The tweet comes from @moeruasia01, a right-leaning aggregator known for surfacing local-friction stories and framing them as evidence that Japan’s foreign-resident population is unmanageable. It quotes what it says was a municipal official’s response to a neighborhood association: the city could not spend budget or manpower on “a small number of foreign residents.”
The underlying dispute involved garbage-sorting violations at a prefectural housing complex. Commenters reference Portuguese-language signage requests and “Chiba’s foreign-language pamphlets,” suggesting the residents in question are likely Brazilian or Peruvian, communities that have been in Japan since the 1990 immigration reform. Others cite the recent case in Aichi’s Nishio and Toyota cities, where neighborhood associations reportedly dissolved after foreign residents outnumbered Japanese ones.
Unseen Japan has tracked the intensifying far-right rhetoric around foreign residents in recent pieces including Why Hasn’t Japan’s Far Right Taken Over The Country? and Japan’s Obsession With Punishing Foreigners is a Ticking Time Bomb.
See a side of Tokyo that other tourists can't. Book a tour with Unseen Japan Tours - we'll tailor your trip to your interests and guide you through experiences usually closed off to non-Japanese speakers.
“then don’t
admit them”
2,805 likes on
the OP
The dominant theme, appearing in roughly a quarter of replies, is a rhetorical trap: if the government can’t handle foreign residents, the government shouldn’t have admitted them. Commenters repeat the slogan 入れるな (“don’t let them in”) almost mechanically, often with angry-face emoji. The framing is notable for refusing to engage with the specific garbage-sorting issue at all, collapsing every local friction into a national immigration-policy argument.
Closely related but aimed at officials rather than foreigners, this theme accuses the prefecture, the city, or “the government” (政府) of inviting workers in and then dumping the consequences on local residents. This line shows up even from otherwise moderate commenters, and it points to a legitimate governance complaint buried inside the xenophobic noise: Japan’s 2019 expansion of foreign worker visas was not matched by corresponding integration or enforcement infrastructure.
The phrase 多文化共生 (multicultural coexistence) appears repeatedly, always as an ironic target. The top-liked reply declares it “impossible,” and others brand the ruling LDP the “Immigration Party” (移民党). Unlike the “don’t admit them” theme, this one aims higher, rejecting the policy framework itself rather than asking for enforcement tweaks.
Planning a trip to Japan? Get an authentic, interpreted experience from Unseen Japan Tours and see a side of the country others miss!
A recurring rhetorical move: point to halal school lunches, removal of pork from menus, Muslim prayer rooms, or foreign-language instruction, and argue that those accommodations for “a small number of foreigners” contradict the official’s refusal to help Japanese residents with trash. This is the one thread in the pile-on that has genuine factual content, even if the implied comparison is not always apples-to-apples.
A quieter but persistent theme: worry that foreign-resident concentration will turn Japanese neighborhoods into slums or no-go zones for Japanese residents. Several commenters cite specific Aichi, Chiba, or Kitakyushu cases, including a reported case in Nishio and Toyota where neighborhood associations dissolved after foreign residents outnumbered Japanese. The most-liked comment in this theme frames garbage disputes as the opening act of a slow demographic replacement, language that echoes European far-right framing imported into Japanese discourse in recent years.
The only theme that actually engages with the garbage issue: suggestions ranging from multilingual signage and employer-funded disposal fees, to deposits, eviction clauses, and illegal-dumping enforcement. A handful of commenters even note that Japanese residents also break sorting rules and argue the underlying problem is enforcement, not ethnicity. This is the smallest engagement bucket in the top-liked replies, but the largest by sheer count, and the closest thing to a civic-minded register in the thread.