"Fahrenheit 9/11" auteur Michael Moore recently fueled the epidemic of hatred for America by denouncing his own country and his own people to the foreign press. The UK's Mirror printed Mr. Moore's observation of Americans: "They are the dumbest people on the face of the earth...in thrall to conniving, thieving, smug pricks...We Americans suffer from an enforced ignorance. We don't know about anything that's happening outside our country. Our stupidity is embarrassing." (1)
That's right. We are. In fact, we're stupid enough to believe that we have a great country. Why? Let's look at the facts...
In 2002, the US Census Bureau estimated that 32.5 million people, from places Moore claims our children can't find on a map (2), lived in the United States, the largest foreign-born population in America since we started keeping records in 1850. (3) Why are all these people risking drowning, hardships, cultural barriers and possible contamination by our laziness, aggression and arrogance, incompetence, shallowness, and sexually explicit media? Why do people such as California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger come here, entertain, take advantage of opportunity, and enrich our economy through business and philanthropy?
Shock time: Americans are not nearly as despised as Al-Jazeera would have you believe. In fact, the PEW Global Attitudes Project reports that in its 2004 survey, roughly half the respondents in Russia, Turkey and Morocco say people who have moved to the U.S. have a better life (natives of Germany, France and Britain who responded to the survey disagreed, but that's hardly a surprise, even though Britain has always been a friend).4
None of the usual pat phrases such as "land of opportunity," "let freedom ring," and "democracy, democracy, democracy," seem to explain why Elian Gonzalez' mother died to bring him to America.
But perhaps we as Americans are stupid enough to believe that those phrases actually mean something. Perhaps we are the dumbest people on the face of the earth. "Dumb" in this case can mean "naïve," generally meant as an insult, as in "Don't be so naïve about why al-Qa'eda hates us so much."
These days, anyone who doesn't adopt the de rigueur attitude of boredom and yawning in the face of just about everything is called naïve. But Americans have always been known for innocence and openness.
Beverly West quoted actress Alicia Silverstone in Culinarytherapy. Ms. Silverstone, perhaps channeling President Abraham Lincoln's optimism, once remarked, "Like when I'm in the bathroom looking at my toilet paper I'm like 'Wow! That's toilet paper!' I don't know if we appreciate how much we have." (p. 184)
The idea of anything-therapy and the overuse of "like" appear to the global audience to be authentically American, impressed with our own coolness in one breath and cheerfully mangling the English language in the next, not to mention taking the words of a nubile young Hollywood actress (who starred, interestingly, in a contemporary remake of Jane Austen's satire on manners Emma) as wisdom. Being excited about toilet paper seems, in this high-tech age, a little backward and disingenuous.
Yet all major religions, particularly the Judeo-Christian tradition on which America as we know it was founded, emphasize gratitude as part of spiritual consciousness. Gratitude for the simplest of things, like toilet paper. The great composer Aaron Copeland based his "Appalachian Spring" symphony on the Shaker song of gratitude, "Simple Gifts."
"Simple" is often a synonym for "dumb." Yet if simplicity means stupidity, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau were prize idiots. Both of these quintessential American philosophers emphasized simplicity.
In a land of high-speed Internet, 500 channels, strip malls, and coffee companies proliferating like WMD, simplicity seems a foreign concept. Yet in America, we're "simple" enough to believe that we live in a land of liberty, that (political correctness aside) we can pray, say, or sing whatever we want. We're simple enough to believe that there still is a personal God, no matter what name we praise; that our kids have the right to attend church, despite the brouhaha over "one nation under God" in the Declaration of Independence; and that (reality shows and a 50 percent divorce rate aside) saying "till death do us part" still means something.
We're naïve and open enough to believe that, "conniving, thieving, smug" CEOs notwithstanding, we can work hard, start businesses, take care of our families, and create a life that we can be proud of when we leave this world. Even the much-vilified Martha Stewart is admired as a self-made American success story, someone who has used traditional homemaking arts to build a worldwide brand that emphasizes the good life. So much for the idea that Americans are a land of instant macaroni-and-cheese and fast-food eaters. Yes, people sue McDonald's over getting fat, but the majority of Americans work hard, try to eat well (often together as a family), and pride themselves on playing fair and upholding the law.
Despite celebrity trials, racial prejudices, judicial snafus, serial killers and publicity-hungry lawyers, we still think that "the little guy" still gets a day in court and a fair trial by jury. There is still a sense of personal responsibility for oneself, one's fellow citizens, and one's children.
Despite increasing pressures that erode childhood, our kids still have faith in parents to set limits, to be an example, and to lay the foundation for a good life. Certainly many of the young men and women we have seen interviewed in Operation Iraqi Freedom represent the best and the brightest. Our children exhibit the unique dedication to serving others that so many of our leaders, from President Kennedy to Eleanor Roosevelt to Colin Powell, extol. Ms. Stewart advocated teaching disadvantaged women how to start their own businesses. In America, even some of our high-profile so-called criminals want to improve life for others.
We're simpleminded enough to believe we can make a difference abroad and in our own communities. We have a strong commitment to preserving the earth for future generations. From Thoreau to Rachel Carson to the eco-friendly celebrity spokesperson of the week, Americans show a love for the natural beauty of the earth, a beauty that we celebrate in our own homeland. Many of our citizens support recycling, controls on pollution, wilderness/rainforest conservation, and wildlife preservation. As the riots at the 1999 WTO Summit in Seattle show, Americans can be quite over-zealous when supporting their causes. In short: Americans care.
This should come as no surprise. Our ancestors banded together to secede from British rule. Even in our fight for liberty, we held opposing views, contrarian views amongst ourselves. The Whigs who supported the Revolution and the Tories who supported England clashed with the fervor of their descendants, demonstrators with opposing views on wars from Vietnam to Operation Iraqi Freedom.
This passion for ideas, this devotion, may seem to undermine the unity we boast of. We're naïve enough to protect the free expression of ideas, even sometimes seemingly at great cost. You don't see death squads breaking into antiwar protesters' homes. For all the controversy over the Patriot Act, people who disagree with the US government do not simply disappear without a trace. Case in point: "Fahrenheit 9/11." It has made over $1 million (the first documentary to do so), yet people coming out of movie theaters don't get dragged into unmarked cars and interrogated. You can't be more critical of the government than Mr. Moore, and yet he won an Oscar for "Bowling For Columbine." Unlike Soviet artists who criticized Communism, Americans are not forced to flee their homeland--the rest of us won't stand for it.
Lest we forget, it was recently-deceased and much-praised former President Ronald Reagan who uttered the famous phrase, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." His administration was hardly free of controversy, and yet "the Gipper" maintained a cheerful optimism, an openness to the "Evil Empire," and yes, a naïve belief that America was "a shining city on a hill." Reagan was actually dumb enough to believe that America would prosper long after he left office. From this standpoint, "the Gipper" personifies Mr. Moore's idea of American idiocy.
In that case, the countless mourners, including children too young to have heard of President Reagan, who streamed by the casket in the Capitol Rotunda and at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library all suffer from a collective lobotomy. For that matter, so do the world's most famous figures, including Mr. Gorbachev and Dame Margaret Thatcher, who all responded to President Reagan's uniquely American character.
At this rate we'll be a nation of Forrest Gumps, which wouldn't be all bad if it meant we could have his decency and kindness (not to mention Tom Hanks' sense of history).
Oh wait...maybe we do. Perhaps that's what Mr. Moore means when he calls us "the dumbest people on the face of the earth." By that standard, we're an entire nation of "Jeopardy" champions.
So the next time people here or abroad say, "You Americans are the world's dumbest people," we can say with pride, "Yes, we are. God Bless America!"
1 June 26, 2004, http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/6/26/103545.shtml http://www.msnbc.com/news/970612.asp?0cv=CB20&cp1=1
2 Michael Moore pointed to a National Geographic survey of American children, http://geosurvey.nationalgeographic.com/geosurvey/. NAEP and Gallup have also reported geography deficiencies. However, it should be noted that in 2003, 84 percent of eighth graders could puzzle out the motivations of a character in a Langston Hughes story, cf. http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/reading/results2003/. Also, there was an overall gain across all grades in mathematical since 1990, cf. http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/mathematics/results2003/
3 http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0073.html
4 http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?ReportID=206
Movie reviewer/screenwriter Kristin Johnson composes personalized poems, speeches, toasts, vows, and family memories. Visit http://www.poemsforyou.com to order your personalized memories. She is also co-author of the Midwest Book Review "enthusiastically recommended" pick Christmas Cookies Are For Giving: Stories, Recipes and Tips for Making Heartwarming Gifts (ISBN: 0-9723473-9-9). A downloadablemedia kit is available at our Web site, http://www.christmascookiesareforgiving.com, or e-mail the publisher (info@tyrpublishing.com) to receive a printed media kit and sample copy of the book. More articles available at http://www.bakingchristmascookies.com
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Let's make one thing clear: This Dan Nelson Automotive fiasco... Read More
With the recent threats from Bin Laden and Al Queda... Read More
Visible remnants of the world's eldest democracy can be seen... Read More
Michael Moore asserts the following in his political film Fahrenheit... Read More
This is the third in a short series of four... Read More
I, too, am saddened by the disaster in New Orleans... Read More
I would like to discuss a few issues we have... Read More
After 9-11 insurance rates on Independent Truck Drivers and smaller... Read More
"It is the duty of every citizen according to his... Read More
ADOLF HITLER:The common perception of Hitler being large and in... Read More
It is time for a change. A change in philosophy,... Read More
Blessed with Chinese GDP growth rates (7-8% annually in each... Read More
Are you happy with all this so-called security after 9-11?... Read More
With respect to the States' databases, you may not locate... Read More
J. Edgar Hoover and LBJ used to enjoy watching Hoover's... Read More
Tax Evasion has been used to criminalize many, Nixon did... Read More
I am not an African-American. Don't call me an African... Read More
America is filled with standouts and perserverance; our nation has... Read More
The organic farmers are angry that Monsantos terminator GM seeds... Read More
Societies have always had a problem of what to do... Read More
There are many types of fuels besides that gasoline we... Read More
Many of the problems that the members of the European... Read More
We see today a fierce unspoken competition between trucks and... Read More
The recent first round of the Iranian elections somewhat resembled... Read More
America has some monetary issues, which need to be addressed.... Read More
I applaud Monsanto for their R and D. I would... Read More
The gun control debate in America is a battle between... Read More
Originally published in 1958, "The Ugly American" (Lederer & Burdick)... Read More
For more than a decade, you the American taxpayer have... Read More
If someone wanted to farm future clones they would need... Read More
Environmentalists say GM Seeds are bad for the environment, dangerous... Read More
Many non-profit groups are feeling upset that they are allowed... Read More
We need more oversight and transparency in government. We need... Read More
Handing over power to Vladimir Putin in 1999, Boris Yeltsin... Read More
Many have lost faith in the government and are completely... Read More
Predicting the future is a tricky business. There have been... Read More
Proposed changes to the Sex Discrimination Act ("SDA") 1975 and... Read More
Regarding the de-regulation of energy, this is not such a... Read More
Recently the CIA staged a practice simulation of a cyber... Read More
The RSS is getting feedback from its 140 pracharaks or... Read More
In response to Douglas Bower's article; Logic Class 101 Applied... Read More
Those of us hundreds of miles from ground zero sat... Read More
Bill Cosby got it wrong. His many speeches regarding the... Read More
We are seeing some trade wars brewing as American trade... Read More
Indian and Pakistan and nuclear war. What does the world... Read More
We learned some lessons in these last few wars. For... Read More
The Bill of Rights to our Constitution caused -- and... Read More
The City of Portland is going after any small business,... Read More
Ever wonder why labor unions consistently endorse democrats over republicans... Read More
Why are we over regulating the franchising industry? What are... Read More
When Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Spector exercised his right to free... Read More
The CBR taxes the Pakistani source income of nonresident individuals... Read More
I was dismayed to learn the other day, that my... Read More
Often we see protests at the sites of global leader... Read More
America is filled with standouts and perserverance; our nation has... Read More
This is no time for the Black community to sue... Read More
As a result of the conflict analysis exercise and a... Read More
The idea that the majority shows the will of the... Read More
The Federal trade Commission has a rule, which says that... Read More
I, too, am saddened by the disaster in New Orleans... Read More
Well, another election has come and gone in the US... Read More
With the recent shakeups in the presidential cabinet, it has... Read More
You know we have sent many, many army tanks with... Read More
Revitalization Downtown projects are all the rage in fact the... Read More
When Boris Yeltsin spoke about an experiment that 'they' wrought... Read More
Einstein when ask how did he believe WWIII would be... Read More
Political |