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Greenfield:We're Turning Japanese Now
The Sultan Knish blog ^ | Friday, September 18, 2015 | Daniel Greenfield

Posted on 09/19/2015 7:35:26 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell

Friday, September 18, 2015

We're Turning Japanese Now

Posted by Daniel Greenfield @ the Sultan Knish blog

It's an article of American faith that Japan is an incredibly strange place. The world has been mapped and GPS'ed to death ruining much of the thrill of discovery. There probably aren't any hidden cities with remnants of lost civilizations lurking in the deserts of Africa or the jungles of South America. That just leaves the land of the rising sun as the X on the map, the strange place that suggests that the world that we know all too well, might still be odder than we can imagine.

But Japan isn't really all that strange. We are.

Depressed post-industrial economy, low birth rate, social disintegration and a society obsessed with pop culture and useless tech toys? A country that has embraced pacifism to the extent that it can hardly defend its own borders? A nation where materialism has strangled spirituality leaving no sense of purpose?

We are Japan. And so is Europe. Or rather Japan is the place we all reach eventually.

Japan is strange because it aggressively hurled itself into a postmodern void without knowing what was on the other side. It did this with the same dedication that its soldiers once marched into machine gun fire.

Japan had been in a race with the West, as it had been ever since Commodore Perry showed up with a fleet to open up a closed nation. It wasn't unique in that regard. A lot of countries tried to do the same thing. Most found that they couldn't keep up with either our technology or our decline. Japan shot past us in both areas. It beat us technologically. And then it outpaced our decline.

In the 80s, there were dire predictions that the future would belong to Japan. America would be broken up and run by a bunch of Japanese corporations. There were even predictions that after the fall of the USSR, the next war would be with Japan. Some of those predictions came from some surprisingly high profile analysts.

The future doesn't belong to Japan. It may not, at this rate, belong to anyone. Japan hurled itself into the future, but didn't find anything there.

Korea hurled itself into that same future and found only emptiness. Now China's elites are rushing into that same void and are beginning to discover that technocracy and materialism are hollow. That is why China is struggling to reassert Communist values even while throwing everything into making Walmart's next product shipment. Like Japanese and Korean leaders, Chinese leaders are realizing that their technological and material achievements have left their society with a spiritual void.

That isn't a problem unique to Asia. Asian countries were just less prepared for a rapid transition to the modern age. Europe and America, which had more time to prepare, are still on the same track.

Japan isn't really a technocratic wonderland. It has a few robot cafes, but not a lot of ATMs. Its tech companies got by on Western products that initially never caught on in the West, like the Walkman and the tax machine. There's not much of a digital economy and the computer isn't all that ubiquitous. Daily life for the Japanese these days is usually lower tech than it is for Americans or Europeans.

It's not as bad as some Gulf Sheikdom where desert Bedouins fire off assault rifles in view of the glittering new skyscrapers whose waste products have to be manually removed from the building, but the strain of a feudal society rapidly transitioning to the modern world is still there, as it is in Russia.

Like Russia, Japan tried to beat us. Unlike Russia it did, only to stop halfway there and wonder what the whole point was.

And that's the problem. There is no point.

American technocrats talk incessantly of beating China. But what is it that we're supposed to beat China to? The largest pile of debt? The biggest collection of light rail and solar panel plans? The lowest birth rate and the most homeless farmers? The greatest disastrous government projects?

A country should move toward the future. But it should have a goal that it's moving toward and a sense of connection with its past values.

The thing we have in common with Japan, China and Europe is that we have all moved into a post-modern future while leaving our values behind and our societies have suffered for it. It is a future in which stores have robots on display but couples are hardly getting married, where there are high speed trains and a sense of lingering depression as the people who ride them don't know where they are going, and where the values of the past have been traded for a culture of uncertainty.

Marriage and children are more extinct in Japan than they are here. They are more extinct in Europe than they are here. And China is still struggling with a bigger social fallout headed its way.

Japanese modernism has made for a conservative society of the elderly. That is what Europe nearly had a few decades ago and it is what it would have had if it hadn't overfilled its cities with a tide of immigrants. Japan survived the consequences of its social implosion only because of its dislike for immigration. If not for that, Japan really would have no future the way that the European countries which have taken in the most immigrants have traded their past and their future for the present.


The cultural eccentricities that Americans fixate on come from a society of young men unmoored from normal human connections, a decline of national values and an obsession with trivial consumerism-- all commonplace elements in postmodern American and European life.

The difference is that Japan got there first.

The loonier elements of American pop subcultures were predated by Japan. Indeed the latter are often influenced by the former. The same holds true with petty plastic surgeries, a truly epic plague among Asia's newly rich, and some of the more ridiculous accessories for living a life with no meaning or human companionship, but we're all going to the same place. Just not at the exact same speed.

The common problem is that our journey has no meaning. The postmodern world of robots, fast trains and handheld computers is shiny, but not meaningful. It's less meaningful than the earlier technological achievements that saved lives and made ordinary prosperity possible.

We can go fast, but no matter how fast we go, we seem to keep slowing down. That's what Japan found out. Its decline was social. And social decline translates into a technological decline, because technological innovation is powered by a society, not some soulless force of modernism. Innovation must have goals. And those goals must be more than mere technology. They must emerge from some deeper purpose.

American innovation hasn't halted entirely because its tech culture had enough purpose to make the latest set of digital revolutions possible. But each revolution has slowed down, becoming another shopping mall with microprocessors, replicating the Japanese problem. And at some point we'll run out of revolutions and be left with the skeleton of a digital shopping mall that is no longer anything but a place to buy more things we don't want and can't afford.

A healthy culture transmits values. When it stops doing that, it dies. When the values no longer seem to be applicable, than the culture hunts around for new values, it undergoes a period of confusion while its forward motion slows down. That is where Japan is now. It's where America has arrived.

The values of the left, that are present in both Japan and America, are a cultural suicide pact. The left pretends to add a spiritual dimension to modernism. It has been peddling that lie for two centuries and it has yet to deliver. In countries where it wielded full control, there was neither modernism nor values. Russia destroyed the economic, technological and spiritual potential of generations of its people. China is trying to use Communist values to avoid turning into another Japan, not realizing that those are little better than the collective obligations with which Japan rushed into the future.

As America gazes at the ruins of Detroit and the insanity spewed forth by a digital frontier that increasingly looks every bit as eccentric and toxic as anything coming out of Japan, it is all too clear that we are Japan.

There is no unique insanity in East, only a common disintegration of values in the East and the West.

Asia and Europe have both witnessed the rise and fall of civilizations. It isn't technology that destroys civilizations, but a lack of values.

To understand where Japan and Europe are, imagine an America decaying with no new ideas, losing its religion and values, losing its economy and finally its sanity, becoming coldly conformist and inhuman, while its families fall apart and its youth retreats into their own makeshift worlds. That reality is closer to home than we might like to think.

America is destroying its values on an industrial scale. In a post-industrial nation, the destruction of values has become one of its chief industries. And while there is value in challenging values, in the conflict and clash of ideas, that requires that values go on existing, or there is no longer anything to challenge. And then there is nothing left but emptiness and madness.

Another stupid product that promises to change our lives, but doesn't. Another ridiculous politician that promises to change our country, but doesn't. Another protest that promises to change everything.

Another indicator of economic decline. Another day, week, month, year of empty nothingness.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics; Religion
KEYWORDS: greenfield; japan; sultanknish
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To: Himyar
Lots of babies being born too.

Hopelessness correlates to fewer children... makes sense that 'being grounded' would create larger families.

21 posted on 09/19/2015 8:48:24 AM PDT by GOPJ (Immigration, World Poverty and Gumballs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPjzfGChGlE)
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To: Louis Foxwell

Grossly overgeneralized nihilistic pap.


22 posted on 09/19/2015 8:53:51 AM PDT by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: central_va
True story. I lived in Kobe during the January 17, 1995 earthquake. Nagata Ward, the working class neighborhood of the city, was totally flattened. There was a little scattered looting going on until the residents quickly organized patrols with broken plumbing pipes, garden tools or whatever else they could find.

A reporter asked what our media would call "vigilante groups" why they were even bothering when there was so little left to protect.

The men on patrol replied "That's not the point. The point is that this is our community, we have our pride and we won't allow a lawless element to run things no matter how trivial. These patrols will continue until the authorities have the resources to protect us. Until then, we will protect ourselves."

Imagine what would happen in our crime infested inner cities if a significant number of their residents took a similar view.

23 posted on 09/19/2015 8:55:17 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: caww

Exactly he “touched on it”.

As well written as the article is he obviously didn’t think “it” was important enough to spend much time on. He could easily be the average “Christian” who really could be defined as a “practical” atheist, that is one that claims Christianity but lives his everyday life like God does not exist.
What we are seeing is a culture leaving its roots and becoming purely secular.
Abortion
Homo marriage
Gender identity?
Vilification of traditional values
“Supreme Court” using foreign (godless) law
Etc.
Etc.


24 posted on 09/19/2015 9:09:30 AM PDT by Romans Nine
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To: Romans Nine

Yes!...and now we can add obama’s appointment of an openly gay Sec. of the Army...who has that same sickly putrid look so many do....we have fallen far Gods Standards...very far.

I think many Christian authors and writers can no longer bring God or Christian values into their pieces because they’d never get published outside the Christian community today....or they’d be so edited the real message would be lost.

Even in the work place the overall “condition” is not to speak about matters of God. Christianity is being smoothered from the mainstream of society....and thus leaving a vacume quickly being filled by numerous replacements.


25 posted on 09/19/2015 9:35:06 AM PDT by caww
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To: Vigilanteman

I visited a community in west Baltimore last week called Sand Town, adjacent to the area where rioting occurred. The residents banded together and refused to allow any kind of criminal element tear them down. This is an area with whole blocks of vacant houses and substantial poverty. Nevertheless they were not willing to allow their youth to destroy their community. There was no rioting of any kind there.


26 posted on 09/19/2015 10:17:34 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (This is a wake up call. Join the Sultan Knish ping list.)
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To: central_va

“Japan has no racial strife.”

Japan does have racial animus, even if it doesn’t have strife (depending on what you mean by strife), it just doesn’t have too many non-Japanese to have strife with. There’s a reason why article 14 exists in the Japanese constitution.

http://www.businessinsider.com/afp-black-miss-japan-fights-for-race-revolution-2015-5

http://www.pri.org/stories/2015-05-12/how-japanese-american-burst-japans-bubble-racism

http://japanfocus.org/-the_asahi_shimbun_culture_research_center-/2932/article.html


27 posted on 09/19/2015 10:22:06 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: Louis Foxwell

Nice observation. Proves that vigilantism actually is the most logical course of action in some cases.


28 posted on 09/19/2015 12:06:23 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: Louis Foxwell

In general technology is getting stronger while the people are getting weaker in the USA.

That said. There are three or four very big technological revolutions in the wings that will fundamentally change this country.

MIT has a list of ten technologies.
http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/534976/nano-architecture/

But I think their work misses the big picture.

The fracking revolution in the last five years has underpinned the obama years by creating several trillion new dollars for the USA (instead of fiat money). But that’s just the first wave in the energy revolution. The next wave comes in 5 years when electric car batteries are produced in volume and begin the demand destruction for oil. It will be the most beautiful time in history to be have a car. Because fuel prices will be driven steadily downward by competition between new types of internal combustion engines that are super fuel efficient and ever cheaper cheaper electric cars and even natural gas trucks and buses. Judging by the amount of money that Toyata pours into Hydrogen fuel cell cars—these cars will be a player too.

That’s the second wave of the energy revolution. The third wave of the energy revolution comes when fourth generation nuclear reactors come online that collapse the cost of base load electricity to 1/2 -1/4 the coast of current cheapest coal based electricity costs.

There will be a secondary knock on effect of dirt cheap electricity prices. It will become economical to do desalination for agriculture. this will result in the world’s deserts being turned into new farm land. that will double the size of habitable earth.

There is a manufacturing revolution gaining speed now in three d printing and advanced robotics which will return most of US manufacturing from abroad.

The medical revolution and really the combined new knowledge on the relationship between food and health will extend lives significantly.

Materials reasearch and genetics will be doing unknown things in the future.

Somewhere out in the future quantum computers will be perfected. Their effects will be to collapse time frames in the way the railroad and airplanes did in the 19th ad 20th centuries.

Not only is technology changing but the rate of change is acceleration —not slowing down.


29 posted on 09/19/2015 3:44:56 PM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

If what you predict comes to fruition, ObaMao’s dreams of turning America into just another third world country will be greatly frustrated.


30 posted on 09/19/2015 8:06:49 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: Romans Nine

“And so goes all godless societies.

Good article but be completely misses the real cause and rather examines the symptoms.”

I think Greenfield “gets” it.


31 posted on 09/20/2015 2:42:47 AM PDT by marktwain
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