>>214901249
I hear people praise Japan for homogeneity all the time, there used to be a multitude of different cultures on the island mulched into a single national entity. Perhaps this concept of multiplying culture could be taken to an extreme, but then you get multiculturalism which is also no-no word. Perhaps it's similar to how business monopolies form, you have small competing tribes that clash, then blend together and the process continues until everything synthesizes. Where does the line get drawn? National homogeneity is fine even if it destroys culture and expands far past the point that its resources allow, but on a global scale it's evil. Culture should be replaced by community, this concept of culture seems like a cancer that has no human input it's purely a state property. When's the last time you've seen a civilian run power plant or oil rig? Most people are spectators in their own culture.