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Algorithm filled the timeline with posts from Japanese today & it has been great
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:14 pm
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:14 pm
Started with smoked meats and continues with admiration of each other

RIP Shinzo Abe
quote:
Heading toward Japan, the American barbecue brigade has begun its broadcast. And it's not about politics. Not about the market. Not about the military. It was just a disarmingly peaceful, disarmingly boisterous cultural greeting: "Look at our meat."
What makes this wave so great is that no one's giving any complicated explanations.
It's not "We understand you,"
nor is it "Let's redefine U.S.-Japan relations."
Bone-in cuts of meat, charred surfaces, dripping fat, massive seafood boils. With just one photo, they're saying over there:
"Welcome"
"This is our culture"
"If you're curious, we'll show you more"
SNS was supposed to be a much more troublesome place. With people from unknown countries, there's caution first. You read the context, probe for ideologies, check if jokes land as jokes, and any slight misalignment sparks a fight.
But this time was different.
The Japanese side opened a door with something innocently casual, like "When you think America, it's meat."
And the other side didn't take it as an insult or misunderstanding—they jumped in full throttle.
"Yeah,"
"Check this out,"
"This is our barbecue."
They kept serving up their proudest dishes one after another.
Here's the most beautiful potential of SNS.
Humans can't connect on correctness alone.
Logic alone, ideals alone, international understanding alone—none of it is enough.
Sometimes, that pre-verbal "looks delicious" crosses borders.
A slightly off translation is fine.
A bit of grammatical weirdness is okay.
The sear on the meat leaps over all of it.
I think it's a shame to let this phenomenon end as just a cute viral buzz. Because here, you can see one hope for X's future.
The way for X to survive from here isn't to keep being an amplifier of anger.
Not to compete on the speed of canceling someone.
If it becomes a place where only the harshest words, the most extreme assertions, the most cutting hostility circulate, all that's left will be exhaustion...
But like this time,
one post crosses borders,
and from there
"Well then, check out our food next"
"Then we'll go with seafood"
"No, smoked stuff"
—if a cultural game of catch starts up like that, X can still be the world's town square.
And what's fun is that what's being exchanged here isn't highbrow refinement—it's pride in everyday life.
BBQ isn't just meat to Americans.
It's family, community, weekends, the scent of their own land.
Showing that to Japan is, in a slightly exaggerated sense,
like "showing the living room of our country."
And the Japanese side probably isn't seeing it just as food terror either.
They're somehow picking up on the boldness, the cheer, the hospitality, the pride of place beyond it.
So while it's a back-and-forth of photos, it's actually become cultural exchange.
This is when SNS really has value.
When people from distant countries come into view not through news headlines, but at the temperature of daily life.
When you see people, not nations.
When you see the dinner table, not claims.
The world probably doesn't have the words for understanding each other that everyone thinks it does.
But it has more to show each other than everyone thinks.
Food, scenery, festivals, daily life, ways of laughing.
Friendships that start from exchanging those things hold hope. This barbecue diplomacy isn't just a punchline—it's a small proof that SNS can still be used for human connection.
Even if algorithms favor anger, even if division breeds revenue, people can still bond sometimes over a single grilled piece of meat.
That fact is surprisingly big.
If there's hope for X's future, it's not in perfect order, but in flows like this— a little messy, a little funny, but oddly warm.
Not a world of debunking someone's culture,
but one where you can offer, "Then check this out from us too."
There, posts become invitations, not bullets.
International exchange starting from meat? Pretty laid-back. But being laid-back is a talent for peace.
I hope that from here on, X
doesn't stay on the front lines of rage,
but reclaims more space as a showcase for everyday culture like this.
The world is tough.
But sometimes, bone-in meat overcomes that toughness.
And probably, the future only brightens little by little from chains of goofy goodwill like this.
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. RIP Shinzo Abe
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:14 pm to Bobby OG Johnson
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:18 pm to Bobby OG Johnson
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:23 pm to Bobby OG Johnson
quote:
Foreigners who love Japan do not wish for Japan to change.
However, foreigners who come to Japan preferring "Communist Japan" probably do not love Japan.
I can think of a few such people.
I wish conservative foreigners would come,
but there are many liberals.
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here.Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:35 pm to Bobby OG Johnson
Not gonna lie, it's been a breath of fresh air and hope. It doesn't all have to be doom and gloom. There's a way to the opposite if we take it.
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:41 pm to Captain Rumbeard
quote:
Not gonna lie, it's been a breath of fresh air and hope.
quote:
> make Pearl Harbor joke
> everyone looks around like “is this fine”
> …
> two weeks later
> japanese and american twitter collide
> mutual appreciation of bbq
> mutual appreciation of kfc
> mutual appreciation of samurai
> did we just become best friends
> yes, yes we did
> total cultural victory
> no amount of Georgetown policy nerds could ever have created this level of soft power alignment
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. quote:
It doesn't all have to be doom and gloom
We win in the end
Posted on 3/28/26 at 10:51 pm to TheGeauxt9
I think we should probably bring the South Koreans in on this too. They love some grilled meats and American culture
Posted on 3/28/26 at 11:38 pm to RazorBroncs
I think we can all agree on their baseball girls too …
Posted on 3/29/26 at 7:06 am to SlapahoeTribe
quote:
I think we can all agree on their baseball girls too …

Posted on 3/29/26 at 7:36 am to Captain Rumbeard
quote:
it's been a breath of fresh air and hope
Japan is the Poland of Asia
Posted on 3/29/26 at 8:34 am to Bobby OG Johnson
I'm pretty sure that our relations with Japan were already top-notch. But, it never hurts to go the extra mile.
Posted on 3/29/26 at 9:44 am to KCT
quote:
I'm pretty sure that our relations with Japan were already top-notch. But, it never hurts to go the extra mile.
Reading the posts from the Japanese stating that the great burden of guilt they have lived with being lifted after Trump made the surprise joke has been good for everyone.
Posted on 3/29/26 at 9:46 am to Captain Rumbeard
quote:
It doesn't all have to be doom and gloom
Hahahaha, oh yes it does!
Posted on 3/29/26 at 9:53 am to Bobby OG Johnson
quote:
Reading the posts from the Japanese stating that the great burden of guilt they have lived with being lifted after Trump made the surprise joke has been good for everyone.
I'm glad you posted this thread because I hadn't seen any of it. I guess it's been taking place on X.
Posted on 3/29/26 at 10:02 am to KCT
quote:
I'm glad you posted this thread because I hadn't seen any of it. I guess it's been taking place on X.
Yes it has been auto translated & is still filling my For You timeline & working its way into the Following timeline as I follow more Japanese accounts
quote:
I wonder
Lately, it's been nothing but exhausting stories about wars, political correctness, illegal immigrants, cults, and rotten politics and justice.
On SNS, only the dark side of humanity has been flowing in.
But ever since everyone in America started sharing their homemade barbecues, I feel like the simple, fun Twitter has come back.
There's still light out there.
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