kenberg, on 2021-March-11, 17:14, said:
That's completely reasonable, and I agree with all you say.
Because of my easy online access to multiple sources - and well-honed skills at finding information, synthesising and writing about it - my interests are slightly different.
What I enjoy when I'm not stuck trying to figure out a Bridge Master problem or trying to add a new arrow to my limited quiver is trying to make sense of the world around me.
Outside the United States, many people have looked at the rise of ultra-nationalism as terrifying. I'm one of them.
I am disturbed by the fact that people as overtly racist as Bobert and Greene, as stupid as Gohmert or Johnson or as devious and self-serving as Cruz and Hawley can be elected to any national legislature.
Don't get me wrong. There are equally self-serving people on all sides of the political spectrum and everywhere in life.
Unlike some, I know that there is no point trying to reason with people who have no literacy in rational thinking. I empathise. I just spent two hours on Bridge Master level 3 A-7 getting nowhere.
Sometimes if you don't know something how do you figure it out?
You simply have to keep looking for clues and learning more until you understand.
As you know, just pressing the enter button or playing the cards isn't going to work.
But my anxieties are not restricted to the USA.
There is a saying in Australia that when times are tough (politically), people turn to the non-conservative option to guide them out of it.
When things seem to be stable they revert to conservatism.
Slime moulds do the same thing. During periods of need they aggregate into a slug, but during times of plenty, they all do their own thing.
That's what European colonisation is all about, looking for times of plenty - usually at someone else's expense.
What about "conservatism". To me, conservatism as a political creed seems to about allowing individuals to disturb the equilibrium to their advantage with no concern for the other people that may be damaged.
As a creed, modern conservatism seems to me to be the political philosophy of the slime mould in times of plenty, with little or no regard for the plight of others.
Sure, we all want things to be a little better for ourselves and our families, but I do not regard the amount of wealth that I have as a way of keeping score.
When Bunker Hunt and his brothers cornered the silver market (e.g. http://bit.ly/BunkerHunt) and nearly caused a financial apocalypse, they got away with it.
I recall (it may be apocryphal - but it sounds good enough to be true) that when Hunt was asked why he kept acquiring so much money he replied that (approximately) "the money isn't important, it's just a way of keeping score".
Well, while people like Hunt, Buffett and Trump are keeping score many thousands of people are starving and suffering because of their devotion to a political creed.
On a personal note, I was born in 1958, I went to more schools than I can count in four different cities in Africa, Europe and Australia.
I spent around 15 years at Universities training before I felt ready to strike out on my own. This is not an unusual experience for some on this forum, but in the real world, it's unheard of.
So now that I have retired, I feel like Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange land".
I speak English fluently in 3 different accents but have lost almost all of the >8 different languages that my Father and Grandfather could speak.
I think this upbringing gives me a very different world view. Not better, but different.
So, bye and large I think we are mostly in agreement. I do not hate Americans as a whole - that would be racism. There are individual Americans I find pretty distasteful (see above for 6 examples), and sometimes I disagree with individual Americans that I otherwise like.
In the end, it has nothing to do with whether or not a person identifies themselves as "American" or Jewish or anything else.
I despise Stephen Miller for example. The fact that he is an American Jew has nothing to do with it.