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Topic: America the Greatest Country in the World?
Bestinshow's photo
Sat 09/01/12 08:24 AM
have been on this earth for 19 years, and not once had I ever felt that the United States was the greatest country in the world. All my life, I have never experienced a time of peace, prosperity, and freedom. I live in an era of recession, restricted freedoms, and war. To many, my sentiment towards the country I call home may seem unpatriotic. This is not true. I am an outspoken critic of the United States because I am a lover of my birth country. I care for it. I speak up when we do wrong. I speak up when we do wrong, because I want us to do better. I want us to succeed; indeed, I want us to become the greatest country in the world. I am patriotic. Before my time, we used to be the leaders, the revolutionaries, and the free; the land we call home used to be the path to opportunity, prosperity, and liberty — but we have lost the way.

They have taken away our literature, our ability to let our minds interpret freely and gave us propaganda, and force-fed our brains to accept policies that harm our interests. They have taken away our family members and sent them far off to a foreign land to fight a war based on twisted lies and hidden truths. They have taken away our right to property and prosperity, and they have tricked us to believe that capitalism is not only equated to corporatism, but that it’s the root of our economic recession. They have taken away our vested powers to make the decisions for our country and gave those powers to failed organizations made up of leaders of foreign nations. They have taken away our ability to love whoever we were destined to love and have distracted us from realizing that marriage is a fundamental liberty that can never be interfered with. They have prohibited us from the victimless use of marijuana and have imprisoned many peaceful, productive members of society. They have taken away our belief that we can make a change and have sadly proven that our vote no longer counts.

We live in a time where Congress spends their time deciding that pizza is a vegetable. We live in a time where we place embargos on countries that are no longer a threat to the world. We live in a time where a president that sends more drones, sends more troops, and kills more soldiers and civilians is rewarded a Nobel Peace Prize. We live in a time where assassinating American citizens as young as 16 without a trial are considered progress. We live in a time where being detained indefinitely without due process and having our phones wiretapped are considered a necessary procedure to our security. We live in a time where we bang our war drums for the sake of war. We live in a time where we spend billions of dollars abroad in foreign aid to build schools, homes, and democracy. We, too, have poor education, foreclosed homes, and restricted freedoms. We live in a time, when the United States ranks 31 in math, 23 in science, and 17 in reading, out of 74 countries by the Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development. This proves that my generation is among one of the worst generations in educational history. We live in a time where we lead the world in the number of incarceration rates, military expenditures, and rank 49th in life expectancy by the CIA Factbook. We live in a time where we mistake loving your country with thinking it’s the greatest in the world.

In America, we vote based on who we relate to more or whose presence we enjoy rather than who will be in the best interest of the American people. In America, we vote more on American Idol than in elections. In America, we demonize and attack fellow Americans because of their religion or race, because of a miniscule fraction of religious fanatics that have constructed terror in this nation — they too face terrorism in this nation. In America, we come together when death has been brought to our enemies, not when we commemorate our servicemen or when we excel in all of human history. In America, being an advocate for liberty is equated to being insane and out of touch with reality. In America, we believe we’re so powerful, yet we always feel so threatened.

Every time we defend America for a crime against humanity is a time where we put ourselves in more danger. Every time we victimize ourselves for the result of our past wrongdoing, we fuel ourselves to kill and commit more wrongs.

We used to not be like this. We used to be the best artists, the best poets, and the best thinkers. We used to care for what our representatives our leaders have said or done. We used to have representatives that actually read bills and argued for days on the wording of these governing documents. We used to wage war on tyranny, not people or individual rights. We used to love talking about liberty, not the American Idol winner or The Bachelorette. We used to be the country of opportunity and of prosperity — we used to be the country that respects and never infringes on anyone’s rights. We used to be the country that believes we can always do better, indeed, we shall still be.

This is what makes us who we are and what we should be individually. A vision of radiant days ahead, belief in things unseen, and faith that here, in this nation, we are the writers of our own future, our own destiny. The belief that we hold the power to dictate and succeed in our own life; the belief that we don’t need government to tell us who we can marry, what we can drink, or what we can do. This is what America is all about. And now it falls to us, our generation of youth, our freedom fighters, our liberty lovers, to write the next great novel of not only America’s history, but also the world’s history; to meet our tests, our challenges, our opportunities, our dreams, and our right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It is our time to rise again; it is our time to secure our future.

I long for day where we stand together strong and enlightened. Our call to liberty is not only a ticket to a journey, nor is it a ticket to a better life; it is a ticket to change the world. It is our calling. We do not need magic, nor do we need authority. We contain the power in our hands from what we have touched, our ears from what have listened, our mouths from what we have spoke, and our hearts from what we have felt.

What lies in the world for us is limitless. I consider this planet, this world, as a canvas and our words as the stroke of a paintbrush. And our words have the power to either make the painting vibrant in colors. And our words have the power to put everything beautiful in this world in that painting. Our words will make a painting that will resonate our message — the message of inspiration, hope, compassion, and freedom. And that painting will be the self-portrait of the invincible greatness of the place I call home.http://studentsforliberty.org/blog/america-is-not-the-greatest-country-in-the-world/

This young person has more logic than most adults. A little hope for the future.

Bravalady's photo
Sun 09/02/12 06:05 AM
Some very nice sentiments, but please, please, don't post this as if it were your own. Please give proper credit to the actual writer.

metalwing's photo
Sun 09/02/12 07:08 AM

Some very nice sentiments, but please, please, don't post this as if it were your own. Please give proper credit to the actual writer.


Bestinshow did not provide the HTML codes to link the source of his post. Whether he failed to do this from apathy, laziness, of lack of knowledge isn't known. The result is that the source doesn't stand out from the post as it does in most posts. Here it is for you.

http://studentsforliberty.org/blog/america-is-not-the-greatest-country-in-the-world/

s1owhand's photo
Sun 09/02/12 08:53 AM
Edited by s1owhand on Sun 09/02/12 08:54 AM
Garbage.

All of the following is still true today.

The US has some of the worlds finest artists, finest poets, and the greatest thinkers. We always care about and debate what our representatives, our leaders say or do. We have representatives that actually read bills and argue for weeks on the wording of these governing documents. (we need to get more efficient at this)

laugh

The US wages war on tyranny wherever it is, not on people or individual rights. We love talking about liberty, not the American Idol winner or The Bachelorette. We are still the country of opportunity and of prosperity — people from all over the globe still flock to the US in droves to escape persecution and find educational, health and business opportunities and seek our a higher standard of living through hard work and determination. The US is a country that believes we can always do better, indeed, we are always improving.

There is more work to be done for sure and there is always a need
for continuing reassessment and improvement. The US has shown time
and time again that we are up to the task. So proud to be an
American.


Chazster's photo
Sun 09/02/12 09:54 AM
Kazakhstan greatest country in the world.
All other countries are run by little girls.
Kazakhstan number one exporter of potassium.
Other countries have inferior potassium.

Kazakhstan home of Tinshein swimming pool.
It’s length thirty meter and width six meter.
Filtration system a marvel to behold.
It remove 80 percent of human solid waste.

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Kazakhstan friend of all except Uzbekistan.
They very nosey people with bone in their brain.

Kazakhstan industry best in the world.
We invented toffee and trouser belt.
Kazakhstan’s prostitutes cleanest in the region.
Except of course Turkmenistan’s

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Come grasp the might phenis of our leader.
From junction with the testes to tip of its face!

oldhippie1952's photo
Sun 09/02/12 09:56 AM

Garbage.

All of the following is still true today.

The US has some of the worlds finest artists, finest poets, and the greatest thinkers. We always care about and debate what our representatives, our leaders say or do. We have representatives that actually read bills and argue for weeks on the wording of these governing documents. (we need to get more efficient at this)

laugh

The US wages war on tyranny wherever it is, not on people or individual rights. We love talking about liberty, not the American Idol winner or The Bachelorette. We are still the country of opportunity and of prosperity — people from all over the globe still flock to the US in droves to escape persecution and find educational, health and business opportunities and seek our a higher standard of living through hard work and determination. The US is a country that believes we can always do better, indeed, we are always improving.

There is more work to be done for sure and there is always a need
for continuing reassessment and improvement. The US has shown time
and time again that we are up to the task. So proud to be an
American.





That is why America is great, because we can do more work....

Chazster's photo
Sun 09/02/12 09:56 AM
The author lived here for 19 years and is in college. So he has been an adult 1 year and is supported by his parents. He knows so much.

no photo
Sun 09/02/12 09:59 AM

The author lived here for 19 years and is in college. So he has been an adult 1 year and is supported by his parents. He knows so much.


The author is a woman Chaz, other than that, I agree with you....:tongue:

smart2009's photo
Sun 09/02/12 10:44 AM

Kazakhstan greatest country in the world.
All other countries are run by little girls.
Kazakhstan number one exporter of potassium.
Other countries have inferior potassium.

Kazakhstan home of Tinshein swimming pool.
It’s length thirty meter and width six meter.
Filtration system a marvel to behold.
It remove 80 percent of human solid waste.

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Kazakhstan friend of all except Uzbekistan.
They very nosey people with bone in their brain.

Kazakhstan industry best in the world.
We invented toffee and trouser belt.
Kazakhstan’s prostitutes cleanest in the region.
Except of course Turkmenistan’s

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Come grasp the might phenis of our leader.
From junction with the testes to tip of its face!

surprised rofl

smart2009's photo
Sun 09/02/12 11:02 AM


Kazakhstan greatest country in the world.
All other countries are run by little girls.
Kazakhstan number one exporter of potassium.
Other countries have inferior potassium.

Kazakhstan home of Tinshein swimming pool.
It’s length thirty meter and width six meter.
Filtration system a marvel to behold.
It remove 80 percent of human solid waste.

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Kazakhstan friend of all except Uzbekistan.
They very nosey people with bone in their brain.

Kazakhstan industry best in the world.
We invented toffee and trouser belt.
Kazakhstan’s prostitutes cleanest in the region.
Except of course Turkmenistan’s

Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan you very nice place.
From Plains of Tarashek to Norther fence of Jewtown.
Come grasp the might phenis of our leader.
From junction with the testes to tip of its face!

surprised rofl

Transparency International ranked Kazakhstan 122nd (tied with several
other nations) in its listing of 146 countries by level of corruption .
The usual contenders of corruption are public and private officials. These are persons who hold positions of trust, and who the citizens must hold to account.

no photo
Sun 09/02/12 11:30 AM
I agree with this man...

I disagree fully with the often-misstated statistics that suggest we are just another declining country. The statistics quoted are sheer bull.

Take for example the statistics that justified the passage of the Obamacare. These statistics suggest that the American healthcare system is worse off than other countries because of poor infant mortality and longevity rates. While this may be true, those statistics have nothing to do with our healthcare system and everything to do with our lifestyle. Eating right and exercising daily are what improve these rates, not government mandated healthcare. But when it comes to treating and curing life-threatening diseases, America is the best in the world proved in part by the fact that most of the world’s wealthy travel here for treatment.

Critics of American exceptionalism next attack our education system, calling it a complete failure. Yes, the numbers are scary if you look at overall math and science scores compared to many other countries. But consider two facts. First, we have a diverse and extremely large population, and the highlighted statistics are often average scores that mask the huge number of high achievers. Our pre-college education system has challenges, yet citizens of other nations increasingly want their children educated in the United States. More, we have some of the world’s best universities, and we see Chinese government officials strive to send their children to U.S. schools at increasingly younger ages. Indeed, China sends 160,000 of their youth to American schools. Second, it’s not the basics or rote learning that makes an American education valuable: it’s the culture of innovation that we imbue. We may not be the best at basics, but we are phenomenal at teaching students to challenge the status quo. Our First Amendment, our immigrant and diverse culture, our “can-do” attitude and our entrepreneurial spirit come together to produce a nation of innovators.

We lead the world in Internet innovation, music, movies, biotech and many other technological fields that require out-of-the-box thinking. From Apple to DreamWorks Studios, from Amazon to Zynga, we are the world’s innovators. As I travel the world and speak about these issues I am increasingly aware that the government of virtually every other country in the world wants their citizens to be as innovative as Americans.

We certainly have problems, and we must address them. Our politicians and even our voters are failing to deal with the big issues. We focus on meaningless political squabbles as the cost and reality of rapidly growing entitlements threaten to send us into an economic tailspin. We are living today rather than investing for tomorrow. And we are raising youth who may not understand the values that we once shared as a nation.

However, I am passionate that our nation was, still is, and can remain the best in world. We not only owe it to our children to act to preserve our greatness, but we must also honor those who have served and risked their life and limb in our Armed Forces to preserve our nation and its freedoms.

We are a beacon for the world. Our challenge is not to lament our decline or even celebrate our exceptionalism; it is to come together with true leadership that can unite us as we sacrifice to preserve and expand our greatness.


http://www.forbes.com/sites/garyshapiro/2012/07/25/is-america-the-greatest-country-in-the-world/

s1owhand's photo
Sun 09/02/12 11:53 AM
It is true that a Swede (Ruben Rausing) invented the juice box.

no photo
Sun 09/02/12 01:36 PM

It is true that a Swede (Ruben Rausing) invented the juice box.


True, but he studied at Columbia University in New York..bigsmile

msharmony's photo
Sun 09/02/12 03:09 PM
I agree with the OP

but then 'greatest' is a very subjective standard that totally depends upon the speakers value system

if freedom to acquire wealth and say what you want and own guns are priorities,,america probably ranks as the greatest

if ability to eat, have healthcare, decent education, and decent shelter are priorities, america probably doesnt come close to the greatest


I have always thought that, like people, America has strenghths and weaknesses,,,

I prefer to use specifics

America has the greatest military for instance
I think it may have the greatest coal reserves
I think it may also have the greates per capita charity


,,,there are other specific areas where america is the 'greatest' (ranking 1st in the world)

but there are many others where we are far down the list,,,

oldhippie1952's photo
Sun 09/02/12 03:12 PM

I agree with the OP

but then 'greatest' is a very subjective standard that totally depends upon the speakers value system

if freedom to acquire wealth and say what you want and own guns are priorities,,america probably ranks as the greatest

if ability to eat, have healthcare, decent education, and decent shelter are priorities, america probably doesnt come close to the greatest


I have always thought that, like people, America has strenghths and weaknesses,,,

I prefer to use specifics

America has the greatest military for instance
I think it may have the greatest coal reserves
I think it may also have the greates per capita charity


,,,there are other specific areas where america is the 'greatest' (ranking 1st in the world)

but there are many others where we are far down the list,,,



Education being one of them, per our rankings in the world math/science competition.

no photo
Sun 09/02/12 04:32 PM
and let us not forget the "Jake leg blues".smile2

Chazster's photo
Tue 09/04/12 05:55 AM
Well Maybe we would have higher education if more of you parents were tiger parents.

metalwing's photo
Tue 09/04/12 06:38 AM
What if, in the days and presence of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Madison, Washington, and Franklin ... and the others, a speaker of the House was elected and said the following ...

“We have to pass the (health care) bill so you can find out what is in it”.

Conrad_73's photo
Tue 09/04/12 07:37 AM

have been on this earth for 19 years, and not once had I ever felt that the United States was the greatest country in the world. All my life, I have never experienced a time of peace, prosperity, and freedom. I live in an era of recession, restricted freedoms, and war. To many, my sentiment towards the country I call home may seem unpatriotic. This is not true. I am an outspoken critic of the United States because I am a lover of my birth country. I care for it. I speak up when we do wrong. I speak up when we do wrong, because I want us to do better. I want us to succeed; indeed, I want us to become the greatest country in the world. I am patriotic. Before my time, we used to be the leaders, the revolutionaries, and the free; the land we call home used to be the path to opportunity, prosperity, and liberty — but we have lost the way.

They have taken away our literature, our ability to let our minds interpret freely and gave us propaganda, and force-fed our brains to accept policies that harm our interests. They have taken away our family members and sent them far off to a foreign land to fight a war based on twisted lies and hidden truths. They have taken away our right to property and prosperity, and they have tricked us to believe that capitalism is not only equated to corporatism, but that it’s the root of our economic recession. They have taken away our vested powers to make the decisions for our country and gave those powers to failed organizations made up of leaders of foreign nations. They have taken away our ability to love whoever we were destined to love and have distracted us from realizing that marriage is a fundamental liberty that can never be interfered with. They have prohibited us from the victimless use of marijuana and have imprisoned many peaceful, productive members of society. They have taken away our belief that we can make a change and have sadly proven that our vote no longer counts.

We live in a time where Congress spends their time deciding that pizza is a vegetable. We live in a time where we place embargos on countries that are no longer a threat to the world. We live in a time where a president that sends more drones, sends more troops, and kills more soldiers and civilians is rewarded a Nobel Peace Prize. We live in a time where assassinating American citizens as young as 16 without a trial are considered progress. We live in a time where being detained indefinitely without due process and having our phones wiretapped are considered a necessary procedure to our security. We live in a time where we bang our war drums for the sake of war. We live in a time where we spend billions of dollars abroad in foreign aid to build schools, homes, and democracy. We, too, have poor education, foreclosed homes, and restricted freedoms. We live in a time, when the United States ranks 31 in math, 23 in science, and 17 in reading, out of 74 countries by the Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development. This proves that my generation is among one of the worst generations in educational history. We live in a time where we lead the world in the number of incarceration rates, military expenditures, and rank 49th in life expectancy by the CIA Factbook. We live in a time where we mistake loving your country with thinking it’s the greatest in the world.

In America, we vote based on who we relate to more or whose presence we enjoy rather than who will be in the best interest of the American people. In America, we vote more on American Idol than in elections. In America, we demonize and attack fellow Americans because of their religion or race, because of a miniscule fraction of religious fanatics that have constructed terror in this nation — they too face terrorism in this nation. In America, we come together when death has been brought to our enemies, not when we commemorate our servicemen or when we excel in all of human history. In America, being an advocate for liberty is equated to being insane and out of touch with reality. In America, we believe we’re so powerful, yet we always feel so threatened.

Every time we defend America for a crime against humanity is a time where we put ourselves in more danger. Every time we victimize ourselves for the result of our past wrongdoing, we fuel ourselves to kill and commit more wrongs.

We used to not be like this. We used to be the best artists, the best poets, and the best thinkers. We used to care for what our representatives our leaders have said or done. We used to have representatives that actually read bills and argued for days on the wording of these governing documents. We used to wage war on tyranny, not people or individual rights. We used to love talking about liberty, not the American Idol winner or The Bachelorette. We used to be the country of opportunity and of prosperity — we used to be the country that respects and never infringes on anyone’s rights. We used to be the country that believes we can always do better, indeed, we shall still be.

This is what makes us who we are and what we should be individually. A vision of radiant days ahead, belief in things unseen, and faith that here, in this nation, we are the writers of our own future, our own destiny. The belief that we hold the power to dictate and succeed in our own life; the belief that we don’t need government to tell us who we can marry, what we can drink, or what we can do. This is what America is all about. And now it falls to us, our generation of youth, our freedom fighters, our liberty lovers, to write the next great novel of not only America’s history, but also the world’s history; to meet our tests, our challenges, our opportunities, our dreams, and our right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It is our time to rise again; it is our time to secure our future.

I long for day where we stand together strong and enlightened. Our call to liberty is not only a ticket to a journey, nor is it a ticket to a better life; it is a ticket to change the world. It is our calling. We do not need magic, nor do we need authority. We contain the power in our hands from what we have touched, our ears from what have listened, our mouths from what we have spoke, and our hearts from what we have felt.

What lies in the world for us is limitless. I consider this planet, this world, as a canvas and our words as the stroke of a paintbrush. And our words have the power to either make the painting vibrant in colors. And our words have the power to put everything beautiful in this world in that painting. Our words will make a painting that will resonate our message — the message of inspiration, hope, compassion, and freedom. And that painting will be the self-portrait of the invincible greatness of the place I call home.http://studentsforliberty.org/blog/america-is-not-the-greatest-country-in-the-world/

This young person has more logic than most adults. A little hope for the future.
what that Dolt doing in America?slaphead

msharmony's photo
Tue 09/04/12 07:57 AM

What if, in the days and presence of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Madison, Washington, and Franklin ... and the others, a speaker of the House was elected and said the following ...

“We have to pass the (health care) bill so you can find out what is in it”.



that would be strange since there was not yet the MEDIA that made people feel so entitled to instant information,,,,,

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