I Don’t Call Myself An American

I just saw a photo on Facebook: I’m not a Democrat. I’m not a Republican. I’m an American and I want my country back.


I was going to keep my mouth shut, but this American thing has been griping me for a long time. The following diatribe is not a political commentary but a semantical one. (I don’t want arguments, but I’m already getting one — I’m writing this on MSWord, and MS says there is no such word as semantical and there definitely is such a word.)


I have no politics, but I am a word lover, and I believe in using proper terms.


Everyone from the top of Canada to the tip of South America is an American. We who live in the United States are OF America. We are not America, nor are we the only Americans, though somewhere along the way, the term was usurped by people in this country for their sole use, perhaps because Unitedstatesian is awkward.


We were never supposed to be Unitedstatesians, anyway — we were supposed to be Coloradans and Minnesotans and Oregonians. Each state was to be a strong political entity, a sovereign territory loosely united under a weak central government. That is not how things have ended up and that is not the issue here (though anyone who has read my books knows how I feel about strong central governments). The point is that we in the United States are not Americans. Or rather, the United States is not “America.” We don’t even have our own continent. We share the North American Continent with Mexico, Canada, and Central America. In fact, in Europe (or so I’ve read), North America is not even considered a continent in its own right — it’s a subcontinent of America. So most Americans are not even “American.” Although the United States is the most populous of the American countries by far, most Americans are actually Peruvians and Canadians, Brazilians and Panamanians, Mexicans and Columbians.


I don’t call myself an American. The term is too general to have any meaning, and it is too ethnocentric. Despite what my fellow Unitedstatesians believe, The United States of America is not the center of the world, though geographically, it might be in the center of the American continent. But still, that is no reason to act as if we are the only Americans.


You say you’re an American and you want your country back? What country is that?



Tagged: Americans, continent of America, continents, North America, strong central government, Unitedstatesians, who are Americans
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Published on August 22, 2012 14:48
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message 1: by Irma (new)

Irma Fritz Bravo, Pat!
I love words too, and I do have politics. I'm a democrat. I believe our president has done a good job and I will vote to re-elect him. Not all my friends, or even all my relatives, believe as I do. This does not mean that we can't have a civil conversation, that we can't respect and love each other. I have not seen the posting you talk about on facebook, but I have seen others. Ugly ones! It's fine with me if someone wants to tell me about their believes so long as they want to hear about mine. I will not ridicule their heroes, and if they riducule mine, I have no trouble unfriending them. (I've done it!) Not as a political act because our believes differ, but a personal act because they have no manners.
What you say about being an American, hits home as well! We do that, don't we? Last week, my husband and I were vacating at Whistler in B.C. where we met some folks from Australia. We had a nice chat and, when we parted, one of them remarked how friendly we Canadians are. I responded that we were not Canadians, but friendly Americans. Later, I realized what I had said. My answer should have been that we are from the States (as Canadians like to say).
Although I'm a Unitedstatsian, I have lived in other countries. And I have relatives and friends in other countries. I enjoy conversing with people from all over the world, be this in person or through social media. I love living where I do. Still, sometimes we all need to be reminded that our world is not the center of the universe.
Good blog, Pat!


message 2: by Pat (new)

Pat Bertram Irma wrote: "Bravo, Pat!
I love words too, and I do have politics. I'm a democrat. I believe our president has done a good job and I will vote to re-elect him. Not all my friends, or even all my relatives, bel..."


Thank you, Irma. I don't usually vent my irritation on my blog, but for some reason, this "American" thing really got to me. I expected a lot of flak, so it's nice to know that people took the article in the spirit it was intended, a commentary on our connectedness.

How interesting that you've lived in other countries. I've never lived farther than 1000 miles from where I was born.


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