Quoting campbell from 02:39, 13th Mar 2008
i wouldn't give a shit usually but I don't think you can argue against the fact that blind american nationalism has allowed many many bad things to happen of late, and the daily promotion of it in schools is not neccessarily healthy. to me, it's an entirely alien idea. my comments are just based on a friend of mine i have in georgia, who i met on a school exchange so i have seen it all first hand a few times.
from my perspective it is insane, no hyperbole, that not just blind nationalism and religious obedience are taught and enforced every day, but the way in which it's done, with all the fetishism of the american flag and hand on your heart nonsense. it is the sort of thing that happens in oppresive regimes. but i suppose so are foreign detention/torture camps, a head of state wearing military uniform, government controlled press, etc etc. i'm not saying it's some hugely evil practice but i think it is utterly ridiculous and negative.
it's like the mix of religion and politics that is not challenged, or the 'american dream' concept, which is nowadays (i'd say) far more realistic in europe than it is in the states... i just don't fucking get that place at all
Thank you for reminding me why I was glad to leave the UK. Every once in a while I get to missing St Andrews and then somebody on here reminds me how much I hated people telling what my own country is *really* like.
You have a friend in Georgia and you've been here for a bit? Good for you! Clearly you know all there is to know about American culture. Nevermind that I've lived here, excepting four years in Scotland, my entire life - and that in a state far more conservative than anywhere in the modern South, excepting perhaps West Virginia.
We still have far far more liberty in the US than you do in the UK. Our press is free - no Official Secrets Act here. We have real seperation of church and state - why in the world you think you have that there considering the official relationship of the CoE and CoS to the government I'll never understand. And if you think European life embodies the American Dream better than American life, you have an incorrect notion of what the American Dream really is because European attitudes about the relationship of the citizen to the state are anathema to the American ideal.
Yeah, we screw up... there's a lot of things wrong with America and I've commented on what they are enough times on The Sinner that I don't think anyone can call me blindly patriotic - but I'm not unique. I don't know anyone, of the thousands of Americans I know, who is happy with how things have gone over the last 8 years. The news polls say about 12% of the country is pleased, but bugger me if I know where to find those people.
Furthermore, of the hundreds of people I went to school with who recited the Pledge and put their hands on their hearts to the flag every day, and of the thousands of people I know who do so at baseball games and whatnot, I can honestly say I've only met ONE, just ONE, person who I'd say suffered from blind nationalism.
What is so wrong with patriotism, anyway? A nation is a society, a community, and like all communities it depends upon a shared sense of identity and purpose to survive. You don't like Britain, fine... leave, find somewhere you do like. I don't believe in blind loyalty to the community you happen to be born in, but I do believe that if you are going to live somewhere, as an adult, you have some moral obligation to live somewhere you can be supportive of - and if that new places changes you can move again. The notion that loyalty is owed only to the self is half of what's wrong with Western Civilisation today, we are social animals and we are only noble (not to mention happy) when we rise above our own narcissism.
If you want to talk about what's *wrong* with America, fine. I'll show you my list if you show me yours. But do try not to call my country a military theocracy... it's far more true of your country than it is of mine, and it's offensive either way.
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Self-control is the chief element of self-respect; self-respect is the chief element of courage. - Thucydides
Man is free; yet we must not suppose that he is at liberty to do everything he pleases, for he becomes a slave the moment he allows his actions to be ruled by passion. --Giacomo Casanova