Some Schmo wrote:Chap wrote:I'd like to hear an answer to that too.
Hey Chap,
I've asked this question before and I've never gotten an answer. If you ever want utter silence, ask what makes America great.
And as a follow up to that question, if America is so great, why do we need to make it great again? Doesn't that imply it was great at one time, but isn't any more, and it needs to return to its former glory? What made it great before that suddenly went away? (I have my own personal answer to this question, but I highly suspect my answer is much different the idiot President's).
I think you are correct that people pay lip service to these kinds of ideas but never really think about what they're saying.
So, to review, it's the greatest country in the world that needs to be made great again... or something.
Obviously I can't speak for Ceebs but I'll take a run at how I typically read these kinds of statements, perhaps I give too much leeway though.
I think claiming one country as the single best is going to pretty subjective, you could use any number of metrics to prove or disprove this idea. What I will say is that for any number of its faults, America still represents (and is viewed by many both in and out) a land of nearly unparalleled opportunity for so many people. Although there are lots of countries where one can build a wonderful life with little more than hard work, ingenuity and a bit of luck, I suspect America ranks pretty high up there as a place many people think of building a better life.
Yesterday I had the great fortune of getting to celebrate Independence Day with a good friend who had earned his American Citizenship just 3 weeks prior, his first 4ᵗʰ as a full blown American. Needless to say he was ecstatic. This was the land where he had an opportunity to go to college, become a physical therapist, run a network of hospitals, meet his wife, build a new home. Perhaps he would have done all those things in his home country, or perhaps somewhere other than America. The point remains that when he wanted to build that better life for himself and his future, this is where he turned.
For me when I think of American exceptionalism, the above story is what I have in mind. I think this is why I view attempts to squash immigration (especially the legal kind) as so destructive to the idea of the US. And although I think we fall short of the ideal in so many ways it doesn't change the US's transformative power that I've seen lift up so many.
I understand that you can probably build a similar argument for many countries, it is why you will probably never hear me claim the USA as the "single" best. But it does put it high up on my list.
As to "MAGA" bit, that can jump off a cliff.
"If you consider what are called the virtues in mankind, you will find their growth is assisted by education and cultivation." -Xenophon of Athens