I live in Japan that has 61 years of being a liberated democratic country/nation, supposedly, but the fact is it is really not a good example of it, just to let you know. Japan used to be in the hands of some war manics in the military and the dorky emperor, but even after the liberation in 1945, nothing significant has really changed. The only difference is that we've got far more influences from the U.S. in every aspect of our lives now, and the Japanese government supports the U.S. power(Washington) more than ever. It's still an oppressive country/nation.
We still do get simliar incidents(?) of what has happened in Croatia and/or Bosinia. There are two kinds of oppressive power here: One is the state with the interest of multi-national corporate businesses, and the other one is the Japanese mafia. The mafia part is much like the current threat issue on some journalists in Russia that if you go against the power you will really risk your life.
For the general public, there's no justice to anything real because the Japanese court is very much in favor of those in power. They defend the government first, the corporations and the mafia heads the second, and the general population at last. The lawyers are useless because they are too snobby. The scholars and the activists are out there somewhere, but they don't have any effectve power over the mass to speak for justice.
What is worse is that the media is not independently driven. The journalists don't practice journalism: Most of them never do that because they support and belong to their press club, which is a very infamous press conference system that they attend, sit, and listen to what the government spokesperson says. That feeds the 6 o'clock and 11 o'clock news on every channel on the same day and the headlines on the major newspapers the next day. So, we have no truths being talked about so openly.
I can just go on and on to list the things that really are not democratic or really corrupt. What the libration back in 1945 did was to unrule the society, but it left so broken. And since then we haven't come anywhere near what our new and current constitutions, which are the U.S. copies, really represent. Most people don't understand the change because they have never seen anything outside of their society and their culture to even compared to. They can learn and start building and creating something more truthful, but it doesn't seem like that's their option.