BikerdadQUOTE
Sigh... somehow, I find it incredibly ironic that the "gold standard for democracy, liberty and freedom" is somehow tarnished because we, for the 25th time in the last century, have managed to conduct a rip-roaring nationwide electoral campaign where pretty much anybody who wanted to be heard could be heard, where each voter had the liberty of voting their own conscience, and then followed up with an election that is legitimate. You don't like the results? Fine, but to translate your distaste for the results into an attack on our democratic process, which, BTW, has continuously and peacefully transferred power longer than any European democracy has existed, is not worthy of you.
I'm not attacking your 'democratic process'.
I am merely pointing out the obvious implications for us, here in Europe, of the choice the American people have made.
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Really? What trans-Atlantic alliance? The one where the United States carried the bulk of the military and economic burden of defending and then liberating Europe from the Soviet threat? Or are you referring to the trans-Atlantic alliance where the United States carried the greatest burden for intervening in the Balkans, where no American interests at all were at stake? Or is it the trans-Atlantic alliance were European investigators refuse to investigate mass grave sites in Iraq because their findings may be used in capital punishment proceedings? If its that trans-Atlantic alliance that you're talking about, then you may be right. There's a lot of Americans who feel the same way about it as they do about the UN. There isn't anything in it for us, except for costs, costs, and more costs...
With power comes responsibility. What do you want me to say? That Europe is a guilty party in many dirty dealings with various non democratic forces?
It is.
Europe has a long and sordid history of
realpolitik but do you really believe that America is any different? Do you truly suppose that the USA had no reason what so ever to go into Kosovo?
Perhaps you should consider your nations own motives for its actions before you so eagerly point the finger at us. We're not responsible for your nations actions. If America had any reason to go into Kosovo, it was certainly not because we in Europe forced you to.
What sort of power do you think we have that we can make your nation bend to our will?
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Here is a heads up for the Europeans, and the American Left. Try to step back and take a hard, long, objective look at the paths that y'all have taken, and the American center has taken. You'll find, if you look clearly, that the American center hasn't moved all that much. We blithely move along. You folks have "divided", veering further and further onto a different vector. Most Americans look at this and shrug their shoulders, returning to watch another intellectually stimulating episode of reality TV. Yet, every once in a while, we get really annoyed with being accused of being "divisive" when we know that we haven't changed course.
You want some examples? Lets start with capital punishment, always a great one for illustrating how we barbaric, uncouth Americans are "divisive". Every country in Europe used to have capital punishment. Every one. So did the US. Now, who changed?
You did Whether its for better or worse isn't the subject at hand here, simply the fact that the US sits in pretty much the same place as it did on this subject 50 years ago, 100 years ago, 200 years ago. Same with universal health care, Israel, the ICC, and a myriad of other subjects. On all of these, the US is pretty much exactly where it was when the subjects first came up. But y'all have moved.
And
we're the dividers?
You can't live in the past.
The world changes and evolves and we as people and as cultures evolve with it. This is equally true for your country as it is for mine.
Yes, we got rid of the death sentence. We had to when we realised it was more important to save the life of one innocent man than to kill ten guilty ones. There is nothing that can recompense a man who has been murdered, and life imprisonment is not so lenient a punishment that it cannot be used instead.
So, yes we changed. But we did not do so on our own. Through the past fifty years, European culture has largely mirrored American culture and our two continents have been in accord on the vast majority of issues. The same is true for Canada, and Australia and Japan to some extent.
America's conservatives are a tiny majority in America and an overwhelming minority in the western world. What we see today, is the conservative half of America, having a 1% majority over the liberal* half of America and using this tiny majority to try to halt the process of cultural evolution because they don't like the implications of the cultural revolution that has been taking place in the last four to five decades and in particular they don't like the idea of gay marriage.
Whats divisive about this is the fact that for the rest of the western world, gay marriage is not such a great issue, and its certainly not a problem large enough to vote for a man who is going to isolate America further and fracture the western democratic nations.
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The American Left and their European counterparts, as well as lots of Europeans, seem to view the American populace as simpletons, unsophisticated, sometimes even stupid. All that may be true, but there is one thing, one characteristic that the American populace possesses in aggregate that is utterly lacking from the Left. Pragmatism. Americans embrace that which works. I'll venture to say, because of our lifelong immersion in a culture which, more than any other, rewards success, we are far more attuned to distinguishing between what will work from what won't.
If you Americans were really pragmatic, then you would not need so many scapegoats to explain your world view. You would not need to point the finger at Europe over issues like Kosovo, or the cold war. Pragmatism involves looking within as well as without, and without taking responsibility for one's nations own actions, then you have no claim to being pragmatic.
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Chirac has held the Presidency in France for 9 years now. In that time, he has managed to grow the French economy by how much? Bring the French unemployment rate down by how much? Improve freedom of expression (Brigit Bardot anyone?) by how much? Schroeder's record is similar, but at least he has the excuse (wearing thin by now) of dealing with reunification.
Now, regardless of whether one chooses to credit (or damn) the national leadership with the unemployment rates, one thing is clear. The American system
works better. Our unemployment rate is lower, our economy grows at a better rate. The Democrats tried to make the unemployment rate a major factor in this campaign, unsuccessfully. Ours is at about 5.6%. France's and Germany's? Both, IIRC, are over 8%! Bush
would have been given the bum's rush with those numbers, but Chirac and Schroeder? Both get re-elected!

Like I said,
pragmatism.
All this really indicates is that the French and Germans have different idea's of what they want from their governments. It doesn't mean the US system is better. It just means that Europeans do not fear high unemployment figures as the Americans apparently do. We don't fear high taxes either. Europe has built itself a social democratic system where the individual is not left on the rubbish tip but looked after as best as possible.
In some European nations this works better than others.
In Scandinavian nations for example, despite our much smaller economies, we have a higher standard of living than the USA, so just how exactly is the US system better than ours?
We are also pragmatic. We just have a different values.
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So, when faced with a big problem, let me ask you: are you going to go with the folks who have a track record of solving problems, or the folks who have great theory, but few successes?
I suppose you mean the USA has a track record of solving problems?
I'm sorry, but I don't see the world in such a simplistic way (I don't mean to imply that you do, only that your question is misleading and obtuse)
If I look back at the history of Europe, I see many examples of European nations making a big difference. Examples of what I mean can be seen from Holland's liberal attitude towards cultural and social differences to Britains willingness, despite is military weakness, to risk its own independence to come to the aid of Poland in 1939.
Through out European history we have had to deal with the clash of religion and culture, kings and despots, socialism and capitalism and yet, we are still here. Denmark or example, despites its tiny size has existed far longer than the United States and through out our history we have been annexed, invaded, have annexed and invaded ourselves. We've been liberated by the British and been to war with them. We've been invaded by the Germans and have invaded Germany ourselves.
In other words, we've been solving 'problems' for longer than your nation exists. America is not our 'saviour'. It is merely an ally.
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There comes a time when all alliances pass away. Perhaps that time is upon us. I hope not, but the toxic attitudes of many in Europe may insure the demise of the trans-Atlantic alliance. You don't like what we're doing? Well, if so, then allies disagree in private.
No European leader has
ever told the American people, you are either with us or against us.
Europe has never made any such demand of the USA.
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I don't buy the whole "America should care what Europe thinks because what America does affects the whole world." You know why I don't buy it? Because Europe doesn't care what America thinks . . . What America thinks is denigrated, dismissed, and trivialized. What motivates such wilfull blindness on the part of Europeans and the American Left I'll leave to another thread, another day, but it is blindness.
Does America think with one mind?
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America works better than any other country in the world. It ain't perfect, not by a long shot, but it seems to me as though Europeans and the Left would be far better off looking at where America succeeds, and figuring out how to emulate that in their own way, rather than relentlessly, and often vicously, attacking it.
I'm sorry, but your claim is false. America does not work better than any other country in the world.
Finland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway all have a higher standard of living and rank as
equals to America's economic competitiveness. The only reason why America is richer, is because it is geographically larger.
You Americans work longer and harder hours than we do and yet you have nothing that I do not have. I live in far greater comfort and security than you do and what is more, my country will provide for my needs in a time of illness or poverty and I will never become a destitute or have to live in a 'trailer park'.
* liberal as in the European sense of the word