Why is that? Because Americans are brainwashed from the day they're born into some kind of pathological patriotism (like, for example, making children sing the pledge of allegiance every day in school, something only totalitarian societies require of their children) that makes them afraid of speaking their conscience and mind.
Despite stated principles of liberty and democracy, Americans don't even realize they live in a totalitarian Gulag of intellectual conformity. America is in a way not a city on a hill, as is often claimed, but more like a village of indentured peasants who live in clusters of mutually hostile neighborhoods and who hate all the other villages around them.
I've known self-declared left-wing, anti-Trump, liberal Americans who would say to an immigrant to "go back if they don't like it here" when said immigrant dares express a criticism. It's OK for an American to say they hate other Americans, but it is not OK for an immigrant to say the same thing. I think growing up in America involves getting a deep scar of xenophobia and perceived superiority over other people with such fantasies as freedoms that are unequaled, a granite-strong democracy, and other genocidal ideas like Manifest Destiny, the destruction of native nations and the acquisition by force of new territories. I think Americans have inherited English racism and colonialism to the bone. After all, the American revolution, though dressed up in sublime ideals, is no more than the refusal by English subjects to pay taxes to their English King. It's always about money in America and the worship of wealth whose contemporary symptom is none else but Trump.
In reality, the liberties that Americans think they have are very relative and do not rise to the level of a truly free people: Any feeling of freedom is tainted with built-in arrogance against other cultures and peoples. Which is why Americans, by and large, including the liberal ones, tolerate what Trump is doing to their country. They will stand up to Trump on gasoline and groceries, but the vast majority couldn't care less for the persecution of people, including Americans, with dark skin.
As an American who occasionally flew back to the old country, I'd be anxious landing at the airport, what with all the received perceptions and stereotypes engrained in me by the American media and culture. Then, upon returning home to the US, I felt a sense of relief, knowing that at least the system protected me. Now, suddenly, in the Trump era, I am discovering it was all fake. It is America that feels unsafe and dangerous; the system is broken; there is fear and anxiety everywhere. I now feel dread returning to the US while I feel a sense of relief upon traveling overseas. Strangely enough, I feel more free, less chained there than I am in the US. The world has become the mythical America, and America has become the Gulag. Like Belgian singer Jacques Brel said despondently in one of his songs, "Il n'y a plus d'Amérique" [The American myth no longer exists]. Trump has exposed the fallacies of a New World where, we were brainwashed to believe, one could escape the injustices of a world run by despots, tyrants, potentates, kings and dictators.
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Non-Americans Are Sharing Their Thoughts On Americans Who Don't Support Trump
Haein Jung
Tue, March 24, 2026
To put it mildly, US politics has become quite the global fodder these days. It might even be a cause for apology to the rest of the world. In r/greenland, a Redditor shared their views on how some Americans have been pleading their mea culpas on behalf of the president, his antics and threats, and the global citizens have had it. Unfortunately, even for those whose views don't align with the current administration, the rest of the world might as well still see us as the same. It makes you wonder... are the criticisms valid, or harsh? Here's what people said:
1. "Trump is not the disease, rather the symptom."
2. "Americans are figuring it out the hard way: 'Not all men, but enough men' applies to international politics, too. We know not everyone supported this, but enough did."
—Mechakoopa
3. "For some reason, there is this idea that Trump is some kind of isolated phenomenon. He is not. He is the leader of a strong ideology with 100 million supporters. Without those 100 million Americans (and another 100 million passive more), he is powerless. So yeah, it is not one single American — it’s Americans."

Andrew Thomas / Getty Images
4. "The worst part is that it was all televised and broadcast on every social media platform that exists! When someone shows you they're a piece of ****, believe them! It truly makes you wonder whether the misinformation in the US is worse than we think and actually worrisome. Nobody should have been blindsided by the actions of the felonious fool running the joint; he's basically doing exactly what he said he was going to, but why didn't ENOUGH people listen?"
5. "I’ve said it before and will say it again. The world, and especially Greenland, would like to see fewer apologies from individual Americans and more posts like, 'I’m American, and I’m doing these three things to prevent Trump from acquiring Greenland.'"
6. "How many American protests have been held specifically opposing Trump's threats to take over Canada? I count zero. That makes every American complicit as far as this Canadian is concerned."
—outremonty
7. "Also Canadian. I also understand that you’re individuals, and I know how hard it must be for you to live in such a place at this very moment, but we have to see your country as an entity. I live right on the border, near Duluth, and the Americans that come up here, it’s so hard to know which ones are actually wanting to be nice or not. It’s nothing against you as individuals."
—enableclutch
8. "The most infuriating part is that the other 200 million 'sane ones' are just sitting there, clenching their fists in their pockets, and begging for someone else to come save them from the 100 million idiots because they're powerless to do anything about it. From a European perspective, my view of Americans in general is that they've grown spineless. They have none of the fighting spirit left that was exhibited by The Greatest Generation. Americans don't have any fight left in them."
9. "Right on. Where are the Democrats and their leaders? They need to get loud and in their opponents' faces every minute of every day. Where are your mass protests and general strikes? What about petitions or protesting the offices of elected officials, especially those of vile Republicans? What about internal product boycotts, not paying taxes, and withdrawing from organizations that support the current administration? Voting seems to be a failed exercise in your country — vote for God’s sake. Where are the 'I'm mad as hell and not going to take it anymore' rants? Why does the rest of the world have to clean up your ****? We have had it — a note from another frozen place."
10. "Sometimes I feel like in New Zealand, we're the little sister that just toddles along, aware of the drama but just doing our own thing. I hope that our country has been scared enough to vote our current government out. But even our right-wing parties are super left compared to America."
—Pale-Attorney7474
11. "Americans are not even willing to close their Facebook or X accounts to stop being subjects of propaganda. They could be hurting the oligarchs where it hurt$, but buying **** from Amazon is more important than democracy. They could be dropping their Tesla investments, they could be cancelling streaming services, and stop buying iPhones, they could be putting their money where their mouth is, but it is inconvenient, so they will not even do those basic actions."

Nurphoto / Getty Images
12. "Decadence will do that to a population."
—Blacksmith_Several
13. "I understand that Americans feel like apologizing on behalf of their country because of this Orange idiot, but right now I think it doesn't help because of how we in Europe, and especially the people in the Northern countries, feel threatened. I don't hold a grudge or hate against those who didn't vote for him. I hate those who voted for him and those who didn't vote at all. What you can do is remember to vote in the midterm elections, maybe it will get a little better. But the relationship Europe has with the US now, it could be generations before it gets better again. Just look at how long it took for Germany after World War II."
—deleted
14. "Dutchie here — I feel skeptical towards posts that try to sow division, and I don't agree. Everyone who is not blind knows that a lot of Americans know that what is happening is not ok. A lot of them do protest even though they often feel just as powerless as the rest of us. This could happen to any country. And unfortunately, eventually it probably will, because encouraging xenophobia and influencing a certain group of people through (social) media has proven to be very effective and profitable for the billionaires without ethics."
15. "As a Chinese American, I never thought I’d see the day that I’d rather tell foreigners that I’m Chinese instead of American."
—DiskBusiness7212
16. "What’s frustrating is that for decades, people have pointed out flaws in the US system, and yet the US arrogantly preached how only they were truly free and democratic. The excessive patriotism, with traditions like flags on many homes, is a breeding ground for fascism. This has been a long time coming, and it won't be fixed easily. I just hope the US doesn’t take the rest of us down with them."
—britjumper
17. And finally, "Correct. Let me be clear: I appreciate that there are Americans who are genuinely ashamed. It takes courage to come here and admit culpability. It must feel terrible to watch a government you didn't want turn your country into a global pariah. I feel sympathy for that. I would argue that it does help a little to know you're out there and on our side. Here's the problem: the rest of the world has been watching your country dominate in every way you can find. Our cultures are being suppressed by yours. Even more or less rational Americans will stand there and chant 'USA!' over and over again, saying it's the best country in the world. You're all participants in a diseased and broken system that allowed this to happen. It's an inevitable outcome."