Why are Americans so Patriotic?

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repeating integers

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kane.malakos said:
Kopikatsu said:
Fagotto said:
Kopikatsu said:
Fagotto said:
Kopikatsu said:
Never use wikipedia as a source. Never.
That's just a silly thing to say. Wikipedia works as a source.
Try telling that to a college professor.
Try considering the reasons instead of just mimicking them. Life is not an academic paper where people should be using more direct sources.
The reason is that anyone can edit Wikipedia. Giving people the freedom to do whatever rarely ends well.
Your point would work if not for the fact that Wikipedia is heavily, heavily moderated. Seriously, try putting up some inaccurate information and see how long it lasts.
To be fair, it's perfectly possible to sneak in a tiny bit of inaccurate information and let it go unnoticed for months. The page for soil once said that soil was mostly composed of old particles of rainbows, or something similarly ridiculous, for a long time.
 

Helmholtz Watson

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AndyFromMonday said:
Volf99 said:
AndyFromMonday said:
Patriotism only serves to breed distrust between different cultures. We should attempt to unite under one banner and relinquish our imaginary differences rather than enforce and encourage them. Patriotism is dangerous, plain and simple.
hhmmm...no. I rather not because that sounds like a gateway to have a single monolith government/country that spans the globe and I don't want that.
It sounds like people being more receptive to other cultures. Patriotism breeds distrust.
I'm not sold on multiculturalism through out the world. If people in South Korean want to be Patriotic and dislike non South Korean culture, that's their right as South Koreans. If Iceland wanted to be Patriotic and dislike non Icelandic culture, again that is their right. But I digress.

I think patriotism is fine as long as it doesn't lead to nonsense like (PRC)China's one china policy which means that Tibetan people have to suffer so that Han Chinese people can feel good about themselves.
 

Mallefunction

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Volf99 said:
Mallefunction said:
You know that being patriotic is actually part of our goal in public education here in the US right? I'm not even kidding. There is a reason that every morning, public school kids are made to stand and read the Pledge like we're goddamn Hitler youths.

It's mostly due to WWII and the Cold War. Especially the McCarthy cases. People got so scared about foreigners and it became all about how America is the fuckin' shit. Unfortunately, times have changed, but the attitudes of many current adults who were either born during those times or grew up during them have no yet changed with them.
Maybe its because I'm a Jew with grandparents from the Holocaust, so I'm just being overly sensitive, but please don't type that the Pledge of Allegiance is like the Hitler Youths. The two are not at all the same.
My family are Orthodox jews. I used that example (knowing very well that one is MUCH more extreme than the other), because honestly it's the most recognizable. There are plenty of other dictators who tried to get kids involved in their regime, but I seriously doubt too many people here would know about them.
 

Therumancer

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Zachary Amaranth said:
Therumancer said:
In so far as this discussion goes, yes. There is a lot of leeway for massive disagreement within the general support of America, however when your dealing with arguements that lead to the reduction in power and primacy of your own nation that is the opposite of patriotism... which is exactly the point. Right now it's "hip" to be un-patriotic.
That's silly. right now it's "hip" to want government to stop propping up toxic corporations. It's "hip" to want some accountability from Wall Street. Man, do you really think that accountability is unamerican?

I mean, we're supposed to be "of the people, by the people, and for the people."

Or is that last quote unamerican?
The way it's done, yes, it pretty much defines hipster/hippie politics.

The central issue we're facing right now in the US is that we are a capitalist system, where people have the freedom to own their own property, compete, and do business, with success or failure being based on your relative capabilities.

The problem largely being that we've gotten to the point where we have a few greedy arseholes ruining it for everyone, and using their success to load the deck so other people can't even get into a position to compete with them.

The issue is of course how one goes about regulating this kind of thing, without totally destroying the freedom that goes along with it. Right now the people protesting, either have no idea what to do for a new system, or want to impose some form of socialism which would bring it's own problems, probably greatly in excess of what we have now. Not to mention the simple fact that the USA's capitalist system props up a lot of the world, whether people want to accept that or not.

There are also international aspects to the entire thing, that largely come down to the US forgetting the old maxim "Free Trade means he with the biggest guns trades freely" we've become too pre-occupied with our morality and a desire for peace to actually enforce our own interests. One major example of this is the issue with China's "robber economy" where China knocks off things invested in and owned by businesses here in the US (and to be fair, also from all over the world) and then sells them at cut rates due to producing the products in sweatshops, and not having to make up the initial investment. In order to maintain peace the US has largely borrowed money from China, which was a combination of paid tribute, and to maintain the peace because the US at least could argue it was getting it's share of the money (similar to what it would have been getting from taxing those products and otherwise taking it's cut), where China was also making money to pump up it's standard of living. Needless to say as things change this relationship isn't working well anymore, with people taking those "loans" seriously due to China's increasing strength, and of course business interests getting increasingly pissed because the US has been snubbing them. After all when the US goverment let's another nation steal from you, while the UN and World Court try and prevent the issue from ever being resolved officially, it doesn't exactly garnet positive relations. The fact that China is rapidly becoming too powerful to guarantee a victory if we were to attack (compared to when we could have done it easily) also hasn't gone unnoticed.... and this is just one issue among many. One of the reasons why the goverment hasn't been all that effective in dealing with business interests is that it has little or no credability with them. It can be argued that US neglect internationally was part of what caused a lot of these problems (though by no means all of them), after all it only makes sense that a company that produces a product, and has another nation steal and undercut it, is going to run into some problems (and as I said this is only part of it). Our reluctance to go to war for our own interests and make people stop doing things, or respect our properties and interests have caused a lot of problems.

The overall point here is that there is a lot of Anti-American sentiment in the US (ie we are not majorly Patriotic internally), and a lot of that sentiment DOES come from Hipsters and left wingers over exactly this kind of issue, with such people ultimatly campaigning against the system in general without a clue of what to change (someone else will have to figure it out) or for some variation on socialism... if not some naive take on what anarchy would turn out like.
 

Blind Sight

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What I don't get is how a lot of my fellow Canadians are patriotic about Canada simply because we're not America. It's like a superiority and inferiority complex all rolled into one.
 

AndyFromMonday

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Volf99 said:
If people in South Korean want to be Patriotic and dislike non South Korean culture, that's their right as South Koreans. If Iceland wanted to be Patriotic and dislike non Icelandic culture, again that is their right. But I digress.
All patriotism does is build more walls and we have a lot of fucking walls in need of destroying at the moment. We shouldn't encourage it. What a person can do and what a person can't do are two completely different things.

Volf99 said:
I think patriotism is fine as long as it doesn't lead to nonsense
Patriotism always leads to "nonsense".
 

Axyun

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CATB320 said:
What's wrong with being patriotic? Geez, people.
Nothing is wrong with being patriotic as long as you are objective about it. The problem is that the media is quick to call someone a communist, terrorist or extremist if you don't agree with the U.S. government and its policies 100%.

I've never been a fan of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. I've always held the believe that we should not have gone to war with either country from the start. Most people can't seem to understand that the attack on ground zero was the result of a conflict that's been brewing for quite some time and that we have some responsibility in it. Yet when I voice my opinion, the lash-back I get from U.S. jingoists is disturbing.

And I say this as a U.S. citizen that likes living in America and almost lost his father and cousin to the attacks on September 11.
 
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Wow, that is a lot of text. I think some spoilers are in order.

interspark said:
it might be just an unfair stereotype,
Yes. Yes it is. It OBVIOUSLY is.
but it's generally believed that if you badmouth america, any nearby americans will go up in arms and get very angry,
That depends on several factors, including who the americans are, and what exactly the "badmouther" says. There's a difference between offing a thoughtful and intelligent dialouge about my countries' (many) problems, and simply yelling "AMERICA SUCKS!!". Your statement is a ridiculous generalization.
and i'm just wondering why. Just to clarify, i have nothing against america, but i hardly think it's anything to write home about. and don't say that anyone would be that way about their home country, because if someone came up to be and said "hey, england's crap!" i'd just say "yeah, it is a bit"
Yes. And if you came up to most Americans and said "America's crap!" I'm sure most of them would share your sentiment. I know I certainly would. Please, in the future, try to avoid sweeping generalizations about my country. It's a big place, we don't exactly have weekly meetings.


MelasZepheos said:
I remember an American who came to our school once telling us that they had to repeat some sort of 'America is awesome' thing (I pledge allegiance? I can't remember, it's been a while) at school every day since he was young.

So basically indoctrination, that's why Americans are so patriotic. It's got nothing to do with whether the country is great or not, it's that the children are taught about how awesome America is before they can even talk properly. It's kind of like how Stalin or Kim Jong Il got people to think they were awesome, byt forming a cult of personality, only instead of a person, america do it to a country.
It's just words, no one really believes it. No kid believes they are actually pledging life-long allegiance to America. It's just an outdated tradition that no one cares enough to get rid of. Maybe when you're a little kid you have this idealistic view of America, but once you start learning about imperialism and the Cold War and shit like that, that idealistic view goes away in a hurry. Which brings me to...

On a related and hilarious note (for me) he also told us that in his textbooks and lessons he wasn't taught that America lost the Vietnam War. When he started doing history at GCSE (we did Vietnam) he was genuinely shocked to find out that they hadn't done so good there. And this was someone who lived in New York and went to school there, not some backwoods Louisianna swamp kid.
I don't what the fuck school he went to, but where I come from, it's pretty common knowledge that the Vietnam War was a giant clusterfuck that never should have happened. Oh, and that we ABSOLUTELY lost. Ha, No. We lost. Everyone knows that. I think your friend was just a fucking idiot.

EDIT: Sorry, should also point out how it's not really 'true' patriotism, it's more like nationalism. That whole jingoistic 'my country tis of thee' stuff that rednecks and Republicans spout isn't patriotism. Captain America patriotism is very different 'I am loyal to nothing, except the American dream.' Not cultural boundaries, not nationalist pride, but the dream of a free country where people are judged on the merits of their character and their actions instead of the luck of their birth or their choice of religion or partner or anything else.

Nationalism is 'my country, right or wrong.'
Patriotism is 'My country right or wrong, if right to be kept right, if wrong to be set right.'

So many so-called patriots forget the second half of that sentence.
FINALLY some goddamn common sense. Some arguments that aren't based of the testimony of "some guy who's from America". (There are a lot of us, it's not a very prestigious title) Thank you, this edit puts your post in a much better light. Though while I'm here, I might as well point out that, in the version of American history I'VE been taught, we spent most of it being giant douchebags. To put it simply. No one is learning some kind of false, "America always wins" history here. I know about all the shit my country's got up to in the past.

Frankly, I would keep quoting people, but if I tried to address every instance of ignorance and stereotyping in this thread, I've never leave my computer. So I'll just leave it at that.
 

Helmholtz Watson

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Mallefunction said:
Volf99 said:
Mallefunction said:
You know that being patriotic is actually part of our goal in public education here in the US right? I'm not even kidding. There is a reason that every morning, public school kids are made to stand and read the Pledge like we're goddamn Hitler youths.

It's mostly due to WWII and the Cold War. Especially the McCarthy cases. People got so scared about foreigners and it became all about how America is the fuckin' shit. Unfortunately, times have changed, but the attitudes of many current adults who were either born during those times or grew up during them have no yet changed with them.
Maybe its because I'm a Jew with grandparents from the Holocaust, so I'm just being overly sensitive, but please don't type that the Pledge of Allegiance is like the Hitler Youths. The two are not at all the same.
My family are Orthodox jews. I used that example (knowing very well that one is MUCH more extreme than the other), because honestly it's the most recognizable. There are plenty of other dictators who tried to get kids involved in their regime, but I seriously doubt too many people here would know about them.
First off, being Jewish doesn't equate to having you family murdered in WW2. I never understood why other Jews (I don't know about your family) seem to think that they can relate to me because just because were both Jews. [End Rant]

I understand what you mean, but I think your trying to make the pledge out worse than it is. Honestly most people say it, but I don't think they care about what it means. The pledge has become as patriotic as Christmas has become a "religious" holiday.
 

TheVioletBandit

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interspark said:
it might be just an unfair stereotype, but it's generally believed that if you badmouth america, any nearby americans will go up in arms and get very angry, and i'm just wondering why. Just to clarify, i have nothing against america, but i hardly think it's anything to write home about. and don't say that anyone would be that way about their home country, because if someone came up to be and said "hey, england's crap!" i'd just say "yeah, it is a bit"
I honestly don't know any one like that and I have lived in America all my life. I have seen in it television shows and movies, but never in real life. Am sure their are Americans out there that are extremely patriotic, but their a minority as far as I can tell, and patriotism isn't strictly an American thing anyway, there are patriotic people in every country.
 

emeraldrafael

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why does it matter really?

I mean... oka, i can get the really vocal dicks who get in your face about it and say america is the greatest, but every country has those kinda people. But really, who cares? You know they're not the majority and you know they dont represent the country.

Now Im a realist, and I understand that the US has been... viewed unfavorably... as of late, but what they've done is nothing compared to some of the countries that the people who like to criticize are from. And at some point, even if you were to agree about some of those points, you do get tired of hearing someone continuously point out all of the negatives of the country.

as an example, you could make a hate thread about the UK and talk about all the negative things about the UK (of which there are many) and while they may be true, you'd get reaction you see from the patriotic US citizens from the Brits defending their country.
 

Helmholtz Watson

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AndyFromMonday said:
Volf99 said:
If people in South Korean want to be Patriotic and dislike non South Korean culture, that's their right as South Koreans. If Iceland wanted to be Patriotic and dislike non Icelandic culture, again that is their right. But I digress.
All patriotism does is build more walls and we have a lot of fucking walls in need of destroying at the moment. We shouldn't encourage it. What a person can do and what a person can't do are two completely different things.

Volf99 said:
I think patriotism is fine as long as it doesn't lead to nonsense
Patriotism always leads to "nonsense".
I was kind of talking about multiculturalism actually. The idea that people should have to accept other cultures is complete nonsense.
 

zHellas

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Bishop99999999 said:
Fridge full of beer, closet full of guns.

America. Fuck yeah.
...I'm very conflicted about how I should feel about your avatar.

OT: I think it's because we mostly got through history by ourselves, only occasionally relying on other nations. Plus, we never went through the horrors that nationalism can bring about.
 

orangeban

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I don't get patriotism. I don't understand defending your country because you were born in it, seems stupid to me. Probably the same reason I don't support a football team.

What I do get though, is defending specific good things about your country. I won't defend Britain, but I will defend the NHS, or the BBC, for example.
 

Denariax

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I live in America. The entirety of America disgusts me. The majority of existence disgusts me. Thats all I'm gonna say.
 

orangeban

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Volf99 said:
AndyFromMonday said:
Volf99 said:
If people in South Korean want to be Patriotic and dislike non South Korean culture, that's their right as South Koreans. If Iceland wanted to be Patriotic and dislike non Icelandic culture, again that is their right. But I digress.
All patriotism does is build more walls and we have a lot of fucking walls in need of destroying at the moment. We shouldn't encourage it. What a person can do and what a person can't do are two completely different things.

Volf99 said:
I think patriotism is fine as long as it doesn't lead to nonsense
Patriotism always leads to "nonsense".
I was kind of talking about multiculturalism actually. The idea that people should have to accept other cultures is complete nonsense.
Alright, obvious question, why is accepting other cultures complete nonsense? Surely it just makes society more accepting of people and breaks down racial and cultural barriers?
 

BrotherSurplice

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MelasZepheos said:
I remember an American who came to our school once telling us that they had to repeat some sort of 'America is awesome' thing (I pledge allegiance? I can't remember, it's been a while) at school every day since he was young.

So basically indoctrination, that's why Americans are so patriotic. It's got nothing to do with whether the country is great or not, it's that the children are taught about how awesome America is before they can even talk properly. It's kind of like how Stalin or Kim Jong Il got people to think they were awesome, byt forming a cult of personality, only instead of a person, america do it to a country.

On a related and hilarious note (for me) he also told us that in his textbooks and lessons he wasn't taught that America lost the Vietnam War. When he started doing history at GCSE (we did Vietnam) he was genuinely shocked to find out that they hadn't done so good there. And this was someone who lived in New York and went to school there, not some backwoods Louisianna swamp kid.

EDIT: Sorry, should also point out how it's not really 'true' patriotism, it's more like nationalism. That whole jingoistic 'my country tis of thee' stuff that rednecks and Republicans spout isn't patriotism. Captain America patriotism is very different 'I am loyal to nothing, except the American dream.' Not cultural boundaries, not nationalist pride, but the dream of a free country where people are judged on the merits of their character and their actions instead of the luck of their birth or their choice of religion or partner or anything else.

Nationalism is 'my country, right or wrong.'
Patriotism is 'My country right or wrong, if right to be kept right, if wrong to be set right.'

So many so-called patriots forget the second half of that sentence.
You, my friend, are right on the money with your definition of patriotism. I despise it when people think that patriotism is just supporting your country whatever it does.
 

GonzoGamer

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interspark said:
and don't say that anyone would be that way about their home country, because if someone came up to be and said "hey, england's crap!" i'd just say "yeah, it is a bit"
Yea... but you live in the UK.
Just kidding, I love the UK actually.

Our nationalism is ingrained in us from an early age. Besides the fun things like making explosions in the sky to celebrate the nations founding (any kid can dig that...it's sure to make an impression at least), we get the pledge of allegiance and the national anthem(s) drilled into us every day at school or at any sporting event and things like that.

Then after 911, a lot of people got behind Bush's 'if you're not with us you're the enemy' thing (so if you weren't patriotic, you may as well be a terrorist) and the flag all of a sudden became as popular as the coke bottle in Gods Must be Crazy.

I think the real thing is that America is made up of odds & ends from every other country in the world (trust me, I know, I'm from Queens) and the only thing we all really have in common is that we're all American.

Some of us get real psycho about it sometimes though don't we.