ARbound
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- Joined
- May 8, 2013
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I agree that it's a generational thing, but it's also us intentionally not passing along this information. We really don't want to talk about it and conveniently
wish not to remember. It's hard to say we're so great when we have blood on are hands that never seems to wash clean. I'm proud of our accomplishments
and nations envying us, but like slavery, we need to own up to the bad stuff we did/continue to do. I'm not expecting French Polynesians or Moldavians to know what we did, just Americans and the people it happened too.
I'm in my 20's and the only reason myself, and a few of my friends know about stuff like My Lai, IA 665, Iran-Contra, Operation Condor, Congo Crisis, Grenada/Panama/Dominican Republic Occupations/"Liberations", etc. is because we intentionally went out of the way to learn about them, and in 11th and 12th grade luckily had a teacher that wasn't afraid to combat the notion that talking about our wrongdoings as a nation is not equal to hating America.
Ask your family and friends back home, how many knew there was a dictatorship in Arge? After that push further and ask them if they knew about Operation Condor. When I told my Argie friends that maybe 15%-20% max of people in our generation knew about the Dirty War/Operation Condor they were shocked.
I posted a picture of the poster that was plastered around town showing the opposition being in cahoots with Clarín and the US Embassy and a friend asked why Argies don't like the US Government, I asked him if he knew about the Dirty War/Operation Condor, nope, he's 22 and has BA, not a stupid kid either.
We're not perfect, and I don't think most Americans are naïve enough to claim we are, I just wish people would stop pretending like we're a victim in the world. Since the 1940's it's hard to find a country that hasn't been treated like a plaything by our government...
wish not to remember. It's hard to say we're so great when we have blood on are hands that never seems to wash clean. I'm proud of our accomplishments
and nations envying us, but like slavery, we need to own up to the bad stuff we did/continue to do. I'm not expecting French Polynesians or Moldavians to know what we did, just Americans and the people it happened too.
I'm in my 20's and the only reason myself, and a few of my friends know about stuff like My Lai, IA 665, Iran-Contra, Operation Condor, Congo Crisis, Grenada/Panama/Dominican Republic Occupations/"Liberations", etc. is because we intentionally went out of the way to learn about them, and in 11th and 12th grade luckily had a teacher that wasn't afraid to combat the notion that talking about our wrongdoings as a nation is not equal to hating America.
Ask your family and friends back home, how many knew there was a dictatorship in Arge? After that push further and ask them if they knew about Operation Condor. When I told my Argie friends that maybe 15%-20% max of people in our generation knew about the Dirty War/Operation Condor they were shocked.
I posted a picture of the poster that was plastered around town showing the opposition being in cahoots with Clarín and the US Embassy and a friend asked why Argies don't like the US Government, I asked him if he knew about the Dirty War/Operation Condor, nope, he's 22 and has BA, not a stupid kid either.
We're not perfect, and I don't think most Americans are naïve enough to claim we are, I just wish people would stop pretending like we're a victim in the world. Since the 1940's it's hard to find a country that hasn't been treated like a plaything by our government...