Originally posted by Alexander's Horse
One very pertinent to where you live is Americans have mental maps of their cities, which areas are safe and which are not, which are for whites and which for coloureds and so on. How can you say you are free when you can't go past 13th street without taking your life in your hands? I remember very well getting detailed instructions on where not to go, and this was only a few blocks from the Whitehouse. It really made a deep impression on me - the capital of the free world is a city of fear, a city without real personal safety, a city where you can't walk the streets without watching your back.
This lack of personal freedom and safety and the consequences was brought out very well by Michael Moore in Bowling for Columbine - in Detroit its civil war and a third world kind of city divide. In Windsor, Canada, just across the river, people aren't even locking their doors at night!
So which is freer as a lived experience? The US or Canada? I dare say its Canada.
One very pertinent to where you live is Americans have mental maps of their cities, which areas are safe and which are not, which are for whites and which for coloureds and so on. How can you say you are free when you can't go past 13th street without taking your life in your hands? I remember very well getting detailed instructions on where not to go, and this was only a few blocks from the Whitehouse. It really made a deep impression on me - the capital of the free world is a city of fear, a city without real personal safety, a city where you can't walk the streets without watching your back.
This lack of personal freedom and safety and the consequences was brought out very well by Michael Moore in Bowling for Columbine - in Detroit its civil war and a third world kind of city divide. In Windsor, Canada, just across the river, people aren't even locking their doors at night!
So which is freer as a lived experience? The US or Canada? I dare say its Canada.
JM
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