Comment on [Video] Cops not sure whether to arrest man with "Plasticine Action" shirt for supporting terrorism
FarraigePlaisteach@lemmy.world 9 hours agoI know (and like) the David Bowie one partly for that line. Thanks for the Rammstein recommendation, I hadn’t heard it. It feels apt for Europe, which seems increasingly Americanised.
When I was growing up there was a song called “In American” by British band Red Box. But looking back, I think it’s hypocritical to criticise America if we don’t also acknowledge our own comparable problems here. We’re not dealing with the same scale of predators you have there because - at least in Ireland - there was less for the ambitious and power-craving individuals to aspire to. Those people usually left for America for that reason, where they could be their unbridled, exploitative selves and make more money than they ever would have here.
So I don’t see Americans as the problem, but the systems and the difficulty in changing them. Many problematic people have simply been exposed to unimaginable amounts of disinformation and cults. It’s a difficult problem but if anyone can overcome it I think you can.
There are more decent people in the USA than the news cycle and online grift-fluencers make it seem.
I think we’re all the same. I despair too, but each population grows up in its own Petri dish. Depending on what attention your resources have attracted and how corrupt the news cycle is, different traits will be evoked in society. So while it’s bad, and seemingly getting worse, I have a bit more hope in people wherever they’re from.
I feel for you. I’m not even based in the USA and I find it impossible to avoid US news of the latest political vulgarity. So I follow the good people who lift my heart - whether that’s Project Pink!, Mumdani in NY or anybody who gives me hope. We can’t let the despair get us, because that’s the real war that’s going on here. Once we let despair reign inside us, they’ve won. Keep the faith!
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 hours ago
Funny you say that about the Irish that migrated here…
I’m aporoximately half Italian by heritage, and from what I know of my own family, and uh, general Italian American culture… uh fucking yeah, yep, same thing lol!
Where we differ is that… yeah, to a great extent, we are a bit uniquely fucked by our systems…
But I spent the better part of two decades getting a Poli Sci and an Econ degree, being involved at tons of ground level political stuff…
… and almost nobody fucking cared, back during Obama, back when we actually had a realistic shot and altering the institutional inertia of those systems.
We could not reform the electoral college, which doomed us to the Imperial Presidency.
We did not repeal the PATRIOT ACT, now everyone who thinks wrong is a terrorist sympathizer.
We did not countermand Citizens United, now our government is wholly corrupt, bought and paid for by corporations and their boards of directors.
We did not implement a ranked choice voting paradigm that would have made it much, much harder for the Republicans to keep their power, to keep gerrymandering and rigging out voting systems.
That was it, the Obama years, historically speaking, that was our shot!
And we missed it.
I told everyone I knew that what is happening right now was a very likely outcome if we didn’t achieve those things at that time.
And almost everyone I knew called me paranoid, delusional, hysterical.
… So no, the problem is Americans.
We are too high on our own supply, we’ve been huffing our own farts for so long that we just assumed we were immune to the broader forces of history.
We still barely even manage to get half the population to vote, for the President, and local and State level election turnout numbers are way worse.
We don’t care, it isn’t cool to care.
De Tocqueville rather importantly notes that a well informed and educated, and politically engaged populace is required for democracy to work.
What he saw in America was a kind of practical communalism, everyone knows and interacts with and is willing to coordinate with their neighbors and their town… thats how he described our fledgling republic.
But we abstracted that all away, got lost in our own propoganda, and now its all blowing up in our faces.
Trump is a symptom of a deeply anti-intellectual and religious fundamentalist streak that consistently runs through our history, and no one ever really bothered to do anything systemic about this, even though its implications are obvious.
Don’t get me wrong, our systems are fucked, but we had so many chances to do… anything else, anything other than neoliberal phantasmagoria as a political ethos… we had so many people, and stories, and signs, and artists! all pointing out our own hypocrisy… and we basically just sung along and pantomimed being rebels that could change the system, as corporate America just turned that into another marketable demographic, and very very few ‘hippies’ and ‘rebels’ and ‘punks’ realized that is what happened.
Sorry, I losing focus, starting to fall asleep, but basically uh… no we Americans fucking suck, trust me, I probably know more of them than you, haha!