#5 The Invisible Police: Why Laptops and Kids are Safe in Japan
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[Introduction] Leave a MacBook on a Starbucks table and go to the bathroom. In most countries, it vanishes in seconds. In Tokyo, it stays right there. Why? Is it honesty, or something else? From six-year-olds riding subways alone (like in Netflix's "Old Enough!") to orderly queues during disasters, Dr. Fujita decodes the invisible "OS" that controls Japanese behavior. Discover why Japan's safety is actually a calculated survival strategy based on Game Theory.
[What You'll Learn]
- The Starbucks Anomaly: Why a laptop acts as a "reservation token" rather than an expensive device.
- Distributed Security: How society functions as a massive incubator for children commuting alone.
- "Guilt" vs. "Shame": The difference between Western conscience and the Japanese concept of "Seken" (The Public Eye).
- Game Theory of Disasters: Why looting is mathematically a "losing strategy" in Japan.
- The Social Contract: The hidden trade-off between absolute safety and individual freedom.
[About the Podcast] Dr. Fujita, an AI Consultant based in Tokyo, analyzes the logic behind Japanese business and culture. This isn't a sightseeing guide—it's an intellectual journey to decode the "True Japan."
[Topics] Japan Safety, Crime Rate, Seken, Shame Culture, Game Theory, Old Enough, Disaster Response, Looting, Social Psychology, Tokyo Life, Murahachibu
