The World according to America.
I. Am. So. Ded.
Standard Disclaimer: I'm pretty damn sure none of the Americans on my flist think this way. If you do, please make yourselves known so I can stare in horror at you.
If anyone wants to know where I found that, it was in a comment replying to this post in
overheardnyc
Teen girl #1: Okay. Maybe I'm, like, retarded for not knowing this,
but...did you guys know that other countries have national anthems, too?
Teen girl #2: Duh! It's the same song, in different languages!
--Bay Ridge
Overheard by: Lysa
Overall just - BWHAHAHAHAHAHA!
ETA: Another one! HEE!
I. Am. So. Ded.
Standard Disclaimer: I'm pretty damn sure none of the Americans on my flist think this way. If you do, please make yourselves known so I can stare in horror at you.
If anyone wants to know where I found that, it was in a comment replying to this post in
Teen girl #1: Okay. Maybe I'm, like, retarded for not knowing this,
but...did you guys know that other countries have national anthems, too?
Teen girl #2: Duh! It's the same song, in different languages!
--Bay Ridge
Overheard by: Lysa
Overall just - BWHAHAHAHAHAHA!
ETA: Another one! HEE!
no subject
Date: 2006-03-05 09:52 pm (UTC)That's all that needs to be said, LOL.
And the teen girls are great.
But those views are possibly more for the uneducated adults in the remoter regions...These days kids in the US can be MUCH smarter than their parents. Can be. If you watch canadian comedy, you'll better understand what I mean.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-05 10:20 pm (UTC)America sucks. That much is correct. And yes, Americans are shamefully retarded.
Also -- I kinda knew other countries had national anthems, but the only one I know is England's.
Because America stole the tune for some other patriotic song of ours.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-05 10:38 pm (UTC)I think it's to do with a mixture of a useless educational system and a big fat dose of
patriotismarrogance. Not only that, our culture is vastly moronic and completely shallow.no subject
Date: 2006-03-05 10:50 pm (UTC)I never had a geography course. Ever. I never learned any history outside the US until 9th grade. Granted, this has a LITTLE to do with odd school-switching, going from a school where certain areas of ancient history were taught later to one where it was taught earlier, therefor missing it all together. But also we never studied any history past WWI.
We have culture?
As far as I can tell, the extent of American culture consists of hotdogs and adding "-izzle" to random words.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 06:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 10:09 pm (UTC)Even before that though, we got a general look at world history in the first three years of high school - and in primary school, we had years of English medieval history (I think they knew that the blood and gore of the Battle of Hastings would be fascinating to 7-8-9 year olds :D). So...yeah, it's kind of hard to see that history isn't really taught as much in America - and also understandable I guess, seeing as the stuff we had to learn about all happened before America was discovered by the Europeans.
I don't want to make it sound like we have a great education system because we really don't. To take history, I had to give up Geography (fine with me, I hated it) and English and Maths and the Sciences are far more important to schools. Languages too. But Humanities (name used for both history and geography before you choose one specific subject to study for exams) certainly don't get screwed as much as the other Arts. Music and drama are almost an afterthought now, as is formalized sports lessons (by that I mean that any kid can play sports in lunchtime/after school activities but if kids don't want to bother in the actual lesson they're not pushed all that much). Maybe it's because the way history is taught makes it relevant to what's going on now, and with our neighbours etc. Perhaps America doesn't have that dimension, having peaceful neighbours.
Hmmmm. Interesting.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 01:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 06:24 pm (UTC)It's the sheer WTF?! involved, to realise that some people out there actually think that other countries don't have their own national anthems, y'know? It is arrogant. It just is. OK, those teeny girls might just be undereducated or something, or just thick - but still, it's shocking to realise. Do they think that Canada and Mexico don't have any of their own nation identity either? It's just...bizarre to think about.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 09:59 pm (UTC)And dude, people prefer America the Beautiful to the Star Spangled Banner? 0_0! I mean, they're both beautiful songs - but as an anthem, I would say SSB is much better. Hell, it'd make me proud to be an American. If, y'know, I was one.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 10:12 pm (UTC)I do have a great version - Lauren Hill, after 9/11. It's got excerpts of people talking, from when they were interviewed on TV when the Towers came down. Stunning really. It is a beautiful song.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-06 06:17 pm (UTC)Umm...well, I can understand Americans not knowing the where all the European countries are located. I know because I've been to a lot of them and they're a lot closer to me than they are to you.
Having said that, I do know where a lot of the South American countries are too, and no, Czechoslovakia does not exist anymore. That would now be the Czech Republic. Slovakia is also a country in its own right.
I also know where Vietnam is, even though British schools don't teach about it because we weren't involved and I didn't take geography.
As for national anthems - well, yeah. Um, that kind of blows me away. Again, being European and living in a place that has three other countries as part of the UK, right next to where I live (and family and friends in every single one of those countries) - I suppose it would never occur to me that people wouldn't know about others national anthems. I mean, even without that - look at the Olympic games. Or any major sports event. The national anthem of the other team always gets played. Over here at least.
I dunno, it just freaks me out. I thought that was stuff that everyone knew. And while I know that a lot of Americans are nowhere near as insulated as my original post would have people believe they are - this sort of thing kind of makes me think differently, y'know?
no subject
Date: 2006-03-05 10:36 pm (UTC)