RedSpawn, on 2017-July-06, 03:47, said:
Winston . . .Clinton is untrustworthy... There is not a "dislike".... She has a husband as a continuous scandal albatross, seems too cozy with Wall Street, and I won't let her campaign off the hook on how they accepted "assistance" from the Democratic National Committee for debate questions at Bernie Sander's expense. That doesn't make Trump a great choice or a good choice, but the "choices" we were given were hardly inspiring.
The choices we had for President were not examples of "American exceptionalism".
See
https://www.theatlan...onalism/532548/
I thank you for the article. I don't think it has the answers, and I probably disagree with some of it, but it has some good questions.
The problem, in brief, with "American exceptionalism" is that it is a simple-minded phrase meaning different things to different people . And is smacks of arrogance. The article discusses some of the history of the phrase.
A quote from the article
Quote
None of that is true, and in important ways it is the opposite of the truth. Who your parents were and where you came from matters probably more in the United States than in most other advanced economies, at least if statistics on upward mobility are to be believed.
I really support the last qualifying phrase. This is not because I think the data is faked, but rather that I think attacking a problem requires looking beyond the gross data.
Like any country, we have our strengths, our weaknesses, our problems, our opportunities. I can say, clearly and truthfully, that I feel very lucky to have been born here. I can hope for a bright future, I can perhaps contribute. None of this requires an assertion of American Exceptionalism.
Maybe we need a thread to list phrases that I think we would be much better off consigning to the trash heap. "American Exceptionalism" and " Politically Correct" would certainly make my list. I'm not to fond of "elite" either.