It seems the Land of the Rising Sun has once again shamed the West with an act of simple decency. Japanese football fans, having just watched their team play, stayed behind to clean the stadium, picking up litter as if it were a sacred duty. Meanwhile, in Britain, some women are reportedly demanding that we adopt the same standards at home. Oh, the irony. The Japanese do this not because they are told to, but because it is woven into the fabric of their national character. It is a quiet, unassuming act of collective responsibility that puts our own childish tantrums to shame.
We must ask ourselves: why does this simple act seem so alien to us? Is it because we have been fed a diet of individual rights without duties? The fall of Rome, after all, was preceded by a loss of civic virtue. The Victorians, for all their faults, understood the importance of public cleanliness and private discipline. They swept their streets and, more importantly, swept their souls. Now we have a generation that expects others to clean up after them, and then demands that the state enforce a Japanese standard. It is laughable.
This is not about feminism or gender equality. It is about a cultural rot. The Japanese fans, many of whom were men, performed this act without fanfare. They did not wait for a government directive or a hashtag. They simply did it because it was the right thing to do. In Britain, we have a crisis of masculinity that manifests in either loutish indifference or hyper-sensitive demands. We have lost the plot.
Perhaps we should look to the Japanese example not as a policy proposal but as a mirror. The real question is not why Japanese fans clean stadiums, but why British fans do not. The answer lies in the soul of a nation that has abandoned the concept of honour for the hollow pursuit of comfort. Clean your own stadium, Britain. Then we can talk about the state of the nation.









