The_Zergling
Junior Member
But from my personal point of view, for a country to advance it cannot lose it's self identity. Which is culture preservation. Remembering where they come from and who they are. Take Japan for instance, they are able to progress but never forget who they are.
Actually, Japan actually assimilated many aspects of other cultures (and technology) very readily. "Japan" does not stand for the same things it stood for 100 years ago, despite technological or political ideas that it may have integrated into its culture.
As a widely known example, it integrated Buddhism, Confucian values from China, but in a way that did not usurp the position of their Emperor. In a sense, they took only the things that they found advantageous in a culture and improved (though this is subjective) their own national culture. America as it is known today is quite different from the one that it started out with in 1776. European, Italian, Spanish, Chinese, Indian etc immigrants all added their own little slice of life into the mix, but that did not decrease in any way what it meant to be American because these were all assimilated into the thinking of what it meant to be American. Now that doesn't mean that China should follow the same path, as obviously what may seem good for one group of people may not seem as good for others.
But it's just worth noting that adopting practices from other cultures that are positive isn't a bad thing.
Technologically Japan also had a tradition of adopting things that would help the country. One reason why they progressed so quickly (especially after WWII) was that they didn't see the changes as "Westernization", instead they saw it as "advancement".
Now it's arguable that aspects of American culture that are slowly becoming more mainstream are China may be detrimental to China as it is or as it wants to exist. But always keep in mind that things that "other" countries have may not always be bad, and could possibly be worth adopting.