I feel great about America the best country in the world and I am glad to have been born here.
2007-09-05 10:18:16
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answer #1
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answered by ken s 5
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I am an American. Unfortunately I am extremely disappointed in the way our government has performed in the past 7 years. In my opinion Bush and his cronies have literally fouled up virtually every area of government and the longer that Bush remains in the White House the worse it will become. Years ago when Bush SR. asked President Reagan if there was something that can be done for little George (who was about 40) Reagan wrote in his diary that little George was a dumdum.....not exactly those words but the meaning is clear. Reagan had no use for Bush Jr. I have no use for him now and hope he doesn't destroy American before he leaves office. His wife is a real dear though. Very nice lady.
2007-09-05 22:11:12
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Without the USA, this question would be
"What is your current attitude towards the USSR and why? What country were you from before the Soviets annexed you."
And the computer and Yahoo would not exist, so you'd be asking this question huddled in a poured concrete hut in the swamps.
2007-09-05 10:26:14
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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1. The 1913 Federal Reserve Act (Far and away the most significant single moment in the chain of events that led us to our present situation.) 2. Absorption into NAFTA (destroyed us as a producing nation and resulted in dependence on foreign imports, which played right into the globalists' long-term strategy). 3. Repealment of the 1933 Glass/Steagall Act (created massive artificial bubbles and generated a lot of short term "wealth" out of thin air for a lot of insiders, including the "housing bubble" which, upon bursting, proved to be the first domino in the chain of recent events, but still only a symptom of a much deeper, older problem.) Either (or both) the Bush/Obama "Banker Bailout" Bill and Obama's more recent "Stimulus Package" will probably be viewed historically as "the straw that broke the camel's back" ...as it is these bills that REALLY gave the green light for the globalists to kill the dollar. The former was the more significant in terms of restructuring the power and oversight of the Treasury and Fed. The latter is really more about creating government programs for managing Americans in the aftermath. Bottom line: this is absolutely the result of decades of planning (and absolutely NOT an accident). The people who engineered this are now the same people using it as an excuse to consolidate more control of the global banking system and augment the powers of the IMF, etc. A lot of people like to parrot what their controlled media tells them to think about it being all the fault of one party or the other, or how it all happened in one moment, generally because of ______ politician from the other party who they don't like. With few exceptions, all of Congress is responsible, either by collusion or by negligence. The use of mass-media talking points such as: "it was regulation" "it was deregulation" "It was speculators" and "it was people taking out loans they couldn't afford" etc. generally expose one as having little independently-acquired knowledge about the issue. (The same phrases repeated on television pop up in the course of public debate as if they were original ideas). It is critical that Americans understand that all globalization and corporatism has come with the support of BOTH MAJOR PARTIES. For anyone who still can't see this, my suggestion is that you turn off your television, and then shoot it with a shotgun.
2016-05-17 12:38:42
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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I like america for the most part, but I feel sorry for all the unhappiness I see and the misery in some areas people have to endure due to lost jobs, poor health, thus losing their homes, etc. People are distressed by what it going on in other countries (if they are informed any at all on the news).
I live in america always have. My great great great grandparents came here as some of the first immigrants from ireland and germany That is the backround my grandmother told me.
But in all actuality I am probably a heinz 57. Who knows for sure?
I like being able to move about without having to show papers on demand. I like being able to practice my religion without harassment usually. I like having the freedom to ask quesitions and have access to so much info to find those answers.
LIve where I want, provided I can afford it, I can go to the doctor and be seen pretty fast when I am sick, though when I was on welfare for 3 years I waited for hours to see a doctor when I was sick sometimes up to a half a day.
but some places in the world you don't even have access to a doctor and if you do he or she has limited capabilitiy to help you in some cases.
I feel comfortable with my neighbors because I don't have to worry they are being coericed to spy on me or others by the government. They are free to express anything to me and me them without fear of it coming back to bite them.
Though this is slowly changing and I have lost some of my comfort due to what I learned, I still feel relativly safe right now from false arrest or religious persecution or harassment because of my looks or beliefs systems, or opinions. I feel I still have some control of my life where I live work, play and freedom to move about without fearing kidnapping by this government.
But from experiences of others in this country it is changing, and in some cases pretty fast. There are too many examples to describe here however.
RRRRR
2007-09-06 09:03:42
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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i love America. the people, history, and everything. because basically it is every country in the world combined. its like a fine little world. and i love it.
sometimes i dont understand. why is it that people say they hate america, but they still want to come here or they live here!?
thats a question for some people i just dont get.
Im Italian.
2007-09-05 11:34:35
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answer #6
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answered by McQueen 1
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I'm from Spain, living in the Great USA for the past 35 years. I still love Spain put aside their politics (they stink). My whole family is there and they P....me off when they badmouth USA. I can only say MOST EUROPEANS ARE JEALOUS
2007-09-05 10:27:23
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answer #7
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answered by Bego?a R 3
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It's a nice place to Live- but I wouldn't want to visit here (I'm from the U.S..). -It's expensive; air travel's a hassle, & people are Cranky after a long, hot Summer...
2007-09-05 10:20:12
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answer #8
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answered by Joseph, II 7
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I think we are awesomely courageous and steadfast and strong.
Your best friend or your worst nightmare ...and as we are a hospitable people, you can choose which you would like.
2007-09-05 10:19:21
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answer #9
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answered by FOA 6
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I love its backbone, honor and morals. I'm a citizen.
2007-09-05 11:03:11
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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