EstebanRey wrote:
You may find a Patriotic guy in the UK but they are normally labbled racists (the only aspect I hate about Britain) but you get the odd "my country rules" nut case everywhere.
My point. Thanks. Although I would disagree that national pride in the UK makes one a racist.
EstebanRey wrote:
In America you are brought up to believe that you are, and I quote, "The Greatest Country On Earth"
I would argue that the same attitude is present in the UK. Over three years I had to endure many comments about Colonials. Is it a joke? Sure, but it was on the same level as comments that you are taking quite seriously.
EstebanRey wrote:
You say that anything prior to the birth of America is irrelevant which is soooo naive.
No, I am arguing that the bulk of what happened hundreds of years ago is not relevant to the current discussion. I stand by it.
EstebanRey wrote:
For a start, what did you just celebrate? Christmas which we (i.e the Europeans) brought to your country and YOU celebrate every year and in turn was brought to us by the Catholics I suspect. More locally, we celebrate St George's day every year to mark our patron saint who died 303! If we were to disregard anything older than recent history as irrelevant then we can't learn from our mistakes and learn how we got where we are today.
What's your point? Are you saying we are missing a lesson of history? Please be specific.
EstebanRey wrote:
If I were American I would be sooo interested to know where my family decended from before the US but the attitude I get is "I'm American through and through"
If you were an American you would know that most Americans are deeply proud of their ethnic heritage. By saying it is not so, you display your lack of knowlege on the subject.
EstebanRey wrote:
The point I was trying to make, and which you've obviously missed, is that when we go to school to learn history we learn about times, kings and cardinals that built our country long before we even knew America exsisted. You don't have that which IMO leads to compensating attitude by many Americans of over-patriotism.
Not so. We learn about the times, kings and cardinals that built your countries long before we even knew America existed. Do you think we don't learn about history before 1492? Don't be silly. Do you learn about British history between the Roman invasion and 1066?
EstebanRey wrote:
The reason I concentrate on history is because I see the Americans making a lot of the same moves as we did hundreds of years ago like a dad seeing his son making all the same mistakes. We used to think we were the World's police once.....
Again, please be specific. I should warn you, I have better than average knowledge of history, having studied it for six years at the University level (part of which was in the UK).
EstebanRey wrote:
P.S. Your country is named after a Welshman which I always find funny.....
I have heard that said, but I'm not sure it is true. My understanding was that it was named after Amerigo Vespucci...an Italian.
EstebanRey wrote:
And I could say that about any factor of WW2. Without Britain fighting the war seven years before the US finally decided to take part it would not have been won
Seven years? The war started in 1939. The US entered in 1941. Where do you get seven years?
I already conceded that the Russians did the lions share of the fighting.
Jeroen wrote:
People from the united states always talk about how they won world war 1 and 2, how they have won every other war, but never talk about how they lost to Canada in the war of 1812, one of the most important time periods in history of our developing countries, and is never tought in US schools that i have heard of.
British troops based in Canada burned Washington DC. That battle did not decide the war, and the troops were not Canadian as such. The largest battle of the war was the battle of New Orleans, which the US won handily several months after a treaty had been signed in Europe, ending the war on terms favorable to the United States. Your account is factually incorrect on several counts...not the least of which is saying that I didn't learn anything about it in High School.
Last edited by whittsend (2006-01-04 09:42:34)