Yeah, don't it suck when people make ignorant xenophobic assumptions about other nationalities?
Ignorant? Am I fundamentally wrong?
Whether they have reason or not, or if it reflects the majority of the population, it's there. I have never seen anti-Canadian graffiti in a foreign country, and have never seen and 'anti' graffiti in my country, except for 'anti-US', or 'anti-Israel'.
Yeah, it's there, although not "everywhere", as the quote claims.
You see, there are some people in Denmark who thinks Bush is a disaster - and some express that.
What is interesting, though, is not what you choose to quote, but what you choose not to quote:
I witnessed the early stages of this sad transformation when I moved to Denmark to work at a multilateral organization for European security in February 2001, only days after Bush took office. From the start, professional internationalists voiced concerns about Bush’s unilateralism. So too did “average” Danes, whom I met in bars or at social events.
Once they learned I was an American, one of their first hesitant questions was, “So what do you think of your president?” Europeans already were apprehensive over what they saw as a potentially disastrous four years with the world’s most powerful nation headed by an arrogant “cowboy” from Texas.
These concerns deepened when Bush disengaged from the Middle East peace process and rebuffed plans for an international war-crimes court. Bush's withdrawal from the Kyoto protocol on global warming confirmed people's worst fears that Bush wouldn't work cooperatively to address the problems that much of the world saw as pressing threats. In summer 2001, the Bush administration walked out of the U.N.'s International Conference on Racism over disputes about Israel.
The new question I got from Europeans was tinged with outrage or fear: "What is Bush doing?"
So, there is concern about Bush - not Americans - and (I hope you agree with me) it is valid.
Proof that Danes don't hate Americans (which you left out):
But when the planes hit the Twin Towers and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, everything changed. There was an outpouring of sympathy and solidarity. At the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen, thousands paid their respects, bringing flowers, candles, personal notes, and even a New York Yankees baseball cap. Similar scenes played out at U.S. embassies around the world. In Kenya, impoverished Africans brought cows to the embassy, to help America in its moment of crisis.
Living as a Dane in New York on 9-11, I got a lot of concerned feedback from Danes.
There also was surprisingly intensive coverage of the U.S. presidential campaign. Every night, the news included segments on U.S. political developments and about the presumptive Democratic nominee John Kerry. When I asked Danes if this level of attention was normal for the early stages of an American election, they said no, that the interest is far greater now than anything people can remember. Some said the U.S. primaries got more coverage than the Danish national elections.
Does this tell you something about how much we want to educate ourselves about US matters?
I remember the growing dismay at the realization the U.S. was growing more bellicose and unilateral, not less. Bush warned nations that "you are either with us, or you are with the terrorists." He also promulgated the Bush Doctrine of "preemptive war" that would be waged against countries that he deemed as representing a "gathering danger."
Perhaps I need remind you that Denmark is one of the relatively few countries that followed Bush into war?
Please show me where I said it was. I was simply pointing out that the of the two countries that border the US, only one does not have English as an official language.
If you travel by car, sure. But there are other means of travel. Flying comes to mind.
And it obviously takes a bit more effort for me to leave the country.
Not really. You have plenty of airports in the United States.
Funny, I was getting evidence while you posted this.
Funny, I just showed that your own evidence disproves your contention.
BTW, are you accusing me of lying?
Heavens, no. I asked for evidence. Why so defensive?
Note that it is a picture of
Bush. It is not an American flag. We are very aware of the difference, you know.
Or maybe I misunderstand you: Do you think that Bush is synonymous with America?
Well, if you need a passport to travel more than 515 km from your birthplace, that makes a passport more useful than if you only need only to travel 3000km from your birthplace.
So you're saying that Danes have always been able to travel wherever they liked inside the 13 countries that now comprise the EU, without travel documents.
No, I am not. Educate yourself.
And the Schlengen Agreement changed nothing. You know, you should educate yourself a bit.
"Schengen".
I don't think it is a prejudice because I don't think my countrymen are any better. I doubt I would be all too keen on travelling to the US if I were Arab or French, for instance.
The French proportionally visit the US more than USAians visit France:
8% of the 24,452,000 USAians travelled to France. That's 1,956,160, out of a population of 295,734,134. That's
0.66%
688,887 French travelled to the US. Out of a population of 60,656,178, that's
1.14%
Additional source
Gee, ain't geographical knowledge grand?
It's not that I think Europeans are dirtbags, it's that I think PEOPLE are dirtbags and will gleefully sieze on any opportunity to do cruddy things to torment whatever group of people are in disfavor at the moment. I have no reason to suppose the Europeans are any better than the rest of humanity in that regard, and Americans are one of the groups of people in disfavor over there (and just about everywhere else) at the moment.
As for the rest, again I say that I can only go by what I see.
As you will notice, the protests have been against Bush. Not Americans.
Also since they had 5 options to pick from (on of which was "I don't know") they did only marginally better than average, and was in fact beaten by significant margins by every other country in the test. Also only 44% knew which organization endosed the EURO. It's not so much that they don't know, but honestly how hard is it to figure out that the EURO is probably endorse by the EUROpean Union, rather than say NATO, OPEC, WTO or perhaps NAFTA.
What was the first moniker the EURO had? The EU? I can't remember.
I don't think that it reflects at all on Americans - I hope I didn't come across as thinking that. I'm just saying that there are instances of anti-Americanism in Europe.
As there are instances of anti-Europeanism in the US. As exhibited in this very thread. And, of course, the Freedom Fries and Freedom Toast, a government sanctioned form of anti-Europeanism, to hit back at France.
Europe is slightly larger than the US, and has
about as many countries in it as the US has states.
If the US were a continent, like Europe, I could claim to have visited 23 foreign countries in that continent. Wow, I am a travellin' dude!
Facts are nice. Geographical facts are very nice.
There are dozens, even hundreds of reasons why Americans don't visit Europe as often as Europeans visit America. My favorite explanation is that most of us have ancestors who left Europe because they were being taxed to death or hacked to death, and passed on their feelings about their European taxers and hackers to their children and grandchildren.
A bit....silly, isn't it?
That's why I don't go to Europe. Here in 'Murrica, cities make you clean up after your dog. In France, they invite the goddam curs right into the restaurants.
Please, let's not generalize about "Europe", hm? Cities in Denmark also make you clean up after your dog.
You're going to have significant problems understadning world events without at least a basic understanding of geography. I supose you could probably survive without understanding what goes on at CNN World news, but it's hardly useless show of knowledge.
Exactly. As has been demonstrated aptly in this thread.