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Ugly Americans: The United States in the Eyes of Europe
Crisis Magazine ^ | February 3, 2005 | Dwight Longenecker

Posted on 02/05/2005 6:19:31 AM PST by NYer

On my first visit to England as a fresh-faced 18-year-old, I had a flare-up with an English war veteran. I had been brought up in a conservative, moderately patriotic American home in Pennsylvania, and for the first time in my life I was confronted with anti-Americanism. The aging soldier was grumbling about the ubiquitous presence of Americans-the old complaint of Americans being "overpaid, oversexed, and over here." I countered by saying, "But we bailed you guys out not just once, but in two world wars."

That's when the volcano erupted.

I received, for my troubles, a warm lecture about the iniquity of an America that only came into the war at the last minute, after American businessmen had made a fortune selling arms to both sides of the conflict. Clearly, I had struck a nerve.

This brusque introduction to anti-Americanism opened my eyes to a different view of America and its domination in the modern world. As an American abroad, I began to pay attention to the negative comments and tried to analyze them objectively. In my private study, I came across political and cultural criticisms that were cautious, objective, and well thought out. But there was also plenty of uninformed opinion, a good dose of old-fashioned jealousy, and a cultural condescension that assumed that America was both as violent as The Godfather and as hokey as The Waltons.

The causes of European anti-Americanism are fascinating and complex. They reach back into our common, often turbulent history and are rooted not just in historical wars but in cultural wars that stretch back for centuries. Whatever the reason for the rift, it is clear that Europe and America have increasingly clashing cultures. While we may once have been closely aligned, those trend lines are rapidly diverging.

Yankee Go Home!

Americans, of course, are not immune to making self-important snap judgments of other cultures. We may not be fond of the French, but "freedom fries" and a wholesale condemnation of "Old Europe" actually confirm the European suspicion that Americans are ignorant, isolationist, and arrogant, and a cycle of petty name-calling is begun.

The mistake is in assuming that only the "other guy" makes such judgments-an error frequently made by the European intelligentsia, politicians, and liberal press. Too often they relax into an uninformed bigotry that deals in hyperbole, propaganda, and loaded language. Writing in the Nation, Eric Alterman commented on British anti-Americanism: "Mainstream papers like the Mirror announce in large headlines, "The USA Is Now the World's Leading Rogue State.'" Meanwhile, the Guardian announced that the United States is an "unrepentant outlaw" nation. A mainstream television poll revealed that the country Britons regard as the biggest threat to peace today is not Iraq or North Korea-it is the United States.

In the British House of Commons, Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn said about the Iraq war: "The mass of British public opinion is deeply skeptical if not completely hostile to this war, [and] believe it's been fought in the interests of the Americans and nothing else." When the British defense minister announced more support for the war in Iraq, Labour politician Dennis Skinner asked him to "confirm that this is all in aid to satisfy the whims of this tinpot American president." 

And it's not just the British. A CNN report says, "After two generations of guilt, young Germans demonstrating against the United States and against war now feel good about themselves because it is the United States, not Germany, that is seen by many as the aggressive warmonger."

Predictably, the anti-American spirit is especially strong in France. Alterman reports, "Walk into a French bookstore and you will find titles like, Who Is Killing France?, American Totalitarianism, No Thanks Uncle Sam, A Strange Dictatorship." French newspapers are filled with blistering criticism of the U.S. role in the world. Le Monde, for instance, pulled no punches when it recently termed Bush's Middle East policies "extraordinary, unjust and arrogant." Dominque Moisi of the French Institute of International relations asserts, "Today's anti-Americanism in Europe is a combination of what America is doing-going to war in Iraq-and what America is: the country of the death penalty, the country-in European eyes-of arrogance."

Analysts warn that a whole generation of America-haters is being created, one that believes Americans deliberately bomb civilians and kill Arab babies. Manfred Guttamacher of Potsdam University in Germany says, "We are on the brink of a fundamental rift between the United States and Europe which goes much deeper than the rifts that came up in the course of anti-American sentiments in the "60s or early "80s." 

Bush the Dummy

The only thing more offensive than America to the anti-American crowd in Europe is its president. George W. Bush has become an easy target for the intelligentsia who believe that intellectual capability is measured by articulateness. Trying to explain that there is a difference between disagreeing over policy matters and labeling someone stupid or evil has met with little success.

The Bush-haters may not have understood Bush, but Bush and his advisers understood their electorate. In last year's election, John Kerry came across as a wealthy, East Coast intellectual with a snooty billionaire wife. His attempts to correct that by hunting geese in Ohio were as laughable as Bill Clinton's spell of Bible-clutching church attendance in the wake of the Monica Lewinsky affair.

In contrast, when Bush said, "I'm glad that Slobodan Milosevic has gone. That's one more tricky Eastern European name I don't have to pronounce," it may not have sold well in Paris, Berlin, and London, but it hit all the right buttons in Topeka, Akron, and Indianapolis. Bush understood his electorate and appealed to their values, their beliefs, and their emotions. It may be corny. It may be embarrassing to the intelligentsia. But it's not stupid.

In a frantic bid to keep Bush out of the White House for a second term, London's Guardian entered the election fray on behalf of Clark County, Ohio, a crucial county in that swing state. Last October, an article by Oliver Burkeman encouraged Guardian readers to "adopt" undecided voters in Clark County and send them letters and e-mails, telling them how important the election was to people outside the United States and encouraging them to vote for Kerry.

In just over a week, the Guardian called an embarrassed halt to the debacle after a flood of largely negative responses overwhelmed the paper. Guardian editor Ian Katz acknowledged that a large number of Democrats, among them Sharon Manitta, the spokeswoman in Britain for Democrats Abroad, had warned them, "This will certainly garner more votes for George Bush." Reaction in Clark County ranged from indifference to amusement and anger. Local headlines read, "Butt Out Brits" and "Trashing Letter Campaign." Some residents of Clark County even wrote back to the Guardian, and livelier respondents felt no qualms in telling the paper just what they thought of their effort. (Those readers unafraid of some colorful language can find entertaining examples of online responses here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uselections2004/story/0%2C13918%2C1329858%2C00.html.)

Understandably, when Bush won, European shock and horror knew no bounds. Brian Reade of the Daily Mirror put Bush's victory down to "the self-righteous, gun-totin', military-lovin', sister-marryin', abortion-hatin', gay-loathin', foreigner-despisin', non-passport-ownin' rednecks" of America. The cover of the same paper the day after the election featured a picture of Bush with the caption, "How can 59,054,087 people be so DUMB?" The Guardian's special edition cover was simply a black page with the tiny caption in the middle reading, "Oh, God."

Embracing Contradiction

Of course, it wasn't 59 million "sister-marryin'" rednecks who carried Bush to victory. Forty-five percent of Hispanics voted for Bush; so did 25 percent of Jews and 23 percent of homosexuals, a proportion of the voting public that greatly expanded the Republican share of the popular vote. The facts are that a wide range of the American public from all walks of life voted for Bush.

In an attempt to explain this apparently inexplicable behavior, many European intellectuals grasped at whatever straws they could find, even those that provided contradictory conclusions. Some critics likened Bush's America to extreme right-wing dictatorships, while others compared it to left-wing totalitarian states. Alterman noted that in Will Hutton's book, A Declaration of Interdependence: Why America Should Join the World, this former editor of Britain's Observer portrays the United States as being in "the extraordinary grip of Christian fundamentalism" that he worries is "very ideological, almost Leninist," and is bolstered by "tenacious endemic racism," with an economy that "rests on an enormous confidence trick," and in which, incidentally, "citizens routinely shoot each other."

Hutton thinks America's conservatism is "almost Leninist." At the same time, clinical psychologist Oliver James said to the Guardian newspaper the morning after Bush's re-election, "I was too depressed to even speak this morning. I thought of my late mother, who read Mein Kampf when it came out in the 1930s and thought, "Why doesn't anyone see where this is leading?'"

Is America drifting into Leninism or nazism? It can't be both. Easy European opinion of Bush's America is that of grim-faced religious fanatics marching in lockstep behind their cowboy leader from Texas. But as Mark Steyn pointed out in London's Sunday Telegraph, when eleven American states voted to affirm traditional marriage last November they were simply claiming the people's right to decide, rather than allowing a few activist mayors or four Massachusetts judges to redefine marriage for them. In contrast, when Italian-Catholic politician Rocco Buttiglione stood up for traditional marriage he was hounded out of his European Commission post by a cadre of politically correct, unelected officials.

Steyn also noted that while Americans were exercising their democratic right to vote on gay marriage, Dutch police had destroyed a wall mural painted to protest the murder of Theo van Gogh, an outspoken filmmaker brutally killed by Islamic radicals for his criticism of Islam. The mural was next to a mosque and simply showed an angel with the caption, "Thou shalt not kill." After some Muslims complained that the mural was racist, the Dutch police swept in, destroyed the mural, arrested the TV journalists filming their work, and wiped their tape.

Religion and Responsibility

The gulf that exists between American and European understanding is nowhere more apparent than on the subject of religion. Secular Europeans like to portray Americans as religious Pharisees par excellence. American religion is represented by sweating, weeping evangelists, who have wives with big hair and false eyelashes to die for.

Time and again my English friends will express dismay and confusion over the strong religious dimension of American life. On the one hand they admire the separation of church and state, but then they cannot understand how every president ends a speech with "God Bless America" and how political candidates universally appeal to the morals and religious beliefs of Americans. They can't fathom how so many Americans said they chose their president based on moral issues last November.

This is the deepest divide between the American and European mentality. Put simply, America is a religious country. It was founded by deeply religious people who sacrificed to build a new society where they could practice their beliefs freely and openly. The countries of Europe, of course, were religious in their conception as well, but more and more these Christian roots have been forgotten; and where they are remembered, forces are at work to extirpate the memory for good. Witness the total absence of any mention of Christianity in the new constitution of the European Union.

It is the religious faith of America that the European intellectual finds most bewildering and annoying. Like Pauline Kael, wondering in perfect seriousness how Nixon could have won-"I don't know anyone who voted for him"-the European intelligentsia simply can't understand the morality and religious views of American voters. How could they? They live in a different universe-a universe that is becoming agnostic through and through.

Truth and Consequences

How did we come so far down this road, where our cultural ancestors have become unrecognizable-even hostile-to us? The underlying reason for European anti-Americanism is simple. It has little to do with politics or economics. It has little to do with education or lack of it. As G. K. Chesterton observed, "All arguments are theological arguments." Beneath it all, the growing divide between Europe and America is a divide between theism and atheism. This simple divide is cosmic in its importance and affects, simply, everything.

This small distinction leads to the most important questions: Which understanding of the cosmos leads to civilization, and which leads to chaos? Which is the culture of life, and which is the culture of death? Which will crumble and fade, and which will prosper and thrive?

Religious middle America is mocked for being blindly obedient to its particular creed, but the European intellectual adheres just as closely to his own-one that is all the more pervasive because it is subconscious. But a creed built simply in opposition to another cannot stand.

As Philip Jenkins has predicted in his book, The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity, Christianity will prevail. Atheists the world over may dispute this prediction, and secularists may rage against the dominant trend, but it's an impotent rage. From the demographics of the Ohio suburbs to the African bush, the statistics confirm that the future belongs to the believers. Fitting, as believers are the only ones who believe in the future.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: america; antiamericanism; austria; belgium; britain; bush; denmark; england; eu; eurobloviation; europe; europeanunion; euros; eurotrash; finland; fourthreich; france; freedom; germany; greatbritain; greece; holland; ireland; italy; luxembourg; netherlands; norway; portugal; scotland; spain; sweden; switzerland; uk; unitedkingdom; wales
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To: Lazamataz

In the future China will rule as the only Super Power and then all this talk about who won the WWII be of no interest.


221 posted on 02/19/2005 8:36:52 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: tomjohn77
In the future China will rule as the only Super Power and then all this talk about who won the WWII be of no interest.

Then, the Swedish will rise up to defeat China, and we'll all be forced to eat those little meatballs.

222 posted on 02/19/2005 8:41:22 AM PST by Lazamataz (Proudly Posting Without Reading the Article Since 1999!)
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To: quadrant

You're right. My wife and mother went on a pilgrimage together 4 years ago to Lourdes, Fatima and the Vatican. They are going again this summer. My wife told me that the French were absolutely secular and finding a french worshipper even at Lourdes was a near miracle in itself. She also said the Spanish and Italians are far more secular than we are which is odd given the pervasiveness of the Catholic Church but believable. The Portuguese came off the best but only slightly ahead of the Spanish...


223 posted on 02/19/2005 8:48:34 AM PST by Crapgame
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To: Lazamataz

Thats true. Looks like our little discussion is becoming somewhat about hard core facts that is hard to digest. Well the truth is hard sometimes.


224 posted on 02/19/2005 8:50:42 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: Lazamataz

Acctually I think San Marino will rise up to fight China


225 posted on 02/19/2005 8:53:06 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: Crapgame

Well most Europeans are secular, but I am a Christian. Dont believe in Catholisism, because of its history of luting people. Making people think their contribution to the Vatican will get them to heaven. You cannot pay your way to heaven!


226 posted on 02/19/2005 8:56:46 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: NYer
Hutton thinks America's conservatism is "almost Leninist."

You can't ever hope to have a friendly relationship with people who are either out of touch with reality or shameless liars. I don't understand the desire some people have to be liked by people who are themselves so thoroughly unlikeable. Like that twit at the beginning of the article who complained that America came too late to WWII. Excuse me? Too late to a war started -- again -- by those sophisticated, peace-loving Europeans? I wonder if he voiced the same complaint to French tourists about France caving and then collaborating with Germany. I doubt it.

Anyway, we're either too early (Iraq) or too late (WWII) for these people. I'm sure there's a psychological term for all of this -- this envy, this wanting to chop off the head that sticks above the crowd -- but I'm not interested in trying to make nice with such people.

227 posted on 02/19/2005 9:03:25 AM PST by Glenmerle
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To: tomjohn77

<< The US played a major role, but not as important as the Russians >>

Bullsh*t!

The Soviet Union would not have had shoes to wear, let alone armaments, had the United States of America not poured Trillions [In 2005 Dollars] of its Treasure into supplying, arming and feeding it [ and our every-other WW-II "ally" -- once-great-britain included] and copious quantities of the Blood of its young men into delivering it all. And into both defeating the Germans -- and the Japanese -- and Trillions more into keeping the bloody Soviets at bay until we defeated them -- while you jokers have all played with yourselves for another sixty years!

Read Glenmerle's post #227 and note what he has to say about folks who are out of touch with reality -- or, I might add, who are just plain bloody mean spirited to be capable of rational and/or objective thought.

Whew: -- Nothing like an ungrateful bloody Euro-peon ingrate or two to kick the day off well!


228 posted on 02/19/2005 12:02:25 PM PST by Brian Allen (I fly and can therefore be envious of no man -- Per Ardua ad Astra!)
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To: UltraKonservativen; tomjohn77

#145?

Hear! Hear!

Well said!

BUMPping


229 posted on 02/19/2005 12:07:03 PM PST by Brian Allen (I fly and can therefore be envious of no man -- Per Ardua ad Astra!)
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To: NYer; snugs
Any country that gave us the formidable and right honorable Maggie Thatcher is OK in my book.
Besides, I hear they also have their share of Cheney Chicks in Great Britain.
230 posted on 02/19/2005 12:09:46 PM PST by jla
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To: Cornpone
We set out from the start to be different and we are.

Yes.

Simple and profound.

231 posted on 02/19/2005 12:42:51 PM PST by Madame Dufarge
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To: NYer
The author of this article doesn't get to the heart of the matter until the next to the last paragraph.
Europe has shunned God. Other than a few lonely outposts of believers, Europe as a whole vacillates between atheism and Gaia worshiping paganism (against the backdrop of a rising tide of Mohammedanism). A continent that once fanned the flames of Christianity has now become a snuffed out candlestick. Sad, but there is no common ground with those that don't fear God. America's candlestick may flicker from time to time - but it is still burning. As Christianity grows in Asia and Africa I hold out a better of hope of finding a working common ground with the people of those continents than I do with a dead Europe.
Maybe the dead will be made alive again -- but I just don't see any signs of it...
232 posted on 02/19/2005 1:05:46 PM PST by El Cid
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To: Crapgame
My wife and mother went on a pilgrimage together 4 years ago to Lourdes, Fatima and the Vatican. They are going again this summer.

This time, suggest they swing through Assisi. It's a 'must' stop on any pilgrimage. St. Francis bequeathed his peace on this small town. There is a serenity there like no other place on earth.

233 posted on 02/19/2005 1:13:23 PM PST by NYer ("The Eastern Churches are the Treasures of the Catholic Church" - Pope John XXIII)
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To: jla

**Besides, I hear they also have their share of Cheney Chicks in Great Britain.**

And here she is


234 posted on 02/19/2005 2:24:24 PM PST by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: NYer

fuckum


235 posted on 02/19/2005 2:26:56 PM PST by bert (Peace is only halftime !)
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To: snugs

I think the grandchild might agree with your assessment of our Veep.

236 posted on 02/19/2005 6:30:41 PM PST by jla
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To: Brian Allen

Well thats right that the Russians got supplies from the US, but it was not the West front that was the most crucial. The battle for Stalingrad was the turning point. It was the vast distances and cold weather and a lot of Russians that broke the back of Nazi Germany.
Every body knows that the East Front broke Nazi Germanys back. Its the truth


237 posted on 02/20/2005 10:07:26 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: Brian Allen

To get insults from a person means that he/you cannot defend your view in a good way. Sad but true. When you are more rational and calm we can continue this little discussion.

Sincerely

Tom


238 posted on 02/20/2005 10:53:03 AM PST by tomjohn77
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To: Brian Allen

I have studyed in the US and have many good American friends. My best friend is a Bush supported. Came over to my families house for Christmas and New Years. I just wrote my view of the WWII and I got some insults back. Grest way to get a productive discussion going. If everybody acted that way the world would have been a great place. Its time to talk about freedom of speech and respect.


239 posted on 02/20/2005 11:02:43 AM PST by tomjohn77
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