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Thursday, November 29, 2007
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Bridge to Nowhere
by Rich Tucker
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


When she won an Oscar a few years back, actress Sally Field memorably blurted, “You like me!” to her fellow Hollywood stars. It’s become commonplace for Americans traveling abroad to assume the opposite. As we skittishly pull out our passport, we nervously assume the natives won’t like us.

But why not?

In the Nov. 25 Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin, columnist David Rossie explains that “the United States, thanks to the Cheney/Bush administration, is about as popular world-wide as the Ebola virus.” He goes on to detail the “draconian penalties” handed down to some American bridge players (that’s the card game, not the congressional earmark game in which representatives attempt to direct billions of dollars to unnecessary hometown projects) who held up a sign reading “We Did Not Vote For Bush” after they won at an international competition.

But if we want to know why the U.S. is so unpopular abroad, the bridge players have already shown us. Not with their anti-Bush signage (their sentiment seems overwhelmingly popular overseas, and perhaps even here at home). No, it’s pretty simple: Other countries don’t like us because the United States wins at almost everything.

Our dollar, despite recent declines, remains the reserve currency of the planet. It’s the money legitimate businessmen and gangsters alike count on. Whether one is buying a big-screen TV from China or dealing in high-grade China White, the price will be set and the bill paid in greenbacks.

Likewise, our English tongue is the language of commerce and air travel.

Commentators frequently complain that Americans don’t learn foreign languages, but that’s because we don’t really have to. We’re confident that wherever we go, somebody will speak English. In fact, about the only place you can go where you don’t have to know some English is an inner city school in the U.S. Too many students are allowed to slide through “bi-lingual” classrooms here without actually learning our language.

Finally, we dominate in international competitions, even ones (like bridge tournaments) that most people don’t care about. The French, for example, are wild about bicycle racing. Yet it was American Lance Armstrong, with his seven straight titles, who put the sport on the map. American golfers Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson dominate their global sport. Athletes from around the world know that, to be the best, they must play Major League Baseball or NBA basketball. Even soccer players like David Beckham are leaving their homelands -- where there’s a passion for their sport -- to compete in the States, where few of us care.

The U.S. dominates where it matters, too. Our economy is too big to fail, and our growth has often (as during the late ’90s Asian meltdown) propped up the global economy. Meanwhile, other countries know that to compete, they’ve got to play by our rules. That’s why free trade is now promoted by the leaders of most growing economies (except, increasingly, here in Washington). So, in the end, maybe we’re making too much of this supposed anti-Americanism.

After all, France and Germany are now governed by the pro-U.S. Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel, respectively. Pro-American Tony Blair was replaced this year by equally pro-American Gordon Brown as British prime minister. Even the incoming Australian prime minister, who wants to pull his country’s troops from Iraq, announced that he’d “emphasized to President Bush the centrality of the U.S. alliance in our approach to future foreign policy.”

However, it couldn’t hurt our image if we started losing some games.

The British built a global empire, introduced cricket throughout their dominions (a game that could only have been spread at gunpoint) then watched as their colonists steadily improved their skills on the pitch. These days, teams from India regularly celebrate victories over the hapless English. Yet, while focusing on their cricket, the Indians went decades without bothering to rebel against the relative handful of British soldiers sent to garrison their land. Sport was an opiate for the masses.

We won the ground war against Saddam Hussein in 2003 and, thanks to the surge, we seem to be on the cusp of defeating the insurgency that followed. But we don’t need to win everything.

So maybe next year, our bridge players should leave their signs at home and instead build a bridge to others by losing to them at cards. That way we’d all have something to feel good about.

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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Ken, lilly
I think you're simply projecting once again.
Americans are ignorant, rude, arrogant, insensitive, etc, to YOU, so obviously the rest of the world feels this way also. You look down your nose at us "common folk" and you just can't get over the fact that this country full of ignorant, dumb, hicks is pretty much the best at just about everything, and it burns ya! All this talk about hate for America stems from jealousy.

Travel memory
AudiR's post reminds me of a similar experience. I am fluent in German, and some years ago was an adult chaperone with a group of gymnasts giving exhibitions through Europe. My daughter was a member of the group, and all of us, including us adults, wore jackets with USA on the back. On one occasion I had gone shopping by myself. A man pushing a baby stroller passed me, muttering the German equivalent of "Yankee go home." I rounded on him in German. "What did you say?" He had the grace to look embarrassed, but I told him he'd better be careful what he said after this, as not all Americans are ignorant of his language. Did that ever feel good!

Cold Hard Truth of Europe
Yes, the cold hard truth is the European employment opportunities are but a fraction of those found in the US. If your bar maid lived in the US and was multi-lingual, then her opportunities would be limited only by her own ambitions. THAT is why so many "global citizens" still want to come to America, despite the left's constant drumbeat of a "Bad America."

Lilly
Yes there are rude uncultured boorish unilingual Americans that have made a bad impression in other countries. Guess what. This is true of every society. Could we all improve and make a better impression on others? Of course. What gets my goat though is this constant stereotype of Americans as uneducated cowboys and of course all Europeans are educated and refined. Lilly I assume you live here in the United States and are a citizen. Stop being ashamed of your country just because we haven't achieved that perfection you look for. I have a sister-in-law like you. No one wants to be around her because she looks down her nose at everyone. Her standards are so high few can live up to them. So come down to earth and relax a little. You'll enjoy life more.

Languages
I know English, French and Spanish well enough to carry on a conversation; German and Italian well enough to carry on a correspondence; Dutch and Portuguese well enough for e-mail.

The reason for this is employment related. It is impossible to properly conduct interviews with racing drivers if you cannot speak their language. Relying on the English of a foreign racing driver is a mistake. There is nothing like greeting a driver in English and getting an absolutely panic-stricken look in reply, because nobody told either of you what language the other one spoke.

Learn a Second Language-Earn Minimum Wag
I love all of you fine arts majors out there that believe Americans should be multi-lingual. And just WHAT other LANGUAGE are we supposed to learn? Got any ideas? Note to all of you hispanderers: Spanish "ain't it."

People learn a second language because they want to, and usually because there is a NEED, not out of guilt (Lilly!).

By the way, I've studied Russian, Italian, and Greek because I wanted to, not because it was the "cool" thing to do.

I've spent years overseas, and I used to take Italian lessons from a girl that worked in a hotel bar in Italy. She was in her early 30s and spoke fluent Italian, French, and English. Yet jobwise, she was lucky to be employed.

Wow (sarcasm), amazing what multilingualism does for you.


The Ugly American
In the more than fifty years since I first read the book, "The Ugly American," I have been amazed at the number of people who think that the title refers to someone you prefer to not be around--because the title refers to the American in the story who actually helped the people in the country he was in, and he was appreciated even though he was physically ugly. Obviously, the people who use the expression have never read the book.

Jeanne-Marie
I worked in International Tax and Finance for several years and dealt with clients from every country in the world. We kept a big book in which behaviours permitted and not were noted down when we found out about them. For example, the French do not respect a closed door and will barge through it without knocking; the Chinese have very strict protocol regarding seating arrangements, so leave it to them to sort it out; Japanese business cards, same thing -- and the protocol for exchanging them is a ballet. (Not to mention that the first thing the Japanese clients wanted as soon as business was concluded was to go to a strip club!)

One of the German clients told me that there is also a book on Americans. For example, Americans are generally punctual, and the first thing they do when they come into a room is move a piece of furniture. The way to make an American crazy in Germany is to fasten down the furniture. That will set the American off balance for the rest of the meeting.

One year when I was in the media centre at Le Mans, I heard one of the staff conducting a newbie through the various areas so he could choose a desk for the week. "These are the British and French," she said. "They smoke. This section is for the Dutch, Japanese, Germans and Italians. Some of them smoke and some do not.

"This section is for the Americans. They don't smoke. At all."

for inkling_revival
inkling_revival writes: "More to the point, though, as we heard from Dennis Prager just two days ago (and as I've been saying for decades), it's simply not true that foreigners hate Americans."

And Prager, and you, are flat WRONG about that.

In the subsequent discussion, I refuted Prager by pointing to the Pew Global Attitudes Survey, which actually polled people in foreign countries and found a sharp decline in approval of America in the last 7 years. Down to only 38% approval in Germany, for example, way down from what it was in the late 1990s:

http://tinyurl.com/rkqj5

Even in Britain, approval was down to only 56% favorable; and in Turkey, approval of the U.S. is way down to only 12% favorable.

for THRadio
THRadio writes: "Dennis made a comment the other day that made sense to me about why the left can only see America's faults, while the right sees a Shining City on a Hill. The left maintain utopian visions of people and nations. No war, no poverty (even relative poverty), no name-calling, no corporations, no dodge ball, etc. When America falls short of this utopian vision, then by their definition America is bad. In contrast, the right looks at past human history"

Not SOCIAL conservatives. They hew to a utopian vision too: In their utopian vision, all people study the Bible, all women are virgins till they get married, no one cheats on their marriage, and homosexuality and prostitution no longer exist. And since America has fallen short of this utopian vision, they do preach that America is bad--a modern-day Gomorrah.

That's why you get the doom and gloom coming from the Christian right every bit as much as from the socialist left.

Discussions from ignorance
If Mr. Tucker (or others on this discussion) haven't actually ASKED foreigners for their opinion of America and Americans, then they shouldn't waste our time by GUESSING how foreigners feel about us.

Anti-Americanism in Europe goes back a long way--probably back to nearly the founding of our Republic. So logically, it can't be just because of our "success" as a superpower. Because we weren't a successful superpower yet in the first half of the 19th century. Yet even back then, you could find European pundits who detested America.

It's always been a cultural thing.



European distaste for Americans
I've only been to Europe once, to Switzerland and Germany, way back in the '70's. It was rather beauteous. It was a reward for my 5th anniversary working at my firm. What a gift!

Well, while I was there, I met a lot of very wonderful people, who gave me directions, translated for me, and guided me to places. The people were very nice. The problem, Americans are always in a hurry and don't have the time of day to give tourists help.

Another thing I think American's are put off by is paying money for the company of othersfor a couple of drinks on them? I don't think in the majority Americans would spring for a drink or two to get to know the foreign couple.
but knowing Europeans, I know that in the same case in their country with similar foreigners they would certainly invite them to a couple of drinks, they wouldn't understand the lack of cordialty, while for the Americans it would simply be cheapness, or even worse, what can I get out of taking them out for a couple of drinks, using them, you know. That's just part of American idology, investing and measuring
your returns.


By the way I have a French client, who insists she is better than all my extra clients, who must have her bon bons every day because she is, after all, French. She can barely write in cursive, but insists in writing in cursive and let me try to read it. She's a challenge. But so aren't they all in their own different ways. Except her. She's in her own better way.

So, I guess, let the French be better. But I read an article about how the French bathe only every other day, and wear their underwear for 3 days in a row. Taking cheap shots here, but it is a part of French culture. So if you wonder if you're competitive with the French, well you sure don't have to go far.

Tinsldr2
You ever dine at the DeFluery DFAC?

I stayed next door to it in Pad 8 and spent small amounts of cash weekly at the "Haji Shop" there between Pad 8 and the motorpool area behind it. The blackmarket DVDs kept me sane.

My platoon also managed the concrete barrier draw yard to the left and behind DeFluery.

1LT Carrier

But Big Mike was hardly "ugly"...
On our last day in St. Petersburg, Big Mike left our tour group in order to stay another week doing maintanence work at a rural orphanage he helped to support.

He addressed our group before he left, telling us that the large amounts of rubles we'd converted would shortly be next to worthless when we crossed back over into Finland. Unless we wanted the hassle of converting them back to dollars or Finnmarks.

He reminded us that our rubles would do far more good at the orphanage. Most all of us had seen pictures of "Mike's Kids" and their conditions. Needless to say, I came back from Russia with just one ruble and a few coins as a momento. So did just about everybody else in our 30 member group.

Ugly Americanism strikes again.

Lilly is partially right
I have a german wife and have travelled extensively over Europe (well also the mid east but that doesnt really count).

On my first trip to Poland in 97, my Polish Army counterpart asked what the word in English for someone who speaks two languages was and I said Bi-lingual, and then he asked what the word was for someone who spoke many languages was and i said multi-lingual. then he asked what the word was for someone who only spoke one language and I didn't know and he said AMERICAN.. We were drinking beer (Pevo)so i thought it was funny at the time.

I saw time and again how you could pick out certain Americans in a crowd and it wasnt just our speech.

On the other hand people are people and there are good and bad in all groups.

Like audi says, if you learn a little bit of a foreign language when traveling and show respect then you are respected as a person whatever your nationality.
And if not, there is always the only phrase in Serbian I remember, "Stanni Illi Putsam"!! (spelled wrong but they get the point)
Tinsldr2@yahoo.com Camp Victory Iraq

We did have ONE ugly moment...
...but it was more like the last battle of the Cold War.

Our group was dining at the Hotel Moscow in St. Petersburg (yeah, I know). I was seated with one "Big Mike", a Vietnam vet and machinegun collector from Arizona.

We were dining among ourselves when this older Russian (about Mike's age) came over and sat at our table. This was rude, but we rolled with it. The guy was dressed in a white suit with tie and was obviously drunk.

After a few minutes the Russian started saying stuff like "Michael Jackson..." and then making spitting gestures. Then he would say "America" with those same spitting gestures.

Finally, he started making shooting gestures with his hand at all of us. Some of us quickly ushered him away and the staff took over. Big Mike was not amused by any of this. He was "Big" because he looked like Bluto.

A few minutes later the Russian returned shouting some unintelligible invective at us. The Cold War was obviously back on. Big Mike stood up, crossed over a few steps and felled him with one of the greatest punches I've ever seen.

The staff again ushered the guy away. The British tour group near us seemed scandalized by the whole thing and went to murmuring among themselves. Yes, things had gotten ugly!

Big Mike sat back down next to us looking just as mad as I've ever seen anybody. After a few moments I said, "Come off it Mike, you enjoyed that."

"Yep."

My trip to Russia
Went there as a tourist in 2000 with a tour bus full of other likeminded Americans. The plan was to visit WWII battlefield sites in the Karelian Isthmus and St. Petersburg.

Some would follow us to our stops along the road to various sites and set up to sell us beer and wine and trinkets out of their trunk. Good beer, even if it wasn't cold.

One woman short changed me by several, several rubles and I knew it. But I wasn't angry because compared to those folks I was pretty much upper middle class with my sergeant's pay in the Army. I could afford to be "generous".

She didn't want to look up at me after handing me my change, but I stood there with a "I know what you just did" grin on my face until she finally made a very embarassed eye contact with me.

We had the most terribly interesting female tour guide in St. Petersburg. She was a storehouse of information and she was tolerant of our frequent stops to buy relics of the Cold War. We were all men, btw. She was with us for three days and when she left, her purse was virtually overflowing with $20 tips and intederminate amounts of rubles.

I suspect that American groups are the most sought after in the St. Petersburg tour business.

She told us as much, so it isn't really much of a suspicion. She also told us that Americans tend to obey the rules wherever they are better than most groups. At the small, cottage-like residence of the tsar we were politely told that if we wanted to take pictures we'd have to pay a fee or buy postcards. We duly put all of our cameras away.

Our guide told us that once Americans are told the rules, she observes that they obey them without fail. She said Russians and others would immediately start trying to break the rules, if for no other reason than the thrill of getting away with it.

Sorry...
...but there's no way a people who love children and dogs as much as we do could ever be as "ugly" as some paint us.

I remember seeing this old doberman pinscher dog another battery in my battalion in South Korea adopted.

Soldiers there are not "supposed" to keep pets, but trying to keep Americans seperated from dogs is like trying to keep peanut butter seperate from jelly.

Anyway, you could count the ribs on that dog, it was so emaciated. We had literally saved it from starving to death at the hands of it's previous South Korean owners. And it had obviously been badly treated. Beaten. Neglected.

How could we tell? Because ANY American could pet that dog. Dog didn't mind at all. Enjoyed it.

But let ANY Korean try it! Let any Korean come within two feet of it! Those lips would curl up and teeth would be bared. The dog would commence to shaking from an adrenaline rush and the fur on it's back would stand up.

I tell you, dogs are a pretty good judge of character.

Another Pragerism
Dennis made a comment the other day that made sense to me about why the left can only see America's faults, while the right sees a Shining City on a Hill. The left maintain utopian visions of people and nations. No war, no poverty (even relative poverty), no name-calling, no corporations, no dodge ball, etc. When America falls short of this utopian vision, then by their definition America is bad. In contrast, the right looks at past human history (which is often brutal and sordid) and current reality and concludes that America is head and shoulders above the rest of the world. This helps explain why a conservative and a liberal can look at the same set of facts and reach completely different conclusions.

To inkling
Of course boorish tourists come in from all nations, but that doesn't mean that Americans don't more than fit that job description. All my long life I have heard Americans say that they would speak English in France if they felt like it and wear shorts in cathedrals in Italy if they felt like it and keep their hats on when the Queen passed in England if they felt like it "because, by God, I am an American and they like my money---if they take my money they can take me as I am".

The money excuse isn't working any more---see another TH thread this morning re China refusing to let our ships dock. Businessmen worldwide are starting to demand Euros instead of dollars. We can no longer assume that our wealth abroad will insulate us from...everything. So it will be interesting to see whether Americans finally figure out how to say, "Bon jour, Monsieur" instead of "How 'ya, doin', Charlie?".

Blind Lilly
Your travel comment justifies Prager's view that the Left hates America. You only see what you want to see and you only want to see "facts" that support your view that America is a bad country full of bad people. Consider:

1. Many of the TH readers have traveled around the world. We have all seen tourists of all nationalities behaving badly. You, however, only see the crass Americans and screen out the rest. I have been to western Europe many times, and have always been treated well. I have even had French express solidarity with the US when they learn my nationality.

2. Sadaam, Kim Jong Il, Chavez, and MANY other tyrants around the world torture, maim and kill their own people by the hundreds and thousands. A dozen US servicemen/women screw up at Abu Ghraib and you conclude that ONLY Americans are bad.

3. Our soldiers are the best trained, best equipped, most professional fighting force in the world. Due 24/7 news coverage, they are forced to fight war under the pressure of microscopic nit-picking, and are lambasted whenever they fail to achieve perfection. The opposition forces dress in women's clothes, use kids as human shields, hide in churches and blow up thousands of innocents. But you only find fault with the US Marines.

lilly, your blinders are a severe limitation to understanding things as they really are.



Travel Memory III
I took my sister to England in 1995. I had been there about 15 times by then; she had never been. We stayed in Youth Hostels although we were middle aged, and the Ugly people we met up with there were Germans. (The English told us privately that *The way they act, sometimes you wonder who won the War.*) In one Hostel a table full of them were making obvious rude comments about us in German (if you grew up in New York, you know enough Yiddish to pick up on this) with smirking expressions to match. One of the most useful phrases for the international female traveller to know in many languages is one I know in 9: *Do you kiss your Mother with that mouth?* I turned and made eye contact and said it in German to the Ugly Table. They shut up and turned their suddenly red faces away.

Later we went across to France because Sis thought my dislike of the French was just prejudice. The French kid who checked us in was wearing a t-shirt with a hand, middle finger raised, clutching a handful of American money and the words in English *F... you and your money too* spelled out in full. We were treated accordingly that evening and night. Sis was convinced and we made plans to go back to England in the morning. But before we did, we appeared at Breakfast in the CNN gear we had picked up at the Turner Store before we left Atlanta. To all appearances we were employees of CNN. I went to the kitchen to ask if we could get some breakfast, and Marcel nearly dropped his teeth. From then til the time we left, we were treated like Goddesses. They were terrified that we would show up on CNN and report just exactly the way they had behaved.

Finally, there is a saying in Australia that the British walk around as if they own the world, and the Americans walk around as if they do not give a d**n WHO owns the world. That is the American way.

They all hate America
That's why so many of them are killing themselves to get here.

dyerje: good post!
I concur with inkling_revival: "You'll find ignorant tourists and polite tourists from every country. Americans are neither worse nor better than any other group."

Somebody writes a book with a catchy title (The Ugly American) and we have to live with it for the next forty years (and counting).

Ah, travel memories
Crowded commuter train between Yokosuka and Tokyo. Evening. An East European basketball team boards in Yokohama. The tallest, drunkest men anyone has ever seen. They leer at the women, stagger into everyone, laugh and play-fight amongst themselves. They smell awful. I maneuver myself, where I stand, to be between these boors and my mother, who is visiting from the States. My eyes meet those of a Japanese businessman, and it's clear we are both thinking exactly the same thing: damn GAIJIN.

The "resort" town of Hurghada, Egypt, on the Red Sea. (Also known as "The Armpit of the Universe.") Thirteen American servicemembers stuck there overnight, when the C-130 broke down in Crete. The resort hotel has lost its a/c, and we have to share rooms, in which you can't open the windows unless you want to be a feast for the flies. The Americans settle on the restaurant's outdoor terrace, where employees tend smoke lamps to keep the bugs away, and sip muddy water over coffee grounds, and watch the sun go down. The French tourists are livid about the a/c, and tell us all how they really feel. The Swedish tourists are embarrassed by them, and make something of a show of their disdain.

Let's see... young packs of Japanese men in Singapore... Aussies in Hong Kong... Saudis in Bahrain, Qatar -- anywhere on the Persian Gulf (typical comment of friends made in the Gulf nations: "The Saudis use us as their toilet bowl")... A phalanx of foul Romanians marauding in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul... Packs of Chinese knocking people over as their tour groups snake through Belgium... Russian tourists smacking the aggressive child beggars in Rio...

Just amazing how only the Americans are ever unpleasant, in foreign lands.

Lilly
A travel memory:

My platoon was building an Iraqi police traffic control checkpoint just outside of Camp Liberty in Baghdad.

There were about a dozen Iraqi cops there, plus a family with 5 children who lived across the street in pretty miserable poverty. Dickensian poverty, you might say.

The oldest son was probably about 7 years old and he just loved hanging around with us. This happened whenever we had a daylight mission in populated neighborhoods.

Americans are a lot "cooler" with kids than any of the Iraqi cops or soldiers I worked with. Kids seemed to annoy them.

Anyway, at one point I gave that kid a packet of skittles from my MRE. He ran off when them happily.

A few seconds later, one of the cops walked by me with the kid following behind him looking very dejected. The cop had taken the candy away from the kid and was gobbling it up.

I tell you if looks could kill, that cop would've collapsed under the look I gave him.

Ugly Americans? I haven't seen it yet. Not really.

Just so you know, I later gave that kid a whole MRE when none of the cops were around...

I'll take...
...noisy Southern women on a train over Sudanese freaks who want to imprison and cane somebody over a teddy bear name ANY DAY.

Or people who think a lady should be imprisoned and beaten because she had the gall to get raped.

Just yesterday a Middle Eastern man who was living here in Columbus was sentenced to jail for planning to detonate explosives in one of our malls.

Yes. We Americans might get drunk. We may might even get loud sometimes. But we won't cane you or plot to blow up your shopping centers.

And is there any other tourist in the world as free and generous with their money as the American? I have not encountered such a person.

The contention that we are disliked because we usually win?

Okay, Republicans...help the Democrats with this one. I'm about to ask them a baseball question.

What is the most despised team in Major League Baseball?

Can anybody tell me WHY they are the most despised team in baseball?

Again, conservatives, help the liberals out here.

Please spare us this hypocrisy
"Meanwhile, other countries know that to compete, they’ve got to play by our rules. That’s why free trade is now promoted by the leaders of most growing economies (except, increasingly, here in Washington)."

Yeah, exactly. Don't talk to us about the American love for free trade as long as you have tariffs on steel (that cost more jobs in industries that use steel than they save in steel manufacturing), sugar (to enrich rich sugar barons but drive companies like Lifesavers overseas so they don't have to pay 3 times the world sugar price), lamb (hurting efficient Australian and New Zealand sheep farmers to prop up wealthy inefficient American sheep farmers while consumers pay an extortionate price) ...

And don't just blame Washington. They wouldn't impose these anti-free-trade policies if there were not VOTES for them at home! It is moral corruption in America as a WHOLE—people oppose government handouts/subsidies/tariffs EXCEPT those that benefit THEM. They want their OWN industries protected, no matter what the costs to consumers. Also,other industries suffer because consumers have less money to spend and because of the unnecessarily highly priced raw materials.

Rich is right!
Lilly et al: If you want the liberal media outlets to be successful, you should start frequenting them. You'll be the first to cry the blues when they all close up shop.

The Onion
I think The Onion wrote this piece some time ago. It is somewhat funny when presented as a joke, but sad when presented as a real opinion.

I travel a good bit, and it is not other Liberals that dislike where America is heading, it is the well-read. Spain, for example, reports actual international news far more often than America. Most understood the current political climate far better than the average American, and none thought that there was a link between 9-11 and Iraq.

I'm proud to be an American, but embarrassed that prez'nit Bush is the so-called Commander in Chief. You crybabies were embarrassed when Bill Clinton was getting some, but still claimed to love America. What's the difference, besides a 50-point IQ spread?


Who Cares?
Pretty lame opinion piece, Rich.

But honestly, why the hell would anyone care what people in France, Germany, the UK or anywhere else in the world think of us? It seems that the only people who fret over this kind of thing are the typically pompous, arrogant, and oh so intellectually superior liberals. Perhaps the real reason these global losers hate America is because they know that they need us but we don't need them. Just ask the next Canuck that sneaks across the border for health care.

Yo Lilly
lilly writes:

"A Travel Memory
Scene on a train in Quebec: Three middle-aged American couples are traveling together. They do not stop laughing hysterically and appear to be drunk..."

So, uh, Lilly, did this story actually happen, or did you make it up in order to prove your point? I mean, that does seem to be the liberal action plan: make up a story, tell it in order to paint a negative picture of your target, and then when the story is refuted, simply respond with the liberal mantra that the untruthfulness of the story does not change the truth of the ideas you are foisting on the rest of us.

Oh, HOGWASH
lilly writes the predictable "I hate America" speech:

"We are not liked abroad because we are loud, arrogant, ignorant, culturally insensitive, rude, and unilingual."

Utter, complete, laughable, unsubstanciated CRAP.

You'll find ignorant tourists and polite tourists from every country. Americans are neither worse nor better than any other group.

More to the point, though, as we heard from Dennis Prager just two days ago (and as I've been saying for decades), it's simply not true that foreigners hate Americans. It's the case, rather, that foreign LEFTISTS complain loudly about American REPUBLICANS whenever there's a Republican President. They do this because Republican Presidents have been very effective at stopping the subjugation of the entire world under neo-Marxists.

The same protesters are usually quieter during the administrations of Democrat Presidents, because Democrats generally cooperate nicely with whatever the neo-Marxists are doing to subjugate the world.

There was a brief period when a large number of Europeans objected to the Iraq invasion because it was not sanctioned by the UN. The Democrats have parlayed that brief conflict into an article of collective wisdom, albeit fictional, that "George Bush has ruined our reputation abroad." (It's part of the BDS complex.)

America's reputation is just fine, thanks. I actually like it when the European Marxists are frothing at the mouth; it means we're definitely doing something RIGHT.

A Travel Memory
Scene on a train in Quebec: Three middle-aged American couples are traveling together. They do not stop laughing hysterically and appear to be drunk. The steward presents them with the lunch menu (yes, folks, on Canadian trains you can have meals served at your seat. It's called "civilization".) One of the women pauses in her hilarity to look at the menu then screeches, in an extreme American Southern accent, "Ah cain't read thee-us! It's in Fray-unch!". This being the funniest line ever spoken, the rest of her group doubles up screaming.

We are not liked abroad because we are loud, arrogant, ignorant, culturally insensitive, rude, and unilingual. And I sincerely hope that Mr Tucker will stay within his native shores because his attitude will only confirm what people abroad already think.

PS: I read the other day that businessmen worldwide are now preferring Euros to dollars. Look up the exchange rate and see if you can figure out why.

The World Doesn't Like Us Because...
...because we're ignorant and arrogant, as best exemplifed by this moron who thinks that American is hated because of "our" English language (you know, like America invented it?)

I don't know what to say about this one
Is this guy brain dead or what? The world doesn't like us because we win? This guy is all TH's and I am so glad.
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