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Hatred of America unites the world
The Sunday Telegraph (U.K.) ^ | 02/25/07 | Niall Ferguson

Posted on 02/24/2007 5:03:36 PM PST by Pokey78

Being hated is no fun. Few of us are like those pantomime villains who glory in the hisses and boos of an audience. And few people hate being hated more than Americans. I wish I had a dollar for every time I've been asked the plaintive question: "Why do they hate us?" and another for each of the different answers I've heard. It's because of our foreign policy. It's because of their extremism. It's because of our arrogance. It's because of their inferiority complex. Americans really hate not knowing why they're hated.

The best explanation is in fact the simplest. Being hated is what happens to dominant empires. It comes - sometimes literally - with the territory. George Orwell knew the feeling. As a young man he served as an assistant police superintendent in British-run Burma, an experience he memorably described in his essay "Shooting an Elephant". Called upon to kill a rogue pachyderm that had run amok, Orwell was suddenly aware "of the watchful yellow faces behind" him:

"The sole thought in my mind was that if anything went wrong those two thousand Burmans would see me pursued, caught, trampled on and reduced to a grinning corpse like that Indian up the hill. And if that happened it was quite probable that some of them would laugh."

Eric Blair, as Orwell was known then, could scarcely have been better prepared for his role as a colonial official. Born in Bengal, the son of a colonial civil servant, he had been educated at Eton, where boys learn not to worry much about being hated. Yet even he found the resentment of the natives hard to bear: "In the end the sneering... faces of young men that met me everywhere, the insults hooted after me when I was at a safe distance, got badly on my nerves ... [It] was perplexing and upsetting."

That's a feeling American soldiers in Baghdad must know pretty well. How does that old Randy Newman song go? "No one likes us - I don't know why. / We may not be perfect, but heaven knows we try."

But who hates Americans the most? You might assume that it's people in countries that the United States has recently attacked or threatened to attack. Americans themselves are clear about who their principal enemies are. Asked by Gallup to name the "greatest enemy" of the United States today, 26 per cent of those polled named Iran, 21 per cent named Iraq and 18 per cent named North Korea. Incidentally, that represents quite a success for George W. Bush's concept of the "Axis of Evil". Six years ago, only 8 per cent named Iran and only 2 per cent North Korea.

Are those feelings of antagonism reciprocated? Up to a point. According to a poll by Gallup's Centre for Muslim Studies, 52 per cent of Iranians have an unfavourable view of the United States. But that figure is down from 63 per cent in 2001. And it's significantly lower than the degree of antipathy towards the United States felt in Jordan, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Two thirds of Jordanians and Pakistanis have a negative view of the United States and a staggering 79 per cent of Saudis. Sentiment has also turned hostile in Lebanon, where 59 per cent of people now have an unfavourable opinion of the United States, compared with just 41 per cent a year ago. No fewer than 84 per cent of Lebanese Shiites say they have a very unfavourable view of Uncle Sam.

These figures suggest a paradox in the Muslim world. It's not America's enemies who hate the United States most, it's people in countries that are supposed to be America's friends, if not allies.

The paradox doesn't end there. The Gallup poll (which surveyed 10,000 Muslims in 10 different countries) also revealed that the wealthier and better-educated Muslims are, the more likely they are to be politically radical. So if you ever believed that anti-Western sentiment was an expression of poverty and deprivation, think again. Even more perplexingly, Islamists are more supportive of democracy than Muslim moderates. Those who imagined that the Middle East could be stabilised with a mixture of economic and political reform could not have been more wrong. The richer these people get, the more they favour radical Islamism. And they see democracy as a way of putting the radicals into power.

The paradox of unfriendly allies is not confined to the Middle East. Last week was not a good week for Americanophiles in Europe. Tony Blair announced British troop withdrawals from southern Iraq, an unfortunate signal on the eve of the American "surge". Meanwhile, in Rome, his counterpart Romano Prodi had to resign because his coalition partners would not agree either to keep Italian troops in Afghanistan or to enlarge a US military base at Vicenza. Anti-Americanism is nothing new in European politics, to be sure, particularly on the Left. But there is something novel going on here, which extends to traditionally pro-American constituencies.

Back in 1999, 83 per cent of British people surveyed by the State Department Office of Research said that they had a favourable opinion of the United States. But by 2006, according to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, that proportion had fallen to 56 per cent. British respondents to the Pew surveys now give higher favourability ratings to Germany (75 per cent) and Japan (69 per cent) than to the United States - a remarkable transformation in attitudes, given the notorious British tendency to look back both nostalgically and unforgivingly to the Second World War. It's also very striking that Britons recently polled by Pew regard the US presence in Iraq as a bigger threat to world peace than Iran or North Korea (a view which is shared by respondents in France, Spain, Russia, India, China and throughout the Middle East).

Nor is Britain the only disillusioned ally. Perhaps not surprisingly, two thirds of Americans believe that their country's foreign policy considers the interests of others. But this view is shared by only 38 per cent of Germans and 19 per cent of Canadians. More than two thirds of Germans surveyed in 2004 believed that American leaders wilfully lied about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction prior to the previous year's invasion, while a remarkable 60 per cent expressed the view that America's true motive was "to control Middle Eastern oil". Nearly half (47 per cent) said it was "to dominate the world".

The truly poignant fact is that when Americans themselves are asked to rate foreign countries, they express the most favourable views of none other than Britain, Germany and Canada.

Back in the 1990s, Madeleine Albright pompously called the United States "the indispensable nation". Today it seems to have become the indefensible nation, even in the eyes of its supposed friends.

There are, admittedly, a few scraps of good news in the international polls. Very few Europeans, for example, would welcome China's becoming a serious military rival to the United States. There is overwhelming European opposition to Iran's acquiring nuclear weapons. And there is a surprising amount of hostility towards the Palestinian radicals of Hamas in both France and Germany. But look again at some of America's supposed allies. One in four Indians, two out of five Egyptians and one out of every two Pakistanis favour a nuclear-armed Iran. A third of Britons, half of all Indians and three quarters of Egyptians welcomed the success of Hamas in last year's Palestinian elections.

Orwell would have understood. Just as it was the educated beneficiaries of British rule in Asia who were the most strident anti-imperialists in Orwell's day, so the British Empire's most natural allies - France and the United States - were anything but Anglophile. For it turns out that power not only corrupts, as Lord Acton famously observed, it also tends to isolate.

It's not for nothing that they say it's lonely at the top.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; United Kingdom
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1 posted on 02/24/2007 5:03:37 PM PST by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78

Yeah...They alol just line up to come here. The world would be in slavery without this country. Ok America...Let'em all fend for themselves...oncluding when natural disasters hit their pathetic little shores


2 posted on 02/24/2007 5:06:37 PM PST by Bob Eimiller (Kerry, Kennedy, Pelosi, Leahy, Kucinich, Durbin Pro Abort Catholics Excommunication?)
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To: Pokey78
Americans really hate not knowing why they're hated

Not I......they may hate all they wish.....for America holds the Aces, and BTW we aren't hiding them. Look all you wish world, but cross us at your own peril.

3 posted on 02/24/2007 5:06:45 PM PST by no-to-illegals (God Bless Our Men and Women in Uniform, Our Heroes.)
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To: Pokey78

All I can say is, let the world come and fight America then. We'll take those Mfers out or die trying.


4 posted on 02/24/2007 5:06:51 PM PST by struggle ((The struggle continues))
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To: Pokey78
Being hated is no fun

I suspect being perpetually envious is far worse.

5 posted on 02/24/2007 5:07:08 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: Pokey78

http://youtube.com/watch?v=G3zLY1k-4pg


6 posted on 02/24/2007 5:07:30 PM PST by struggle ((The struggle continues))
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To: Bob Eimiller

I'm so incensed I didn't spell check for typos


7 posted on 02/24/2007 5:07:40 PM PST by Bob Eimiller (Kerry, Kennedy, Pelosi, Leahy, Kucinich, Durbin Pro Abort Catholics Excommunication?)
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To: Pokey78

Don't you just hate people like that??


8 posted on 02/24/2007 5:08:13 PM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: Pokey78

We're the most hated yet everybody and their brother will do just about anything to get here.


9 posted on 02/24/2007 5:09:24 PM PST by DaBroasta (Stop the hate--vote Republican)
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To: Bob Eimiller

I wish the media would raise the volume on this mantra so we could avoid wasting money on illegal immigrants who continue to flock to our awful country.


10 posted on 02/24/2007 5:10:02 PM PST by zarf (Her hair was of a dank yellow, and fell over her temples like sauerkraut......)
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To: Pokey78

the rest of the world has always hated us. Who cares. They change their tune when they NEED OUR HELP and then we are the greatest only long to help the bastards out of their mess and then they go back to hating us.

Think of what the planet would be like if the U.S. never existed? People think that global warming will kill us all but neglect to remind themselves that mankind would already be decimated had the brave men of the colonies didn't fight the limeys to create the most freedom loving people in the world.

Until the rest of the world bellies up to the table and takes the risks that we do to ensure freedom and to squash people who want to kill us all, they should shut their stinking pie holes.


11 posted on 02/24/2007 5:11:02 PM PST by MAD-AS-HELL (How does one win over terrorists? KILL them with UNKINDNESS)
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To: Mr. Mojo

"I suspect being perpetually envious is far worse."

Bingo!


12 posted on 02/24/2007 5:11:17 PM PST by traderrob6
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To: Pokey78

I once had the perfect first sentence for a dystopic novel about the world without the United States:

"When America was destroyed, the world cheered, and when they finally understood what they had done, the world wept and prayed for the Americans to return."


13 posted on 02/24/2007 5:11:57 PM PST by redpoll (redpoll)
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To: Pokey78
"Political Science" Randy Newman.

No one likes us
I don't know why.
We may not be perfect
But heaven knows we try.
But all around even our old friends put us down.
Let's drop the big one and see what happens.

We give them money
But are they grateful?
No they're spiteful
And they're hateful.
They don't respect us so let's surprise them;
We'll drop the big one and pulverize them.

14 posted on 02/24/2007 5:15:48 PM PST by LibKill (ENOUGH! Take the warning labels off everything and let Saint Darwin do his job.)
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To: LibKill

"Asia's crowded, Europe's too old,
Africa is far too hot, and Canada's too cold.
And South America stole our name
Let's drop the big one,
There'll be no one left to blame us.

We'll save Australia, don't want to hurt no kangaroos.
We'll build an American amusement park there,
They got surfin' too!

Boom! goes London, Boom! Paree
More room for you and more room for me.
And every city the whole world round,
Will just be another American town.

Oh, how peaceful it'll be!
We'll set everybody free!
You'll wear a Japanese kimono, baby
And there'll be Italian shoes for me!
They all hate us anyhow
So let's drop the big one now,
Let's drop the big one now!"


15 posted on 02/24/2007 5:16:50 PM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: no-to-illegals

If they hate us so much, why are so many people trying to get into this country?

If I really hated someone, I damn sure wouldn't take charity from him. Evidently "their" hatred doesn't stop "them" from accepting billions and billions in aid from this most hated country.

If there is so much hatred, how on earth can the UN bear to keep its headquarters in such a terrible country?

I don't get it.


16 posted on 02/24/2007 5:17:13 PM PST by SusaninOhio
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To: Pokey78

Would I dare say; it's some of the people in our own country who pretend to be American citizens.


17 posted on 02/24/2007 5:18:28 PM PST by freekitty
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To: Pokey78

I could care less.


18 posted on 02/24/2007 5:19:55 PM PST by Dallas59 (Case Closed)
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To: Pokey78

A sad fact of life: If you are principled and choose your own path, many people will ridicule, persecute and despise you. America, alone, has retained some sense of what is needed. Evil, in a world of compromise and hedonism, is focussed against any sign of resistance. Unfortunately, we're populated with pleasure-loving, emotional, nit-wits.


19 posted on 02/24/2007 5:21:31 PM PST by WorkingClassFilth ("Don't tread on me" - the motto of Patriots. "May I lick your boots?" - the motto of RINOs.)
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To: Pokey78
Niall Ferguson Biography
20 posted on 02/24/2007 5:21:50 PM PST by Anti-Bubba182
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