The U.S. is a representative republic with a capitalist economy.
As one who denounces any mixing of Christianity with government, and is not himself a believer, you have no credibility or entree to speak of christian "selfishness".
you asked a question and I responded..It was an opinion based on observation, you cannot dismiss it because I am not a christian
I became an atheist, I was once a christian. Don't flatter youself, I don't reject "any mixing of Christianity with government" I denounce mixing religion with government. Even then I don't denounce religious people in government, I denounce religious people in government that think their religious beliefs should trump the constitution. Your attack line is tiresome. Would you say that someone that converted to christianity from atheism had no insight into atheism? would you deny that christ taught to love his fellow man? Was jesus a capitalist that would think it evil for society to put the well being of people over wealth of individuals?
this is a response and not an attempt to steer away from the subject
Given that-
Would you prefer to pay more taxes?
Of course not, I would prefer the taxes we pay where spent wisely in worthwhile areas and we got value for money
.53 of every dollar the government here collects goes to entitlements, .09 to debt service, and about .21 goes to defense.
The remaining .17 could be defined as discretionary, or subject to budgetary whim.
and ? ...so what?
We work more than most other "civilized" countries already.
That is a subjective opinion, not proven fact
Apart from all that, I think you're attempting to make this thread into something I hadn't intended.
I do find mself wondering what shape opinions in here would take if/when a Democrat sits in the White House.
I'm not trying to shape anything, merely wondering if you are mistaking complaints about the way the country is heading politically and possibly culturally with hating the usa, if you yourself are happy with everything why do you complain about things. Some have more to object to than others. No doubt the tables will turn again so to speak.
Our culture (that which we may be granted to possess, anyway) is belittled as shallow and cheap, and it's influence around the world is loathed even by those who enjoy it.
I think that (generally speaking) this is a universal issue. Many americans reject the culture of others just as others reject ours. We have an attitude of "if you come here you must accept our way of life and not expect us to accept yours, if you don't like it f. off somewhere else"
I agree and regret that the only culture we've managed to export is of the sort meant to generate profit.
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