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30 years later, man discovers visa got expiry date
Japan just delivered one of the coldest immigration reality checks.
A foreign restaurant owner lived in Japan for 30 years, ran a curry restaurant for 18 years, bought a house, raised kids there, then got shocked when his business-manager visa was not renewed. His main emotional point is that his children only speak Japanese and see Japan as home.
Sad music plays. Still a visa.
Somewhere along the way, temporary permission quietly became “I stayed long enough, so this country must absorb my life choices”.
That is premium visa cosplay.
The best part is the surprise. A renewable visa got reviewed, then suddenly everyone acted like Japan changed the meaning of “renewable”.
Singapore angle is obvious. A lot of locals already feel this place is too open-leg with work passes, business routes and long-term foreign families. Stay long enough, open shop long enough, send kids to school long enough, then one day “your pass is not renewed” becomes “how can you do this to me?”
Japan is showing the hardline version: you can live there for decades, run a business, buy a house, raise kids, and still get told the basic line. Visa means visa.
And honestly, that line has to exist. If temporary permission cannot expire without turning into a national sob story, then it was never temporary. It was permanent settlement with extra paperwork.
Very simple. Permission is not ownership.
A visa can last 30 years and still expire like a hotel booking. That is the whole point.