Ciro Pabón wrote:On thread:
Perhaps Toyota and Honda are not that bad. Maybe Ferrari and McLaren are extremely good this year and were fortunate in the "musical chairs" game that Schumacher retirement unleashed.
Anyway, could you (sigh...) provide some figures about why you think Toyota and Honda are not advancing? Yes, japanese work in teams but also the other manufacturers... I bet meetings are not an Eastern invention! What happens to Williams? Too many meetings?

Toyota's engines converted them to the "japanese way"? Or perhaps germans at BMW work each one separated from the others, without discipline, hanging around in hawaian shirts?

I think is normal to expect variability in team performance: I doubt very much it depends mainly on national traits.
Finally, talking about "european love for individuality", that (I'm sorry if wrong) the thread seems to imply, the only guy in recent history that dared to invent, fund, construct cars from nothing, get drivers, mechanichs, build a factory and FIA permission in a few months is Aguri Suzuki. Last time I checked, this remarkable individual was japanese...

How many of us are so daring, individualistic and brave as to accomplish that? It sounds very "samurai-ish" to me...
Don't give me the "Spyker did the same" reply

: they did it, in part, because FIA wanted new teams and they have been racing for ages.
Well reasoned and logical post, Ciro!
People conveniently fail to recognize Aguri Suzuki who is Japanese and who is therefore obviously

doing things the "Japanese Way"

and yet is doing quite well considering the circumstances. While Honda and Toyota are struggling, Super Aguri have been making rapid progress with limited resources. Despite this people will readily take Honda and Toyota’s struggles to make blanket generalizations about the “Japanese Way,” even when there is a blaring counter-example in Super Aguri.
The American auto industry is struggling against the Japanese car makers. Does this mean it is a problem with the "American Way" of doing things? It is interesting how when Ferrari were dominant and both Mclaren and Williams were struggling, nobody speculated about the failure of the "British Way." Perhaps we should also attribute Ferrari’s success to the “Italian Way” and Spyker’s struggles as issues with the “Dutch Way” of doing things?
Has anyone paid attention to MotoGP (the two-wheeled F1)? The MotoGP/500cc championship has been won by Japanese teams every single year since 1974. Honda in particular seem to be doing pretty well in MotoGP, applying this so-called "Japanese Way" successfully to eight championships in the past ten years.
Perhaps the issue is more complex than nationality; perhaps it has little to do with nationality at all. Unfortunately, people will continue to make these kinds of superficial, blanket generalizations because it is a far easier alternative to thinking critically on a case-by-case basis.