If you oppose it, then you do it.

I was doing various tasks on site today.
The sliding door for the toilet… yeah…
The toilet bowl was in the way so I had to remove it to bring the door in.
Should’ve gone with the vinyl LIXIL door…
Well, whatever.

This is the frame for the bathroom mirror.
Measured it, ordered the mirror from the glass shop.
“Please install the mirror on site.”
“Please install the mirror on site.
The size is ○○.”
Sent it with photos attached through chat.
Just a slight difference in instructions,
and the subcontractor won’t need to visit the site again for measurements.
This is so basic…
but a surprising amount of people still can’t do it.
Kindness and consideration are disappearing.
We’ll add shelves and iron bars soon.

Migration issue…
The solution is honestly too simple.
Below is the summary written by AI, based on my thoughts.
If possible, I’d rather have Japan operate with its own workforce.
I prefer that.
And honestly, I’m not in favor of mass immigration.
Cultural differences, safety concerns — it’s not like the risk becomes zero.
But…
So tell me — are YOU going to do the jobs that keep Japan running?
Can Japan really run with only Japanese people?
The conversation always circles back to this.
Japanese people don’t want to do on-site labor.
They avoid it.
This has been true for decades.
ATMs came and bank workers were no longer needed.
Digitization reduced the number of service counters.
And AI will replace more public sector and clerical work — that’s inevitable.
If those people moved to on-site jobs,
Japan wouldn’t need immigrants at all.
But nobody goes.
Absolutely nobody.
This isn’t about pride.
They have zero intention or readiness to work on site.
That’s just the reality.
・Cold
・Dirty
・Dangerous
・Heavy responsibility
・Tight scheduling
・Body pain
・Unpredictable hours
・Stress hits you directly
・One mistake can break things or cause serious injury
・And then you get scolded politely by people wearing suits
White-collar pain is different.
This is “your body and your responsibility being shaved down” pain.
Though, honestly, it’s healthier mentally and physically.
But the gap cannot be filled by thinking about it at a desk.
Ideally, Japanese workers would do Japanese on-site jobs.
Everything would stay domestic.
But reality says otherwise.
People don’t want to do it, or can’t do it,
so the country relies on foreign workers.
Immigration issues are not about immigrants.
It’s about Japan’s “work culture” and “values.”
That’s the part we can’t ignore.
The “500 Vietnamese drivers hired by Yamato Transport” decision represents this perfectly.
Bank workers are surplus.
Public workers are being replaced by AI.
White-collar jobs keep shrinking.
But still, no one goes to the field.
So foreign workers become necessary.
I personally oppose immigration.
If possible, I’d rather Japan run everything domestically.
But reality hasn’t caught up.
In short:
The only people allowed to say “I oppose immigration”
are the ones who are ready to fill the gap themselves.
So anyway — BABYMONSTER’s first performance on Japanese TV.
I watched it sitting properly in my home lounge.
And yeah… the level is just something else.

