JAL’s Pilot Drinking Problem Part of Larger Workplace Culture

Keiichi Furukawa from Nikkei:

Pilots are treated differently compared with other employees. The average annual salary for pilots is 20.05 million yen ($135,000), according to JAL's securities filings, while ground and cabin crews average 6.43 million yen and 5.92 million yen, respectively.

Before JAL filed for bankruptcy in 2010, pilots were allowed to commute from their homes to airports using chauffeured vehicles.

Tottori's remarks last week suggest that JAL management still faces obstacles disciplining pilots, who are regarded as nearly untouchable.

Wow, they are all little kings in their own kingdom which makes their behavior even more inexcusable.

Japanese Object to American Military Moving into Mainland

Julian Ryall from South China Morning Post:

Amid growing calls in Okinawa prefecture for some of the US facilities there to be relocated to other parts of Japan to ease the burden on the southern islands, the Asahi Shimbun published the results of its survey on September 13.

In response to the question on whether respondents could accept an American military base being opened nearby, 82 per cent of the 2,376 people polled said they would not. The newspaper conducted the same survey in 2010, when that figure was 74 per cent.

Of course, most people don’t want military in their backyards. But the majority of Japan doesn’t truly understand the burden that is being forced on Okinawa and a shift to more mainland bases will make them see.