deja wrote:Aside from all the PC rhetoric concerning nation-state prerogatives, it seems to me that globalization trends will prevail regardless of regional proclivities. All of this hand waving concerning European status only delays the inevitable at best. Why not prepare for the future rather than hopelessly try to preserve the past, which was never there in the first place. Magicwand, et al have already pointed out the obvious. The West needs to catch up with East and there's no other path than to acknowledge the disparity and work toward competing against the best of the best.
The bottom line - they don't need us. We need them. They can ignored us without affect.
Well... apparently they like the 'our' money...
Not just as tournament prizes, but also as growing markets for selling equipment, lessons, knowledge, and all kinds of other stuff.
I do not think it is right for the Europeans to understate their importance in the 'Grand Scheme of Go Economy'.
As for the 'global village' argument... I am not sure if you ever spent time around any kind of minority groups, but my experience tells me that the stronger the push from the outside to abandon one's culture and roots (and thus - uniqueness), the stronger the resistance. I have known emigrant groups in foreign countries placing a much stronger value on their 'uniqueness' than the same people while in their own country. Not sure how this will translate wrt globalization, but I will not be surprised if the trend to remain 'distinct' will grow stronger the more borders between nations crumble. Historical examples abound (Basks, Irish, Scots, to name just a few.)
Take Koreans for example, since this seems to be the underlying trend here. Are they any less proud to be 'Koreans' now than 20 years ago? Or 50 years ago? Will they be any less proud in 10 or 20 years? Will they stop referring to themselves as 'Koreans' and becoming generic 'World Citizens'? Will they always cultivate their specific uniqueness and culture or will they switch to Esperanto and make BigMac their national cousine? Will they want to have their own Baduk Association, or will they be happy for it to be silently absorbed into some Global Umbrella?
Time will tell, I guess.
How do you feel about your nationality in this light?