14th September 2001

I've put in a request to have this writeup moved to "America: The Good Neighbour" now that lawnjart has removed his writeup. It'll need some editing once it gets there.


The article quoted by lawnjart above was written by Gordon Sinclair in 1973, shortly after the USA pulled out of Vietnam at a time when the whole world seemed, to Mr Sinclair, to be anti-American. Ordinarily I would consider it unfair to take his comments out of context, but they are listed here in this node, and all over the internet (Often with extra lines at the end such as "God Bless America!") as though they're still as true today as when they were written. They're not.

Firstly, there's the issues regarding American technological superiority. Today, Airbus makes very successful passenger aircraft. Russia makes the Antonov AN124, the largest cargo plane in the world. The US Marine Corps use a few Harrier jump jets, which are certainly not home grown aircraft.

No-one has ever doubted that the Moon landings were outstanding achievements (except for the odd conspiracy theorist) but how many people believe that the moon would have been touched by man today if it wasn't for the cold war? Why doesn't Mr Sinclair mention that Russia put the first man in space?

The second problem is the idea that the USA alone runs to the rescue of nations in need. The recent devastating Earthquake in Turkey was met by assistance from not only the USA, but also Austria, France, Greece, Israel, Sweden, Switzerland, UK and Germany to name just the ones I found in under five minutes. Similarly, the Gulf war was not left for America to fight alone. British and French soldiers joined their US allies just over a month after the first US troops were deployed.

The final thing that interests me is the notion that the USA never gets anything back from the world. How many times has the USA asked for international assistance and not received it? Does the USA not have airbases stationed all over the world? Has the UK not risked upsetting it's European neighbours by agreeing to host the US Echelon system? Has Turkey not risked upsetting Iraq by allowing such a large US military presence?



Final thoughts:

I'm constantly in awe of the US space program. My grandfather would have been amazed that I can look at satellite photographs of Mars located on US government computers right from my own home PC.
I wouldn't be in my current job if it wasn't for Microsoft
I wouldn't be using this PC if not for Intel
I wouldn't be driving my current car if General Motors didn't inject cash and parts into Vauxhall/Opel
I'd probably have nothing interesting to watch at the cinema if not for America. ;-)

I am not anti-American. I AM anti-"You-owe-us-everything"-ian. "You-owe-us-everything"-ians are all ugly.
And as a citizen of a country which has been pulled out of the mud by America in the past, I say "Thank you, we'd do the same for you if we could."