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Still proud to be an American?

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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Daryl » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 15:42:46

Either way if Bush is so evil, then it shouldn't have been close.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby FatherOfTwo » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 16:12:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', ' ')Everytime they blew up one tank, five more came up behind it. That's what beat Germany, an inexhaustible supply of manpower and equipment from the US.
[/quote]

Yes, I concur with that statement. The German tanks were far superior but the US production volumes were overwhelming. This was a factor that is well recognized.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', ' ')The Canadians? Please, I don't want to dishonor the Canadian war dead, but really, be serious.
Well, it’s understandable that you don’t have much knowledge about this, because American’s only learn about American history :) and I won’t try to put the Canadian contribution on par in terms of scale with that of the Americans. But in terms of contribution on a per soldier basis, let me give you just one example that is well recognized throughout the world. In the assault on Normandy, the landing on Juno beach by the 3rd Canadian division had progressed further inland than any of the other Allies and they also suffered the biggest loses. Later they were up against some of the best of the Germans Panzer tank divisions and still achieved their objectives. There are lots of other examples, but that isn’t what this thread is about… I just had to stick up for Canada. :)


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'H')uh? Can Soviet Communism be any more discredited than it is today? Ask the Eastern Europeans what they think about life under Soviet domination. You can't equate America with the Soviets. Ask the Tibetians about the Chinese. This isn't propaganda, it's just fact.

Sure the Soviet regime was brutal. But do you honestly think the Amercian’s were/are pure? Ask the Vietnamese what they thought of the Americans. Ask the Japanese - the Americans are the only ones to ever use nuclear weapons in battle. There are numerous examples; they are hardly angels - no country that tries to be top dog ever is.

Re: your comments about the Iraq war.
It is well known and was clearly understood, especially by DoD, the Pentagon etc. that years of sanctions had made Saddam’s army impotent. Equipment was in old and in shambles. Moral was bad. Sanctions weren’t going to be removed anytime soon and I don’t buy the “Saddam was going to become a significant threat.” argument. He was a caged animal, his influence muted. Now Iraq is in true danger of a civil war… and this is more stable?
Last edited by FatherOfTwo on Wed 21 Dec 2005, 16:21:17, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby FatherOfTwo » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 16:20:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'E')ither way if Bush is so evil, then it shouldn't have been close.

The religious right is a very well organized, highly motivated and cohesive block of voters. For a long time they have been waiting to elect someone who would reverse the course of the US. In addition to that, it’s unheard of for a sitting war time president to not win re-election. These two factors in my opinion were enough for Bush to squeak through.
The conspiracy stuff about rigging the election is worrisome, but currently unsubstantiated.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby nero » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 16:36:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('petrodollar', 'I') just got back from a trip abroad where I spoke to 2000 foreigners. I will offer a grossly generalized answer to the initial post:

1) The majority of the world still likes American people
2) The majority of the world really fears and/or hates President Bush
3) The majority of the world really wanted Kerry to be president, and
4) They really don't understand how Bush won the 2004 election, especially given that the exit polls showed a Kerry victory.


Thanks for the reply Petrodollar. I understand the Canadian (and European) viewpoint alot better than I do the American. I think you underestimate how much blame they place on individual Americans for acquiescing to the actions of their government.

However my question was more aimed at understanding the American viewpoint. I know there is a significant divide between Democrats and Republican right now, but at least on the subject of renditions or secret prisons I haven't heard too much outrage from either party. There is a segment on the hard left that certainly is worried about it but I'm not sure if the average American is all that worried.

In the responses I've received on this thread, a couple felt it is fine by them if their government has to bend a few rules to provide security. A couple felt it was the other party's fault and so didn't feel that they had to take responsibility as an American, and a couple denied any group responsibility by disassociating themselves from the actions of the country they happen to live in.

Appologies if that is a missrepresentation of your opinion. It is simply my interpretation of the responses. What I didn't receive was anybody responding that thier view of what it means to be American has also being shattered by the actions of their country. I think the image of Americans is changing for the worse outside America but my tentative hypothesis from the responses I've received is that American's self image of what it is to be American hasn't changed much.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Daryl » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 17:17:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FatherOfTwo', 'S')ure the Soviet regime was brutal. But do you honestly think the Amercian’s were/are pure? Ask the Vietnamese what they thought of the Americans. Ask the Japanese - the Americans are the only ones to ever use nuclear weapons in battle.


I addressed this objection in advance. I'm not sure you have read what I wrote already. Please explain to me how you equate the Soviet, Nazi and Tojo regimes with the Americans. Pointing to a set of bad or aggressive actions on the part of America is not enough. There is a serious issue of quantity and quality of action and ideology that makes a substantive objective difference between the parties. To argue otherwise is frankly offensive. It's like equating the incidents at Abu Ghraib with Saddam Hussein's regime. He executed millions in cold blood!!!!

If your point is that US propaganda is overblown, well, duh. That's why they call it propaganda. It's the nature of war and conflict that countries indoctrinate and motivate their public for the sacrifice and pain that lies ahead. It involves telling lies, demonizing the enemy and forming an exagerrated view of yourself. Name me an instance in any conflict at any time when this was not so.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FatherOfTwo', ' ')It is well known and was clearly understood, especially by DoD, the Pentagon etc. that years of sanctions had made Saddam’s army impotent. Equipment was in old and in shambles. Moral was bad. Sanctions weren’t going to be removed anytime soon and I don’t buy the “Saddam was going to become a significant threat.” argument. He was a caged animal, his influence muted. Now Iraq is in true danger of a civil war… and this is more stable?


Sanctions were dead. Al Queda was claiming we were killing two million children a year. I'm sure the Canadians sympathized greatly with the plight of Iraqi children at the time. Saddam's army was useless against the US, but could have easily marched on the Persian Gulf states if unopposed. This was the threat. That's why we were keeping thousands of troops in Saudi. Today the US has not a single troop in Saudi, ie no infidels on Muslim Holy soil. You may recall this was a central platform of Al Queda. Via the Iraq War we were able to remove this objectiion without seeming weak.

No, Iraq is less stable now. I'm sure if you re-read my post you will understand that I am taking a longer term view and looking at a bigger picture than who's running Iraq for the next couple of years. The 24 hour news cycle wants us to judge the situation based every car bomb that blows up, which probably provides about 80 percent of the motivation for the tactics employed by the insurgents there. Thanks for the help, tool.

By the way, I like Canada. A very talented people, as can be seen from the success many of them have enjoyed, particularly in the popular arts. You are a small country, though. In terms of defense, you have none. You have thrived under our protection and your social welfare programs have been funded by the military dollars you don't have to spend because we provide your security.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Ingenuity_Gap » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 18:37:52

Just a point of view from somebody who lived in both communism and capitalism.

I guess everybody who replied so far is more or less right in her/his on way. But defending or criticizing, being proud or ashamed is mostly based on someone's feelings and less on judging cold facts.

To make it clear from the beginning: communism and fascism were horrible societies, and I truly hope nobody wants to reiterate them. In our quest for a better world I hope they will remain in the past as a really bad example of what human beings were capable of.

That being said, I will not try to make the case for our current capitalistic way of life. There are good parts but I will stick with the criticism.

What I soon learned after I left behind the soviet gulag, is that Americans or Soviets, are pretty much the same soup (maybe more or less seasoned) when it comes up to protect one's interest. It's a matter of flavor, of ideology with the Americans wearing better gloves and the Soviets being more direct and brutal. What Soviets have done by killing or starving millions of their own people, Americans have done far away from home and with different (?) methods (military, economic, politic). There's no point in listing all American atrocities conducted in countries or regions like Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq, Central America. You just have to open your eyes and stop believing all the crap about America being ole' good Santa Claus.

Certainly, I agree with the dichotomy between government and people. Most Americans are of course honest, hard-working, decent citizens like everybody else. And the damage done to America's image in the world was instrumented by a corrupt, greedy and selfish government.

But I recently started to question this distinction. When things go so far and on every possible media channel we hear only bleak, horrific and regrettable news about what the American government is doing (torturing prisoners, eavesdropping on citizens, abandoning hurricane survivors, refusing to even consider greenhouse gasses curtailing, playing with people’s lives and future, and the list goes on and on), and Americans are doing almost nothing to address this situation, I start to wonder where the government stops and where the American people starts. The government was supposed to be elected by the people. Electing twice the same bunch of corrupt and greedy idiots is kind of troubling to say the least.

But don’t get me wrong. One way or another, the Western World peoples (starting with the Americans and continuing with the Canadians and Europeans) are together in this tragedy. Most of us are still buying cheap stuff from Wal-Mart and still driving long hours every day in our huge, energy-deficient, polluting vehicles. We are still living in Kunstler’s drive-in utopia and we don’t seem to be able to get out of it. We are prisoners of our governments and corporations. We possess lots of time-saving and entertainment gadgets, but we’re still prisoners. Maybe materially richer and still (!) with more freedoms than our gulag counterparts, but nonetheless prisoners.

What we as so-called “First World” citizens are doing (directly or indirectly) to our environment, our resources, the “Second and Third World” people, and last but not least our children and grandchildren, is shameful.

I’m more and more ashamed I’m a human being.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Daryl » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 20:45:02

Hey, you want criticism of America? How about the genocide of the American Indian? What about enslaving 10 million Africans? What about the other 20 million Africans that died during forced marches and on slave ships tied to the slave trade? Hiroshima and Nagasaki pale against those crimes against humanity. Who's proud of these things? Why should our image of ourselves change because of Abu Ghraib?

The bigger and more powerful a country is the more pain it causes others in becoming so. That's why Canadians have a much easier time explaining themselves and find it so easy to cast stones. When I lived in Europe complete strangers would come up to me saying things like, "Carter, why Turkey? Why screw Greeks in Crete? Why Carter do that?" I didn't know what to say to these guys. You know, I'm just trying to take in a few museums and cathedrals and I've got to explain the geopolitical importance of Turkey in the Cold War to some Greek guy whose Mom got killed.

Still, I say overall if you compare the US to its 20th Century peers in terms of power and influence, say to Nazi Germany, Imperial Britain, Tojo Japan, Maoist China, Soviet Russia, and especially to its historical equivalents i.e. Rome and other ancient Empires, it comes out looking relatively good. I'm an American and I'm prejudiced, but I think most fair people would agree.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Ingenuity_Gap » Wed 21 Dec 2005, 22:12:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'H')ey, you want criticism of America? How about the genocide of the American Indian? What about enslaving 10 million Africans? What about the other 20 million Africans that died during forced marches and on slave ships tied to the slave trade? Hiroshima and Nagasaki pale against those crimes against humanity. Who's proud of these things? Why should our image of ourselves change because of Abu Ghraib?

The bigger and more powerful a country is the more pain it causes others in becoming so. That's why Canadians have a much easier time explaining themselves and find it so easy to cast stones. When I lived in Europe complete strangers would come up to me saying things like, "Carter, why Turkey? Why screw Greeks in Crete? Why Carter do that?" I didn't know what to say to these guys. You know, I'm just trying to take in a few museums and cathedrals and I've got to explain the geopolitical importance of Turkey in the Cold War to some Greek guy whose Mom got killed.

Still, I say overall if you compare the US to its 20th Century peers in terms of power and influence, say to Nazi Germany, Imperial Britain, Tojo Japan, Maoist China, Soviet Russia, and especially to its historical equivalents i.e. Rome and other ancient Empires, it comes out looking relatively good. I'm an American and I'm prejudiced, but I think most fair people would agree.


I agree with you, Daryl, but I'll still criticize America, because I expect much more from the country and the people. Something I cannot say about Cuba, North Korea, Russia or other communist or ex-communist country. I have no expectations from them because I know what they can and can't.

America has been a beacon of freedom, democracy, and hope for most of the 20th century, but lately I don't see her leading us in the right direction. Something is going terribly wrong. The American dream seems to be turning into a nightmare. And government is not the only pne responsible for that. People should do something about it.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby LadyRuby » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 01:25:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', 'T')hanks for the reply Petrodollar. I understand the Canadian (and European) viewpoint alot better than I do the American. I think you underestimate how much blame they place on individual Americans for acquiescing to the actions of their government.

However my question was more aimed at understanding the American viewpoint. I know there is a significant divide between Democrats and Republican right now, but at least on the subject of renditions or secret prisons I haven't heard too much outrage from either party. There is a segment on the hard left that certainly is worried about it but I'm not sure if the average American is all that worried.

In the responses I've received on this thread, a couple felt it is fine by them if their government has to bend a few rules to provide security. A couple felt it was the other party's fault and so didn't feel that they had to take responsibility as an American, and a couple denied any group responsibility by disassociating themselves from the actions of the country they happen to live in.

Appologies if that is a missrepresentation of your opinion. It is simply my interpretation of the responses. What I didn't receive was anybody responding that thier view of what it means to be American has also being shattered by the actions of their country. I think the image of Americans is changing for the worse outside America but my tentative hypothesis from the responses I've received is that American's self image of what it is to be American hasn't changed much.


The secret prisons and the like are absolutely not okay. And the fact that we're having debates about whether or not it's okay to torture is unbelievable!!

Every week there seems to be some new shit coming out on wrongdoings by the Bush administration. If ever a president deserved impeachment and being thrown out of office, Bush does. He's a shameful president.

And to you Republicans out there who want to think this is just more of the same (like the last president's "sex scandal"), this is unprecedented. How many people have lost their lives because of Bush? How much has the environment/economy been damaged, directly because of Bush?

For God's sake, couldn't the Republicans have come up with a better choice in 2000 than Bush?? What were they thinking?
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Doly » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 05:34:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LadyRuby', '
')Every week there seems to be some new shit coming out on wrongdoings by the Bush administration. If ever a president deserved impeachment and being thrown out of office, Bush does. He's a shameful president.


Like my brother said a couple of days ago: what does Bush have to do to get impeached? Confess to eating babies?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LadyRuby', '
')For God's sake, couldn't the Republicans have come up with a better choice in 2000 than Bush?? What were they thinking?


He got elected, didn't he? So he must have been the right choice.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby untothislast » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 07:29:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', '
')Gee, you finally grew up, congratualtions.


So which part of my original reply did you find naive and/or puerile? Just thought I'd ask.

This is all about the current perception of the US (under the neocons), as one of the most malign influences on the planet, being diffused by our traditional view of America as a positive presence and genuine force for good. Sadly, we're finding this folk-memory ideal, hard to displace - even when the evidence has become comprehensive and damning that Bush & Co now view the world as their own exclusive property.

Why is it, you can never get a left-wing loony, lone gunman when you need one?
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Andrew_S » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 08:06:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', '
')
I majored in German and lived in Germany for several years. I talked to Germans who were infantrymen on the Eastern front against the Americans.



Presumably this is a typing error: the Americans and British were on the European Western Front. Contrary to the movie-style presentation of history in the USA and the UK, Germany lost WW2 primarily on the Eastern Front against the Soviets.

Just to make a general point addressed to this whole thread: real history is largely unknown to the general public, and even to many university graduates of history. The presentation is utterly biased in order to hoodwink people. The success of this approach is apparent in the thousands of threads like this on the internet.

One key to confusion is nationality. The real power and cause of the major conflicts exists above and outside nationality. Divide and conquer.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Seadragon » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 09:28:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ingenuity_Gap', '
')
But I recently started to question this distinction. When things go so far and on every possible media channel we hear only bleak, horrific and regrettable news about what the American government is doing (torturing prisoners, eavesdropping on citizens, abandoning hurricane survivors, refusing to even consider greenhouse gasses curtailing, playing with people’s lives and future, and the list goes on and on), and Americans are doing almost nothing to address this situation, I start to wonder where the government stops and where the American people starts. The government was supposed to be elected by the people. Electing twice the same bunch of corrupt and greedy idiots is kind of troubling to say the least.

But don’t get me wrong. One way or another, the Western World peoples (starting with the Americans and continuing with the Canadians and Europeans) are together in this tragedy. Most of us are still buying cheap stuff from Wal-Mart and still driving long hours every day in our huge, energy-deficient, polluting vehicles. We are still living in Kunstler’s drive-in utopia and we don’t seem to be able to get out of it. We are prisoners of our governments and corporations. We possess lots of time-saving and entertainment gadgets, but we’re still prisoners. Maybe materially richer and still (!) with more freedoms than our gulag counterparts, but nonetheless prisoners.

What we as so-called “First World” citizens are doing (directly or indirectly) to our environment, our resources, the “Second and Third World” people, and last but not least our children and grandchildren, is shameful.

I’m more and more ashamed I’m a human being.


Exactly my thoughts...at some point the American people have to take responsibility for the government; we elected them, after all. I used to think the current administration was the worst since Nixon, but they've surpassed that milestone by quite a ways. But the saddest part is the torpid American public.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby LadyRuby » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 09:35:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '
')
Like my brother said a couple of days ago: what does Bush have to do to get impeached? Confess to eating babies?



Well as I'm sure you're aware we have this little problem called Congress. Since the Republicans have the majority in Congress it was no problem impeaching Clinton for having a little fling. But Bush can do whatever he wants, government run amok, power unchecked. I hope the GOP will pay dearly for this in coming years.
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Re: Still proud to be an American?

Unread postby Daryl » Thu 22 Dec 2005, 11:38:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('untothislast', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', '
')Gee, you finally grew up, congratualtions.


So which part of my original reply did you find naive and/or puerile? Just thought I'd ask.

This is all about the current perception of the US (under the neocons), as one of the most malign influences on the planet, being diffused by our traditional view of America as a positive presence and genuine force for good. Sadly, we're finding this folk-memory ideal, hard to displace - even when the evidence has become comprehensive and damning that Bush & Co now view the world as their own exclusive property.

Why is it, you can never get a left-wing loony, lone gunman when you need one?


It's naive to fully invest yourself in your native propaganda. Childlike. Propaganda is designed to motivate the less educated, who usually are the ones sent off to die. The elites understand the real reasons for the war. With the spread of universal education and modern media and communications, propaganda is becoming less effective. Too many people have "grown up".

I agree with Kunstler, Bush would have been much better off if he had just fessed up about the real reasons we invaded Iraq. Hardly anybody fell for the WMD pretext. Even fewer are buying the democracy stuff.
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