No, it's true. You were on a "Linux is foreign" kick again, then we told you that much of Linux is American. In response you went on a "Linux gives our technology to the enemy" kick. Then when reminded that BSD does the exact same thing with an even more permissive license you weaseled that BSD isn't useful enough for supercomputers and our enemies aren't using it anyway.
So now you appear to be of the opinion that it's better that American technology be given away ("but if that's truely what you need you can use the American original") than have foreigners come up with it themselves. But then NetBSD and OpenBSD were founded and are maintained by foreigners (especially the anti-war de Raadt).
Principles are great. Inconsistently applied principles are hypocrisy.
I generally don't support open source
That's fine, you're allowed your opinions. But be consistent.
And why would I want to use a cheap clone of anything, much less a cheap foreign clone of something originating from the US?
I wouldn't want to use a cheap clone, foreign or domestic, either. Now a high-speed clone is a different matter. I use a high-speed clone every day -- Mac OS X. I post this to a system running Linux. I get my mail from a Linux system.
but my preference for US products is good for America
Blind preference for American products almost killed our car industry. Banking on loyalty the industry got sloppy and produced a lot of garbage. It took competition (remember that capitalist term?) and a thorough trouncing by the Japanese to wake them up.
This is the most obscene description of my position imaginable, of course. Unlike you, I clearly support the protection of US intellectual property rights, while you support foreign clones and hackers. And when you're not painting strawmen in defense of yourself, you like to accuse others of the exact position you're guilty of. So you're busted, again. Why you continue to create these confrontations, which expose your true motives is harder to explain, but it doesn't really matter. Feel free to talk in circles some more if you want, but until you can finally ever explain what your actual point supposedly is, there's nothing really else to say.