I usually make the habit of avoiding the term “American” as an adjective, or “America” as a substitute for the United States of America, ever since a member eons ago (don’t remember who it was) busted my chops for doing it. On that note, though, I don’t think that nomenclature ranks amongst the biggest issues that the United States has to deal with at the moment.
I think that the United States, by and large, is good.
Yes, I prefer many systems of government over the presidential and congressional republic used in the United States (remember, guys, I’m sure The Queen would take you back if you asked nicely!). However, I have to applaud the level of citizen’s engagement that the United States is able to achieve under its over-democratic system. United States citizens have an electoral voice in almost every aspect of the decision-making process — and even though the end-results may not always be desireable (or even on questionable constitutional grounds), the passionate discussions and debates that this process incites are exhilerating and something that Canada seems largely unable to reproduce.
The United States has endeavoured to spread its style of democracy to other nations, and not always successfully. However, its efforts have brought about positive changes. I don’t think that anyone here would refute that in terms of democratic government, there have been major strides forward in both the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the Republic of Iraq. Granted, these improvements are not yet to the point where these nations are democratically-sustainable under their own weight, but they are nonetheless strides forward, and this is largely (perhaps exclusively) thanks to the United States’ drive to spread its take on freedom and democracy.
No world superpower can be all things to all people, so the negative press against the United States is to be expected (it’s there, and it’s never going to go away, so long as the United States is a superpower). This is the same thing, on a much larger scale, as it is with celebrities in Hollywood. A celebrity’s positive activities never hit the headlines because they aren’t the juicy stories that the world craves; but if they slip up, just once, it can mar their reputation for weeks, months, even a lifetime.
Does that make the positive work that the United States does count for less? Absolutely not. I think that we have a responsibility, though, to change our media viewing habits to set the expectation for balanced coverage, as opposed to the juicy soundbite of the day. Let’s face it, under the international population’s current attitude, which one of these do you think is going to get the headline?
Little girl goes to school for the first time, after United States supports educational infrastructure
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