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Curious what @cryotosensei thinks about this cultural comparison
I suppose he could even update it with the Japanese technocratic state works, too.
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On the whole, I think life in Japan is more colourful, but I still want to raise my child here in Singapore. Perhaps I should write a post about there sometime!
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We left Japan to raise our children in the US. We didn’t like how the school system was centrally run by Mumbusho. It seemed to produce cookie-cutter people.
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I haven’t had much exposure to Hong Kong and her people to verify whether Bryan has suggested is true or biased. But I woefully admit that my countrymen are conditioned to take the safe route. Even now, even if examinations have been de-emphasised for the young, people still pay for their children to take mock exams at tuition centres - because our narrative of success remains largely unchanged. Get stellar grades get a scholarship graduate from college cruise into top positions in the civil service. It’s all about optimising our moves to accumulate as much wealth as possible.
However, I would like to add that our Gen Z n Gen A seem to have a stronger backbone than the rest of us. It isn’t unheard of people who run part-time cafes while pursuing college, or inherit their families’ eateries (f n b is a notoriously hard industry), or become urban farmers. I think while we still overwhelmingly love money (and the conventional paths that take us there), more of us are singing our own tune
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