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Re: What is it about the US?
| quote: | Originally posted by HardTranceProd
This past weekend I traveled from Washington DC to North Pennsylavania along the I-95 corridor, looking at the sprawling suburbs, malls, and churches of America as I was driving, and thought about American culture.
Here's what I thought: The US is part of several countries that were populated by the British, and hence have an Anglo-Saxon cultural base:
- Australia
- New Zealand
- Canada
- USA
- South Africa
Yet, out of all these countries, the US remains culturally distinct, and extremely different from, say, Canada and Australia. Why? What is it about the US that makes it such a sharp contrast to the other former British colonies?
Why are the US' Anglo-Saxon siblings all Socialist, while the US abhors Socialism? Why are the other Anglo-Saxon countries secular, while the US is religious?
Could it be geography? Climate? Just what exactly is it, given that all the former colonies share the same ancestry.
BTW, I realize that there are actually two different "United States" (the South and the North - very distinct culturally), but there's a lot of things common to the continental US. |
Maybe it is because the US is run by huge corporations that have billions of dollars to do what they want. And what they want is to make lots of $. So thats why you see lots of suburbs and malls. It is all a part of the economy to make it grow and make these corporations richer than they are now, along the way they take out the small business owner.
It might also be because there are over a hundred million ppl compare that with other British once ruled countries. So the more ppl the more diverse it should be right?
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