How Japan Gets Away With Killing Whales
Whaling for commercial purposes was banned in 1986, but Japan still kills hundreds of whales every year. How do they get away with it?
Post Series: Japan
- 1.How This Town Produces No Trash
- 2.How Japan Gets Away With Killing Whales
- 3.Fukushima 360: walk through a ghost town in the nuclear disaster zone
- 4.Inside Fukushima’s Radioactive Ghost Towns
- 5.An Eerie Look Inside Japan’s Nuclear Exclusion Zone | National Geographic
- 6.Why Won’t Japan Stop Illegally Hunting Whales?
- 7.Japan’s Town With No Waste
- 8.Mystery Of The Missing Million
- 9.Chinese Children Are Being Abandoned By Their Parents
- 10.Illegal Japanese whaling filmed by the Australian Government in Antarctica
- 11.The Extraordinary Life Cycle of a Hornet Colony
- 12.Cameras Capture a Hornet Hatching Up-Close
- 13.Japan’s Homeless Fight Back
- 14.TOKYO CITY SERIES: HOMELESS IN TOKYO
- 15.Residents living permanently in Japan’s cyber-cafés – Lost in Manboo
- 16.Death By Overwork in Japan: Karoshi & Japanese Salarymen | NowThis
- 17.Japan’s ‘Premium Friday’ Attempts to Stop Death by Overwork (HBO)
- 18.Karoshi crisis: The Japanese employees who work themselves to death
- 19.Inside Story – 🇯🇵 Will Japan’s overwork culture change?
- 20.Why Japanese Die From Overwork (Karoshi かろうし) | ASIAN BOSS
- 21.Japan Is Dying: All Work, No Sex Means No Future
- 22.Why Does Japan Still Struggle with Karoshi and Toxic Workplaces? (with Glen Wood) – Brand 2020
- 23.Money Talks: Japans Major problem Karoshi Kills workers
- 24.Convincing Japanese Workers to Work Less
- 25.Why does Japan work so hard? | CNBC Explains