• TheKrunkedJuan
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    1 year ago

    I definitely remember reading about the trail of tears in a small town US high School

              • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
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                1 year ago

                Agreed. We are “exotic” to them at best, a kind of “almost American” or “honorary American” but they just never quite bother to actually learn about us in any meaningful way. The sheer number of Americans I’ve had to teach basic facts about my country (like which city is the capital, or the size of the country) is mind boggling. They honestly don’t seem to be interested in anything except in order to compare it to America.

                I can’t even imagine what it would be like for non-white people, Africans especially, trying to educate Americans on their nation.

              • you must have never met the liberals who act like Europe is devoid of “dumb racist hicks” who don’t “vote against their own best interests”. Some Americans consider Europeans more human than the Rust Belt, or the Deep South, or Texas.

                • WoofWoof91 [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  i’m not american, so of course i haven’t
                  i’ve experienced americans purely online
                  and most of you dont see anyone outside your borders as people shrug-outta-hecks

                  • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                    1 year ago

                    I think they were making a more nuanced point that American liberals tend to (incorrectly) romanticize Europeans for supposedly being less conservative (in a purely bourgeois political spectrum). I know you’re just rightly calling out American chauvinism, but I don’t think the person you’re talking to is trying to defend that. American chauvinism takes on many different forms, some of which involve romanticizing European libs.

        • s0ykaf [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          Most Americans hate American politicians and the shitty things they’ve done.

          it wasn’t “american politicians”. it was americans. even if the government helped, it was common americans, poor and rich, who murdered and repressed natives every day until the land was solidly occupied. and while everyone in the country can be perfectly able to recognize the shitty things they’ve done, they’re absolutely incapable of admitting the terrible things they’re supporting and doing today. they live in a constant cycle of “oh we’ve done a baddie” into “no i’m not doing anything bad this time” into “oh i guess that was bad as well sorry” into “no i’m sure i’m not doing anything wrong this time

          the average american was evil back then and remains evil as fuck to this day, because that’s what not being an anti-imperialist leftist tends to mean if you live right in the middle of the imperial core

          • it was americans. even if the government helped, it was common americans, poor and rich, who murdered and repressed natives every day until the land was solidly occupied.

            Even so, there have been Americans who opposed what their country and countrypeople were doing, and fought to oppose it. Were they in the minority? At times, sure, but the American political system has always given disproportionate power, first to landowning Anglo-Saxon Christian men and now to (still predominantly the same group tbh) rich people and the people they get to follow them.

            the average american was evil back then and remains evil as fuck to this day, because that’s what not being an anti-imperialist leftist tends to mean if you live right in the middle of the imperial core

            If you view everyone who isn’t actively radicalized as evil then I think you’re losing touch with some of the very people that need to also be radicalised. The “average American”, when polled time and time again routinely profess to have viewpoints waaaaaay to the left of mainstream discourse. Is it not our job as socialists to get to the see the full extent of what it means to really believe in equality and justice?

            • s0ykaf [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              The “average American”, when polled time and time again routinely profess to have viewpoints waaaaaay to the left of mainstream discourse

              for domestic issues, sure, especially because most of those would favor them in the end

              but when it comes to the expansion and maintenance of the empire (in territorial, military or even ideological terms, as in believing and/or helping spread the belief that these actions are commendable or in any way fair, deserved or justifiable) i have never seen this

              If you view everyone who isn’t actively radicalized as evil

              i only see them that way if they live in the 1st world

              and i do believe evil people can become good or even just, i don’t know, better, but i can’t see them as anything but evil until they realize how the modern western mindset - their mindset - is built upon a supremacist worldview. how is a person whose worldview is built off supremacism not evil? until they start dialing back on that shit, which i can’t see happening before radicalization, i can’t think of them as good

          • Canis_76@feddit.nl
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            1 year ago

            That’s like saying, “if only the school shooter didn’t have a gun”. True on the surface, but an effect of a larger, more serious issue. The average American was stupid back then, and is stupid today. Hell, I’m sure plenty of them went out there just to kill those pesty redskins. Why? Read a book that you weren’t given in school. That was like the 78th Thanos snap.

        • meth_dragon [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          Some states are passing rank choice voting which is a step in the right direction and will allow smaller political parties to win votes.

          hear me out:

          downvotes