The piece argues for a calm, data-driven view of foreigners issues, avoiding panic and xenophobia. Seikei University media-sociology professor Ito notes that the withdrawal of the JICA Africa Town project shows how misinformation online can trigger panic in cities and agencies. He says debates often split between weak foreigners such as workers and refugees and strong foreigners such as investors, tourists and wealthy students, with liberals emphasizing protection for the weak and critics worried about disruption by the strong. Ito warns that some critics’ stance resembles isolationism. He suggests focusing on concrete economic-security issues such as foreign investment controls, technology leakage, and land purchases rather than broad moral judgments, and notes some critics mix humanitarian concerns with these economic worries, complicating consensus. The aim is inclusive policies grounded in facts that address real problems without fueling division.