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Post by Always on Aug 30, 2008 9:32:02 GMT 10
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Post by rafael on Sept 12, 2008 2:55:17 GMT 10
Religion plays a major role in democracy. A Shintoist in a Japanese temple is different from a Yankee in California. Do you think they will both have very similar democracy in all aspects of life and governing laws?
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Post by rafael on Nov 27, 2008 0:48:45 GMT 10
Can a buddhist or taoist who lives in democracy of Japan be entirely the same as a Baptist who lives in the US?
They have both democracy.
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Post by Always on Nov 30, 2008 10:39:33 GMT 10
Reminder of the week:
"Do your research first so that you will not be left behind."
People in Japan receive the same kind of democracy in principle as is from the people of United states. Clear?
If not, then how do you define the term itself? What is democracy to you?
If not yet, then, does a buddhist in Myanmar or in Burma receives the same kind of democracy when compared to a buddhist in Japan?
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Post by rafael on Jan 12, 2009 3:16:58 GMT 10
Democracy is taken in various forms. Sex liberalism is democracy to the US while not in Japan. The former a Christian Nation, the latter a Buddhist nation.
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Post by Always on Jan 12, 2009 12:07:38 GMT 10
Rafael, there's a reason why I asked you to define the term "Democracy." But instead of defining the word, you posted a recycled sample.
This is the reason why you are confusing your own self-understanding of democracy to that with culture, tradition, mores or with the fixed morally binding custom of a particular group.
Again, how do you define democracy?
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Post by iloanetadihi on May 25, 2019 7:33:25 GMT 10
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Post by kapacomubohi on May 25, 2019 9:28:43 GMT 10
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