BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
this thread will be the new twitter, and I am going to get paid phenomenal amounts for it - you just wait!
try to keep it short guys, we don't care THAT much
BubbleBobble's Current Status: 4/28/2009 11:17:07 PM |
BIGcementpon Status Name 11318 Posts user info edit post |
BIGcementpond's current status: FIRST] 4/28/2009 11:26:33 PM |
Mr. Joshua Swimfanfan 43948 Posts user info edit post |
GO FUCK YOURSELF 4/28/2009 11:26:52 PM |
BIGcementpon Status Name 11318 Posts user info edit post |
^San Diego? 4/28/2009 11:27:28 PM |
wdprice3 BinaryBuffonary 45912 Posts user info edit post |
some wonky shit going on
[Edited on April 28, 2009 at 11:28 PM. Reason : .] 4/28/2009 11:28:28 PM |
ambrosia1231 eeeeeeeeeevil 76471 Posts user info edit post |
\] 4/28/2009 11:28:51 PM |
j_sun All American 9198 Posts user info edit post |
i saw a ufo friday 4/28/2009 11:33:37 PM |
TreeTwista10 minisoldr 148250 Posts user info edit post |
quo 4/28/2009 11:34:10 PM |
fleetwud AmbitiousButRubbish 49741 Posts user info edit post |
some old Beatles lyric since mon madame is leaving the country till June 4/28/2009 11:48:44 PM |
nicklepickle All American 11693 Posts user info edit post |
^que vas a hacer?
and i hate twitter 4/28/2009 11:49:41 PM |
fleetwud AmbitiousButRubbish 49741 Posts user info edit post |
drink more, solution to anything 4/28/2009 11:59:18 PM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
4/29/2009 12:15:36 AM |
nicklepickle All American 11693 Posts user info edit post |
^^ que mal! tomando no es la respuesta correcta
hablas espanol? 4/29/2009 12:23:47 AM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
BubbleBobble's Current Status: nicklepickle is sexy 4/29/2009 12:25:51 AM |
fleetwud AmbitiousButRubbish 49741 Posts user info edit post |
No. Ich spreche kein Spanisch, aber Google uebersetzt fuer mich. Jetzt ich muss schlafen, wiel arbeit ist schwer bis Freitag. 4/29/2009 12:26:32 AM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
ca c'est magnifique LANGUAGES YOU ARE SPEAKING THERE
or something 4/29/2009 12:27:28 AM |
nicklepickle All American 11693 Posts user info edit post |
please no german unlinek you i dont have it in me to trnaslate using a translator
i was shocked atheat i could speakl spanish drunk 4/29/2009 12:29:01 AM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
haha
I love drunk typing 4/29/2009 12:29:43 AM |
GrumpyGOP yovo yovo bonsoir 18166 Posts user info edit post |
GrumpyGOP's current status: Sober(ish) 4/29/2009 12:30:00 AM |
fleetwud AmbitiousButRubbish 49741 Posts user info edit post |
mmmk zzzz 4/29/2009 12:30:27 AM |
nicklepickle All American 11693 Posts user info edit post |
creo que puedo hablar el espanol mas buena que el ingles despues de tomando cerveza 4/29/2009 12:32:14 AM |
fleetwud AmbitiousButRubbish 49741 Posts user info edit post |
QUE IN THE HELL WOMAN
4/29/2009 12:33:49 AM |
nicklepickle All American 11693 Posts user info edit post |
i think i am able to speak spanish better after drinking than english
because when i am sober and speaking spanish i get nervous about how horrible my spanish accent is
[Edited on April 29, 2009 at 12:37 AM. Reason : sfasdf] 4/29/2009 12:36:16 AM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
lololol @ the 420 embed
AND THATTT'S WHY POT IS BAAAAD!
I've heard all I need to make an informed decision, marijuana is hereby re-illegalized! 4/29/2009 12:37:13 AM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
BubbleBobble's Current Status: about to possibly 4/29/2009 5:41:47 PM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
POSTING CHAMPION 5/23/2009 4:51:32 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
[Edited on May 10, 2010 at 10:57 PM. Reason : http://content.ytmnd.com/content/f/c/5/fc59c50021b07ca6a92ea75546f99d5a.mp3]
5/23/2009 7:25:56 PM |
stevedude hello 4763 Posts user info edit post |
haha i kinda like the techno remix 5/23/2009 8:24:41 PM |
wawebste All American 19599 Posts user info edit post |
ALL AMERICAN!!!!!! 5/23/2009 8:40:30 PM |
Smath74 All American 93278 Posts user info edit post |
married filing jointly? 5/23/2009 8:51:17 PM |
Rockster All American 1597 Posts user info edit post |
toasted and posted 5/24/2009 1:11:03 AM |
wawebste All American 19599 Posts user info edit post |
POASTED 5/24/2009 1:12:36 AM |
punchmonk Double Entendre 22300 Posts user info edit post |
was "batshit she be" now it is "reeking shitshow" 5/10/2010 10:57:21 PM |
Sweden All American 12288 Posts user info edit post |
"all about that splash life" 5/10/2010 11:01:54 PM |
MitsuMtnASU All American 2346 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "00110000 00110001" |
5/10/2010 11:02:42 PM |
amac884 All American 25609 Posts user info edit post |
summer 88 was all intensity and heat. i saw the youth of today at the 7th street entry. there were skins in the pit and some of them tried to kill me. 5/10/2010 11:02:42 PM |
slingblade All American 12133 Posts user info edit post |
IOP1 5/10/2010 11:03:58 PM |
th3oretecht All American 15539 Posts user info edit post |
HONGRY 5/10/2010 11:04:46 PM |
bmel l3md 11149 Posts user info edit post |
5/10/2010 11:23:38 PM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
"all about that splash life" 5/12/2010 1:05:12 AM |
j_sun All American 9198 Posts user info edit post |
single 5/12/2010 1:17:56 AM |
Master_Yoda All American 3626 Posts user info edit post |
Happy. 5/12/2010 12:15:08 PM |
ncsuapex SpaceForRent 37776 Posts user info edit post |
ALL AMERICAN 5/12/2010 12:16:35 PM |
BubbleBobble :3 114243 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | ""all about that splash life"" |
7/25/2010 12:07:53 PM |
JayMCnasty All American 14180 Posts user info edit post |
from 4 am
Saw how the mighty current can rip away even the beachest of whales 7/25/2010 12:11:14 PM |
roguewarrior All American 10887 Posts user info edit post |
7/25/2010 5:19:10 PM |
billytalent Suspended 12909 Posts user info edit post |
AT NINE o'clock on the morning of September 11th 2001, President George Bush sat in an elementary school in Sarasota, Florida, listening to seven-year-olds read stories about goats. “Night fell on a different world,” he said of that day. And on a different America.
At first, America and the world seemed to change together. “We are all New Yorkers now,” ran an e-mail from Berlin that day, mirroring John F. Kennedy's declaration 40 years earlier, “Ich bin ein Berliner”, and predicting Le Monde's headline the next day, “Nous sommes tous Américains”. And America, for its part, seemed to become more like other countries. Al-Qaeda's strikes, the first on the country's mainland by a foreign enemy, stripped away something unique: its aura of invulnerability, its sense of itself as a place apart, “the city on a hill”.
Two days after the event, President George Bush senior predicted that, like Pearl Harbour, “so, too, should this most recent surprise attack erase the concept in some quarters that America can somehow go it alone.” Francis Fukuyama, a professor at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University, suggested that “America may become a more ordinary country in the sense of having concrete interests and real vulnerabilities, rather than thinking itself unilaterally able to define the nature of the world it lives in.”
Both men were thinking about foreign policy. But global terrorism changed America at home as well. Because it made national security more important, it enhanced the role of the president and the federal government. Twice as many Americans as in the 1990s now say that they are paying a lot of attention to national affairs, where they used to care more about business and local stories. Some observers noted “a return to seriousness”—and indeed frivolities do not dominate television news as they used to.
But America has not become “a more ordinary country”, either in foreign policy or in the domestic arena. Instead, this survey will argue that the attacks of 2001 have increased “American exceptionalism”—a phrase coined by Alexis de Tocqueville in the mid-19th century to describe America's profound differences from other nations. The features that the attacks brought to the surface were already there, but the Bush administration has amplified them. As a result, in the past two years the differences between America and other countries have become more pronounced.
Yet because America is not a homogeneous country—indeed, its heterogeneity is one of its most striking features—many of its people feel uneasy about manifestations of exceptionalism. Hence, as this survey will also argue, the revival and expansion of American exceptionalism will prove divisive at home. This division will define domestic politics for years to come.
Not all New Yorkers any more
From the outside, the best indication of American exceptionalism is military power. America spends more on defence than the next dozen countries combined. In the nearest approach to an explicit endorsement of exceptionalism in the public domain, the National Security Strategy of 2002 says America must ensure that its current military dominance—often described as the greatest since Rome's—is not even challenged, let alone surpassed.
In fact, military might is only a symptom of what makes America itself unusual. The country is exceptional in more profound ways. It is more strongly individualistic than Europe, more patriotic, more religious and culturally more conservative (see chart 1). Al-Qaeda's assaults stimulated two of these deeper characteristics. In the wake of the attacks, expressions of both love of country and love of God spiked. This did not necessarily mean Americans suddenly became more patriotic or religious. Rather, the spike was a reminder of what is important to them. It was like a bolt of lightning, briefly illuminating the landscape but not changing it.
The president seized on these manifestations of the American spirit. The day after he had defined America's enemies in his “axis of evil” speech, in January 2002, Mr Bush told an audience in Daytona Beach, Florida, about his country's “mission” in the world. “We're fighting for freedom, and civilisation and universal values.” That is one strand of American exceptionalism. America is the purest example of a nation founded upon universal values, such as democracy and human rights. It is a standard-bearer, an exemplar.
But the president went further, seeking to change America's culture and values in ways that would make the country still more distinctive. “We've got a great opportunity,” he said at Daytona. “As a result of evil, there's some amazing things that are taking place in America. People have begun to challenge the culture of the past that said, ‘If it feels good, do it'. This great nation has a chance to help change the culture.” He was appealing to old-fashioned virtues of personal responsibility, self-reliance and restraint, qualities associated with a strand of exceptionalism that says American values and institutions are different and America is exceptional in its essence, not just because it is a standard-bearer.
On this view, America is not exceptional because it is powerful; America is powerful because it is exceptional. And because what makes America different also keeps it rich and powerful, an administration that encourages American wealth and power will tend to encourage intrinsic exceptionalism. Walter Russell Mead of the Council on Foreign Relations dubs this impulse “American revivalism”. It is not an explicit ideology but a pattern of beliefs, attitudes and instincts.
The Bush administration displays “exceptionalist” characteristics to an unusual extent. It is more openly religious than any of its predecessors. Mr Bush has called Jesus his favourite philosopher. White House staff members arrange Bible study classes. The president's re-election team courts evangelical Protestant voters. The administration wants religious institutions to play a bigger role in social policy.
It also wears patriotism on its sleeve. That is not to say it is more patriotic than previous governments, but it flaunts this quality more openly, using images of the flag on every occasion and relishing America's military might to an unusual extent. More than any administration since Ronald Reagan's, this one is focused narrowly on America's national interest.
Related to this is a certain disdain for “old Europe” which goes beyond frustrations over policy. By education and background, this is an administration less influenced than usual by those bastions of transatlanticism, Ivy League universities. One-third of President Bush senior's first cabinet secretaries, and half of President Clinton's, had Ivy League degrees. But in the current cabinet the share is down to a quarter. For most members of this administration, who are mainly from the heartland and the American west (Texas especially), Europe seems far away. They have not studied there. They do not follow German novels or French films. Indeed, for many of them, Europe is in some ways unserious. Its armies are a joke. Its people work short hours. They wear sandals and make chocolate. Europe does not capture their imagination in the way that China, the Middle East and America itself do.
Mr Bush's own family embodies the shift away from Euro-centrism. His grandfather was a senator from Connecticut, an internationalist and a scion of Brown Brothers Harriman, bluest of blue-blooded Wall Street investment banks. His father epitomised the transatlantic generation. Despite his Yale education, he himself is most at home on his Texas ranch.
Looked at this way, the Bush administration's policies are not only responses to specific problems, or to demands made by interest groups. They reflect a certain way of looking at America and the world. They embody American exceptionalism. 7/25/2010 5:36:14 PM |