Yeah, it's not like you CLEARLY have a highway of some sort, filled with information on any given subject, literally at your fingertips....oh wait.SmokingBomber465 said:As far as the "we don't know a lot about the rest of the world" statement goes, it makes sense for this to be the case since America is so large and so far physically away from so much of the rest of the action. It makes a lot of sense that someone brought up in Europe where everything is literally RIGHT THERE would need to know a lot A LOT of geography--and several languages--but in America where one can live several hours and several hundred miles from ANY other nation, this is not as necessary. When a person can go through their whole life without needing to travel outside of their nation (and frankly it costs a million million dollars to get a ticket across the ocean), then it is understandable that few people bother.
I personally like to travel myself--but I just wanted to throw this perspective out there. It's incredibly bothersome to me how sometimes people look at the lack of interest and knowledge of European affairs (because lets be honest--that's what people mean when they say "world affairs") in America and immediately jump to unfair and frankly inaccurate conclusions.
You might want to redo your math on overseas tickets there bud, or maybe go with a different airline, either way that's wrong.
You're opinion on the definition of the term "world affairs", while certainly more enlightened than the average American(you grudgingly admit Europe exists), is still narrow-minded, there's 5 other continents buddy, pull up an atlas and learn them.