Boy, this takes me back!
Excellent post. I meet these sort of people all the time. New Zealand has a long history of disliking Americans, dating back to WW2. Also I work in the film industry which is, IMHO, heavily saturated with woo.
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The general "anti-Americanism" is often hardest of all to combat. First off, from a given world view, America has done a lot to frame it in a negative light. Secondly, most New Zealanders are only exposed to Americans through the media and through your rich tourists. As you can imagine the struggling low budget NZ film industry doesn't think very highly of the US Media/Film megolith. And the rich tourists that come here are hardly fantastic ambassadors.
There's so much misconception it seems an impossible task to combat it. Especially when any correction immediately has you labelled as a war mongering right wing facist psychopath.
What's really sad is the mind-blowing level of ignorance. Most NZers of this ilk constantly criticise the ignorance of Americans - citing things like random street interviews where Americans are asked the location of various cities and countries.
Ignoring the gross subjective nature of such interviews (we only get shown the most absurb responses), most New Zealanders are equally ignorant of our OWN country, failing to locate towns and cities on a national map. And the lack of understanding of the states here is shocking. That's one thing I really appreciate about this forum. I've learned an enormous amount about the United States - both its structure and organisation, and the American psyche and world view. These are things never made available to us in New Zealand.
There's still lots of things I really don't like about the USA, and I can't say I'd ever want to live there, but unlike most New Zealanders I understand the REASON things are the way they are in the USA. And I recognise that many Americans probably feel the same way about my country.
Ack. Why did this turn into a study on the USA?????
-Gumboot
Having lived for three years in New Zealand, where I was anything but rich, this takes me back.
I had to give tours of the US Antarctic base in Christchurch to local groups, mostly kids. The kids heard my Bronx accent and asked me about their three favorite things about America: Los Angeles gangs, rap musicians, and NBA basketball stars...and had I ever been one or known one?
That was America to them.
Occasionally I dealt with anti-nuclear protesters, who were convinced our Air Mobility Command flights to and from New Zealand and Australia were hauling nuclear weapons. Actually, they were dragging around furniture to and from bases for people moving. They didn't like American policy, but were not angry at Americans.
Kathy worked in the community as an RSPCA inspector, and everyone loved her. She had the New Jersey accent, loved dogs, a great sense of humor, and got on with people. Any time she had to go to a house where someone was older than about 50, they'd hear her voice and thank her profusely for winning the Battle of the Coral Sea and the Battle of Guadalcanal...in 1942.
Kathy didn't even know what they were. I had to explain them.
When my unit did parades for V-E Day, V-J Day, ANZAC Day, and so on, our sailors would get surrounded by aging men and women who would tell the sailors how they served on
HMNZS Leander at Kolombangara or flew P-40s from Guadalcanal. The poor sailors, being 20 years old, would be stupefied. So would their officers, who didn't care, and because I was interested in the subject, the sailors would happily dump the old guys on me, and we'd talk about Kolombangara and P-40s while the sailors scuttled off to hoist a beer or chase a girl.
New Zealanders knew a lot about the United States, thanks to TV. But they didn't know that much. One kid asked me if the Concorde ever landed in New York (Air France was doing a Pacific charter tour and the big bird was in ChCh). I told him it arrived in New York three to five times a day. The kid goggled.
Another kid asked if we had "Sky TV" and its four cable channels in America. I told him we had 75 channels and nothing on. He was amazed. When our New Zealand pal's kids came to America, we flipped on our tv to the cable channel, and they were awed.
Some New Zealanders know their own past and their country. Being an outdoors people, they know their country. Being sports-minded, they know about the All Blacks and where they're playing. But they're vague on Charles Hazlitt Upham, Minqar Qaim, and many don't even know that 37 New Zealanders died in Vietnam alongside the Grunts. They're beginning to learn... attendance at ANZAC Day Dawn Services kept growing every year when I was in Christchurch, for example.
But I'll say this...I love New Zealand. Kats and I wanted to stay in Christchurch. It had clear skies, very little crime, well-behaved kids, beautiful parks, friendly people, no terrorists, no crowds, no environmental waste. I got married there, my daughter was born there, I had my first home there. I'm a New York native, but Christchurch is my adopted home town.