That would all depend on where you lived in the US, most likely.Blind groper wrote:Nothing is wrong with being an American. Americans are just people, with all the good and bad that goes with being human.Coito ergo sum wrote:
What is wrong with being an American?
However, I would hate to live in America.
This, again, depends on where you are living. The US is about the size of Europe. Many places in Europe have similar crime rates as New Zealand. Many places in the US have similar crime rates as New Zealand.Blind groper wrote: My country is a little less wealthy, and a lot less powerful militarily. But we are also less corrupt, with a lower crime rate,
Have you ever been to the US?
That depends on the area in the US, again. Some places have very low homicide rates, some very high. Most of the homicides are in larger cities.Blind groper wrote:
and a much, much lower homicide rate.
Moreover, I have to look up the stats, but I seem to remember that New Zealand suffered from a very high crime rate in general, especially violent crimes.
That's an idiotic statement. You also don't have planes flying into your buildings, terrorist organizations blowing up your overseas embassies, and all sorts of other such activities. You also don't have the world relying on you to keep shipping lanes open, and middle east oil flowing at market prices, something EVERYONE relies upon.Blind groper wrote:
We do not have idiot leaders who go marching off to war overseas.
Well, nobody objected to the metric system based on freedom or any amendment, and the things that we use the Constitution for is protect, oh, things like freedom of speech, press, religion, privacy, abortion, freedom from arbitrary state action, and other such matters which you apparently consider "spurious" and "silly." We have the metric system over here too, and many, if not most, labeling is done in both systems.Blind groper wrote:
We are prepared to instigate necessary changes (like changing to the metric system 50 years ago) without being stopped by spurious complaints that it is against some fictional freedom or against some silly amendment to the constitution.
What would be silly would be considering forcing a switch to the metric system something that is worth a lot of State time and effort. That's pretty silly. Having a protection built into the legal system that the State can't keep you from voicing political opinions, or force you to give money to a church, or come into your house for no reason -- those things that you seem to consider "silly" seem to me to be about the most important things.
Really? I'd love to examine New Zealand law. I would be willing to bet you don't have a greater set of true freedoms and that your State can do more than the US government in terms of invading your privacy, searching you and monitoring your phone calls. The US was late to the game with the Patriot Act. Most of the so-called enlightened countries were already there. Countries like the UK are far more intrusive than the US. I haven't looked it up, but if I were a bettin' man, I would say that there is nothing that the US government can do to me that the NZ government can't do to you.Blind groper wrote:
We have a greater set of true freedoms than the USA (no anti-terrorist national security foolishness),
I have no idea on that note. I suspect you don't know much about the US police forces either. Most of our police are dedicated, professional and non-corrupt too. We have our instances, though.Blind groper wrote:
and a police force that is largely unarmed and dedicated, professional, and non corrupt.
How do you know it's the same standard of care?Blind groper wrote:
Our government is influenced by wealthy lobby groups, but has avoided existing in the back pocket of the very wealthy. So they can create policies that are to the benefit of everyone - not just the rich. For example : we have a national health system that is better than Obamacare could ever be. (And way, way less expensive than the American system, for the same standard of care).
The "less expensive" allegation is normally a dicey one. The comparison of apples to apples is almost never made.
[/quote]Blind groper wrote:
The major problem with the USA resides in its government (s), state and federal. Corruption. Kowtowing to the rich. Prepared to indulge in highly expensive and enormously damaging overseas military adventures. Massively influenced by the moronic religious right. The people are fine. But the government needs a total overhaul.
So, sure - nothing wrong with being American. But I will live here in New Zealand, thank you.
New Zealand is a beautiful country, what I've seen of it. Perhaps if you knew more about the US, you'd have a different view of it. The first thing I think many folks need is perspective. Making generalizations about the US because of crime in some big cities is like generalizing the entirety of Europe based on eastern Europe.
And, crime is an interesting thing -- New Zealand has twice the number of assaults per capita and twice the number of rapes per capita. And, twice the suicide rate. And, total violent crimes in New Zealand apparently exceeds the US (US is ranked 15th in violent crimes and New Zealand an astonishing 2nd). http://www.nationmaster.com/compare/New ... ates/Crime
As for corruption, the US isn't that much worse than New Zealand, and it's on par with Great Britain, France, Belgium, Ireland, Austria and that ilk, roughly. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corruption ... tion_Index
I won't raise the health care issue, but, suffice to say that the US health care level is largely misunderstood by those commenting from other countries.
The US is in the top 10 of countries for highest quality of life: http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-top-te ... e-map.html - so, we can't be all that bad. And, the US is in the top 10 for highest standard of living (usually we're 5th or 6th these days after a long run of number 1).
And, the US crime rate, for what it's worth, is still going down, despite the recession: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/24/us/24crime.html?_r=2 - this New Zealander seems to think that New Zealand needs to take a lesson: http://www.stephenfranks.co.nz/?p=3497
So, pick your poison, I guess.