Well, if you don't have any hang-ups at all about Empire (and at your age, too!

), you're a better man than I am.
But of course, you're right that Empire shouldn't be (such) an (explicit) issue (anymore) for
today's generation (even for those who have become "footsoldiers", teachers, for the EFL industry); anyone who is serious about teaching English must ultimately get to grips with the intricacies of their native language and use those findings as the basis for their teaching (how could it be otherwise - why should anyone
not work on and with what they know best and should always be getting to know even better)...and none of this necessarily precludes a (healthy) interest in regional and international (including learner) diversity and creativity in using the language (by that, I mean a creativity that is striking for its better qualities rather than any puzzling if not worrying symptoms of L1 interference - "mistakes", in a word).
Until such time as the supposed legions of perfectly fluent Japanese and Chinese start speaking a variety of English that is recognizably good and acceptable to other competent users around the globe (or at least stop writing textbooks with such lame dialogues, or examining students on archaic vestiges or obscure points of wholly prescriptive grammar), they will presumably still need native speakers to hold their hand and more or less assure them they are free to twist the language around as much as they like for their own (silly, not that e.g. the AET says this word) purposes, just so long as the other Japanese or Chinese get it and accept it (not saying a natural language is evolving in any way shape or form here).
Are there as many westerners involved in teaching - often an*lly, inaccurately or just plain badly - Chinese or Japanese in the west? Western students of foreign languages seem much more willing to accept the guidance and perhaps even the dominance of native speakers, and western countries don't seem to have such contradictory, often national policies where native speakers are simultaneously feted but also held at arm's length (but then, we don't have quite the competition for university places), but this doesn't stop many westerners totally changing in asian climes, and refusing to accept, or only reluctantly accepting, whatever authority BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY
RESPONSIBILITY that is bestowed upon them - a case of "When in Rome...", whilst disregarding that maybe not all roads will lead to Rome (or if they do, they could well be winding and torturous ones rather than the sleek Route 66 superhighway that's also available). Maybe we (westerners

) are simply more the perennial students, despite (or maybe because of!) our lack of a strong "Confucian" teacher-centred and led tradition.
I am not of course suggesting for a moment that westerners should become the new mandarins in the educational systems of asian countries, but the ambivalence (and often just the lack of knowledge, pure and simple) must constrain what is possible and can only add to the contradictory emotions (and sometimes "schizophrenic", blowing hot-cold, ones, in asian countries, learners and even their non-native teachers) that are often on display in TEFL.
Edit: This is obviously in reply to SJ's post - I've only just seen yours, woody. I'll let SJ reply to you (ore both of us) first before I say anything further.
