An American, by the Grace of God
I am an American. You can tell by looking at me. It is in how I stand, walk and talk. I have been in only a few foreign countries. But I am willing to bet that in every one
people took one look at me and said to themselves, “American.” I like that.
I am guilty of the hubris of thinking that
being an American is better than being from any other country. Mind you, I have absolutely no imperialist
ambitions. We would do nothing but
adulterate out strength and character by acquiring additional territory. Neither do I think that we are better
intellectually than other people. I am
an unabashed anglophile. I admire the
English and consider them the fountainhead of all that is best in American law
and democracy. Intellectually, I know
that genius and inventive acumen are equally distributed throughout the human
population. That means, by the way, that
the third world countries are an intellectual landscape lying fallow through
economic deprivation. We need to do
something about that. [I firmly believe
that one of the greatest legacies of George W. Bush is going to be his
aggressive economic and moral support for Africa.]
So why do I give a moral edge to
being an American? Because of who we
are, and because of what we do. We have
the longest living democracy in the world.
We are the first European-based country to elect a President of shared
African descent. We have become a world
power without trying to. In fact, the
one characteristic that seems to define our relationship with the rest of the
world is, “Don’t tread on me.” Leave us
alone and we will most likely leave you alone.
For example, the Taliban were committing atrocities against its women
and enslaving its people under a corruption of Islamic law for years with
Americans doing nothing other than clicking their tongues before they attacked
us on 9-11. We were quite willing to let
those beasts mistreat their people up to the point where they involved us in
their excess. Pity the fools.
Americans have consistently tried
to expand only to the natural boundaries of our continent. Alaska and Hawaii are the only
exceptions to that. We don’t want Mexico or Canada. I would be happy to have us cut Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands free. We probably need to keep Guam,
nature’s gas station in the Pacific, but other than these vestigial remnants of
a sea faring military we did not colonize the way other nations have.
Our economic clout is the natural
outgrowth of our free market economy, and will last as long as that economy is
allowed to work with as little interference as possible. Again, we were simply trying to make a
personal and national income and did it so well that after World War II America was in
a great position to lead the world in reconstruction. Since part of the American character is an
attitude of, “charity for all” we were willing to help. But, the key was in what our goal was. We didn’t provide assistance to make other
cultures a part of America. We did it to get them on their feet so they
could get on with their lives and we could get the hell out.
It is good to love the country you
come from and respect the culture that made you. But if you weighed the good and bad
characteristics of every country, I am convinced that the scales would come
down strongly in favor of the United
States of America as the best place to
live.
God bless us, every one, and keep
the faith.
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