:::::People don't hate Americans for being a mix of people but when Americans start to talk about being tough about the sources of funding for terrorists some people can't help but recall that American is one such source. Making the Real IRA an organisation that Americans can't raise money for is good start though and I look forward for this kind of things to be extended to other terrorist and extremist groups, regardly of any issues of perceived enthic bias. -- Aristotle |
:::This anger is definitely misplaced unless the government do not take steps to prevent futher funding, whatever the country is. Some people also will fund an organisation not knowing what their money is funding and to a degree this kind of intial innocence is understandable. -- Aristotle |
To my credit I did avoid mentioning that the British National Party is considered to be a fascist organisation in the UK. -- Aristotle |
I have sought to do this but it does expand the text considerably. You are welcome to rewrite it again if you feel that I have failed in this task. I am neutral in respect to The Troubles as I consider all paramilitary groups there to be as undemocratic, violent and dangerous as each other. -- Aristotle |
Larry, (out of interest) have the read the entry for the Provisional Irish Republican Army recently? Wikipedia is not neutral on this subject unless the current activities of the Provisional IRA are everyday activities for most readers. -- Aristotle |
There are criticisms of Britain and there is anti-British sentiment around the globe. Consider your example of Mexico, which has never been a dominant world player like Britain has been and America is now. You have to be worth noticing to be worthy of someone disliking you. However places that Mexico has invaded or fought wars with (Do you remember the Alamo?) are prone to harbour anti-Mexican feeling. -- Aristotle |
: The fact that many supposedly less-sophisticated European viewers flock to American movies and telvision further infuriates those who dislike it. The above paragraph does not reflect a neutral point of view so I've moved it over to here. - Aristotle |
Anti-Great-Britainism clearly exists when you see newsgroups like uk.politics.misc where Americans choose to snipe at Brits for all kinds of reasons. -- Aristotle |
I'm going to personally (try to) enforce the following rule: if you put up an example of grounds for anti-Americanism, you must also supply a fair, sympathetic reply to that, of a sort that a patriotic, intelligent American would approve. (Stop laughing, I'm serious.) Failure to supply a fair, sympathetic reply will result in the text being temporarily relegated to this /Talk page. --LMS
I am completely open to changes to my contribution.
However to understand anti-Americanism you need to understand what causes it and the funding I'm talking about is well-documented. A patriotic, intelligent American should approve of being informed of this, if he didn't know of it already. To America's credit the Real IRA is a list of organisations that it is illegal to raise funds for and this possibly should have been highlighted to show that America is taking steps to stem this kind of funding.
IMO, the article shouldn't assume that funding the IRA is wrong (even if it obviously is; let your readers decide). It should also express defense of (and give an explanation for) the practice of funding of the IRA. --Larry
I doubt a patriotic intelligent American would try and justify all of America's past actions. More likely they would talk about the relative scarcity of atrocities, more than made up for by America's democracy and egalitarianism, so that while noone is perfect it's still the best we've got. Or something like that. I think demanding a counterpoint for every point might not be providing an NPOV so much as restricting what material can go on here.
I contribute an piece on Americans sullying their own reputation and pointed out how other Americans can save the day by doing something positive. As Bill Clinton is too contraversal for many Americans I used Martin Luther King as a example no-one could criticise.
"Positive" is a value term here. One persons "positive action" is another's "Anti-Americanism", and vice-versa.
That comment about Americans salvaging their reputations seems more like an editorial than an encyclopedia piece; it implies a particular stand, that America needs to salvage its reputation, which is a position, not a fact. - Tim
It seems to me that if you are going to begin an article by saying "X involves people who a, b, c, or d, then you have to discuss a, b, c, and d separately in the article. Otherwise, you are confusing the topic and not doing it justice.
I don't see what the following is doing in an encyclopedia; again, do please look at neutral point of view.
The latter paragraph in particular is blatant opinion piece writing. Who says the great strength of American society is that? --LMS
I thought this was something we could all agree on -- Neutral point of view. Guess not.
I'm *not* trying to be argumentative here, but just curious: You would list the great strengths of "American" society as what??
Bet you one of the main problems is the line "Understanding valid criticism can help Americans counter anti-Americanism", which appears right before we get into the details. This makes it seem like the details are important in so far as they help the reader be anti-anti-American. Otherwise, the article is shaping up really well, as wikipedia articles tend to do.
I think the article still lacks very many fair, intelligent, complete responses to these objections, which shows either the very stubborn bias of the people working on it, or their ignorance. I suspect it's the latter more than the former. --LMS
Many sociologists theorise that the continuing vitality of religion in American life, compared to many European countries, is due to the lack of a strong state church (or indeed, any state church at all) during much of American history.
This statement does not seem to be an objection to or criticism of America, but a comment on religion in America. I do not object to the statement, as such, but think it should go in another article, such as [Religion in America]?.
bin Laden is NOT a mass murder.
The Anti-Americanism page sounds like it was written by Americans confused by why people might be resentful of Americans. Perhaps only those outside of the United States should be writing here. Sounds a little like CNN talking heads pondering the question, "Why could they possibly hate us? Does anyone remember the slogan, "Yankee go home"?
First of all a distinction needs to be made between what people in other countries think of Americans (U.S citizens as opposed to Canadians) and what they think of US leaders. Many in other countries direct their anger at the imperialism of the US government while feeling hospitable to citizens of the United States. To lump these two distinct concepts together into one generic term, Anti-Americanism, only confuses issues and does not help in the understanding of what is really going on.
There are a number of reasons why people might be angry at the United States:
Even phrasing the term as "Anti-Americanism" shows an arrogance toward other countries in the Americas and may even be further grounds for hostility toward those in the US who cannot imagine that there are others in this continent.
The other problem with this entry is slanted nature of the writing - " to violence, such as that shown by some Islamists and by Osama bin Laden." What violence has Osama bin Laden committed and why is he and Islamists being singled out in this entry? "mass murderers like bin Laden" - looks to me like somebody has been watching too much CNN.
American Funding of Terrorists and Extremists - why is the word "Extremist" used here - this is a propaganda term being used as a [code word]? to demonize those out of favor with the media establishment.
"America's religious tolerance and diversity, and its separation of church and state, are offensive to people in many cultures, such as Islam." Religious tolerance and diversity - is this why people who look like Arabs are being killed and harassed. Ask Blacks about their experience with "tolerance and diversity". Tolerance in the US is a work in progress and has a way to go. I fail to understand why someone in another country would hate Americans because they were too tolerant. The United States is not terribly tolerant of people why don't profess a belief in God (or even a non Christian version) - there is even the slogan "In God We Trust" on the money, for Christ sake. I am sick of all this self-congratulation in the media about "America's religious tolerance" - I say walk the walk before talking the talk.
Any discussion of why there is hostility toward Americans and the United States needs to include something about the US support for Israel and how people in other countries view this.
There are bits of Anti-Americanism that seem to fit neatly under the banner "The Collective National Character" or "Stereotypes of American Character" perhaps, notably (and I should add that of course these are beliefs that I think exist in some quarters rather than assertions I'm necessarily prepared to support - note also that I'm concentrating on Americans who travel abroad because that's one of the main ways people in other countries form opinions of a country's citizens):
I could go on and on, but you get the idea. These kind of things (fair or not) are perceived in various parts of the world, and they're really about common characteristics of Americans, rather than actions of American government or other American institutions.
Does this stuff fit in the article, and if so does it deserve a new subheading? --Robert Merkel
One big problem that I see with this page is that for the most part, it consists primarily of the sorts of complaints about America that only Americans (or inhabitants of similar Western countries) are likely to make. These are mostly things that we do not like about our own country.
For example, the Middle Eastern and Islamic countries which are the most virulently anti-American most certainly do not take issue with such things as our use of capital punishment.
It should be noted that people hate America for reasons that are not things that we do not like about ourselves, at all. They hate us for having freedom of religion, freedom of speech, trial by jury, a democratically elected government, an open economy permitting work by women and the charging of interest on loans, for attempting to educate everyone, for outlawing slavery.
It is a sort of (benevolent) Western bias, I suppose, to fail to recognize that these are at least important reasons why we are hated. We apply our own moral standards to the hated, searching our souls for what we have done wrong. But we should also look at the things that we have done right.
Take as an example our often misguided funding of very questionable freedom fighters. There can be no question that the victims of these so-called freedom fighters should hate us, and the article points this out quite well. But why then do the beneficiaries of our misguided funded hate us as well? Because the very ideas that make our funding of them stupid (i.e. they are not freedom fighters at all) makes them hate us (because we are free).
Afghanistan makes for a useful example. We (quite improperly, I think) helped the so-called freedom fighters there kick out the Soviet Union because we were (quite properly, I think) convinced that the Soviets constituted an evil empire. But those freedom fighters hated us even as they took our help, because of all the values that I listed above.
My overall point, whenever this gets incorporated into the article, if it does, is that we shouldn't just list things that we dislike about ourselves and then feel that we've done a good job of being unbiased and critical of our own culture. All we've done is miss the point: they hate us for the very things that we consider good about ourselves. Why that should be boggles our minds, but nonetheless it is true. --Jimbo Wales
The UK has had all these things, most of them earlier than the US, plus the UK pissed off pretty much everybody all over the world as a colonial power. Why is there no Anti-Great-Britainism?
I don't see any evidence that either of the above factors significantly contributes to middle-eastern anti-americanism. I think middle-eastern anti-americanism has two deep roots:
I don't necessarily agree or disagree, but I do freely admit that my tidbit (above) is opinionated. I'm not planning to write anything on the main page because I'm not currently mentally able to put aside my own pro-Americanism to write anything about anti-Americanism that doesn't sound like bashing. :-)
One recommendation I have for the article is for someone to rewrite it so that instead of saying "They hate America for propping up various evil dictators from time to time", it says "They hate America because of the perception that America props up various evil dictators from time to time". This is one of our best tricks for writing something more neutral -- talking about waht people believe, rather than what actually is the case. (Oh, and of course, we shouldn't call us America, but the US, I suppose?)
Some of the things listed above (not in your response, Axel, but further up the page, strike me as just plain silly. Either Americans as I know them do not expect everyone to speak English (what a stupid stereotype of Americans!), or they do so rationally since lots of people do speak English as a second language in at least both Europe and Asia. They do so, of course, because the United States is the greatest country in the world and they love us. ;-) (I'm just deliberately being biased here for fun on the talk page.) --Jimbo Wales
AxelBoldt, I agree with your conclusions except for the envy and the absolute absensce of any Anti-Great-Britainism.
The Islamic areas probably just want to lead their own lifestyle, at the various level of adherence to religious and cultural rules, and see this frustrated. Feeling impotent about Palestinian treatment is a big frustration with pollsters finding it to almost over-whelmingly one of the one of key subjects in that region. This amplifies any sense of interference and possible anger over being supported by the Americans during the Cold War and then being ignored afterwards.