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Gringo.Floripa
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 17 June 2010 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 4534 |
![]() Posted: 24 January 2011 at 16:16 |
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I'm with Grantham, sort of. But you need to understand, when images are broadcast on television, around the world, of American forces invading other nations, of buildings exploding, and women and children being killed by these explosions (their deaths labeled by the sanitary term "collateral damage"), of atrocities committed at places like Abu Ghraib, etc, etc, there are no closed captions on the tv screen indicating who's Red and who's Blue, who voted for Bush, who didn't. True, not ALL Americans embrace, much less support the war, nonetheless, the war continues. Why??? You have a rude awakening coming to you my friend. The democracy you think you might have a participatory role in has essentially morphed into a well-crafted illusion. The powers-that-be learned from Vietnam, that the control of information, especially images, which have a much greater impact than words, is essential to keeping the public from rising up in effectual protest. Why do you think it was FORBIDDEN for the media to broadcast or publish photos of caskets returning with soldiers killed in Iraq?!? Images of "the enemy" being slaughtered are fine, it appeals to a base (ugly) human trait, but they dare not show your neighbor's son being shipped home in pine box. Moral indignation just might get up off the sofa, and DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT...! I'd like to recommend for you to read On Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau. Now to change the subject. How do you like your new school? What classes are you taking this semester? Edited by Gringo.Floripa - 24 January 2011 at 16:30 |
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I might bark, but I don't bite.
(trolls, sock puppets, Brasil-bashers, and "Joined:Today" persons too lazy to use the Search function excluded; cry babies too) |
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DUNGA
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 30 March 2006 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 5110 |
![]() Posted: 24 January 2011 at 19:06 |
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I think you guys are confusing what most people recognize as popular American culture, ie. music, fashion, food, entertainment with American foreign policy. Most of the world has a love hate relationship with American culture, the former, because it is somewhat overpowering and suffocating. Here in Brazil you have to dig under the current hybrid pop culture to find what's left of traditional Brazilian culture, and when you do it is often in the form of a tourist attraction, treated like an endangered species.
Ranting about American foreign policy is a political exercise popular all over the world, and in the US as well, as great numbers of people there do not support it. But on this forum about life in Brazil it just sounds like so much self-indulgence and auto-stimulation. |
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Gringo.Floripa
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 17 June 2010 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 4534 |
![]() Posted: 24 January 2011 at 19:34 |
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You're absolutely correct Dunga! Yet name me one forum topic on this site that does not get off track, sometimes, off on several diverse tangents at once. The recent comments about "Why the low self-esteem" have nothing to do with the subject. Yet since the original poster of this thread (Grantham) has headed in this direction, well.... But briefly back to the "auto-stimulation".... aiii, que gostoso! ![]() This time around, with the Internet (youtube, twitter, FB, blogs, etc) as a player in addition to the mainstream media, the boundaries between "pop culture" and foreign policy are VERY blurred. Personally, I consider Sarah Palin a (clownish) figure of pop culture. Yet she has some significant weight in politics. And God help us all if she one day has the position to decide foreign policy! Whether we like it or not, whether we are prepared for it, or not, it's a new world, or as some would like to coax us to, a new world order... (of?) Is it Pop or Politics? The distinction is often no longer able to be discerned. EDIT: Obama's pop-ularity was precisely because he tapped into pop culture. EDIT: Is this pop culture, or foreign policy? "The story of an Arabic extremist who is used as a pawn by the Russian ultra-nationalists and the Marines and SAS that try to save the world from nuclear annihilation" Modern Warfare So back to Brasil Dunga, do YOU think Brasilians suffer from low self-esteem? If so, why? If not, why? Edited by Gringo.Floripa - 24 January 2011 at 21:43 |
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I might bark, but I don't bite.
(trolls, sock puppets, Brasil-bashers, and "Joined:Today" persons too lazy to use the Search function excluded; cry babies too) |
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Esprit
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 28 January 2010 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 2370 |
![]() Posted: 24 January 2011 at 20:01 |
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One imagines that such low self-esteem might be limited to the educated and well travelled Brazilian who, paradoxically, should not feel that way. |
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Esprit
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Gringo.Floripa
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 17 June 2010 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 4534 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 06:51 |
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You might be quite right Esprit. In Jardims, or the Zona Sul, they're the top dog, the biggest fish in their sea. But when they arrive in say NYC, London, Paris, they realize there are not only lots of other big fish just like them, but fish MUCH BIGGER!
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Steven
Senior Member
Joined: 05 April 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 1109 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 08:47 |
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I disagree. I make the trip between SP and NYC pretty often and the big Brazilian fish who sit in the front of the airplane have no inferiority complex problems. These guys move and shake with the best of them. Fluency in the language makes all the difference.
One caveat - I have a cunhado who is very successful in SP but speaks very little English. I have to admit that he's a different man when he's in the U.S. Much more timid. Again, I think it's a language thing that affects us all when we are in another country.
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Esprit
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 28 January 2010 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 2370 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 09:07 |
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Lets not get carried away and concentrate on the top 1%, yet even if we do, I strongly suspect that this group have their moments of toe curling embarrassment when forced into a discussion about the severe contrast in Brazilian demographics, education, infrastructure and law & order. Imagine the embarrassment of a beautiful red rose growing out of a cow pat. |
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Esprit
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sven
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 14 March 2007 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 12777 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 09:34 |
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Wouldn't she grow much better due to the cow dung?
Back to the OP. We have to remember the OP is 18 and fresh out of diapers (high school). We all feel we are ready to change the world fresh out of highschool. Worse even fresh out of University. We feel we're ready to change the world. Some of us will start to work for Amnesty or Greenpeace, others move to brasil and yet others will follow the dream of the white picket fence house in the burbs with 2.3 kids. At some time in our lives, most of us (those that aren't Donald Trumps, Eike Battistas, Osamas or Obamas) realize that all those ideals are bogus and we can't change anything. Hell, even our vote gets lost in the hundereds of thousands of others and doesn't really affect things. Governments come and go, but almost nothing really changes. Most Brazilians come to this conclusion much sooner than other westerners. In western countries things happen more "hidden" than in Brazil where sh*t happens "in your face". It's not low self esteem, it's just that they learned quicker than we. |
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We live in an age when unnecessary things are our only necessities.
~Oscar Wilde |
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sven
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 14 March 2007 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 12777 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 09:37 |
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It had children and is now a family of countries
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We live in an age when unnecessary things are our only necessities.
~Oscar Wilde |
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sven
Gringoes.com Guru
Joined: 14 March 2007 Location: Brazil Online Status: Offline Posts: 12777 |
![]() Posted: 25 January 2011 at 09:40 |
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We live in an age when unnecessary things are our only necessities.
~Oscar Wilde |
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