An Australian journalist trying to set the record straight: It matters not that, in the year before the tsunami, the US provided $2.4 billion in humanitarian relief: 40 per cent of all the relief aid given to the world in 2003. Never mind that development and emergency relief rose from $10 billion during the last year of Bill Clinton's administration to $24 billion under George W. Bush in 2003. Or that, according to a German study, Americans contribute to charities nearly seven times as much a head as Germans do. Or that, adjusted for population, American philanthropy is more than two-thirds more than British giving.
There is a teenaged immaturity about the rest of the world's relationship with the US. Whenever a serious crisis erupts somewhere, our dependence on the US becomes obvious, and many hate the US because of it. That the hatred is irrational is beside the point.
We can denounce the Yanks for being Muslim-hating flouters of international law while demanding the US rescue Bosnian Muslims from Serbia without UN authority. We can be disgusted by crass American materialism and ridiculous stockpiling of worldly goods yet also be the first to demand material help from the US when disaster strikes.
The really unfortunate part about this adolescent love-hate relationship with the US is that, unlike most teenagers, many never seem to grow out of it. Within each new generation is a vicious strain of irrational anti-Americanism. But unlike a parent, the US could just get sick of it all and walk away.
Thursday, May 15, 2008
The need to paint Americans as a greedy, selfish, war-mongering superpower cannot be disturbed by facts.
Posted by Barbara Dillon Hillas at 1:58 AM
Labels: Anti-Americanism, Humanitarian assistance
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2 comments:
Good post, although she does cop some flak in Australia for her pro America views...
Doesn't surprise me that she would get flak for having a pro America view! It takes guts to take that approach. In her case, though, her article was backed up with facts... something rare among journalists everywhere!
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