I'm getting really sick and tired of the constant America-bashing on BBC News 24 and in "The Times." After listening to two Brit commentators on the BBC saying Britain should stop following the States on everything (and insulting Tony Blair), and reading countless insulting columns about Americans in the Times, I just sent the BBC this on their news comment link:
"This comes from an American living in Britain: Why is the British press so relentlessly anti-American? And why is the journalism so ridiculously biased here when it comes to reporting on the Israeli/Palestinian situation? (Israel always bombed someone--your big live update. Hours later, you'll briefly mention WHY. I'm not Jewish, but anti-Semitism still rings loud and clear in Europe--you'd think you people would have learned. And you WONDER why the U.S. backs Israel. I think history shows Europe sure as hell won't).
I don't agree with all U.S. policies, I don't like Bush, I think attacking Iraq would be rash, and I'm not a redneck, gun-toting American. But I DO have a journalism degree, regularly read the Washington Post and New York Times, and am stunned at the poor quality of journalism here. I dare the BBC to let an American regularly give an intelligent U.S. point of view on a news show. I'd be happy to volunteer. (You can't even get your facts straight about the States: For the record: Miami isn't the capital of the state of Florida: Tallahassee is. The state of Maryland isn't pronounced "Mary-land." (I could go on and on with the constant factual errors about the States that pop up on your news programs, but I'll spare you the embarrassment.)
The majority of Americans don't carry guns, aren't frothing at the mouth to put people to death, aren't any less educated than your typical git on the streets here (in fact, we spend four years at university, vs. your three, and it's not because we need that extra year to meet Brit standards), etc. I could go on and on, but I'll leave it at that. And given how the British press works, and how much more important it is to cover "serious" issues like Paul Burrell's relationship to the royal family, I doubt I'll get any intelligent reply. But I AM forwarding this to every American I know here, and every remotely intelligent Brit. The saddest part of it all is that Americans honestly admire Brits, a nation of xenophobic racists that hold not only the U.S., but every other country, in contempt, it would seem. How quickly the Brits (and the rest of Europe) have forgotten just which country saved their independence. Believe me, historical facts aren't lost on Americans... What ingrates."
Harsh, I know. But enough's enough.