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Subject: 
Re: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.off-topic.debate
Date: 
Wed, 3 Jul 2002 03:32:09 GMT
Viewed: 
3605 times
  
In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Pedro Silva writes:

Well, I meant *in* history, not for all time.  The US is the greatest nation to
have ever existed, even though we've only been around for 200odd years.

Sorry to pop in in this discussion like this, but I dispute this point of
yours.

No, welcome!

I'd acknowledge the United Kingdom as the greatest nation the world
has ever seen, even if its context was considerably different
(colonial/imperial, I mean).

That's funny.  For those reasons the US gets criticized bitterly...

You can say a lot about how great the USA are now, and you won't be totally
wrong (the country is great, IMO), but bear in mind that the American way of
life had its origin in the British way of life...

Yeah, and life in Britian became so intolerable for some that they *left* it to
find a better life and country here in America!

And so far, the USA have
not originated any significant nation. :-)

lol If you are using the greatness of the US as a reason for Britian's
greatness... that's what I call "dumb luck";-)

To my view, the ultimate evidence
that the UK was the greatest nation to date is the fact that it parted
itself into viable countries when needed, after giving them all the best it
could of its own costumes.

Elaborate.  Not sure to what you are referring.

Heck,
Americans have driven SUVs on the moon-- we've landed stuff on Mars!

The purpose of that remains disputable - science is great, but has the
condition of the average man been significantly improved thanks to Space
exploration?

Are you kidding????  Haven't you ever heard of "velcro"!!?? (apologies to those
who believe velcro is actually borrowed alien technology:-)

It is my oppinion that the moon trip was purely a showoff, a
good display of "we CAN do that, even though it's no use". An advertising
stunt, for the Cold War context.

Wow.  You are talking about argueabley the single greatest human accomplishment
in the history of mankind.  To reduce it to a "stunt" or to "show off" is about
as short-sighted as one could get.  Our destiny is out there in space IMO.

And yet,
we could have rightfully claimed those places our own, but we didn't!

Could you have kept them? (see the concept for African partition in Berlin
Conference, 1883 - you can only claim it if you occupy it ;-)

That is not too far away.  But even still we wouldn't do it.

See above.
Additionally, I'd risk pointing out that Norway seems to be now the greatest
place to live in,

Norway???  Just going by depression and suicide statistics of Norwegians alone,
I'd rule her out;-)

But seriously, if Norway is *so* great, why aren't people clammering to
immigrate there?  And of the ones who are clammering to get into Norway, they
are merely doing so so they can live off of the government, and it is causing
an interesting backlash so I understand.

according to UN statistics - Canada dropped it's place in
the rank a short while ago. And if a place is the best one to live in, it is
fair to call it "the greatest", don't you agree? :-)

Sure.  But the best thing Canada has going for it is her neighbors;-)


If that paper disappeared right now, what would happen?
Would you *poof* disappear?  Would your homeland cease to be the United
States of America, and revert back into the French Territory of Louisana,
Mexico and whatever else there was before 1776?  Somehow I doubt it.  Just
as I would not stop being a Christian because you took away my Bible, you
would not cease to be American if the Constitution were to disappear.  You
have laws, you have judges, you have appeals, you have government.  The
Constitution is a guideline and a pretty good one at that, as to how to do
things, but it should never be put above the individual.

The Constitution *is* our government, and without the government, there is
nothing to protect the rights of the people, and without that protection, you
have anarchy, which is a far cry from the US today.  Damn right this country
would cease to exist as we know it.

Are you this sure about the importance of an immutable Constitution? Our has
a clause in it that forces parliament to review it every 10 years or less,
no matter how good it is, to keep it up-to-date. It has worked fine... would
you claim the mere actualization of the Constitutional text, in order to
clarify it in the light of today's lifestyle, would torn apart the USA???
This can't be a good thing...

Seriously, I don't know of anyone who would *presume* to second-guess the US
Constitution, and if anyone ever did, for that reason alone I wouldn't trust
them.  If it ain't broke, don't fix it:-)

And what do you think of other countries? Is there any country you could try
to live in? Would you try to adapt to a new country (suppose you had to
emmigrate due to work reasons), or isolate in the "american quarter" and
whine about how misfortunate you'd be for living abroad?
I dunno, but it seems to me you are simplifying the relation of your country
with the RoTW. No two countries are alike, all have good points and bad
points, that can't be "counted". Just because you believe your system is
great and suitable to you, that alone does not mean it *is*... ;-)

It is when we talk about the cornerstones of our country, which are liberty and
freedom.  No other guards and protects them like we do.  (This is our secret)


the world's countries today, there is simply no comparison.  I say this not as
a braggart; it just happens to be a fact.

(See above for nations)
I dispute this "fact" to be even a valid statement! (there really isn't a
universal form of comparison between countries, is it?)

That's why I say, pick any category and let's compare (just not sports)

But show me I'm wrong.  I know this is coming off as a lot of flag-waving and
Patriotic rhetoric, but try to see beyond that and really take a look at what
this country has done in 200ish short years.  It's downright remarkable.  And
then try and *explain* the US's success.  And try not to conclude with "dumb
luck":-)

In two words: Pacific + Atlantic. Geography alone has given the USA great
opportunities, and the settlers knew how to profit from them. They did
right, and built a great nation. I only dispute it to be "the greatest to
date", or even the greatest *now*.

If geography alone were the reason, then why aren't Native Americans sitting
here saying that they are the greatest country in the world?  The settlers here
didn't invent capitalism, and as it was pointed out elsewhere, our nation was
built from those fleeing other countries to find a better life for themselves.
So what's so different about America?

Here's my point:

If the US were, say a socialist state:

1. Nobody would have bothered to come because they could have just as easily
gotten repressed in their home country,

2. The *opportunities* would not have existed and nothing would have been
accomplished.

We are the land of opportunity *because* our Constitution guaranteed the
freedoms and liberties of its citizens to pursue their dreams.  We built the
proper framework of government which enabled our success.  And that framework
is our Constitution.  *It* is what *allowed* us to be great.

Accomplishments aside, we are the freest country in the world.  That *alone*
should say enough.

-John



Message has 3 Replies:
  Re: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
 
(...) I know this is bad form, but I have to apologize for this statement-- I admit I was shooting from the hip there. But here is an evaluation of Norway allegedly being the best place on earth to live (and it's by a Norwegian, no less): (URL) (22 years ago, 3-Jul-02, to lugnet.off-topic.debate)
  Re: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
 
(...) It may be because of immigration regulations. (...) That sounds quite a bit simplified. The majority of immigrants come from neighboring countries. There have been a fair number of immigrants from Sweden lately, and they generally move over (...) (22 years ago, 3-Jul-02, to lugnet.off-topic.debate)
  Re: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
 
(...) Thank you! :-) (...) I used the expression "differnt context" for some reason. And I did not criticize the USA for any sort of Imperialist attitude, did I? (...) Innacurate: the Britons who originally left found life in the Colonies better; (...) (22 years ago, 3-Jul-02, to lugnet.off-topic.debate)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
 
(...) Sorry to pop in in this discussion like this, but I dispute this point of yours. I'd acknowledge the United Kingdom as the greatest nation the world has ever seen, even if its context was considerably different (colonial/imperial, I mean). You (...) (22 years ago, 3-Jul-02, to lugnet.off-topic.debate)

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