Carcharodon wrote:Agreed, up to a point. Some of us–and I'm one of them–think we have an obligation to use our wealth and power to help free the oppressed in the world. This is a very noble sentiment of which I'm quite proud.
It's a nice sentiment, but ask yourself what face America really
does present to the world. You may like to think it's your constitution or your ideals, but that's not the case. Guess who your emissaries usually are, particularly in the developing world:
multinational corporations. Either that, or the CIA. Neither tends to march in there with any interest in helping people.
You're free to disagree, but I think the substantive progress which the mindset I described has contributed to outweighs the annoyances and indignities it has also contributed to.
You are
assuming that they come from the same mindset. They don't. McCarthyism is about xenophobia: paint everyone who is different as a threat to
our freedom and then attack/suppress/destroy them. Efforts to promote democracy around the world, on the other hand, stem from altruism: look for people who are not free, and try to free them. The former is about protecting oneself from "the enemy", inventing enemies, and using paranoia as an excuse to advance an ulterior motive (eg- restoring Christian theocracy). The latter is about helping others, even if it can be overly egostistical at times. They are not connected, apart than the fact that proponents of both mentalities come from the same country.
We don't invariably ask others to adopt all our ways. We allowed Afghanistan to remain an "Islamic Republic" with traditional sharia law, even though sharia law is based on the very same definitions of morality that one finds in the Old Testament. I'm afraid that may have been a mistake, but we did it nonetheless.
Actually, if you look at the history, American foreign policy is rarely conducted with human rights in mind. American governments have propped up tin-pot dictators when it suited them, fomented terribly destructive civil wars for the sake of geopolitik (and shrugged off horrible civilian suffering if it occurred as a direct result), and cozied up to all manner of scum (including Osama Bin Laden, using the rationale that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend"; one of those popular sayings that is not necessarily true).
Historically, American foreign policy is based on what they call "larger geopolitical goals", ie- fuck 'em all if it will give us a military base, help us gain access to an important resource, or hurt communism. This may be changing now, but that's the reality if you look at their conduct over the last half-century.
Was that Machiavellian policy good? Did it bring down communism? Does that make it worthwhile? Or was the impact of all that questionable behaviour irrelevant, and did communism bring
itself down by virtue of being a bad system? I don't know, and perhaps this thread is the wrong place to ask, but I
do know that many of the "American icons" mentioned in the original post which started this thread are of pretty questionable value, and the implicit argument (that we need to return to an earlier cultural mindset) is deeply flawed. Look at the list:
- John Wayne: to most of the world, John Wayne stands for an ignorant American who thinks his cultural values are universal and who has no respect whatsoever for anyone else. I think he's a questionable icon.
- Lucky Strikes: anyone who thinks a particular brand of death-sticks should be considered "icons" is on drugs ... wait, that was redundant and obvious, wasn't it?
- Corvettes: I love Corvettes. I love 'em, love 'em, love 'em. If I had that kind of play money, I'd get a 1966 Stingray. Having said that, they're just cool cars, not cultural "icons".
- Pabst Blue Ribbon: this is an icon? A beer? A watery American beer? Sorry, I just couldn't help saying that
- Baseball: most boring spectator sport ever invented. Go to the ballpark, pay a small fortune, and then watch the most slow-moving game in the world besides chess. I can't figure out for the life of me why Americans think baseball is synonymous with Americana. Football is a much cooler sport.
- Rock 'n' Roll: is that an American icon? A lot of the world's greatest rock and roll came from the Brits.
- Yankee Dogs: is he referring to hot dogs? What's a Yankee dog?
- The Pledge of Allegiance: don't get me started on that "one nation under God" horseshit.
What a pile of crap. Do you want a
real American icon? Try Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, Muhammad Ali, Martin Luther King Jr., or the fucking
Statue of Liberty. Unfortunately for social reactionaries, these icons aren't useful in promoting exclusionary politics so they just won't do, hence the desire to return to shitty icons like John Wayne or Joe McCarthy's butchered Pledge of Allegiance.
And another thing. We're not just forcing everyone to adopt our culture by opening up their markets to our stuff. Equally a factor in the "Americanization" of the world seems to be a genuine desire on the part of some people to emulate us. I don't entirely understand that. In fact, I question whether it's even a good thing. Some facets of our culture are absolutely brain dead. (Star Trek?
) A world where everyone is just like us sounds unbearably boring. Nevertheless, there it is. Kids in Iran risk beatings, imprisonment, and death on a daily basis to spraypaint "Metallica" graffiti in public places. What do you think this is symptomatic of?
This is going even further off-topic so I probably shouldn't answer, but ...
- Some parts of your culture may simply appeal to them for their intrinsic values. I'm Canadian but I like lots of American things such as Corvettes, Harleys, big dumb action movies, blue jeans, etc. The image and wonderfully worded plaque of the Statue of Liberty is also a powerful and memorable image the world over, even if many won't admit it (and many inside your own government wish to undermine the idea).
- Never underestimate the power of marketing.
- Perhaps many people associate Americana (which still exists, despite the thread starter's claim that it's gone because his preferred icons have fallen by the wayside) with America's success.
When a threat to survival comes from outside, then the human mind naturally tends to overgeneralize and be suspicious of anything not familiar to it.
And if the mindset is extremely narrow, the range of suspicious behaviours will be much larger. McCarthyism still stands as proof of a deplorable mindset predominant at the time. Today, most clear-minded people don't react to a threat by rushing out and attacking anyone who seems different. In the 1980s, we felt the threat of nuclear war every day (people forget how much it was discussed, even in childrens' classrooms), but people didn't act that way. It is overly charitable IMHO to chalk up McCarthyism to the presence of a threat rather than the mindset of the people who promoted it.