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Signatures 3261 total

Page: « 1, ... 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, ... 66 »

  1. 2951
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 5, 2008
    Comments:
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  2. 2952
    Name: Bob Nguyen on Oct 7, 2008
    Comments: Doshite!
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  3. 2953
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 16, 2008
    Comments:
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  4. 2954
    Name: GIanni DaCosta on Oct 17, 2008
    Comments:
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  5. 2955
    Name: Koga Abe on Oct 18, 2008
    Comments: いつまで鎖国政策を続ければ気が済むんですか?19世紀は100年以上前に終わったことお気づきですか?
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  6. 2956
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 18, 2008
    Comments: i feel so bad and ashamed of myself being japanese when i heard this news from my british friend. security should be protected but not in this way, never. i believe japanese technology can make another way to deal with this problem.
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  7. 2957
    Name: Jason Kahler on Oct 18, 2008
    Comments:
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  8. 2958
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 21, 2008
    Comments: 私は外国で指紋を採取されるという侮辱的取扱いを受けたことは一度もありません。それなのに日本は外国人を犯罪者扱いするとは。私は自分が日本人であることを恥じずにはいられません。
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  9. 2959
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 25, 2008
    Comments:
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  10. 2960
    Name: Sara Lee on Oct 25, 2008
    Comments:
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  11. 2961
    Name: Levi Vue on Nov 5, 2008
    Comments: why do this you are a great country!
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  12. 2962
    Name: Ted Case on Nov 8, 2008
    Comments: United States of Japan Most Unfortunate that the Japanese government and the people who have elected them have decided to move towards this type of state control. Quite naturally on the surface it seems like a WONDERFUL way to keep track of potential criminals and illegal aliens, but what happens when it starts being used to keep track of the Japanese citizens....Kanpai Anyone ;)
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  13. 2963
    Name: Michael Guyette on Nov 11, 2008
    Comments:
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  14. 2964
    Name: Minoko Takanashi on Nov 16, 2008
    Comments:
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  15. 2965
    Name: Simon Walliss on Nov 19, 2008
    Comments: This discriminatory practise is inhumane. The handful of people they catch is not worth the loss of human rights to the millions they will subject this to. This will discourage foreign tourist who were thinking of travelling to Japan with the resultant loss of income.
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  16. 2966
    Name: Jake Reid on Nov 28, 2008
    Comments:
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  17. 2967
    Name: Clément Martin on Dec 5, 2008
    Comments: Omg....
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  18. 2968
    Name: Andrew Mullan on Dec 17, 2008
    Comments: Fingerprinting is an invasion of my privacy and is a breach of the privacy provisions of the European Convention of Human Rights. This should be illegal in Japan, shame on the Japanese Government.
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  19. 2969
    Name: Mereck on Jan 2, 2009
    Comments:
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  20. 2970
    Name: Terry on Jan 4, 2009
    Comments: Who does the Japanese imigration give this data to - US, Interpole so much for kojin jouhou ! I cant believe the jgov would just dream this up on their own - the UN or trilateral commission maybe....
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  21. 2971
    Name: Anonymous on Jan 23, 2009
    Comments:
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  22. 2972
    Name: Mike on Jan 25, 2009
    Comments: Well personally I would love to visit Japan as I have friends there but I am having to reconsider if I am treated like a criminal and singled out simply because I am a foreigner. I think this Nazi discriminatory fingerprinting of foreigneris very shamefull behaviour for a country that prides itself on its polite culture. I find this, rude, insulting and very facist. If this is what japanese people are realy like no wonder they people fought on Hitlers side.
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  23. 2973
    Name: Mike Demsey on Jan 26, 2009
    Comments: I would just like to say that as an Irish national doing business in South east asia I have repeatedly had to tell Japanese customers that I will be unable to provide international marketing services to them because I am unwilling to enter Japan while the invasive fingerprinting procedures are carried out by the japanese goverment. I currently provide 7.5 Million Euro (13.5 Billion won) worth of revenus from european and US based advertising networks to my Korean clients and would love to expand into Japan, but I do not appreciate being discriminated against and find the entire notion of being treated like a criminal very insulting. Im sure I am not the only person who has this opinion and I would guess that Japan is suffering major finacial loss plus loss of reputation for engaging in such discriminatory practices. When this policy is reversed I will revise my opinion of the Japanese people and government and hopefully be able to do profitable business with Japanese customers. Untill then, I will have to focus my efforts elsewhere. Regards Mike Demsey
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  24. 2974
    Name: Francesco on Feb 2, 2009
    Comments:
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  25. 2975
    Name: Bonnet Dany on Feb 3, 2009
    Comments:
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  26. 2976
    Name: Epign on Feb 5, 2009
    Comments:
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  27. 2977
    Name: Roman on Feb 16, 2009
    Comments: Pour une perspective moins sécuritaire et plus libre de la société.
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  28. 2978
    Name: ASADA Akira on Feb 23, 2009
    Comments:
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  29. 2979
    Name: Bruce on Apr 23, 2009
    Comments: I have visited Japan on two separate occasions and was warmly welcomed by all Japanese that I met. Indeed I had the good fortune to be guided to several cities by a man who was extremely generous. Another family welcomed me into their home for dinner and an overnight stay, despite having just met them. I have extended an invitation to my home country to return the graciousness I was shown. However, I will not return to Japan - though I would love to do so - until the fingerprint requirement has been removed. I will not visit any country where such a requirement is a condition for entry. Were my country to institute such a requirement I would make my disapproval known to the government until it was removed and would disavow citizenship were this protest ignored.
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  30. 2980
    Name: Chernishcov Denis on May 12, 2009
    Comments: It so sad to know that my beloved country had had such bad orders...~
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  31. 2981
    Name: Alauze Melissa on May 19, 2009
    Comments:
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  32. 2982
    Name: John Burd on May 23, 2009
    Comments: I had no idea this fingerprinting garbage came with virtually NO promise the information was for immigration purposes only until I arrived in Kobe. Your immigration departments attitude towards my private data is entirely unacceptable to me, and I am sure millions of others. Others who simply need to be made aware. I am posting all over the internet how unwelcome tourists are in Japan. May your tourism industry suffer the losses it should.
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  33. 2983
    Name: Bodin Samuel on Jun 2, 2009
    Comments: This is unfair and ridiculous.
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  34. 2984
    Name: Kyra Troyan on Jul 1, 2009
    Comments: I will never visit Nippon again due to this policy. I am very sad about this violation of privacy.
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  35. 2985
    Name: Dave Miller on Aug 3, 2009
    Comments:
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  36. 2986
    Name: Amy Gale on Aug 22, 2009
    Comments: i came on exchange to japan in 2005 as a student and you didnt have fingerprinting then! I think it is pathetic and against my human rights i that come to japan and help your tourism industry by spending thousands and i get treated like a criminal by them asking me for my fingerprints fair enough if i was a criminal or muderer or something, this is the treatment of child sex offenders not tourists. i am never going to Japan ever again
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  37. 2987
    Name: Steve Dallas on Aug 28, 2009
    Comments: Treating guests as criminals is baka and wrong!
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  38. 2988
    Name: Hirokazu Inoue on Sep 3, 2009
    Comments: I believe that someone with ego in Japanese government is trying to target foreign nationals. If the government/police is so concerned about the crime prevention, they should first fingerprint every single Japanese citizens, then perhaps they can also justify the fingerprinting for foreign nationals.
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  39. 2989
    Name: Anonymous on Sep 24, 2009
    Comments:
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  40. 2990
    Name: Anonymous on Sep 24, 2009
    Comments: I am against the fingerprinting of inocent foreigners such as a foreigner woman like me, living in Japan for over 12 years and married to a Japanese national and conceived two children with him who both obtained a double nationality. Why every time our family travel together, me the mother have to be fingerprinted while my husband and my children do not need to but even worse being separated from me at the custom point of entry This is totally unacceptable. I am Canadian and we don`t treat Japanese imigrants in Canada this way. Shame on the Japanese government for such racist policy.
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  41. 2991
    Name: Massimo Rana on Sep 24, 2009
    Comments: freedom for the planet earth
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  42. 2992
    Name: James McCartney on Oct 12, 2009
    Comments: I refused to be fingerprinted just to have a vacation in Japan. I will spend my monet in Thailand instead. Before they started the process in late 2007, I spent at least 50,000 USD a year vacationing in Japan with my family.
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  43. 2993
    Name: Miho Kurosawa on Oct 17, 2009
    Comments: 反対します。至急やめるようにしてください。あとどのくらいで実現するのでしょう。招聘したい人が、そのために来日してくれないのです。なんとかやめるようにしてください。よろしくお願いします。
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  44. 2994
    Name: Ruben Van Mansum on Oct 19, 2009
    Comments:
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  45. 2995
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 27, 2009
    Comments:
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  46. 2996
    Name: Olof Karlsson on Oct 27, 2009
    Comments:
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  47. 2997
    Name: Jame Nederlader on Nov 17, 2009
    Comments: I will not visit Japan again before the humiliating fingerprinting stops!
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  48. 2998
    Name: Samir on Nov 27, 2009
    Comments:
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  49. 2999
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 23, 2009
    Comments: ahhhhhh omg this is bad
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  50. 3000
    Name: JohnJacob on Jan 10, 2010
    Comments: I Agree
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