"For the first time in a long time, it's cool to be an American."
No, that's not First Lady-in-waiting Michelle Obama, although it sounds a lot like her infamous comment from the 2008 Democratic primary campaign. It's American expatriate Kit Maloney, as quoted by London-based Washington Post foreign service staffer Mary Jordan at the end of her January 16 article, "Americans, Feeling the Love."
Sharing some credit with a total of nine additional Post contributors based in London and seven other foreign capitals, Jordan's 27-paragraph story relayed the stories of Americans sharing their tales of low-grade persecution by anti-Bush, anti-American Europeans.
Rather than question the incivility or poor etiquette of said snooty Europeans towards Americans working in their countries, Jordan painted Europeans and Americans living abroad as uniformly breathing a welcoming sigh of relief at Barack Obama's inauguration next Tuesday.
"Finally! I'm tired of pretending I'm Canadian," exulted Californian Micha Wyatt, who "is basking in the new warmth toward Americans overseas." "There is a buzz about America now," Wyatt -- a San Franciscan whom Jordan insisted "does not align herself with any party but comes from a Republican family" -- added.
In addition to the Republican-by-family-affiliation Wyatt, Jordan noted a McCain supporter saying that his Russian clients "think we're more enlightened now."
"The people I work with give me high-fives and say things like 'You can be proud to be from your country again,'" Jordan quoted New York teacher Jennifer Granger, who lives in Prague.
Okay, we get it. Many Europeans strongly disagree with the Iraq war and other Bush policies. But Americans are well known for our patriotism regardless of the party in power.
For example, I doubt many Republicans living overseas in 1998 were really ashamed to be Americans due to President Clinton's disgraceful conduct in the Lewinsky Affair. Yet Jordan failed to find a single American expatriate to insist that he or she was and always will be proud to be an American regardless of what their European colleagues think, even though Maloney practically hinted at one such reason. America's political scene is much more diverse and post-racial than Europeans see theirs:
Kit Maloney, a Boston native who for the past eight years has lived on and off in London, said strangers have begun to quiz her on all aspects of American life and on how a country could elect a black liberal intellectual, something people tell her they can't imagine happening in Britain any time soon.
"For the first time in a long time, it's cool to be an American," she said.
—Ken Shepherd is Managing Editor of NewsBusters




















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You may purchase unusable
January 16, 2009 - 15:13 ET by mattmYou may purchase unusable Democrat bumper-stickers here.
Russians think we are more enlightened....
January 16, 2009 - 20:36 ET by bpjamBoy, that's rich. A country which is rapidly heading back into a violent thugocracy has an opinion about our enlightenment???
Whatever the russian word for chutzpah is (insert here).
These POS
January 16, 2009 - 15:15 ET by RD Kingaren't now or ever been American's.
There is one simple
January 16, 2009 - 15:40 ET by Hunter12There is one simple response to any European who is not German who wants to be rude to an American, if it's just because they are an American: "Hey ___head, if it wasn't for my dad or grandpa, you'd be speaking German right now." Not too good of come-back in Germany. Try, "My dad kicked your dad's butt." Chances are in Germany or most of the rest of Europe, the people who choose to be rude are those thirty- to sixty-somethings that want to blame the US for the failure of their attempts at socialism to provide a sustainable lifestyle in their countries of birth. The young and the old love America. Hell, in France they've had to pass laws to preserve their culture because Western influences and Muslim emmigrants are pushing it aside. However, one reason why theses expats might get rude treatment could be that they put the Ugly in their presentation of being American. And also, I'm not too bent out of shape to be disliked by some simpering foreign faggot (apologies to my gay friends).
"An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last." - Sir Winston Churchill
This sure makes you think.
January 16, 2009 - 15:55 ET by NC CopWar is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself. John Stuart Mill English economist & philosopher (1806 - 1873)
Well, according to this quote, there are A LOT of miserable creatures in this country.
"O" Dumbo
January 16, 2009 - 15:57 ET by rick007Since he's been elected I am thinking of becoming an Expat. LOL
I have never, ever
January 16, 2009 - 16:47 ET by MOONSTRUCKNOT been proud to be an American. Not once. Never.
However, if things keep going the way they are in our country, it will (has) changed my beliefs in the people of this country. I live in such a messed up, global warmed place that feels al freakin' franken is senate material, bailouts, major unqualified barry elected potus, (the list is endless) WTH is going on in OUR country? I am stunned and saddened. I pray we have not reached the point of no return, but my gut sez it's happened.
It's depressing.
Here is in Tokyo my
January 16, 2009 - 18:37 ET by SlicksterHere is in Tokyo my Japanese friends are mourning the destruction of America with obama as president. But then what would they know living so close to the reality of red china and north korea?
Not so where I am
January 16, 2009 - 21:04 ET by SilentWatcherAll over this vast land, when folks find out I'm American, they burble on about "O-B-A-M-A" and how they expect America to be better. He's a "great leader" they chirp. My answer usually shocks them into silence.
Mourning in the land of the Rising Sun
January 16, 2009 - 21:06 ET by nkviking75I'm guessing the Japanese are mourning the imminent weakening of one of their major markets due to Democrat ignornace and incompetence in economic policy.
Welcome to the era of unity, you racist!
I am an expat in Asia. The
January 16, 2009 - 21:00 ET by SilentWatcherI am an expat in Asia. The flag is prominent in my quarters. Criticism of America is off-the-table with the Asians with whom I discuss things ... unless they want to hear my stinging criticism of their country. They usually don't. America is my country, right or wrong, and I'm not going to leave her shores and apologize to some unreflecting dingbat about anything she does. My criticisms of America and President Bush are mine to be shared with my fellow Americans. If you're not American, criticize at your own risk.
When it comes to Obama as POTUS, I'll ride out the wave in silence.
Exactly how many people
January 17, 2009 - 02:22 ET by RR GOPExactly how many people have to be killed by these Muslim terrorists before they get it? If ever?
How much aggession and for how long will they endure the constant bullying and looming threat dangling over their heads of Moscow or Red China or North Korea or Iran as the case may be before they tire of it?
How long before they come running to us for help, and how long after that before they riot and yell "Yankee go home"?
How long will they tolerate the U.N.'s corruption, Leftist appeasement and ineptitude as something good?
We over here should know better. Unlike them, we (once upon a time anyway) know what Freedom and Liberty is supposed to look like. They don't. These foreigners are stuck socially, politically and economically in the Middle Ages complete with the local warlord or burgermeister who they naturally cow-tow to, but all the while bragging about how 'progressive' they are.
What is our excuse?
One of the 24% who thinks George W. Bush was a great President. One of the 89% who wants to bring back the stock and pillory.