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#451 |
the snarky blue one
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Musings (response to no one in particular)
I think it’s safe to say that every country and culture on this entire planet has an unsavory history if we but look. Most of history itself consists of one culture/race/religion/country invading/overpowering/killing off/conquering the guys across the road/river/lake/ocean for the purpose of gaining land/goods/labor/control because they feel justified/superior/greedy/or they just plain CAN.
Every culture/race/religion/country has been both the aggressor and the oppressed at some point in time. The aggressors have often oppressed their OWN. Sometimes the aggressors have gained or remained in control and won the battles, and sometimes the oppressed have risen up, revolted, fought and won. When of the same culture/country, if the oppressed (the subordinate entity) stand up to the aggressors (the controlling entity), then the oppressed, by definition, become traitors and their actions treasonous, no matter what their cause may be. In the view of the aggressors (or ruling class) they are now enemies of the state, rebels, revolutionaries and heretics. In the view of the oppressed they are freedom-fighters, heroes and patriots fighting for a noble cause, which is usually by definition, freedom from oppression of some sort. Our Founding Fathers, although (most, if not all were) born in America, were nonetheless British subjects. When they felt oppressed and decided to rise up against their sovereign, they became traitors to Britain, yet patriots to their cause. Benedict Arnold however, had the dubious distinction of being twice a traitor – first a traitor to the British for taking up arms against them, and then to the American Patriots for selling out and going back to the British side. In simplistic terms, if victorious, the oppressed continue life with new found freedom and self-righteousness, in control of their lives and destinies. Life is good, prosperity reins. Inevitably, over time, the oppressed go through all the stages of the human condition and circumstance that now brings them to the doorstep of aggression, and so it goes. Throughout history a given race/culture/country goes beyond its backyard and goes to great lengths to impose their will, religion and power, and corrupt, exploit, and steal the riches and resources of another given race/culture/country, as in the cases of the Zulu, Aztecs and Native Americans to name but a few. We may not, as individuals, be at fault, or be a victim of these circumstances. But as descendents of one form of culture/race/religion/country or another, our human history is the same if we just look. Probably, without exception, we all come from being both the oppressors as well as the oppressed. There is good, bad and mediocre in every single culture/race/religion and country in the world. No system, belief or practice is ideal or perfect. What worked yesterday does not work today and will need to change again for tomorrow. We can’t even agree with our own family, friends, neighbors and leaders although we’re assimilated into a core culture from birth. We will always unite when in our own best interests and be in conflict for the same reasons. We're all selfish and generous. We're frail, yet strong. We're wise, yet foolish. We're human, yet monstrous. We're both right and wrong. We love, hate, kill and heal depending on which way the wind is blowing. The US/Europe Cultural Divide is simply/complexly that we’ve always been the same/different and always were/will be for as long as humans have or will exist. |
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#452 | |||||
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
![]() The whole thread was defined as a over-generalization, to wit "US/Europe Cultural Divide -- Musings". What do you do with that? It does not describe fine-grained subculture subtlies. Maybe I take my old debater training too seriously. (You can bring any relevant fact to the debate, but you can't change the defined subject of the debate.) Quote:
To me, it seems like the only option is caputulation of my ehtics base. Sorry - not acceptable. Of course I do. I hadn't been aware I'd been made a God, or even a wise man on a mountaintop. Just another human being. But everbody has prejudices, even you, Nekokami. I'm aware of most of mine, they were self chosen at age 14 after several months of introspection, based on the knowledge I had available then. Nearly 40 years later, I have found little data change them. I described some of mine, and why. (And I stand by my other sig line as well, even though it's a fictional place. You might want to read the book it came from.) Can you describe your prejudices, and why? Quote:
(By the by, the largest ecological disasters created by technology have occured in areas without free markets and unlimited government.) Quote:
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I'll sum it up by asking you the following question. Where in the world will people who believe in a limited form of government be allowed to live and organize by those beliefs, without any "missionaries" trying to covert them, and without and unlimited form of government viewpoints controlling them because they end up successful? Inquiring minds want to know... Last edited by Greg Anos; 04-21-2009 at 03:21 PM. |
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#453 | |
Illiterate
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#454 |
MIA ... but returning som
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#455 |
Not scared!
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Stereotypes?
Right, this thread (I think) is about cultural differences. Perhaps a summary of what I (as an Englishman) know to be true about Americans would help here.
All Americans are: Arrogant Obsessed by money and celebrity Extremely right wing politically Stupid Fat Gun owners Rude Self-obsessed Now, clearly this is nonsense - but I think a lot of UK people really do believe the above (or a large part of it). Perhaps it would be good to explore why some of the above points are commonly held as stereotypes? Are there/were there elements of truth in there or is it just pure xenophobia (perhaps a mixture of the two?). Perhaps also an American member could let us have a similar list from the US perception of people from the UK (yeah, go on, we can take it!). |
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#456 | |
Banned
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Maybe we should all stop thinking of ourselves as from here or there, and instead embrace everything from everywhere? My cultural upbringing has as much to do with the media I consumed as the place where I was raised, so maybe that's an approach. Instead of division along cultural lines, maybe inclusion along what is similar and admirable? Just a thought. |
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#457 |
Not scared!
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Well, of course you're right Moe; wouldn't the world be a better (and more peaceful) place if we all respected and celebrated each other's differences and emphasised our similarities as a way of living together in harmony.
Can't see that happening any time soon though unfortunately! |
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#458 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Nekokami say I'm not supposed to stereotype.... ![]() Columist to Howard Roarke: What do you think of me? You may use any terms you like. Howard Roarke: But I don't think of you. Checklist: Arrogant ![]() Extremely right wing politically: Is a limited government libertarian extreme right wing? Stupid: Depends on who you ask... Fat: Yes. Gun owner: That's a loaded question.... Rude: Read my posting on this thread, and form your own opinion. I'm biased. Self obsessed: Good question. At leasst I have a self.... |
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#459 |
Illiterate
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#460 | ||||||
fruminous edugeek
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![]() Would it force you to capitulate your ethics base if you were to admit that the US is and always has been culturally diverse, and that the "limited government" experiment was not universally held to be of value even at the founding, and has become rather less so of late? I'm not saying that you, personally, need to reject the idea of limited government, but it seems to me that you don't want to admit that an awful lot of other US citizens are looking for alternatives, nor that there's any merit to the concerns people express about the system you cherish. I commented that you seemed to stand by your sig line, i.e. "Remember, no matter what they say, people don't want the truth, just their prejudices reinforced. -RSE" I don't really understand how your response below connects with that. Quote:
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The thing is, when we look at the historical reasons for poverty around the world, there are very often events in the past and present caused by the same people who benefit from a low-cost labor source (i.e. poverty) now. It looks to me like the system has a built-in dependency on maintaining poverty for a substantial part of the world's population. I am guessing that you believe that the relative wealth presently enjoyed by citizens of the US is due to historically limited government and free markets. That might be true-- I'm not completely convinced, but let's accept that for the moment. What if the stunning poverty in many places in the rest of the world is also due, at least in part, to the free markets and (comparably) limited government in the US? Can you accept that this might be possible? Does it matter to you if it is? Quote:
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If so, I'd support you all the way, and I'd honestly wish you well. Show us all how it's done. I would personally defend your right to do so, even though this isn't the kind of society I myself would want to live in. |
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#461 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#462 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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30 percent seems pretty high for a revolution... Most of them had far less... (and why the "thing" about the American revolution? It was the British Empire's Vietnam War, and you lost. Ok.) |
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#463 |
MIA ... but returning som
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#464 | ||
King of the Bongo Drums
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Quote:
You should spend some time talking to your standard family doc or pediatrician. Here in Illinois, if you are a baby doc and treat kids under the statewide insurance plan for the "poor," the state (1) doesn't pay you much and (2) delays payment for months. (Meanwhile, if you treat anyone who walks in your door, you get a lot of deadbeats who - guess what - are illegals.) And on the Medicaid/Medicare side of things, it appears that more and more docs are refusing to accept patients because of the same problems. Let me introduce you to Pournelle's Iron Law of Bureaucracy - which, as a member of a federal bureaucracy for some 37 years now, rings true to me: "In any bureaucracy, the people devoted to the benefit of the bureaucracy itself always get in control and those dedicated to the goals the bureaucracy is supposed to accomplish have less and less influence, and sometimes are eliminated entirely." This Iron Law is why any governmental "heath care" system will ultimately become tyrannical. It will not be run for the people needing health care, any more than the public schools are run for the students. It will not be run for the docs, except for the ones who, like teachers who become administrators, become members of the administration. And it will be a tyranny, because you will take whatever medicine it wants to give you, and prevent you from getting any medicine it does not want to give you. Quote:
Government's role in health care is to regulate for purposes of quality control and for insuring (so to speak) competition among providers, prosecuting of fraud, and providing transparency to the consumer. But once we let the government take over the funding we will get two things: increasing costs, and decreasing service delivered in accordance with government decree handled by a bunch of bureaucrats following Pournelle's Iron Law to the letter. Last edited by Harmon; 04-23-2009 at 11:18 PM. |
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#465 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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"In the end, Benedict Arnold's "moral failure lay not in his disenchantment with the American cause" for many other officers returned to civilian life disgusted with the decline in republican virtue and angry over their failure to win a guaranteed pension from Congress. Nor did his infamy stem from his transfer of allegiance to the British side, for other Patriots chose to become Loyalists, sometimes out of principle but just as often for personal gain. Arnold's perfidy lay in the abuse of his position of authority and trust: he would betray West Point and its garrison "and if necessary the entire American war effort" to secure his own success. His treason was not that of a principled man but that of a selfish one, and he never lived that down. Hated in America as a consort of "Beelzebub ... the Devil," Arnold was treated with coldness and even contempt in Britain. He died as he lived, a man without a country." The Enigma of Benedict Arnold by James Henretta http://www.earlyamerica.com/review/fall97/arnold.html |
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