Hi Kelly,
I should not have highlighted the parts where you spoke about your heritage, sorry. I felt the other quotes were inaccurate or could have used further explanation.
I felt the first quote was inaccurate because to me, it sounded like we (the Americans) came here and threw out the British. To me, this is inaccurate because the US began as British colonies, so we were possessions of Britain and in fact were British.
What really set off the Revolution was taxation without representation, as demonstrated by the Boston Tea Party: Britain taxed the colonists, but the colonists had no representatives in the British Parliament in London. That’s like treating an adult like a child: Being told what to do, but having no say. Now that I think about it, it’s kind of like being under the control of an N: being told what to do, but having no voice to protest or being punished if you do protest the unfairness. Eventually, the colonists no longer accepted being told what to do by Britain and the revolution ensued.
Regarding the other quotes about “why do they hate us” and ‘big satan/little satan”, it bothered me to connect the hate & satan quotes with the quote about the origins of the USA. To me, they are not connected.
IMO, and the opinions of some scholars & pundits, to understand the Mid-East today, we need to look at and understand the map of the Mid-East pre & post World War I (WWI). Prior to WWI, the Ottoman Empire ruled the Mid-East and countries such as Iraq, Jordan and others did not exist (see maps of 1920 & 1880:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/globalconnections/mideast/maps/pol.html). After WWI, the British & French created new borders and to a large extent, much of the tension in the Mid East today is due to the borders created after WWI.
Sorry to meander, but history is important for understanding today. IMO, essentially, why they ‘hate’ us is due to a culture clash between East & West (ideas of a nation-state, democracy, free speech, division of church & state), the imposition of post-WWI borders, oil (discovered in Saudi Arabia the 1930s) & the now defunct Cold War, since Cold War politics were played out via proxy Mid-East nations. I’d add to this list the US notion/predicament of whether we should try to spread democracy throughout the world or whether we should not interfere with dictators. Sorry to get so technical, but IMO, it's not simple black & white.
Love,
ann