[QUOTE
Ha, yeah, I got that. My point was more that there was likely a well-intended, thought out reasoning behind the decision (whatever the actual decision was), rather than a simple, flippant "let's see what happens" one.
Sure, I can see it being seen as such… I can think of a number of arts where it's not a case… but that's really besides the point. In those cases, the rules are there from the beginning. This change is unusual, of course.
Same. Hence my request for such in my initial post.
Yep, and I'm not denying that that could be a direct result of such action. My comments were based on the ideals behind the change itself.
Yep.
arker, post: 1727753, member: 15886"]Okay. That's their prerogative.
Okay. Again, their prerogative.
How do you figure that?
Possible.
Doubtful.
Honestly, we have no information to draw any such conclusions from here…
Again, that's possible, but we don't have anything that actually supports that at all (I'm not denying the inherent racism in Japanese culture… and it's not just "non-Asians", it's "non-Japanese"… there's plenty of other Asian cultures they don't look to with much of a positive view either). I mean, I can come up with a number of Japanese case-studies that go directly against this (the large number of ridiculously high ranked Westerners in the Bujinkan… the high proportion of senior grades being Westerner in the Genbukan… the fact that all of the current Shihan of Toda-ha Buko Ryu, including it's current Soke-dairi, are all Westerners… high ranking Westerners in any number of classical Japanese arts…), but they'll all be simply individual examples.
Which wouldn't be necessarily out of place, but again, there is absolutely no evidence whatsoever for any of these ideas.
No, there's even less evidence for that. There's no mention of Westerners not gaining rank, just not allowing Westerners to award rank to others. Westerners have been awarded, and continue to hold, high rank in the organisation.
Look, the most important thing to remember when it comes to rank (no matter how it's done) is that it's only relevant within the school/association/organisation itself… with any standards, requirements, rituals, rules, or considerations being entirely up to them. And what strikes me as the most likely situation that caused this reaction is a perceived lack of standards, or dropping of standards, on a global level… with this as an attempt to take back control (centrally) of those standards. I'd probably suggest that it's not a rule that "only the Japanese can grade students to Dan ranking", but more "only the Hombu (which is in Japan) can grade students to Dan ranking"… or "only the head of the system (who is Japanese) will award Dan ranking going forward". Do we have the actual statement from the Seigokan about this? It's neither unusual, nor uncommon for a single central source to control rank within an organisation… particularly when it comes to higher ranks.[/QUOTE]
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Ha, yeah, I got that. My point was more that there was likely a well-intended, thought out reasoning behind the decision (whatever the actual decision was), rather than a simple, flippant "let's see what happens" one.
Sure, I can see it being seen as such… I can think of a number of arts where it's not a case… but that's really besides the point. In those cases, the rules are there from the beginning. This change is unusual, of course.
Same. Hence my request for such in my initial post.
Yep, and I'm not denying that that could be a direct result of such action. My comments were based on the ideals behind the change itself.
Yep.