Originally posted by Agathon
Not really. The British ruled much of the earth and had a similar sense of moral righteousness. What they also had was a genuine interest in the places they were running, because the British were not fundamentally isolationist. They also tended to leave institutions that looked a lot like theirs in place when they left. India, for example, is the world's largest democracy. These places had a pretty big effect on British culture, as one can see in the works of Kipling, for instance.
Not really. The British ruled much of the earth and had a similar sense of moral righteousness. What they also had was a genuine interest in the places they were running, because the British were not fundamentally isolationist. They also tended to leave institutions that looked a lot like theirs in place when they left. India, for example, is the world's largest democracy. These places had a pretty big effect on British culture, as one can see in the works of Kipling, for instance.
Still, many argued the British oppressed the people they ruled, perhaps in a more hands-on manner than the Americans did.
The British massacred Zulu, brutally crushed the Kikuyu rebellion (the Mau Mau rebellion In Kenya, and were involved in other atrocities. Admittedly, the Brits conducted themselves better than other colonial powers- but still, they abused their power.
Americans have very little interest in any of the places they dominate. Most of them can't even find them on a map.
Americans are only really interested in themselves, and aren't a very cultured people (the British weren't and still aren't by European standards - to be fair, neither are the Australians or NZers).
The US is extremely aggressive. We just haven't seen this because western news media tended to downplay it during the Cold War for obvious reasons. In the Cold War, the Soviet Union was supposed to be the aggressor, but a simple record of military deployments gave the lie to that.
On the other hand-
Russia occupied Czechoslovakia, Hungary (1956?), the Baltic States, Kazakhstan, destroyed Mongolian culture, etc. and would have taken all of Germany if they could have gotten away with it. They also wanted to absorb Austria. And Italy (with Soviet-funding) probably would have joined the Iron Curtain but for a few serendipitous circumstances.
Their method of war is also pretty nutty. It's been the case for a long time that the American way of war is to stand as far away from the enemy as possible and rain down insane amounts of ordnance with little or no concern for friendly fire or collateral damage. I've spoken to veterans of four wars who fought as allies of US troops and all of them without prompting said that they were often more concerned about being victims of friendly fire than they were about the enemy.
Both. But Americans are too insular and ignorant to make any good come of it.
* But then again, I admit I personally dislike insularity and narrow opinions because they can be limiting... I LIKE free trade deals between countries, I LIKE NAFTA, I LIKE the EU, and follow international news almost exclusively.
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