Zeon wrote:Why do Americans need to learn anything about the internal features of foreign countries, except by choice,
I noticed that you left out this part in your rebuttal. Again, before a person ventures abroad it would be nice to learn a little bit about it before you go. Speaking from experience, before I came to Korea I made it a point to read up on the history, etc... to avoid being completely in the dark. And when I got here, I made it a point not to come across as a know-it-all.XP wrote:You don’t, but it might help stop the stereotype that is continually being perpetuated. Especially when traveling abroad.
You forget that Canada is also an immigrant nation.Zeon wrote:Russia may be the largest nation on Earth, and Canada the second - But in the northern climes such as they are, they do not have the range of climatic diversity as America, which also has Alaska, thus also matching their furthest northern climates. Our island outposts in the Caribbean and the Pacific complete the picture, giving us a whole range of experiences to be sampled without need for a passport, or crossing a national border.
India and China are indeed very diverse, far more diverse than most people realize, at that - But their diversity is equalled and matched by a USA which has taken immigrants from every part of those nations, and every part of the globe.
Zeon wrote:The Hopi villages? Cahokia? They may not be of the same nature as the Pyramids or Angkor, but we do have our own impressive and native constructs of notable age.
But they ain't the Pyramids are they? Unless you're including the one in Las Vegas.
Of course it's hardly an evil and it's great that her ignorance is being rectified. But basically you are saying that there is no good reason to leave America in the first place since you can "sample" a range of diversity at your fingertips. Which is all fine and dandy. But I think that is a poor excuse not to travel and see the world. That is, in my hometown in Canada I can eat Japanese food, see a picture of Mt. Fuji, and talk to a Japanese guy, but is it really a subsitute? Nope.Zeon wrote:And I was hardly disagreeing! I was just saying that ignorance prior to that - like her's - is not something that's necessarily a horrible evil. It's being rectified in her travels, after all.
XPViking