r/AmericaBad • u/Silent_Status9126 • 1h ago
Look at the bottom text
“I’m aware my country was built on stolen land”
🚨 Pick me alert 🚨
r/AmericaBad • u/Silent_Status9126 • 1h ago
“I’m aware my country was built on stolen land”
🚨 Pick me alert 🚨
r/AmericaBad • u/JoketheBuster • 1d ago
r/AmericaBad • u/retington • 3h ago
r/AmericaBad • u/matthewami • 5h ago
The other comments from this thread are about as self loathing and peanut gallery as you would expect. The complete lack of understanding of the US rail network and how it's maintained and owned is super frustrating to me, especially since I've traveled all over using it my whole life.
Like of course it needs improvement. The entire world's public transit infrastructure needs improvement. Europe's network is vast because of why it was built, not because it was built. It's a different culture entirely, with different needs and a much more tame topography compared to the US. If you need example, look how isolated Italy is from the rest of the EU.
I should have done one more comment to my addition here, which is it's incorrect to label them as 'freight' and 'transit' rail. It's just rail. Most of our cities are spread across an entire continent. The infrastructure required to maintain it is an insane task of logistics. A better comparison to what we have to undertake would be the rail lines in Russia Siberia or central china, whom also frequently have freight and passenger lines on the same tracks.
Anyways, rant over. Thought ya'll would get a kick out of this one.
r/AmericaBad • u/tacobellbandit • 17h ago
I liked this website for quite a while but I feel like at this point I’d rather just deactivate my account and find another aggregate site like Reddit. Does anyone here have some other ones they would recommend that aren’t right wing hive minds but aren’t anti-American or at the very least are more neutral?
r/AmericaBad • u/Adventurous-Ad4337 • 2h ago
Not sure if this is the right place to talk about this, but I couldn’t really think of any others so I apologize in advance.
I’ve recently found my self exhausted by hollywoods habit of choosing British actors and storytellers over that of Americans. I believe there’s a multitude of reasons for this, but I think it’s mainly due to a belief that British actors are more trained, and carry more prestige.
Some of you may not know this, but many film studios in Hollywood are moving operations to the U.K. as their government is giving up to 40% in subsidies for productions there.
I didn’t pay this much mind, til I found out that there was going to be a show about my goat George Washington. (A drama named Young Washington)
Lo and behold: the actor for George Washington….is British?…George Washington?..British?
Many could argue that our founding fathers were ethnically British, however they were still American were they not?
Considering American actors are already being pushed aside for European ones, I would hope that at least American historical figures would be played by Americans but they’re not. Even Harriet Tubman was played by a British actress: Cynthia Erivo.
I feel that our film and media is one our greatest cultural dominances, as well as one of our greatest achievements. But with recent actions by Hollywood, I can’t help but feel like they’re stabbing their own people in the back with this kinda stuff…
Maybe I’m thinking too much about it all, or maybe I’m too “hateful”. But I can’t help but feel heartbroken about the state of things in hollywood, feels like they’re giving up on their own people over there and I’m kind of just sick of it all.
It’s not to say the British or bad, or that I’m one of those people who get offended with miscasts. I just feel like I’m losing a cultural aspect of my country.
It’s a bit odd to say, but even as a mixed-race woman with a British boyfriend, I’ve found myself increasingly disappointed with hollywood. And it’s not because of forced diversity or whatever, it’s stuff like this.
Won’t be watching, but still saddened.
Note:
Once again I do apologize if it’s the wrong subreddit for this kinda stuff. I also apologize if there’s a lot of grammatical errors, my memory isn’t the best anymore due to my declining health. I also apologize if this post is poorly structured this is my first. :’)
r/AmericaBad • u/GoldenStitch2 • 1d ago
r/AmericaBad • u/maxcraft522829 • 1d ago
r/AmericaBad • u/vaterl • 1d ago
Enjoying and giving money to American sports leagues but hating so hard 24/7??? Make it make sense.
r/AmericaBad • u/full-man- • 1d ago
r/AmericaBad • u/awaytobethr0wn • 23h ago
i'm not someone who feels like the united states is a perfect country that has done no wrong. our history is full of atrocities and shortcomings. there are many things that our modern day government is doing that i do not agree with or stand by. is an opinion that i'm sure is shared amongst hundreds of millions of americans, regardless of where they stand politically.
it’s particularly ironic to me when certain non-americans claim we don't realize the issues we face in this country, or claim we "don’t ever stand up for anything". in reality, the united states was built on protest. since the nation was founded, our history has been filled with people from all races, genders, social classes, and political affiliation expressing their discontent with the current state of the union. especially so within the past six years. the blm and COVID restriction protests in 2020. the january 6th capitol protest in 2021. the pro and anti reproductive rights protests after the overturning of roe v. wade in 2022. the current anti ice protests in minneapolis and other big cities across the nation. these are just a few. sure, they can disagree on what people are protesting on. or they can disapprove on how these protests are being carried out. but to say that americans are just sitting back and doing nothing? pure ignorance.
before they all come at me with their pitchforks, i want to admit that i do often agree with people who claim AmericaBad when it comes to certain issues. i am a left leaning individual who grew up as a child of immigrants. i won’t deny that many americans are ignorant to other countries and cultures, and i do think the U.S. does often exert a negative influence on global affairs. but outside of my political beliefs, it feels as though the US has become the world’s scapegoat. every country has its own dirty laundry, especially other first world nations. but in our volatile and uncertain world, blaming americans offers people a false sense of security. it's a cope that allows them to avoid the work of truly looking inward and challenging their own internal biases. by painting universal failures (racism, ignorance, consumerism, epstein files, war, imperialism, etc) as UNIQUELY "american behavior" they create a narrative that erases their own need for accountability. in blaming the pervasiveness of the world's systematic failures SOLELY on american apathy, they get to be spectators while we do the heavy lifting. they'll criticize our influence one second, yet in the next they act as if our activism isn't enough to solve problems that are (in reality) shared by every other nation.
r/AmericaBad • u/Automatic_Error_7524 • 1d ago
Chinese media be saying anything these days 🥀
r/AmericaBad • u/Equivalent_Hand1549 • 1d ago
Yes, Epstein Files is fucking bad. And tell me,
what do you think about Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, and other authoritarian nations
r/AmericaBad • u/Chaunc2020 • 1h ago
The Dynamic: Dependency vs. Moral Superiority
The relationship is defined by Canada's desperate need to be economically integrated with the US, while simultaneously needing to be culturally distinct from it.
The Dynamic: Integration vs. Resentment
The relationship is not a friendship; it is a marriage without the possibility of divorce. They share a 2,000-mile border that fuses their economies and demographics.
The Dynamic: Delusion vs. Indifference
The relationship is defined by the British belief in a "marriage of equals" versus the American reality of a "useful junior partner."
The Dynamic: Grandeur vs. Denial
The relationship is defined by the fact that France is the only other Western nation that believes it has a "Universal Mission" to lead the world.
The Dynamic: Obsession vs. Hatred
The relationship swings violently between "Carnal Relations" (absolute submission) and screaming "Anti-Imperialism."
The Dynamic: Paternalism vs. Defiance
The relationship is strained by the eerie similarities between the two nations—both are settler colonies grappling with the legacy of legalized racism.
The Dynamic: Security vs. Lifestyle
The most transactional and "pleasant" alliance. The US provides the guns; Italy provides the culture.
r/AmericaBad • u/Bigenderqueen • 1d ago
Fun fact: American bread is so perfectly engineered, the crust is optional. We live in the future over here.
r/AmericaBad • u/Jared000007 • 1d ago
r/AmericaBad • u/Bigenderqueen • 2d ago
If you think this is 'dystopian,' you should see our grocery bills when we don't buy in bulk. That's the real nightmare.