Jenna, it seems like you are just saying that western culture has some good and some bad, and eastern culture also has some good and some bad, and you recognize that, and that you have benefited by picking the best things to you of both. I don’t think anyone would disagree with you there, but we are talking about whether these “cultures” whatever we define them as, are more bad than good, or vice versa, and how they rate against one another.
Though I think such a comparison is a complex undertaking, it lacks feasibility no more than rating the respective freedoms of nations, which organizations like the non partisan Freedom House do a great job of. A similar discussion as this could certainly arise about which country is more free, X or Y, and by what standards. Of course they’ll have an easier job of it since they wont have to define “nation” before they start the comparison. Freedom House currently ranks 43 other nations as free as the US in regards to their political and civil freedoms. Their ratings are determined by survey teams measuring objective criteria. Take a look at their map of freedom (http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=15&year=2005) and ask yourself which countries rate higher, those that tend to be influenced by “western culture” or those influenced by “eastern cultures” (depending on your definition of course) and which ones you would like to live in? Freedom house unfortunately does not rate economic freedoms, but the Heritage Foundation publishes an annual Economic Freedom index, (http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/) And here is their current ranking by scores (http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/indexoffreedom.cfm) At the top of the chart is Hong Kong. Ten nations score higher than the US. I have no doubt plotting this data against median per capita income and life expectancy would reveal some interesting apparent correlations. Now I know these are just books, publications and charts and I couldn’t really know a culture’s freedom in a nation unless I lived there, but in lieu of spending decades living in every nation in the world these are the best practical ways we have to try to make assessments of these things.
Personally I wanted to eventually move to Hong Kong, as arguable it was the freest city economically on this planet, and I have a virtual reverent appreciation for it. However, now that it has lost it’s “western culture” governmental influence and has now been reclaimed by the “eastern culture” communist Chinese government, I am not so sure. It’s political and civil freedoms are lower and continue to fall. 10 other nations rank nearly as free economically and more free civilly and politically than Hong Kong and all of these appeal to me, but still none like the beautiful city state of skyscrapers of Hong Kong. I recently posted in another thread how here in CT they wanted to widen a 65 mile stretch of 95 by adding 1 lane on either side, this stretch is one of the worst in the country. The estimate was for 20 billion dollars over the course of 20 years (!!!!!!) Hong Kong, by comparison, in 7 years and with 20 billion dollars, built two bridges, both the worlds largest of their type, 22 miles of an elevated super highway, a 1.5 mile tunnel, a rail system running parallel to that highway, and artificial island where they built one of the worlds largest airports. One can have nothing but reverent respect for any nation that can do that and disgust for what CT and the US was not able to do.
Economically, Hong Kong is the closest thing to Galt’s Gulch that has yet existed on this planet.
Hong Kong –
http://www.code-d.com/china/victoria-peak-hong-kong-big.jpg
http://www.skyscraperpicture.com/hongkong002.jpg
http://www.fitzblog.com/media/Fitzblog%20-%20Hong%20Kong%20-%20Skyline1%20Wallpaper.jpg
http://www.geraldbrimacombe.com/SE%20Asia%20-%20Orient/Hong%20Kong%20at%20night.jpg
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