow tourists for being disrespectful assholes
Your prediction might not be a joke. With so many issues arising from tourism, it's only natural for Japan to limit foreign tourists.
@nicholausbuthmann1421 when the poor illegals dont get free food for driving over pedestrians
People aren't having enough kids and asking to work more hours...
What can we do?
Oh yes I know!!!
Let ban public drinking!!!
Indeed. The goverment is simply so out of touch.
gov needs to touch some ass
This is a good decision tho in general , lots of countries have public drinking banned , the only ones against this are prolly alcoholics
You are effectively saying "Public drinking leads to more child birth." Seriously?
You can probably count the number of Love Hotels in all of Shibuya on one hand. These people wouldn't be able to afford hotels if they can't afford a seat at a bar. Does the sex have to be public too?
And are these the ideal people and the ideal circumstances for a child's conception?
@@DGen7 Japanese citizens are finding less of a reason to be alive and present and their population is showing that
Banning drinking to a legal hardworking adult in public is mearly a distraction that puts responsability on the wrong people. Their authority should have reformed, not their people
If like in europe it encourages paper bag usage- the local police (as joey has stated) would disproportionally target biracial, mixed, or ("""foreign looking""") Japanese citizens
it's a holistic issue
Which is why it's hard to explain with little words
Get the paper bags out or use a juice bottle. 😂
I go to Shibuya most weekends and over the last few weeks I’ve noticed lots of cops and security guards walking around with megaphones yelling at people who are drinking on the sidewalk
In the UK, We have police around during the weekends. I work in a nightclub and people aren't allowed to takes drink outside the club.
I don't mind this.
Same, and making this news like a big problem is totally dramatic content imo.
@@ochtiy Your a loser.
I think as long as you’re not being a public nuisance you’ll be fine.
*As long as you're a Japanese saleryman
California. It’s illegal to drink in “public”. You can’t have an open container of alcohol. $1,000 fine. State park campgrounds are ok to drink if you stay overnight.
I would say it make sense. Drunken people on the street is not a good idea
That's not gonna stop it dude
You're suppose to go drink with your boss- its engrained in their culture that there will be drunk people on the streets, not they're just gonna be sneakier about it and it's not illegal to be drunk in public
I mean honestly, I think like there won't be less drunk people on the street (the people will still get drunk), they just won't get drunk while being out on the street
I think this ban will do little, but I also think it is not a big deal as a lot of places ban drinking in public, or drinking outside of restaurants areas (yk if you can sit outside and stuff)
So imo not a big deal and it will just make it so that establishments will make more money when people go drinking inside lol
Japanese salary man lying in their puke on some streets during evenings and nights is honestly so bad that majority of Japanese think something should be done about it.
Exactly, people who get so drunk that they can't walk properly shouldn't be drinking in the first place. It's incredibly annoying when they start fights on the streets or behave in other disruptive ways. This is my personal opinion as a Japanese person.
@@gotakazawa408 Well this law isn't going to target that issue
It's gonna target tourists, biracial, and mixed individuals disproportionally due to local police culture
They aren't stopping not minimizing drinking, they are stigmatizing the bottles; They aren't stigmatizing the beverage
There are bars and alcoholic vending machines they could have regulated, yet they chose the adult common spaces at their sacrifice
That's what i'm trying to say
If the paper bag method were to work then Joey shouldn't be disproportionally targeted for the same action
Dude, if you're gonna do the news commentary thing, please read the entire article first. Otherwise, you're just regurgitating as you go. Unsub.
This makes perfect since in my opinion. I don’t know why you would want or allow people to drink outside of an establishment or home. Drunk people are usually hazardous to themselves and those around them. Especially in social areas alcohol consumption should be monitored by bartenders and those responsible for selling/serving alcohol. As where people buying alcohol from stores don’t have restrictions on when where or how much they drink, WHICH IS DANGEROUSLY STUPID. So yes these people should be limited to only being able to consume inside of their homes or social establishments that allow drinking.
I agree with you; it seems that issues like this have a sort of vacuum principle; when something is taken away, there is always something else there to fill in for it. And in many cases it creates even bigger problems. For example the heroin/fentanyl epidemic in the US. Its a real shit show.
To be fair, this is pretty standard across most of the world now.
*Islamic Word + USA
Not the rest.
@@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece
*Islamic Word + USA + Mexico
@@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece + Europe, being drunk in public is not allowed in most countries here. Drinking in public isn't either.
@@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece
don't forget Eastern Europe
Yea not in most of the civilized world though
Ban in shibuya. Everyone goes to shinjuku. Lol
Ten AM? It's five o'clock in Mecha, so drink up!!
Japan: we need more young people to drink
Also Japan: we need to ban drinking on the streets
Lol
I'm visiting in July and the ban goes into effect in October? Finally some luck!
Hope you have fun! We'd love to hear your stories :>
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 Thank you so much for that!
me looking at the sake bottle and saying hawk tuah and then eying the police officer.
if you need alcohol to have fun then you dont really yet know how to have fun without losing control over yourself lol
Alternatively, a discerning person can drink alcohol and still behave properly.
Yes, it's quite a child-like interpretation to assume alcohol means you lose control of yourself or that adults can't self regulate
There are ranges of alcohol from sake beers, heavy-heavy liquors
Banning drinking in public to a legal hardworking adult puts responsability on the wrong people. Their authority should have reformed, not their people
With the lack of incentives for adults to persist, removing a common space isn't very helpful
If like in europe it encourages paper bag usage- the local police (as joey has stated) would disproportionally target biracial, mixed, or ("""foreign looking""") Japanese citizens which is the main issue of this law being implemented
it's a holistic issue
Which is why it's hard to explain with little words or without explaining other parts of their culture
nerd take
I'm not drinking, but probably just for not drunk and causing scene in public? Maybe.....?
Uh, is it not illegal to drink out in public in a lot of countries? I know its a stupid law. Since you can buy and drink unlimited amount of alcohol if you are outside on private property.
I recommend researching why it's illegal in many countries but permitted in Japan. It sheds light on a unique aspect of Japanese culture. Unfortunately, Joey seems to lack that knowledge.
@@gotakazawa408Joey lacks the knowledge.... Yeah sure
@@Dwd84 He does, in many areas.
cant even drink? whats next? ban food and photosynthesis?
That's like the Netherlands (except cafe and festival grounds). You can't drink in public except in designated areas or at home.
hm no it's actually the opposite? it is legal to drink anywhere unless forbidden signage is in place
@@davidf760Bullshit.
It is not allowed to drink in public places unless it's a event or carnaval
@@rapthor666 isnt that like most places in europe?
@@Zeitgeist6 probably, only drink at home and whisky tastings
RULES RULES RULES RUKES RULES!!!! Too many japan!!!! 😩
canada dry.
I immediately went to the comments to see if any other Canadians pointed that out lol
Thats a law in most countries, including mine, so it doesnt shock me.
If public drinking was really an issue, why don't they just remove the alcohol vending machines that seem to be everywhere?!
Literally. In the US alcohol isn’t in 7/11’s you have to go to a liquor store! And depending where you are it can be pretty out of your way. It’s as easy to get sake in Japan as it is coffee lol
@@mario98730 USA and sweden are probably the only countries that have these liquor stores, why cant you just buy booze at the supermarket or convenient stores on the go...
@@mario98730what are you talking about? Sure liquor isn't sold in 7/11. But they do sell beer, malt liquor and things like 4loko...
@@Jellyfish60 Sweden's liquor stores are a government monopoly though (literally speaking, the store brand is owned by the Swedish government and is the only liquor store allowed in Sweden), so grouping the liquor stores in the US to the liquor stores in Sweden isn't really correct per se. They're two very different systems.
@@mario98730 I can get beer in 7/11 in the US. Only handful of states or county make you buy from a liqour store.
I feel like japan really suffers from the highly increased tourism. People are really abiding by the rules and were not ready for all those chinese, american and whatever tourists that don't do so. You see a new video every other week where there are new restrictions to this, bans of that and so on. You have limitations, high increases in prices, tourist scams and fees. I'm curious of what the average japan travel experience will look like in a year.
China and Japan have a longer history that they've sorted between themselves over japan and america
This still really impacts people that look like joey
Biracial mixed japanese citizens
They already are quite exculded in society- this will not be helping
7:52 I think that s exactly why, they do not want to hurt Japanese people imho but they want to have a say whenever TOURISTS misbehave, NOW they will have a bigger range to actually have the pretext and do something I guess. whenever another r cist f er appears. and there is also the offset of Japanese people being less rowdy, cu zthey follow the rules anyway. ( not like they were rowdy probably )
7:26 So don't be like Johnny Somali...got it!
This is an L take Joey, whether this new law works or not depends solely on enforcement, give enough tickets and people will know the government means business and wont fuck around to find out, also if you want tourist to follow the law then the Japanese need to take the lead because lets be honest, 9 out of 10 times when a tourist isn’t sure if he/she is allowed to do something, they look around and see if the locals do it or not.
I don't think you understand the political courruption in thier authority systems
This is yet just an other right taken away from Japanese adult workers that really have been asking the question "what's it all for? cant have fun"
Banning public drinking makes sense to me.
A guy in the train I was on was removed from the train because he had an open bottle of beer.
And this is from the country that claimed young people should drink more..
Wow, a misleading thumbnail AND video title. At this point why not just call it "Japan is banning all alcohol" 😅
He realized mid video
Not really surprising. Japan always punishes everyone for the actions of a few.
Crazy thing is that it's not even gonna impact the drunk individuals on the streets
Drinking in public isn’t a harsh ban, it’s one present in a big part of Europe. Just do your drinking in bars, clubs or at someone’s house.
The issue with this ban is that it's distracting us from legislature paying mind to the wrong issue- they're also putting the responsability on their citizen while their local authority aren't spending their working hours effectively
Japan isn't Europe- a lot of things point to that. Explaining them all is unvieling Japans specific type of corruption
My apologize I have the right words for my concerns now
"Japanese citizens are finding less of a reason to be alive and present and their population is showing that
Banning drinking to a legal hardworking adult in public is mearly a distraction that puts responsability on the wrong people. Their authority should have reformed, not their people
If like in europe it encourages paper bag usage- the local police (as joey has stated) would disproportionally target biracial, mixed, or ("""foreign looking""") Japanese citizens
it's a holistic issue
Which is why it's hard to explain with little words"
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 Thank you for the clarified explaination. You are right, Japan isn't Europe and as such the ban might have negative effects not often seen here.
Japanese govt is making some weird decisions past few months...
No shit. For japanese people
Honestly, I prefer if people didn't drink in public. And by that, outside a bar/restaurant. It upsets me so much to see VVDVV selling beer in the parks. It's a park designed for kids. Kids don't need to see people chugging their possibly 20th beer. I long since stopped going because of that (among other things). Not to mention the littering. Had I not been vvearing tennis shoes vvhile vvalking dovvn the sidevvalk in my tovvn, I'd have glass in my feet. I still remember stores not selling alcohol after a certain time or day.
Kind of reminds me of how they limited alcohol content of beer here for the longest time. Therefore making alcohol drinkers merely more broke to achieve the same amount of drunk and more fat from the empty calories. How did that make anything better for anyone? Even the beer companies weren't having it because then they have to process the beer further to drop the alcohol adding further cost and labor.
Prohibitive measures never help solve drug and alcohol related problems and often just create new ones. We already have history to tell us how this works.
Nothing the Japanese authorities do ever makes much sense. If anything it's generally quite contradictory.
In America some cities have "entertainment districts" where you can walk around with a beer or drink from the local places or during festivals. It's to encourage visiting these multiple local businesses. It's usually not a particularly large area from the ones I've seen.
Banning drinking in public doesn't sound like a bad idea 💡. I guess alcoholics would not like this new law 😂.
Japan is full of alcoholics....with alcohol intolerance
I mean, this is only if you insist on sticking to the tourist areas. Me and my friends in Yokohama on the other hand: This law literally has no effect. I get the message Shibuya City is trying to send here, but it’s not going to be as effective as they expect it to be.
There's so much more to this issue, pardon me copying and pasting what i've previously wrote"Japanese citizens are finding less of a reason to be alive and present and their population is showing that
Banning drinking to a legal hardworking adult in public is mearly a distraction that puts responsability on the wrong people. Their authority should have reformed, not their people
If like in europe it encourages paper bag usage- the local police (as joey has stated) would disproportionally target biracial, mixed, or
("""foreign looking""") Japanese citizens
it's a holistic issue
Which is why it's hard to explain with little words
"That initial ban came in response to the increasing violence and vandalism on and around Halloween night in Shibuya"
Yeah remember the last one in particular was SPECIALLY crazy
You can have fun without drinking alcohol. Some people don't want to see or hear drunk people. It's annoying and disgusting.
It's way less annoying or disgusting than expecting everyone else to modify their behaviour to make you comfortable. Sorry but the rest of us aren't just minor characters in the movie of your life.
Finally someone said it. They annoy me as well. If you can't handle being drunk and start getting annoying to others then don't drink
@@tcrime pot calling the kettle black
@@tcrime Name one negative side of banning drinking alcohol. Just one. I have had Jin, Vodka, Beers, Wine I just cannot wrap my head around the desire for drinking alcohol. Which is the deadliest of all psychostimulant consumption primarily on the basis of how common its consumption is. And in your argument, you were not able to name 1 logical/rational argument besides "i am an adult I do what I want" good for you mate.
@@reck_er5003 A negative being that going out would be much more boring.
Is this effective immediately? Im going in two weeks 🤧
Not until October.
I dont drink so it doesnt affect me 😂
same.
japan turning into taliban
A lot of countries ban public drinking. This guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about
Several things will happen. Get turnt before going places. Get extremely turnt causing trouble inside places (unfortunately people go outside because most businesses don't have enough room for a mass amount of friends that want to socialize) 3. People will move to local areas
I'm sure the public order will deteriorate.
Shibuya used to be a student town, but now it's full of foreigners like Roppongi before. Roppongi used to be the number one illegal drug town in Japan, but now Shibuya has become the worst illegal drug town.
nuts.
Roppongi has been successfully cleaned up through the efforts of residents. Now, Shibuya feels like it's not even in Japan. It's become a place even Japanese people try to avoid if possible. This is a test case to observe the situation, and if it doesn't improve, stricter laws will likely evolve.
@@gotakazawa408 But the issue is not tourists
around 99% of the drunk people are Japanese
most of the drunkard issues come from the Japanese drunks
@@mk_gamíng0609 What is your basis for saying 99%? While I won't deny that most incidents involve Japanese people, it's a fact that safety has deteriorated, especially in recent years. One contributing factor is tourists who have learned they can drink on the streets. Comparing Shibuya from a few years ago to now makes this obvious. I've seen it firsthand-have you actually checked for yourself?
@@mk_gamíng0609
@@mk_gamíng0609 No, a large percentage of street drinkers in Shibuya are foreigners.
It's like the konbini Mount fuji problem, I read that the screen they put already have holes 😂
In reality, there will likely be a need for stricter entry regulations for foreign tourists. Many of them fundamentally struggle to grasp the differences between "freedom" and "self-indulgence." Their adherence to the law is often questionable.
I mean idk most places have a public drinking ban , but tbh if thwyre gonna make illiegal it should be a federal law
It should be a federal initiative to stop working laws from allowing people to overwork themselves
Makes sense to do city by city. It's not like they are going for national alcohol prohibition, just local communities deciding they want drunk people in bars instead of wandering the sidewalk. No biggie.
Saudia Arabia 😂
@@pointless.speculations6741 It's illegal to drink in public, not to be drunk in public
You're falling for the same issue a misread statistic can lead you too- a false sense of security through forged numbers/laws
Prohibition never works. I don't drink anymore myself, but have fun trying to tell people who are already drunk to do something they don't want to do. People will still be able to go to the bars, drink, and then leave drunk, and I suspect that those are the people who will be drinking outside afterwards
Just been drinking in the red area last week and a cop came up to us and just told us to be careful after drinking alcohol. Didn’t know it was not allowed to drink there. We as well drank in front of the Shibuya station police booth and they didn’t mind.
But also we ve been chill and relaxed, so that might been a thing for them as well.
It might have been a blessing in disguise. Imagine if things got out of hand and turned into a fight. They could end up spending their valuable hotel stay in a Japanese detention center.
🗣️GAWK GAWK GAWK 🗣️
No objections from me to this ban.
Of course you don't AdrianAlexAnderveidt, because you couldn't care less for adults mental states and rights to self regulate in a country they already have to overwork themselves
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138womp womp
@@warshallwathers7971 What will you do to bring happiness to the Japanese citizens
Tell them "womp womp" when they bring up a concern
Geez thanks mom
phrases like womp womp have genuinely ruined meaningful discussions that could actually lead to people being more open minded and educated lol
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138 And you honestly think that the solution to depression or mental disorders is alcohol?
Nope, it isn't. If anything stop drinking it's only a positive.
I'm from a country of raging alcoholics where public drinking is illegal all year round 24/7 [aka you cannot have an open beer outside a private residence or licensed establishment] and there is a boatload of alcohol [and testosterone] related violence in the streets even with nobody physically drinking outside. I don't know who thought this was a good idea, but they need to do more research especially case studies. Though strangely most of the violence or accidents happen between 12am-2am [when most establishments legally need to stop selling alcohol] - in both "areas for working adults"m tourists areas & university areas. [our legal drinking age ahs been 18 for the past 30 years, before that it was 21].
Where I live in NC public drinking has been illegal for ages. Honestly, I thought that's how it was most places.
Yeah, people being upset are really surprising me lol. NYC has the same rule and nightlife is doing just fine
If you travel you'll see how different most places are from the US. Also most non Americans probably don't know what NC means.
@@sephiroth7655 I wish I had the money to travel 😭 I would go to Japan in a heartbeat
In Japan, alcohol consumption is allowed in public outdoor places like parks because order is generally maintained. It's considered the norm. While I understand that many countries do not permit this, the issue arises with the increasing number of foreign tourists who abuse this privilege.
@gotakazawa408 I live in Japan. Japanese people abuse this privilege just as much if not more than foreigners
Saying that people just drink on the streets at any time of the day like it's something special, and I'm sitting here in Germany wondering why you'd word it like that before I remembered that America exists xD
Shibuya is the only one for now, but if things get worse, it'll spread to all of Tokyo. Shibuya is seriously chaotic-trash is scattered everywhere after people drink, and some even sleep on the streets. It's no wonder this is happening with tourists getting out of hand.
Before that, it would be quicker to regulate foreign tourists. It would be a waste of taxpayer money and restrict the actions of law-abiding Japanese people to spread and strengthen enforcement throughout Tokyo and across Japan. Foreign tourists are not bringing in an equivalent amount of money to Japan.
one thing that can help is to require a VISA for USA citizens traveling to Japan. That'll weed out some of the more trashy tourists. Right now anyone w/ a US passport can enter Japan for 90 days. Not sure how it works for UK and Australia.
If it was getting to the stage that alcohol was causing a massive problem in Shibuya, making weed legal or at the very least decriminalised would’ve been a great option. But unfortunately the 1980s attitudes to drugs still remains.
It’s okay, shibuya is pretty dead recently 😢 everyone does the old shibuya style drinking in ueno nowadays. The shibuya ward polis probably don’t want all the smoke that comes with the party life and is just creating plausible deniability 😅
While we’re the topic, On a recent trip a month or two ago, i saw a a rowdy drunk dude get carried away by police at Harajuku station.
Just an interesting moment from the trip.
It's going to be one of those laws they're not going to enforce but they can use when they really need to do something. There's also the added effect of deterrence.
Imagine if they get out of control and it turns into a fight.
They could end up spending their precious hotel stay in a Japanese detention center.
in the istanbul, governorship banned alcohol in street parks beaches, etc. (outside except indoors that allowed to sell alcohol and home) they say there is a penalty, but they are not allowed to do this. They can't say to the police that they want to put penalties to the people that drink alcohol, constitution doesn't allow this. So where drinking is popular people will drink but except that not too much people drinks alcohol outside in turkey but if they want they can. Example they put some rules with penalties because of covid, police gave penalties to the people that does not want to wear mask etc. But 2 years later they refunded all penalties because they didn't allowed to put rules with penalties like this they needed to put this rules via parliament but they didn't.
Josh, you know the golden rule is that you drink after 12 pm, also great video
LMAO RED CUP RULE! As long as it's in a cup where no one can see what it is, it's ok! LMAO that was the rule at my college. ^_^ It will be applied here since how will they know? Security would only yell at us if it was in the original alcohol container since cops can see that, hence putting it in another cup. lol Then we don't care. I have a feeling that this is going to happen there.
So they're only banning alcoholic beverages?
In public in certan districts 03:15
@@thatonellamawhoissoobsesse8138and at certain hours
@@Tobythesammich Still leaves room for issues if the paper bag metiod is "allowed"
I live in Switzerland and I find this strange cause our countries are usually similar in how regulated they are. Its very simple what you have to do, penalize people if they are loud or causing disorder. In Swiss u can go straight to jail if you are too loud after a certain hour, its kind of like a noise law. Further, for loitering you get fined from 150 to 300 CHF. The difference is probably that Swiss will report you if they see you do shit like this. Probably the Japanese people wont cause they are inherently argument avoiders. So in that case more law enforcement officers are needed to check the area in later hours. That simple. There is no other way to keep order but by first establishing a strict environment by law.
its no big deal. this is such a non-story its not even worth talking about...I had the opportunity to do that on my last 2 trips but just didnt....kinda pointless when you can just go into a bar. A tourist drinking on the street where you dont even know where you are and cant even speak the language that well just makes you look awkward and unwanted. The locals can get away with that because they live there.
Its a good thing tbh. the area will look nicer and cleaned up. Hopefully they enact a penalty for foreigners.
It just makes it the Japanese citizens mess to clean up instead of putting the precedent on their local authority
That's why it's an issue- gives another reason for their citizens to struggle with no reward
Just realized to highlight that foreign looking locals would be targeted
It's still a harmful precedent knowing how the local police targets people that look like Joey or different in many ways
You'd think it makes more sense to make "Drunk in public" the offense. After all drinking in public isn't the problem until someone lets themselves get visibly/foolishly drunk.
I always find it funny when people look at the American Prohibition and say, "that's a great idea, let's try it here." Or maybe they didn't look at it. They really should...
Ngl, this law feels like a bandaid solution. Like, yeah, tourists are there for a good time, and when alcohol is involved (especially if alcohol is cheaper and more readily available than it is in their home country), they can get pretty rowdy so it makes sense to try and mitigate that to less busy/crowded areas to minimise the potential damage and public disruptions caused (though the fact there's no penalty isn't going to do much).
But as someone who has lived and worked in Japan, there is a wider problem with the drinking of culture of Japan if they really wanted to address public drunkenness (including the "Shibuya meltdown" phenomenon), perhaps they should start with the work culture and the expectation that workers do an abundance of unpaid overtime, with a poor work-life balance often leading to mental health problems that can contribute to addictions like alcoholism; something which could be achieved through increased amounts of paid leave, tighter laws requiring paid overtime and harsher penalties on companies for breaking those laws. They could also start working to destigmatise mental health and make treatments more accessible so that people aren't turning to alcohol and other addictions to cope (additionally making rehabilitation treatments more accessible for those who are dealing with these addictions).
They could also address the mandatory drinking sessions that workers are expected to have with their bosses on a regular basis which can be mitigated through stronger laws protecting workers against unfair dismissals, so there's less fear of repercussions for saying no to these drinking nights. Another commenter mentioned pulling alcoholic vending machines in Japan; while many of them were pulled from the Olympics, these vending machines still exist, so putting a ban on them which will decrease the accessibility of alcohol in public spaces for both locals and tourists. You could also stop konbini's from selling alcohol in these areas so that people drinking will be limited to licensed bars and restaurants, which will also help surrounding businesses. If they really wanted to, they could also advise businesses to cut people off after a certain number of drinks in order to mitigate excessive alcohol consumption.
I know Japan is very resistant to any kind of structural change, but I feel like these kinds of solutions would be so much more effective than just simply slapping people on the wrist for drinking on the street within relatively small area of commercial ward that is literally known for its nightlife.
I agree, thank you for informing us
Though I appreciate the extreme content of information- i know others are quick to avoid reading it due to the length
You having anecdotal evidence being a previously living in Japan individual should give them more reason to heed your concerns- though i cannot say they would unless it were to be more consice
I also hope Japan will reform wisely for their work environment- it really would help their economy