Once again, the point of my arguement is that it doesn't matter what reality is, the fact of the matter is that many people in countries that don't enjoy freedom equate those ideals with what it is to be American.AniThyng wrote:The IDEAL of american "freedom" and "democracy" is quite different from the REALITY of american freedom and democracy, isn't it?
Completely beyond the point of the discussion, but I agree that you cannot force the values of a society on the people of another society and expect success. The people that are normally crying foul when America says that a society should become a democracy are the people that are in power, and therefore are the ones that have everything to lose by becomming a decmocracy.has it occured to you that it's implementation in places other then america might be even more flawed then it already is? particularly when it is forced upon that society? and this is somehow a GOOD THING?
I don't believe I have ever seen anyone forced at gunpoint to eat Big Mac, watch Survivor, or listen to Britney Spears. People didn't line up for miles outside of the first McDonald's in Moscow because they were pissed off at an American megacorporation, they did so because McD's offered them a service that they wanted. All you're getting out of America is what you want, quit buying our shit and it'll disappear from your stores.and it's not that ideal that is necessarily what we get. in reality, we end up with...Reality Television...Macdonalds....Britney Spears...these are arguably net cultural minuses.
I'm not saying you should give up what you enjoy for freedom, just simply warning you that to live in such a way invites the possibility of tyranny. Reminds me of something FDR said:if my countrymen desire more freedom then what we enjoy, we'd prefer to think we want it for our own sakes, not because America preaches it at every turn and holds itself out as the model.
In the truest sense, freedom cannot be bestowed; it must be achieved.