anotheralias
Well-known member
heh my kid LOVES visiting forums. Almost 11 yrs old and loves religious debates, Go figure.
That I could see.
heh my kid LOVES visiting forums. Almost 11 yrs old and loves religious debates, Go figure.
I think it's wrong to generalize people or countries. It's probably true that there are a lot of ignorant people there (I know that there are large differences between the different states, which are sometimes almost countries on their own), maybe a bit more than in some European countries. But the knowledge, technology and economical benefits we have in the world come for a great deal from the American people. I do have problems with some of the government and media there though, I think they are misleading some of the more vulnerable people and by doing that actually harming their own country. That's one of things that disturb me most, and I recognize it because in Belgium it's just the same.
I have actually lived in several countries though never any of them for a long period of time except Korea.
One of the things I was getting at that it is going to be hard to have a stereotype of Americans that fits. It seems there is a media type American and some think we are all similar. Shoot there are some Americans that beat up on other states. In flyover country people make fun of California and New York except for parts of Northern California remind me of flyover country. When I am on the East Coast and West Coast their are a few that think the center of the USA if all redneck. Then there are inttra state feelings. When I was on my way to see a friend in Northern Minnesota the people in St.Paul wanted to know why I would want to go to the wasteland. In the so called Wasteland they called the people of St Paul Citiots. There would be people from the city showing up on the weekends to show the people that lived in the woods how to hike and fish, it was funny.
Our culture is varied enough that most Americans don't know what exists in their own nation.
I had someone tell me what certain minorities in the USA where like, the funny thing is I don't know all of American culture because I have rarely run across anyone from those minorities that match the stereotypes.
I am going to add pictures of the America I am in now and might look unfamiliar to what some Americans see.
I am going to add pictures of the America I am in now and might look unfamiliar to what some Americans see.![]()
Thats really something that surprises me sometimes when i see people who don't have anyidea about their own country .
It depends really. The US is really big
Thats really something that surprises me sometimes when i see people who don't have anyidea about their own country .
We are 300 + million people and I would say we have at least 30 distinct cultures and probably a lot more. We have what is known as the Mississippi Chinese that are distinct. They where came from the Cantonese people brought over to help build the Union Pacific Railroad. They have lost everything Asian about them and became group of their own. We have large Amish areas. The people where I am at area almost all mixed race but their are exceptions. The Chinese Railroad workers that stayed on the plains instead of going to Mississippi did not die out, they where bred out and are spread out inside the cowboys. Most of the cowboys are at least 1/8 Native American and quite a few are full but that is rare.
You have a culture that is unique found in the Appalachians, actually several different groups. The natives are all very different as well.
David Kuo, former deputy director of the White House Office of Faith-Based Initiatives, which channels federal dollars to religious charities.
Kuo says the office was misused to rally evangelical Christians, the Republican base voters, to get GOP politicians elected. Not only that, Kuo claims Bush officials mocked evangelical leaders behind their backs, alleging that in the office of political guru Karl Rove they were called "the nuts."
"National Christian leaders received hugs and smiles in person and then were dismissed behind their backs and described as 'ridiculous', 'out of control,' and just plain 'goofy,' " Kuo writes.
"You name the important Christian leader, and I have heard them mocked by serious people in serious places," Kuo told "60 Minutes" Sunday night.
That mockery, he added, included the Rev. Pat Robertson being called "insane," the Rev. Jerry Falwell being called "ridiculous" and comments that Dr. James Dobson of Focus on the Family "had to be controlled."
James Towey, Kuo's former boss in the faith-based initiative office, suggested Kuo is bearing false witness.
What the book seems to be "describing is kind of a personal animus against evangelicals and a kind of personal insulting behavior," Towey said. "President Bush would never have tolerated that, and I never saw it in four and a half years."
Kuo says that he never heard President Bush himself say anything negative about Christians, but he believes many Christians have put too much faith in political leaders.
"I think the Christians have viewed this president, with a lot of help from the White House, as a pastor-in-chief, as opposed to a commander-in-chief," Kuo said today on "Good Morning America."
"And Christians need to understand that there's a difference between George W. Bush who is a great man, a good, compassionate man, and President Bush, a politician."
Kuo says it should come as no surprise that any administration plays politics.
"But my point is even in this White House, you are loved for your votes, not anything else. That's what you need to know," Kuo said. "I say it within this broader argument, Christians have put way too much emphasis on politics."
We also have this group of "so called Christians" that influence the political results, they are a group that Cheney and Bush used then subsequently made fun of once they took advantage of them to gain the White House.
These die hards will still support the Republican party even though they have been used by them as pawns for years.
more:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/sep/04/uselections2008.sarahpalin3
This is somewhere in the Midwest ?! A RodeoI feel right at home
This is somewhere in the Midwest ?! A RodeoI feel right at home
Could also be in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.![]()
Yep they do ... They participated in San Antonio Rodeo last yearYou have cowboys in Canada?
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