• parpol@programming.dev
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    8 days ago

    By southern do you mean Kyushu and shikoku? I haven’t been to Shikoku but it does look like a Paradise from when Degawa and other celebrities went there on TV.

    Kyushu is also pretty tropical, but more populated, and has more tourist attractions, thus more tourists.

    Both are beautiful. I haven’t been all over, but Shikoku looks more tropical than Kyushu.

    Unfortunately they also are where most of the summer typhoons wreck havoc, landslides destroy the most property and bury the most people. Most of japan besides Kanto, Hokkaido and touhoku are pretty tropical so for example if you move to areas around Kanazawa you can get most of the Paradise with less natural disasters. If it is just for a visit, however, Kyushu is amazing. Kumamoto, Beppu, Fukuoka are beautiful in their own unique ways.

    • Rolando@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      It was kind of funny to watch Hanzawa Naoki, and they’d be like: “As punishment, we’re transferring you to this city outside of Tokyo!” And they’d be like: omgz a fate worse than death. And I’d look up the city and it’d be a place with great public transportation, a famous temple, and amazing local cuisine.

        • parpol@programming.dev
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          7 days ago

          Even cities near Tokyo are at most a few hours train-rides away from Paradise. In Chiba you have onjuku (A large beach with desert dunes), in kanagawa you have Enoshima. (Beach, and an island with caves and shrines). In gunma you have Kusatsu. (winter hotspring wonderland on top of a mountain chain)

          • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            No, I don’t want to visit a deserted place. I want to live there. I want to take vacations to places with people, and live all alone on the side of the mountain.

            • parpol@programming.dev
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              7 days ago

              If you’re fine with there also being few things to actually do, you can essentially throw a dart on the map and pick the closes village to where it lands, and chances are it’ll have a population of less than 1000 people, and if you’re OK being stuck there for 10 years you can join the house givaway program to get some old house. You’ll have to find a job and maybe do so maintenance on the house, but other than that, you’ll get a free house in the middle of nowhere.

              • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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                7 days ago

                I’m wonderfully fine with having nothing to do, cause there’s always chorin’.

                Plus people pay tons of money to go somewhere warm and sit around doing nothing. I get to do it for free.

                Also, what if I already have a remote job I can do?

                • parpol@programming.dev
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                  7 days ago

                  As long as you can get a work visa with that job, you’re good to go. At the very least you probably can get a similar remote job by a japanese company and get the visa.

                  There will be a gift tax on the house, and land tax, but where you’re trying to go, the land tax will be very low, and the free house will be valued at 0 and therefore have 0 property tax. Houses don’t appreciate in value in Japan, so you’ll never have to pay property tax on that house even if you fix it up, and as long as you don’t tear it down, the land tax will also stay low.