Disbelief, dismay, anger, depression, numbness. I felt the same as many of you. And wondered what possessed so many Americans to vote for Bush against the better interests of the rest of the planet, the United States, and even of the Republicans in the bottom 98% income bracket. Aside from all questions of software manipulation, discarded ballots, challenged registrations, and divinely wrought chad hanging, quite a few voters did choose the Cowboy. Why?
There’s been no shortage of explanations in these posts and elsewhere—fundamentalist Christians, biased media, appeals to fear and xenophobia, simplicity of message—probably all of these are true to some extent, along with other factors, but they beg the question: Why are Americans so stupid? Why do they fall for these transparent ploys?
Now, don’t get me wrong: First of all, everyone’s stupid when it comes to politics and Americans are in good company there. And I don’t think Americans are genetically stupider than Europeans, or Africans, or anyone else. Jared Diamond does make a good case in Guns, Germs, and Steel for the superior intellect of the few surviving hunter-gatherers (he has worked for years in Papua New Guinea) who have been rigorously selected up to the present, unlike us well fed agriculturalist/couch potatoes, but probably the important differences are environmental.
Most Americans today do seem different from most Europeans, broadly speaking, Americans are more isolationist, less well-informed about politics and science, less interested in the fate of other nations, and more likely to hold absurd beliefs (astrology, alien abduction, virgin birth, Uri Geller...). The difference is not pronounced—people here (I live in Vienna) swallow all kinds of nonsense too—but no one I know here, from the Greens through the Socialist to the Freedom Party (sort of a neonazi neocon group), likes Bush and everyone (not just my Muslim friend) thinks the war in Iraq is an unmitigated disaster. Why the difference?
My suspicions: First of all, European countries are small, the US is big. Europeans have had to cope with many different neighbors, languages, and cultures for centuries. It’s easier for Americans to think that their nation is the whole world. Second, television. The average American watches more than four hours of TV a day, the average European about an hour less. Television sucks out your brain, especially the simplistic pap that passes for entertainment in the States. Third, Europeans walk more. Many of my friends, like myself, don’t even have cars. Driving around in a metal box and seeing the world through safety glass can lead one to think that it’s all just another TV program.
On the other hand, maybe the main difference is that the US is a major military power, and power corrupts. Americans are manipulated to support stupid wars because the powers that be need the oil, and can get it, through force of arms.
My comparison, anecdotal and undocumented as it is, is between the US and Europe because the standards of living and access to information are comparable—who can blame the Kokovoko Islanders for being superstitious?
Anyway, I’d like to hear your opinions on this.


















Ivan, sir Dutchman:
I understand how you feel, but as an American there are (in my opinion) 2 reasons why most Americans don’t know or care about the location of other nations (I do know, by the way):
1) Our public school system is weak in teaching geography and, I might add to the list, economics and history. In order to educate the masses, the amount of information that is taught is reduced so even the slower/less motivated students have a chance to pass and graduate school. Often the failing student is passed on to the next grade, passing the problem on to let some other teacher handle the lugnut who doesn’t want to learn. Please note this isnt the case of all schools but as a Public School graduate this is what I observed. There are “advanced” classes in Public School but their focus is usually science, literature, and mathematics.
2) Americans want to make money. We want to strike it rich (1849 gold rush anyone?), to live big and large and well off: dream big! Our focus is on honing our job skills and abilities to make more money. Knowing the location of some little (compared to the size of the U.S.) country is irrelevant in the dream of Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. If knowing the location of other countries can put more money in the bank then we’ll learn it; otherwise, most Americans don’t care. Our thinking is, if we have enough money we’ll buy the durn-blasted little place if need be!
I have to respectfully disagree that the U.S. is responsible for “wasting” your country (Holland)due to the craze of consumerism. You Dutch were wheeling & dealing, trading in sugar, spices, tobacco, and all manner of goods for big money when America was just a bunch of woodcutters and Pilgrims. You have a very lenient stance towards the use and abuse of drugs which is a rot and stain upon your nation. You have enclaves of immigrants who refuse to assimilate or respect your country, not even honoring the descendants of Van Gogh’s family of artists and art dealers, a cornerstone of your culture. They shot him dead like he was some stray rabid dog wandering the streets.
Does America force you people to buy Coca-Cola? Do Americans threaten you with invasion if you don’t eat our chocolate bars? I think not. You Dutch, just like all humans, want what is fun and good and will do so given the chance.
We Americans are first & foremost marketers, salesmen, producers, and moneymakers. We’re good at it and we’ve used that skill to prosper ourselves around the world, just like you Dutch did in Indonesia, Curacao & the Caribbean, and in the early colonies of America several hundred years ago before Napolean and all them wars you people foisted on yourselves time and time again drained your coffers dry, allowing America to rise as a world power due to the power vacuum that was left upon the fall of the British, Dutch, French, and Spanish empires.
I do agree that Americans can be ugly. The love of money produces people who are crass, crude, impatient, and rude. Americans like to get to the point, not pansy about with subtle words, hints, and suggestions. Part of this comes from the bible: “Let your yes be yes and your no be no” --don’t bandy and play about with words obscuring what you want or intend to mean. Be clear about it.
I hope this offered some insight. “Pobody’s Nerfect” as a famed t-shirt once said.