The guy in the mini van was really lucky to walk away there - a collision with a train can easily end very badly for car passengers. What I also noticed: how clean it is along the tracks. Here in Germany everything is covered in grafitties, walls, railroad buildings, even the trains cars sometimes. In Japan it looks like it did here 50 years ago. Google says this is the japanese translation: ミニバンの男はそこを歩いて行くことができて本当に幸運でした-電車との衝突は車の乗客にとって非常にひどく終わる可能性があります。 私も気づいたこと:それがトラックに沿ってどれほどきれいか。 ここドイツでは、すべてが落書き、壁、鉄道の建物、時には電車の車でさえ覆われています。 日本では50年前のようです。
@F605282 жыл бұрын
Hast Recht. Die Japaner sind viel zu stolz um ihre schöne Bahn mit Farbe zu besprühen, oder in den Wagen zu telefonieren oder Müll zu hinterlassen. War letzte Woche im Shinkansen Fukuoka-Kumamoto, super Sache. Unser ICE ist ja auch top, hat aber zu selten eine eigene ICE-Trasse
@no-damn-alias10 ай бұрын
Servus, der KZbin Algorithmus ist unerklärlich
@sedidandanazu53510 ай бұрын
@@no-damn-alias Tach, ist er das? Es ist jedenfalls interessant.
@railwaymechanicalengineer458710 ай бұрын
Japan obviously has much better schooling that teaches the children such dishonourable social behaviour as spraying "Graffiti" will require you to commit suicide as a result of total loss of face. Indeed train drivers that arrive 30 seconds late due to imperfection in their train Driving are also expected to commit suicide - and DO !!! You have a Mountain to climb before you will ever understand Japan !!!!!
@guri3116 күн бұрын
Das ist wahr. Das wirkt alles auffallend sauber. Ich denke aber, dass auch deutlich schärfere Strafen drohen, wenn man seinen Dreck einfach irgendwohin wirft oder Graffitis an öffentliche Stellen schmiert. Dafür scheinen in China bei weitem keine so scharfen Regeln für den Erwerb eines Führerscheins zu existieren, wenn man die vielen Videos aus diesem Land so revuepassieren lässt...
Were the car's occupants all evacuated without serious injury? What happened to the train conductor after the collision?
@FirstLastOne10 ай бұрын
Did people forget how to dial 110 and 119. Where was the police and fire-rescue in all this? 🤔
@RODALCO20072 жыл бұрын
People take often risks and run red lights, this guy made a serious error and got clipped by the train. Trains run on tracks, so the van was at fault. I usually feel bad for the affected passengers on the train, who will be late for work or miss appointments. Amazing that you caught this on video. New subscriber from New Zealand.
@QUIX4U2 жыл бұрын
subbed - just cause Ura KIWI.
@Kromaatikse2 жыл бұрын
Notable also how many people carried on over the crossing past the wreckage, even though the lights were still flashing to show it was closed to the road. Someone did activate the obstruction signal fairly quickly though.
@vse73272 жыл бұрын
I dont think you'd take the romance car to work but hey maybe they could of.
@KEIO-qd1zx Жыл бұрын
I doubt that the van meant to run the red light, as the railroad crossing had gates anyway. I guess that driver got either really distracted or had a health issue as they was driving and eventually crashed into the already passing train
I hope everyone's okay - but given the amount of railway-specific KZbin channels in Japan, you'd think that the chance of filming a crash happen is more likely, when in reality it's astronomically unlikely due to there being more trains and the state of railway safety in the country being really good
@worldcomicsreview3542 жыл бұрын
The warning "please do not go outside the train" has a grim history, though.
@petebeatminister2 жыл бұрын
Well, the railway safety can be as good as it gets - but if people act stupidly on the railroad crossings, desaster is inevitable.
@QUIX4U2 жыл бұрын
@@worldcomicsreview354 That's why they have inside loos now. To stop people going "outside".
@FrankHeuvelman2 жыл бұрын
Japan cares for its people. America can learn a thing or two from them concerning keeping the peace instead of politicians dividing the nation in search for financial gain and personal power by lying and cheating all the time to the most vulnerable part of their constituency.
@Kromaatikse2 жыл бұрын
@@worldcomicsreview354 Starting with William Huskisson MP in 1830.