That is horrible, and I don't think I've ever met anyone here in the states with that attitude. Criminals perhaps. Sheriff's t-shirts may be colorful but not of general public opinion, and that one sounds hyperbolic.
Such people do exist, at least around here where I live in Arizona. Maybe it's because I live in a military town. A lot of people have that warlike "edge."
All people are this way. I remember someone mentioning N. Korea. Talk about a gaslit citizenry!
Yes, although as the OP article indicated, their reasons for being hostile towards the U.S. are not entirely manufactured. We carpet bombed their country and wiped out 20% of their population, and we still maintain a military force right on their borders.
I don't think that is USA at all. I do not think it is us.
Some people use that as a justification for U.S. military actions.
We do, however, have actual scheming enemies who are not imagined. In particular fascists in charge of failed states such as N. Korea are embarrassed by the happiness of all of the successful republics such as S. Korea.
I'm not so sure of that. How can we possibly know what people (particularly leaders) in other countries think and feel? How do we know what they're scheming? It could be just the opposite. They might think that our government is scheming, and they're desperate to build up their defenses to prevent it. Since we already have bombed them excessively, as well as a long track record of warmongering interventionism in East Asia - while they have not dropped a single bomb on us or sent a single soldier to our soil, it seems logical to assume that their fears of us are more well-founded than any fears our leaders have of them.
Likewise, we have a track record of military interventionism in China and Russia - yet they never did anything to us. Yet our government tries to pass off the notion that they went against us for no reason and that we never did anything to provoke them.
In the here and now, it probably doesn't really matter anymore, since we may already be past the point of no return. Now that we've decided that they're enemies, they are responding accordingly - and that might mean doing a bit of scheming on their part. Just as our leaders have to do their scheming. They're certainly not imagined, but perhaps in the future, it might behoove us Americans to learn a bit better about the outside world before throwing our weight around. If nothing else, at least we should follow the old saying: "Know your enemy."
The other downside of entering a new cold war is that it could have unintended side effects here at home. If we are forced to defend ourselves against enemies around the world, then we'll have to focus even more on national security issues.
Since then a much higher percentage has been wiped out mainly through starvation by the installed government.
I haven't seen the statistics on that.
That is several presidents ago, and in the time quoted Bush is probably referring to specific enemies that did mistrust our freedoms, such as our freedom to wear bikinis on beaches and freedom to not be religious and such other things as are considered evil freedoms in many places. Our freedom to eat whatever we like would be considered evil by leaders in N. Korea . Our decadent food is scandalous.
I've never been to North Korea, so I really wouldn't know if they consider Americans' freedom to eat to be evil. I don't think they care so much about what Americans eat as much as where we put our military bases and forces, especially when it's in close proximity to their borders. Just as our leaders would freak out and go into a panic if ever North Korea had bases and troops in places like Tijuana or Ciudad Juarez.
I honestly can't believe that our enemies would commit the 9/11 bombings because we have the freedom to wear bikinis on beaches. They did it because we had been interfering in their region for decades. I don't think they had any desire to take over our territory, nor did they care all that much about how we lived or what freedoms we had. They were just telling us to stop messing around in the Middle East and keep our troops out of the region. It was their way of saying "Yankee, go home."
Founded upon the concepts, yes, and at great risk. It was a unique time when most would not have taken such a risk, but the people here in the original colonies were from previously oppressed minority groups such as quakers, baptists etc.
Generous, compassionate and loving is debatable. It is generous in that it allows full immigration though. Immigrants can become citizens with complete rights as if born here, able to vote, able to work in government or join our military.
The reason to hate USA is: too big. The government is so large and unwieldy. Countries ought to be smaller. While citizens have benefited in many ways, we really are far too large of a country. The military while large and powerful enough to defend us is overwhelmingly too large, too expensive, too influential. Are we going to take over the world or not? Its like we can't back down since WWII, and its an awful situation that can not be sustained.
My point here was that, all too often, the perceptions of America can come across too one-sided and exaggerated.
I do agree that we could stand down somewhat, at least in terms of our military posturing. We could pull back from the world to a certain degree. But that might also mean taking a more tolerant attitude towards certain other countries in the world we have declared to be enemies. Either we can negotiate, compromise, and find peaceful solutions. Or we can put ourselves on a war footing and prepare for whatever onslaught may await us. It would probably be comparable to the Cold War, but with the added dimension of cyber warfare and space warfare.
Should be a boon for industry, but civil liberties will probably take a tumble - "for reasons of national security."
One thing I keep in mind, at least as an American, since 1941, for all practical purposes, we've been in a constant state of war. As you say, we never could stand down after WW2, as the Cold War came right after, and even when the Cold War ended, we still couldn't stand down. Of course, during the same period, life still went on in America - and life improved greatly in America following the Depression and WW2 era. Things also got better in the area of civil rights and equality for all citizens. But we were also having air raid drills, and many people were building bomb shelters. The public got a great scare during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the public started seeing more and more pictures and film footage coming out of Southeast Asia - and the public started showing its dislike for such activities more and more.
Nevertheless, discussions of geopolitics were common among regular people, and foreign policy and our military activities became one of the most important political issues of our time. The public, for the most part, has accepted limitations on their freedoms for reasons of national security. Whole generations have been raised with this kind of "national security" mindset which I've observed to be quite prevalent among a lot of people. People accept it, but this is where the great trap lies. While I'm hesitant to use the term "fascism" and apply it in America, whatever we want to call it, Americans have already been conditioned and programmed 80-90% of the way already.
That's one of the downsides of long-term warmongering under the pretext of defending our freedom. We shouldn't be surprised when some people start to actually take it literally.