News Please no Bush-bashing, America bashing

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The discussion centers on a Forbes article that critiques perceptions of American democracy and anti-American sentiment, urging participants to avoid bashing the U.S. or its leaders. Participants argue that labeling critics as "anti-American" is reductive and undermines democratic discourse. They highlight that many democratic nations, including those in Europe, can express discontent with U.S. actions without being anti-democratic. The conversation critiques the portrayal of American democracy as superior and questions the validity of stereotypes about European intellectuals' views on the U.S. Ultimately, the discussion emphasizes the complexity of international perspectives on democracy and cultural identity.
  • #181
Smurf said:
That may be the most ridiculous thing I've heard all day (granted it's just started, but still). Yes, Anti-Americanism is an alien technology that has been 'sleeping' since it's deployment many years ago and is only now emerging to destroy the world!

Yay! I got your attention! :smile: o:) I tried to use the citation marks to point out that I was using a figure of speech. A more factual way of putting it would be, "common parts of various myths (that are components of prejudice) can be found through history and they can be more or less salient, depending on, for example, real-political circumstances." If you're interested, Ruppert Brown has written a good introduction to a socialpsychological approach to prejudice, called (surprise!) Prejudice.
 
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  • #182
Art said:
I fully agree, that is nonsense! In fact I think it is the other way around. For many years europeans were inordinately fond of America and it's culture.
Certainly in the English speaking parts of europe we were raised on a diet of thoroughly enjoyable american comics and films and any homegrown programs we saw waxed lyrical on how well America had done since becoming an independent state.
If anything our deep-rooted liking of America and all things american kept us too quiet for too long about the dangers and threats inherent in America's expansionist policy.
I agree. In the run-up to and start of the Iraq war, the targets of objection were fairly well spread between Bush, Blair and the other leaders of the coalition. This was most pronounced in Spain. While the public protests in New York and London were impressive, the Spanish seemed the most dedicated. Endless posters, graffiti and people wearing t-shirts adorning the slogan: "Bush, Blair, Aznar - no a guerra" (or whatever the spanish is for 'no war' - I don't speak the tongue and haven't seen that slogan for a while) did suggest a pecking order of blame, but certainly no racist sentiment aimed at a particular country. Indeed, the leaders alone were seen as to blame. Now America does seem to be the sole target - not even Bush alone. Quite possibly this has something to do with the figure 52%?
 
  • #183
Regarding prejudice and real-political circumstances:

http://gpi.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/7/3/221

Two broad distal causes of prejudice are past history of intergroup contact and general political predispositions. Two studies investigate the extent to which these effects are mediated by emotions directed at the outgroup, as proposed by Intergroup Emotions Theory (Smith, 1993). In both studies, past intergroup contact and Social Dominance Orientation predict prejudice. as measured either by a feeling thermometer or the Modern Racism Scale. Furthermore, for both studies these effects are significantly mediated by intergroup emotions, above and beyond measures of stereotypes (stereotype endorsement in Study 1 and stereotype knowledge in Study 2) that were entered as alternative potential mediators. Stereotype endorsement also plays a significant mediational role in one case. Increased attention to the role of emotions in intergroup relations, including in the mediation of such powerful and well-known effects as those of intergroup contact and political predispositions, appears to be warranted.

Regarding anti-americanism in Europe before and after the second Iraq war broke out, I disagree in the sense that it was clearly america who took the initiative and this was in my opinion understood by those opposing the war as well. The critique against Uk and Spain was, "Do not support the war", while the critique against USA was, "Do not suggest a war". Furthermore I've seen many demonstrations where Bush and America where compared to Hitler and Nazi germany, which in my opinion can not be called 'rational critique' even with good imagination.
 
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  • #184
Art said:
I fully agree, that is nonsense! In fact I think it is the other way around. For many years europeans were inordinately fond of America and it's culture.
Certainly in the English speaking parts of europe we were raised on a diet of thoroughly enjoyable american comics and films and any homegrown programs we saw waxed lyrical on how well America had done since becoming an independent state.
If anything our deep-rooted liking of America and all things american kept us too quiet for too long about the dangers and threats inherent in America's expansionist policy.
Yeah, I remember when I first moved to France before all this Bush crap started. People there were very fond of America. Not that they're negative and prejudiced towards America now, but the old fascination seems to have disappeared somewhere in all the politics.
 
  • #185
Smurf said:
Yeah, I remember when I first moved to France before all this Bush crap started. People there were very fond of America. Not that they're negative and prejudiced towards America now, but the old fascination seems to have disappeared somewhere in all the politics.
I guess no one remembers France during the Nixon era when they hated Americans. Sentiments go back and forth. But most Europeans held that sentiment then.
 
  • #186
Evo said:
I guess no one remembers France during the Nixon era when they hated Americans. Sentiments go back and forth. But most Europeans held that sentiment then.
Hated Americans or hated Nixon and his government?
 
  • #187
Smurf said:
Hated Americans or hated Nixon and his government?
I traveled there and had to conceal the fact that I was American. The masses cannot seem to separate the hatred toward a government, or leader or the people. It's sad, but for the majority, it's true.
 
  • #188
Evo said:
I traveled there and had to conceal the fact that I was American. The masses cannot seem to separate the hatred toward a government, or leader or the people. It's sad, but for the majority, it's true.
What was it Nixon did to alienate the French? I thought the major issues of his tenure were all domestic with social unrest in the USA? In fact didn't he actually revive US - French relations following his meeting with French President de Gaulle in Mar '69 shortly after his election in '68?
 
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  • #189
Art said:
What was it Nixon did to alienate the French? I thought the major issues of his tenure were domestic with social unrest in the USA? In fact didn't he revive US - French relations following his meeting with French President de Gaulle in Mar '69 shortly after his election in '68?
The Viet Nam war. Anti-American sentiment was at an all time high in the early 70's.
 
  • #190
Art said:
What was it Nixon did to alienate the French? I thought the major issues of his tenure were all domestic with social unrest in the USA? In fact didn't he actually revive US - French relations following his meeting with French President de Gaulle in Mar '69 shortly after his election in '68?

actually, the love-hate relationship between the French and the USA goes back several hundred years, all the way to the formation of the USA.

The US has screwed over France many times, and France has screwed over the US many times. (Notable examples: US declaring neutrality when the French went to war with the British, the French undermining post-WWII US interests in Asia leading to Vietnam, etc.)
 
  • #191
Evo said:
The Viet Nam war. Anti-American sentiment was at an all time high in the early 70's.
I'm not contradicting you but I am surprised the French were protesting over American involvement in Vietnam seeing as how the Americans originally went there to help the French in their efforts to maintain French control of the territory as part of the larger French Indochina. As far back as 1950 the US was shouldering half the cost of France's military expenditure in Vietnam.
The shock at home following France's ignoble defeat at the battle of Dien Bien Phu at the hands of the communist forces led shortly afterward to a full scale French withdrawal after 7 years of war leaving the US to spearhead the military campaign against the Viet Minh (later Viet Cong) forces.
Thus it seems very hypocritical of the French to criticize a war which they themselves started.
No wonder most members of the EU doesn't trust them :biggrin:
 
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  • #192
The "Events of 1968" were not carried out by the conservative French, who might have responded to these considerations, but by the students and leftists, who were responding to the bombing of Cambodia.
 
  • #193
selfAdjoint said:
The "Events of 1968" were not carried out by the conservative French, who might have responded to these considerations, but by the students and leftists, who were responding to the bombing of Cambodia.
I don't believe Vietnam played a very big role in the "Events of 68", this was certainly one of the things the Paris students demonstrated about initially but the major student led protests (the Movement of March 22nd) had a far greater domestic agenda than protesting over American actions in Vietnam. For example some of their key complaints were overcrowding at the universities, the lowering of entrance exam stds and dormitory rules. Following fights with the police and numerous arrests the unrest spread to unions and other left wing groups resulting in numerous strikes and further fighting. The common purpose then though was simply to bring down de Gaulle's right wing gov't.
When de Gaulle called an election to gain a fresh mandate the French elecorate voted overwhelmingly for the right wing parties increasing their share of parliamentary seats massively to 385 out of a total of 487.
 
  • #194
Art said:
I'm not contradicting you but I am surprised the French were protesting over American involvement in Vietnam seeing as how the Americans originally went there to help the French in their efforts to maintain French control of the territory as part of the larger French Indochina. As far back as 1950 the US was shouldering half the cost of France's military expenditure in Vietnam.
The shock at home following France's ignoble defeat at the battle of Dien Bien Phu at the hands of the communist forces led shortly afterward to a full scale French withdrawal after 7 years of war leaving the US to spearhead the military campaign against the Viet Minh (later Viet Cong) forces.
Thus it seems very hypocritical of the French to criticize a war which they themselves started.
No wonder most members of the EU doesn't trust them :biggrin:
The French had a strong antiwar movement. I remember seeing graffiti scribbled on walls "Nixon Assassin". "Kill Nixon" American flags being burned, effigies of Nixon being burned. I can still sing the little song that two puppets on tv were singing "Kissinger, Le Duc Tho" "Kissinger, Le Duc Tho" and the puppets dancing around, really bizarre. :bugeye:

You also missed were I specifically said early 70's.
 
  • #195
Better they burn flags than live sheep.
 
  • #196
Is osmeone burning live sheeps? :confused:
 
  • #197
Joel said:
Is osmeone burning live sheeps? :confused:
The French set fire to British trucks exporting sheep to France.
 
  • #198
Art said:
The French set fire to British trucks exporting sheep to France.
Some French farmers and political activists, that is. I'm sure the French were as disturbed by it as we were. At least, I hope so, or else you can shove a freedom fry up my a--- and call me Russ.
 
  • #199
El Hombre Invisible said:
Some French farmers and political activists, that is. I'm sure the French were as disturbed by it as we were. At least, I hope so, or else you can shove a freedom fry up my a--- and call me Russ.
:smile: :smile: :smile: :smile:
I thought it was the French prosititutes. They thought their livelihoods were being threatened by the sudden influx of the Welsh farmers' mistresses. :biggrin:
 
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  • #200
Evo said:
The French had a strong antiwar movement. I remember seeing graffiti scribbled on walls "Nixon Assassin". "Kill Nixon" American flags being burned, effigies of Nixon being burned. I can still sing the little song that two puppets on tv were singing "Kissinger, Le Duc Tho" "Kissinger, Le Duc Tho" and the puppets dancing around, really bizarre. :bugeye:
I wasn't disagreeing I just said it was hypocritical of them given their 100 year military occupation of Vietnam

Evo said:
You also missed were I specifically said early 70's.
? Are you referring to my response to selfAdjoint's post? My reply there was specific to his reference to the 'Events of '68'
 
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  • #201
Deviating from topic: I'm like bored of people bashing America(though it is the right thing to do LOL) What other countries do u like to bash. Or shall we bash all the countries in alphabetical order?
 
  • #202
chound said:
Deviating from topic: I'm like bored of people bashing America(though it is the right thing to do LOL) What other countries do u like to bash. Or shall we bash all the countries in alphabetical order?
Aren't you the person who posted the long list of wind-ups about Americans in the 'My view of USA' thread? If so, start with yourself - start an 'India-bashing' thread.
 
  • #203
El Hombre Invisible said:
Aren't you the person who posted the long list of wind-ups about Americans in the 'My view of USA' thread? If so, start with yourself - start an 'India-bashing' thread.
To get the ball rolling how about a thread on 'who owns the Kashmir region' :devil:
 
  • #204
Dude like 'My view of USA' wuznt an America bashing thread. Okay so like I'm going to be a Prime Minister of India in the future so I'll see what are all the complaints u have of India. Please make all the bashes relevant to present time.
 
  • #205
We could try for an 'insult' to every country?

English: Stuck up b*stards
Welsh: Sheep-sh*ggers (that's me)
Scottish: Drunken head-bangers
Irish: Stupid
French: Smelly cowards
Germans: Nazi's
Spanish: Peacocks
Italian: Posers
Russian: KGB (say no more)
China: xenophobic communist pigs
America: most of the above (apart from the sheep because that's for us Welsh and the Australians)

I can't think of an insult for Canadians though, can someone help me out?
 
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  • #206
Art said:
I wasn't disagreeing I just said it was hypocritical of them given their 100 year military occupation of Vietnam
That would mean they would actually have to understand the history behind what they're protesting, you're asking too much. :-p


? Are you referring to my response to selfAdjoint's post? My reply there was specific to his reference to the 'Events of '68'
Oooops, sorry. :redface:
 
  • #207
Daminc said:
We could try for an 'insult' to every country?

English: Stuck up b*stards
Welsh: Sheep-sh*ggers (that's me)
Scottish: Drunken head-bangers
Irish: Stupid
French: Smelly cowards
Germans: Nazi's
Spanish: Peacocks
Italian: Posers
Russian: KGB (say no ore)
China: xenophobic communist pigs
America: most of the above (apart from the sheep because that's for us Welsh and the Australians)

I can't think of an insult for Canadians though, can someone help me out?
I know there are tons, it's too early in the morning though.
 
  • #208
Try "hosers"?
 
  • #209
This thread is just so much COBBLERS, Brits complain about the weather more
than our relations with the Yanks, talk about tittle tattle, you have your worries
we have ours, Aint that enough?
 
  • #210
By EVO

I can't think of an insult for Canadians though, can someone help me out?

MOUNTED.
 

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