I do love your leftist, or should I say in the American terms, "liberal", view of the "correct" America, Bitter Crank. I would feel it very far fetched to describe the America (that I would despise) as a gun-toting libertarian cowboys with black ghetto thugs. Those gun-toting cowboys are actually quite far from actual libertarianism, in my view. True libertarians aren't fascists. I remember my old dad laughing about those praising (or worshipping) the Founding Fathers being the most fascist element in the US society. Yeah, well he was a leftist.With great distaste and reluctance I recognize both white gun-toting libertarian cowboys and black ghetto thugs as "American"--not "my America" but America, none the less.
And you? — Bitter Crank
Reading these forums (this one, the old PF and others), I've come to the conclusion that Americans actually don't think much of their state, they somehow don't believe it is a melting pot anymore. — ssu
Sure is, and actually the culture is amazingly similar in Latin America as in the US and Canada. But many people in the US make it to be a huge difference. Well, if the Aztecs would have kept out the marauding Europeans from their country and the Aztec Empire would have survived, then Mexico would be really different.Oh and isn't America a continent rather than a country? — mcdoodle
What's that culture they retain?The question is whether the US is a melting pot or whether it is becoming a mosaic of all sorts of cultures living side by side without "melting" together as one. Typically assimilation takes a number of generations, so it is too early to tell. My expectation is that the concerns among English speaking Americans today will be replaced with the concerns of Hispanic Americans tomorrow, when they note that with each generation, fewer will speak Spanish or retain that culture. — Hanover
Yes, the fiestas and the folkmusic is different, but the actual lifestyle is quite the same. — ssu
That "fitting in" does happen because it's a country made of immigrants. Hence there is a natural acceptance of immigrants turning into citizens. It's part of the national ethos, which is actually very important. Just a geographical distinction like being "Asian" or "African" doesn't connect people.It is remarkable how well people from various places fit here. — Bitter Crank
This happens and this basically makes then the people who really are "American", they are quarter this, quarter that and so on. In these kinds of families English will prevail.So, even the European emigrants to the US were getting continuously stirred and mixed. The population mixmaster also creates space for new people. — Bitter Crank
the immigrants uphold an "ancestral" culture alongside the American culture, keep old traditions and do not invent new culture — ssu
Now that is true Norwegian heritage.Like Norwegians, lutefisk, and lefsa. I doubt very much if people in Norway would eat either of these foods — Bitter Crank
because "nation" is still largely about where you were born, and about living with people who are somewhat like you (because born from the same soil) - either in terms of genetics, ideas and culture, or both. — gurugeorge
The leftist-SJW-PC-types don't get right is the rootedness you are talking about. They are not, for some reason, rooted in the soil in which they were planted. — Bitter Crank
The future will look back on Boomers with a great deal of contempt, as a generation of clowns: the generation that threw away centuries of accumulated culture and tradition that had been passed on down the generations, that took so long to build up. All thrown away in what amounted to a fit of adolescent rebellion by the first most spoiled generation in history. — gurugeorge
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