I am.Lalaith wrote:Okay, so my American friends (the ones not online) are asking, "Why do the non-Americans care so much? Why are they so thrilled that Obama was elected? Why did they hate Bush so much?"
I've given some answers as best I could, but I would be interested in hearing the direct answer from some of you.
Anyone game?
Lali
Obama
He looks and sounds like a world class statesman. He has dignity. I think he will be a very good rep for America on the world stage.
And he's a family man. Happily and faithfully married to his wife for 16 years.
He's also right about healthcare (in my humble opinion, having benefited from 'socialised medicine' all my life ). As to whether it will be possible to reform the healthcare system in the US, with a deep recession looming, I don't know. Your new President-elect has the intray from hell. But I hope and pray he is the man he appears to be and that his supporters believe him to be.
And I can't deny the fact that America does now have its first biracial President speaks volumes about your nation's ability to rise above its past and prove that it really does believe in the ideals and principles that the Founding Fathers enshrined in the Constitution. Every African-American kid now knows it's possible they could become President, if that was their ambition!
We all found America absolutely inspirational this week. The American dream is not a kitsch, shallow thing, it's for real.
Bush
I despised the Bush administration. They came across as arrogant. And I disliked this attitude emanating from them that if you weren't for them, you were against them, that if you criticised America, you hated America. Rubbish. I love my country deeply, but I criticise its leadership all the time. That's the privilege of living in a democracy where ideas are not censored!
I support the fight against al-Queda in Afghanistan (and it appears that President-elect Obama does too) but I thought the invasion of Iraq was ill-considered and ill-judged. Tony Blair was a popular PM but his popularity plummeted here after that. People were not happy about his reasons for the invasion, especially as those reasons never materialised. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad Saddam was ousted. But I think the war was a terrible drain on reserves and distracted away from the actual fighting against the Taliban in Afghanistan. I can't deny that the surge in the spring worked. Just as well.
And yet I could have forgiven/overlooked that (since I believe Blair was sincere in wanting to get rid of a tyrant) were it not for other things ...
I was appalled by Bush's sanctioning of waterboarding, of torture.
I was unhappy with his attitude to Guantanamo. If you suspect someone of plotting terrorism against the US or the UK or anywhere else, then arrest them and charge them. Don't bang them up for months, years, without a trial. To my mind, this is not how a civilised Western democracy should behave.
The Patriot Act. What is THAT about? I have similar concerns in Britain. Vigilance against terrorism should not mean a slow whittling away of civil liberties.
New Orleans. OK, so the US is a lot bigger than Britain, and the stricken city was not the easiest to get to, but a leader has to show that they care. During World War Two, the King and Queen went on walkabout in London to talk to and empathise with Londoners who had survived the previous night's bombing raids. Of course the Royal Family had their own royal bunker. But the thing is, they showed their people that they CARED. A huge psychological booster.