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Putting it bluntly, nobody in the rest of the world gives a rat's ass what happens in the U.S.
Many of us have imagined, in flights of fantasy, a time when the rest of the world would rescue us from our own failed democracy. To the contrary, in the rising tide of knowlege-sharing we Americans are, to the person, just as irrelevant to non-Americans (or, from another perspective, just as relevant) as the "huddled masses" may be to us, ourselves. From hi-tech to high crime, the world is catching up (and often ahead).
Here is an oddball perspective: we, citizens of the U.S. are only five percent of the total world's population. A full forty percent now live in either India or China.
Although many, if not most, DU'ers are more globally-conscious than average, the general inclination here (DU) as far as international relations is concerned is to see affairs through the lens of our own distorted culture. The millenarian mindset that we often slip into at DU, however, does not translate very well when I look abroad.
At times being the bearers of horrific suffering, other peoples often have a different perspective on the state of things in 2003. Things haven't been well for as long as anybody can remember in most of these places because late capitalism wasn't so great for them in the first place. So, when we bemoan the "end of the world," others are just trying to make sure that they can get out from the bottom. Things are bad, but for most of the world it is a time to make advances.
There are alliances being made that have just as much potential to be as effective as the proverbial "barbarians at the gate." The gate is our economic system that puts controlling powers in the U.S. and her allies at the top of the global economic food chain.
When the rubber hits the road stateside, though, we are on our own fixing it.
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