Showing posts with label jingoism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jingoism. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2015

9 Things Many Americans Just Don’t Grasp (Compared to the Rest of the World)


To hear the far-right ideologues of Fox News and AM talk radio tell it, life in Europe is hell on Earth. Taxes are high, sexual promiscuity prevails, universal healthcare doesn’t work, and millions of people don’t even speak English as their primary language! Those who run around screaming about “American exceptionalism” often condemn countries like France, Norway and Switzerland to justify their jingoism. Sadly, the U.S.’ economic deterioration means that many Americans simply cannot afford a trip abroad to see how those countries function for themselves. And often, lack of foreign travel means accepting clichés about the rest of the world over the reality. And that lack of worldliness clouds many Americans' views on everything from economics to sex to religion. 

Here are nine things Americans can learn from the rest of the world.

3. American Exceptionalism Is Absolute Nonsense in 2015

No matter how severe the U.S.’ decline becomes, neocons and the Tea Party continue to espouse their belief in “American exceptionalism.” But in many respects, the U.S. of 2015 is far from exceptional. The U.S. is not exceptional when it comes to civil liberties (no country in the world incarcerates, per capita, more of its people than the U.S.) or healthcare (WHO ranks the U.S. #37 in terms of healthcare). Nor is the U.S. a leader in terms of life expectancy: according to the WHO, overall life expectancy in the U.S. in 2013 was 79 compared to 83 in Switzerland and Japan, 82 in Spain, France, Italy, Sweden and Canada and 81 in the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, Austria and Finland.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The Ignominous End of an American Sniper

Reposted from a couple years ago in honor of the highly successful Clint Eastwood film.

Yahoo News reports

Former Navy SEAL and "American Sniper" author Chris Kyle was fatally shot along with another man Saturday on a Texas gun range, a sheriff told local newspapers.

Erath County Sheriff Tommy Bryant said Kyle, 38, and a second man were found dead at Rough Creek Lodge's shooting range west of Glen Rose, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and Stephenville Empire-Tribune. Glen Rose is about 50 miles southwest of Fort Worth.

8 comments:

  1. OK, we have a guy who has a gun, knows how to use it, and he's in an area loaded with guns.

    Yet, he gets gunned down.

    I can't imagine what the gunloon response will be.
    ReplyDelete
  2. Something radical, like waiting to see what the investigation reveals so we can discuss facts rather than conjecture...
    ReplyDelete
  3. It's really quite amusing. He was probably the most dangerous and well prepared man in the entire US, and he gets killed by a punk. Reminds me of Wyatt Earp.
    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Um, Wyatt Earp died as an old man of natural causes.
      Delete
  4. This is the first documented murder that took place at a gun range that I have ever been able to find. I suppose it was bound to happen sooner or later.

    This is the trouble with criminals: we (the good guys) never know when they (criminals) will attack. All we can do is react which means criminals will always have the advantage. And since the bad guys always have the advantage, we need as many good guys as possible that can respond to such an event.

    My preferred response to such an event is to be armed so I can defend myself and my family. Being armed certainly does not guarantee that I will prevail. Being armed guarantees that I have more options and much better odds when someone goes bad and lashes out.
    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. http://mikeb302000.blogspot.it/2013/02/gun-range-deaths-are-not-all-suicides.html

      That took about 5 seconds. That makes your first sentence seem like a bit of a lie, don't you think? That you've "ever been able to find," you said.
      Delete
  5. My best guess is that he was surprised. It happens. I had friends in the military who were as highly skilled and trained as Mr. Kyle who are no longer with us because they were surprised, or their equipment malfunctioned, or they were outnumbered, etc. Likewise, I know people who were never in the military and who are alive today only because they had a firearm when it was desperately needed.

    When I was in the USCG I carried a weapon while boarding suspected drug boats and ships (actually, for all boardings), even though we were taught that if the bad guys wanted to kill us badly enough they were almost guaranteed to succeed. Why, then, the weapons? Because they increased our chances of survival. Did they provide an impenetrable shield? Of course not. That there are no absolute guarantees of safety or success does not mean people should be deprived of their right to self defense or the means to exercise that right.
    ReplyDelete

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

China Has Just Overtaken the United States as the World’s Largest Economy



Vanity Fair

When the history of 2014 is written, it will take note of a large fact that has received little attention: 2014 was the last year in which the United States could claim to be the world’s largest economic power. China enters 2015 in the top position, where it will likely remain for a very long time, if not forever. In doing so, it returns to the position it held through most of human history.
Comparing the gross domestic product of different economies is very difficult. Technical committees come up with estimates, based on the best judgments possible, of what are called “purchasing-power parities,” which enable the comparison of incomes in various countries. These shouldn’t be taken as precise numbers, but they do provide a good basis for assessing the relative size of different economies. Early in 2014, the body that conducts these international assessments—the World Bank’s International Comparison Program—came out with new numbers. (The complexity of the task is such that there have been only three reports in 20 years.) The latest assessment, released last spring, was more contentious and, in some ways, more momentous than those in previous years. It was more contentious precisely because it was more momentous: the new numbers showed that China would become the world’s largest economy far sooner than anyone had expected—it was on track to do so before the end of 2014.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

The Three Major Reasons I Don't Live in the US

1. Obesity.

My own observations recently were chronicled in this post. I believe the condition is actually contagious. When so many people are obese in your daily comings and goings, it's that much easier to accept a bit of overweight in yourself. Over time, this leads to ever more cases. It's a terrible spiral going down with no indication of letting up any time soon. 

The real problem, I suppose, is the fast food industry, and the hormones and additives they put in processed food. More recently there's the controversy of genetically modified foods.  The portions in restaurants and diners are incredible large.  The waste is awful.

Everything is geared towards more and more obesity. 


 2. Prescription drugs

The drug addiction among young adults and teenagers seems to be worse than ever. Several documentaries I watched explained how the new synthetic heroin-like painkillers are so prevalent that entire new demographic groups are being affected. When the prescriptions run out, buying the pills on the street is extremely expensive.  Many turn to heroin which a 10 times cheaper.

We already knew about the when assigning The Crown to Florida, partly because it is the hub of this deadly business, but on my recent visit I saw the devastation with my own eyes.

  
 3. Gun availability

The dreaded phone call from school that there's been a shooting is about 100 times more likely in the US than it is in Italy, for example. Easy access to guns makes life there a little bit more risky than it should be. 

In one thing I agree with the gun-rights folks.  It's the violence of the people that's the real problem. When walking down the street in the US towards a group of young men, the potential for violence is there. This has nothing to do with guns.  But, to use that as an excuse for making guns easily available is insanity.  Guns make whatever violence is already there that much worse. What could be more obvious than that.

One of the funny things about the gun control argument is that most of the vocal gun-rights guys are jingoistic rah-rah Americans, yet they embody these problems, in some cases all three.