I've seen enough of american society to form my own quiet opinion of it, i'l be honest with you i find it harsh and it troubles me, i see americans working incredibly hard to stay afloat, often holding down two jobs just to make ends meet with no financial safety net under them and almost no time for family let alone history classes, my aunt is one of them.
Sometimes they are ill and in pain with no health insurance but they work anyway because they have to, how many of us could learn things under those conditions? and can we really blame the average american if he or she is slightly sketchy on some facts others would consider essential?
I posted
an article here a while ago about Remote Area Medical. It's a group that parachutes doctors into places like Guyana and Haiti to give people free medical care.
Well nowadays the majority of the work they do is inside the States.
For example Wise County, Virginia, which is right on the border with West Virginia deep in the heart of Appalachia.
These people don't live in the same America as the vast majority of people posting in this thread. They live in an America where birth fatalities, high school graduation rates, retirement ages, incidence of diabetes and lung cancer, all bear no resemblance to "America the world's #1 nation."
For a good percentage of the people who came to get free healthcare, they have not seen a clinic doctor in DECADES. All the medical attention they get is either informal or charity.
Here's where your mind is blown: the voters of Wise County cast their ballots 63% for John McCain.
And if you make a map of places where Obama got a smaller percent of the vote than Kerry, here's what you get. Blue areas are where Obama got a higher % of the vote than Kerry; red areas are where he underperformed Kerry.
These same voters who lined up outside a tent to get 20 fillings, swung 10% against Obama because... well, we all know why