View Full Version : Charging more for handicapped employees?
Japan-Games.com
05-23-2006, 09:41 AM
Seems like this belongs in the Japan area. This is in the description of a Japanese seller on eBay:
"We also set shipping rate a but higher than normal because handicapped persons of our employees are carrying baggage to postal service."
(http://stores.ebay.com/TokyoDisney, second sentence under "Shipping Informations").
I'm assuming they are trying to say that the shipping has an extra charge for the cost of bringing the items to the post office, but somehow they word "handicapped" got thrown in there due to some direct translation issues. Either that or they really are charging extra to cover the cost of handicapped employees.
madhatter256
05-23-2006, 01:15 PM
That's discrimination if they mean that. But its more likely its not really what it says, just like what you said where that word was thrown in there due to direct translation.
peter
05-23-2006, 01:17 PM
I don't know about you, but they're charging at least $7 in (air mail to Asia) shipping for a mechanical pencil that weights only five gram, give or take.
Paulo
05-23-2006, 03:28 PM
Yeah but do they charge more for an item that actually would cost near $7 to post?
GaijinPunch
05-23-2006, 09:14 PM
LMAO. That is the most fucked up thing I've ever seen.
Phinn
05-23-2006, 09:37 PM
I suspect the translation is accurate. Anti-discrimination legalisation is a joke in Japan.
ccovell
05-23-2006, 11:47 PM
Apparently, companies in Japan that employ handicapped workers are given an incentive by the government. Which sounds fine in itself -- tax- or subsidy-based programs designed to make work practices more "progressive" exist in many countries around the world.
The problem is, companies just see Yen signs in place of handicapped employees, and just keep them around for the extra income. One of my students works in an office with a handicapped employee under this system, and she said that all the other workers just ignored him or treated him as a minor nuisance. She was the only one that actually tried to befriend him.
Then of course there are many "handicapped" kids in Japan nowadays because their mothers drank/smoked/did drugs during pregnancy, but don't get me started on that.... X-(
Japan-Games.com
05-24-2006, 06:21 AM
heh well I didn't mean to depress anyone. I just imagined an email saying:
"Hello, and thanks for your purchase. We sent Billy to the post office with your package, but no one has seen or heard from Billy since he left on Monday. Your package will either be arriving soon or not at all. Thanks again."
S.Guard
05-24-2006, 10:33 AM
nvm mind that, your all handicapped
SuperGrafx
05-24-2006, 10:37 AM
I consulted at a company last year that took in people with disabilities and gave them menial jobs. The city (and I believe the state) subsidized the salaries and gave the company some sort of tax benefit for giving these people an opportunity. Not really different from what the Japanese do, given ccovell's response.
GaijinPunch
05-24-2006, 09:11 PM
Anti-discrimination legalisation is a joke in Japan.
Things that don't exist are generally not jokes. :)
Apparently, companies in Japan that employ handicapped workers are given an incentive by the government.
Yeah, but employees are also supposed to be compensated for overtime. Nowhere in the world will you find such a large populace of people working* obscene hours for no overtime.
*work sometimes entails playing freecell and/or drinking tea.
ASSEMbler
05-24-2006, 10:06 PM
That's just the Japanese way of social responsibilty.
In the USA we give tax credits for hiring diabled persons. HUGE credit.
They don't hire old or disabled at walmart out of kindness.
If you ask me, I'll pay more to have someone handicapped bring my items to the post office.
When my uncle needed a transplant (sadly he did not survive)
the american taxpayer paid the subsidized fees and I am
eternal grateful that I live in a country of such generosity.
You have the french approach of supporting everyone,
and the USA way of telling the poor to go to hell.
I'm suprised in a country like Japan, they don't euthanize or
abort babies with defects. They seem the type of country to do so.
ServiceGames
05-24-2006, 11:34 PM
I'm suprised in a country like Japan, they don't euthanize or
abort babies with defects. They seem the type of country to do so.
I'm sure there is a robot in the works as we speek. Or possibly one of those cute interactive robo-stuffed animals... that shoots poison darts.
ASSEMbler
05-25-2006, 12:00 AM
Kodomo-robo? The Japanese euthanization robot?
I see you have a squashed head and missing limbs ! Kodomo-robo has a special candy,
just for you!!!
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