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but I think the way the Boomers were most naive was in their buying into the age-old "basic niceness of Americans" argument: People are essentially the same everywhere; Americans are fundamentally good and decent; once their "consciousness" is raised high enough, all will be right with the world.

Then came the 2004 election, when 66% of the American electorate was not "good and decent" enough to vote against a lying, thieving, criminally incompetent torturer and warmonger. The result was massive cognitive dissonance, which a lot of left-leaning Americans have sought to resolve by falling back on the "People are essentially the same everywhere" argument but with an ugly twist. You see it in every thread on dKos where "foreigners" dare to comment: Europeans, in particular the French, are "just as bad as Americans" or(when the dissonance reaches a peak) "exactly the same except much, much worse."

by Matt in NYC on Fri Dec 8th, 2006 at 04:19:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Europeans, in particular the French, are "just as bad as Americans" or(when the dissonance reaches a peak) "exactly the same except much, much worse."

You may be onto something... Is the shocking discovery that America, the land of the Free, is just as bad (or worse(?)) as the nations from which it strived to be different after it seceded?

Perhaps it's part a phase of denial and/or re-adjustment to the dis-illusion of finding out that the New World can behave just as atrocious as the Old World...

by Nomad on Fri Dec 8th, 2006 at 07:52:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]
You ought to write a diary about it.

My thoughts exactly.

Of course, everything has something wrong with it.

And Nirvana and human perfection are all around the last bend.

Last bend is a bit tricky.

"When the abyss stares at me, it wets its pants." Brian Hopkins

by EricC on Fri Dec 8th, 2006 at 09:00:43 PM EST
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