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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2009 21:05:19 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- References: <mailman.1.1244516401.16290.tlug@example.com> <BAY108-W60A814BB85DD2E4A27D60A2440@example.com> <50917824-4B7E-4514-BEF2-0068C026C58A@example.com> <87ljo1e4ig.fsf@example.com> <956ae5a90906091003x4a8c203dh658503a1787a849a@example.com> <87fxe8epm5.fsf@example.com> <956ae5a90906100154g74870f8u139a5c01e64041a0@example.com>
Doug McLean writes: > Regarding other examples, another one that comes to mind of a "locked" > system is the Philippines. It is a functional democracy in the sense > that, aside from Marcos's rule, the presidential system has held firm > since its independence from the US and later Japan. The catch is > that the same political families get elected in the Congress over and > over and over again. Where *doesn't* that happen? > Presidents can span generations of family (current president Gloria > Macapagal's father was president too). Bush-league presidencies run in families in the U.S., too. > Most researchers agree that their two main parties are not so > different based on ideology as they are on power structure, > patronage, etc. But this is true in most any two party system, as JC has pointed out. There's a pile of political-economic theory explaining this in terms of "single-peaked preference distribution" in the electorate. What's special about Japan is that in a parliamentary system it nonetheless has a single party with a lock on power. > But we have to be careful to spell out under what conditions Japan > could be considered unique. Earlier in our discussion the it was > implied that Japan is somewhat unique in the world, and I don't > disagree but feel it's a bit exaggerated compared to other > lesser-known parts of the world. As a first-world, industrialized > country, one could definitely argue its unique among first-world, > industrialized countries (since the rest are all Western, > non-Asian/Confucian). That doesn't help, not foreigners trying to live in Japan, nor the Japanese people who aspire to reform. The reason for insisting on a working democracy is that it's nearly a prerequisite for nonviolent, popular change. Uniqueness as "non-Western", "Asian/Buddhist", is not very helpful, in fact it's starting to border on nihonjinron.
- References:
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: Raedwolf Summoner
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: JC Helary
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: Doug McLean
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] (OT) The enigma of Japan
- From: Doug McLean
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