





Direi definitiva. Magari cambio paese, dovrei tornare in Cina l'anno prossimo, l'obbiettivo comunque e' prima o poi stabilirmi a Singapore, il Paese che ha messo in pratica il "fascismo del XXI secolo" senza dichiararsi tale. Un vero paradiso.


benvenuto








Benvenuto....Ho un amica che lavorava a Singapore, ramo diplomatico....Ora è a Roma in Farnesina....Mi ha descritto Singapore dettagliatamente, con particolare riguardo circa l'ordinamento, politico e giudiziario. Alcune cose le ho trovate veramente interessanti, altre un po' inquietanti, e altre ancora, purtroppo, molto vicine a noi....Certamente vi sono aspetti che si potrebbero definire fascisti....Altri ben lungi.....Io credo di più assomigli ad una sorta di Svizzera asiatica. Vorrei comunque sentire le tue opinioni a riguardo....
Complimenti per il nick, anch'io sono un fan dell'ex kogi kaishakunin dei Tokugawa....Purtroppo non riesco a trovare le puntate del telefilm in italiano, ma solo quelle con i sottotitoli una tantum....In compenso possiedo la collezione quasi completa del fumetto dai cui è stata tratta la serie: "Lone wolf & cub".....Un vero capolavoro ! A presto![]()


Since the city's foundation in 1819, Singapore's population has been polyglot and multiethnic. Chinese have been in the majority since 1830 but have themselves been divided into sometimes antagonistic segments speaking mutually unintelligible Chinese languages. The colonial society was compartmented into ethnic and linguistic groups, which were in turn associated with distinct political and economic functions. Singapore has never had a dominant culture to which immigrants could assimilate nor a common language. This was the foundation upon which the efforts of the government and ruling party to create a common Singaporean identity in the 1970s and 1980s rested.
On July 1989 Singapore's 2,674,362 residents were divided into 2,043,213 Chinese (76.4 percent), 398,480 Malays (14.9 percent), 171,160 Indians (6.4 percent), and 61,511 others (2.3 percent). The proportions of the ethnic components had remained substantially unchanged since the 1920s. Although the ethnic categories were meaningful in the Singaporean context, each subsumed much more internal variation than was suggested by the term "race." Chinese included people from mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong, as well as Chinese from all the countries of Southeast Asia, including some who spoke Malay or English as their first language. The Malays included not only those from peninsular Malaya, but also immigrants or their descendants from various parts of the Indonesian archipelago, such as Sumatra, the Riau Islands south of Singapore, Java, and Sulawesi. Those people who in Indonesia were members of such distinct ethnic groups as Acehnese, Minangkabau, Buginese, Javanese, or Sundanese were in Singapore all considered "Malays." Indians comprised people stemming from anywhere in pre-1947 British India, the present states of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, and from Sri Lanka and Burma. Singapore's Indian "race" thus contained Tamils, Malayalis, Sikhs, Gujaratis, Punjabis, and others from the subcontinent who shared neither physical appearance, language, nor religion.
MELTPOT FASCISTA?
(SE PER TE FASCISTA VUOL DIRE CREDERE NELLE LEGGI E FARLE APPLICARE..BEH ALLORA SONO FASCISTA ANCHIO!)
l'uomo superiore è cauto nel parlare e pronto nell'azione".

