Skykid wrote:
I appreciate the correct assertions about the plughole elements of Asian culture and I don't disagree, but there are plenty of positives in terms of values and respectability in Asia that outshine many of the louder, more arrogant western cultures I've been privy to (and live in.)
I meant something else, more specific. So:
I lived for more than one month in both China and Japan, and know tons of asian (immigrant) people and asian-australian people. I had a deeply negative experience of China, and variegated experience of Japan and Thailand (went there for holidays). Generally speaking, most of..."far east" asian countries have a more capillar massification procedure than western one, which appears to be very strong on younger generations. I talked at length about this with "older" immigrants, which tend to share similar feelings.
And then, I met a lot of asian-australians kids, which are much like the Italian- or Lebanese- (or X-...) australians kids of the past: immigrants always a bit out of place, which import and ape old trends, and all look the same because they are expected to, as "tight-knit immigrant communities". Once I almost decked a kid who kept calling me "professor", out of a massive Pinkerton syndrome.
Perhaps it's a matter of taste, but your lambasting seems unnecessarily vitriolic. What prompted that?

There are faults in all cultures. A mate who just returned from 6 weeks in Italy didn't have a great deal of nice things to say about the folks there either.
If we can move Italy (and UK, large portions of the US) on the pacific rim before the big one it would be perfectly fitting. I include Australia and NZ too.
I don't identify myself with a culture or a country, nor I think that there is a "good country" full of nice people. I
lived abroad for a while and in various countries, for long (Germany, NL, Oz) and short (US, China, Japan) periods. And, living in one place for extended periods is the best, if not only, way to figure out how a country other than yours works.
So, I'd say that I am really fine if I can easily avoid to meddle with "the common man", which I don't hate, but I don't get along with, too. Whether he/she is white, yellow, red, black, green or moe. I stick out, and don't plan to stop doing it anytime soon. Few can like this, insofar as they are human.
Tutto il mondo è paese, I am told.
"The only desire the Culture could not satisfy from within itself was one common to both the descendants of its original human stock and the machines [...]: the urge not to feel useless."
I.M. Banks, "Consider Phlebas" (1988: 43).