Thanks for this. Anytime I talk about these things to folks outside the US, it’s always some reply about “your country chose this!” And how, regardless of how I voted, I still somehow let this happen. It’s super frustrating and disheartening. Now, it is the cool thing to be super anti-American.
This country has a huge population of people who are terrified and strictly opposed to what is happening. Once you decide: “Fuck the US,” you’re turning your back on millions of Americans that did not want this to happen and did what they could do stop it. We need help in our resistance. Please don’t abandon us.
Either go protest and get shot or you clearly asked for your rights to be stripped away feels like a slap in the face for anyone who is directly affected by the things that is happening and is extremely demotivating. It feels like someone saying that somehow it was your individual fault that states that you are not in did not vote the way you would have liked them too.
I hear you. Americans in general aren’t our (Canada’s) enemy, but your President is, along with those who voted for him (and to a lesser extent, those who did not vote), and I have much less sympathy for the “leopards ate my face” crowd during Trump’s second term than his first, since he made it very well known what kind of charlatan he was.
That president is the enemy of every single American worth less than a billion dollars, unfortunately there’s a solid chunk of Americans who seem to think they’re going to wake up and become billionaires. But please know we don’t want any of this stupid bullshit
I hear you, friend. Just remember, they don’t live here. They haven’t experienced the calculated dismantling of our education system. They haven’t seen the meteoric rise of Christian nationalism. They don’t know how sick and tired the general population is. Social safety nets are more robust in their countries, so they don’t have nearly the same number of racist, angry, lead addled boomers managing to gain a chokehold on every aspect of our daily lives.
But we do live here, we have experienced it, and you are not alone.
I don’t think people outside the US realize how hard people have fought to stop this from happening. How this was a slow decent that people have been doing their best to prevent for literal decades and the people in power just kept letting it happen. I am not saying that the democrats are as bad as the republicans but they have been complacent in letting the GOP destroy all the checks and balances that were available to them in the past. They should have blocked the SC picks but did not because it would have been bad form.
Anytime I talk about these things to folks outside the US, it’s always some reply about “your country chose this!” And how, regardless of how I voted, I still somehow let this happen. It’s super frustrating and disheartening.
The way i see it, the current disasters unfolding were predictable as far back as the 1960s. Unhinged greed is a disease, and letting it run free and calling it “progress”, “economic liberalism”, and channeling it to make it your main way of doing economy, is a disease. What’s angering me personally is that it seems to me that Americans are so extremely short-sighted, that as long as it worked for them, everything was ok in their eyes, and now that they’re hitting the wall, they suddenly want to get off the vehicle. Good planning takes a long time, and even if we wanted to help you, we couldn’t, because there’s not enough preparation time.
Now, it is the cool thing to be super anti-American.
This isn’t news. Different than what americans might think, they’re not necessarily looked at as the “big heroes” everywhere. There’s a lot of countries who have made a lot of bad experiences because of them, and really, the USA isn’t popular, on average, world-wide.
The hero thing is not a mindset of most Americans. It seems like you’re considering everyone in the US is an ignorant conservative. While there is definitely a large group that is very ignorant and naive, there is a different large population that do not live in a fantasy world and understand what their country has done on a world stage.
Thanks for this. Anytime I talk about these things to folks outside the US, it’s always some reply about “your country chose this!” And how, regardless of how I voted, I still somehow let this happen. It’s super frustrating and disheartening. Now, it is the cool thing to be super anti-American. This country has a huge population of people who are terrified and strictly opposed to what is happening. Once you decide: “Fuck the US,” you’re turning your back on millions of Americans that did not want this to happen and did what they could do stop it. We need help in our resistance. Please don’t abandon us.
Non Americans don’t understand and assume we have the same liberties as them.
“Just do die in the street and achieve nothing” Isn’t the compelling moral argument many Canadians seem to think it is.
Either go protest and get shot or you clearly asked for your rights to be stripped away feels like a slap in the face for anyone who is directly affected by the things that is happening and is extremely demotivating. It feels like someone saying that somehow it was your individual fault that states that you are not in did not vote the way you would have liked them too.
I hear you. Americans in general aren’t our (Canada’s) enemy, but your President is, along with those who voted for him (and to a lesser extent, those who did not vote), and I have much less sympathy for the “leopards ate my face” crowd during Trump’s second term than his first, since he made it very well known what kind of charlatan he was.
That president is the enemy of every single American worth less than a billion dollars, unfortunately there’s a solid chunk of Americans who seem to think they’re going to wake up and become billionaires. But please know we don’t want any of this stupid bullshit
I hear you, friend. Just remember, they don’t live here. They haven’t experienced the calculated dismantling of our education system. They haven’t seen the meteoric rise of Christian nationalism. They don’t know how sick and tired the general population is. Social safety nets are more robust in their countries, so they don’t have nearly the same number of racist, angry, lead addled boomers managing to gain a chokehold on every aspect of our daily lives.
But we do live here, we have experienced it, and you are not alone.
I don’t think people outside the US realize how hard people have fought to stop this from happening. How this was a slow decent that people have been doing their best to prevent for literal decades and the people in power just kept letting it happen. I am not saying that the democrats are as bad as the republicans but they have been complacent in letting the GOP destroy all the checks and balances that were available to them in the past. They should have blocked the SC picks but did not because it would have been bad form.
I agree with you. Hopefully we get to see the electoral college and two party system abolished in our lifetime.
That statement is practically begging to be monkey-pawed
The way i see it, the current disasters unfolding were predictable as far back as the 1960s. Unhinged greed is a disease, and letting it run free and calling it “progress”, “economic liberalism”, and channeling it to make it your main way of doing economy, is a disease. What’s angering me personally is that it seems to me that Americans are so extremely short-sighted, that as long as it worked for them, everything was ok in their eyes, and now that they’re hitting the wall, they suddenly want to get off the vehicle. Good planning takes a long time, and even if we wanted to help you, we couldn’t, because there’s not enough preparation time.
This isn’t news. Different than what americans might think, they’re not necessarily looked at as the “big heroes” everywhere. There’s a lot of countries who have made a lot of bad experiences because of them, and really, the USA isn’t popular, on average, world-wide.
The US is not the only democracy that is currently endangered. Europe can easily follow suit, South America in some parts as well, as we’ve seen.
Freedom doesn’t come freely, it has to be fought for, hard, time and time again.
The hero thing is not a mindset of most Americans. It seems like you’re considering everyone in the US is an ignorant conservative. While there is definitely a large group that is very ignorant and naive, there is a different large population that do not live in a fantasy world and understand what their country has done on a world stage.
Yeah, this reply is a perfect example. It’s a generalization of over 340 million individuals.