Katrina, it's not that I don't like what I percieve as answers given to to how people feel about US spying on Germany. E.g. I have nothing against the answer at all which you sketch there. To me it's quite interesting to hear that USAmerican citizens apparently worry more about the NSA tapping into their private stuff than international politics. And I greatly appreciate answers to that or similar effect.
What seems quite interesting to me is the difference in mentality there. I'm quite sure that a lot of Germans would think that it is wrong for German intelligence agencies to spy on allied contries. It's not like the NSA merely spied on our goverment. We have a right to privacy over here as well and the Germans I know of are as indignated that the NSA seems to ignore that right in the US as they don't like that they're ignoring it here. In 'the German mind' they should respect the right to privacy in general, regardless of location. There seems to be a difference in mentality there between USAmericans and Germans that seems to me to explain why USAmericans don't seem to understand the outrage of the German side. And by the way, I don't think that we're morons because of that. It's not that we don't think that it does happen, but rather that it shouldn't happen. Maybe Germans see a more stark contrast between
what is and
what should be and also place more value on the latter than people in the US? Just as a thought to explain the differences in view, adding to the past in regard to spying as covered in the BBC news thingy I linked.
So, no problem with the answers in that regard, it's not that I expect USAmericans to care and am grumpy if they don't. Rather the answers in that regard were interesting in my opinion and gave me food for thought.
Thanks for that!
But then I get a bit agitated if people tell me I'm supposed to be thankful that the US is spying on the German government and me, because else the Europeans would slaughter one another. Maybe instead of reacting to those posts, I should've rather thanked the people that made all the other posts - which were in the majority in my eyes - that were enlightening on how you people see the issue I was interested to hear opinions about.
So, what I really take issue with was imho a trajectory off topic. Still, I want to say a few things to that off-topic trajectory.
As to my comment that the US had never to experience a real war on their own soil:
What I meant is that the US basically never had to experience foreign forces invading them in a ground war covering any area covering a substantial part of an average US member state.
The british burned Washington, but the War of 1812 was laregely confined to a) the Atlantic ocean, b) Canadian territories and the Great Lakes and c) the Gulf coast.There were inland raids along rivers, but those were aimed at cities along them and didn't take the form of foreign forces occupying any larger patches of land, afaik.
The American Civil War didn't see any foreign forces invade the US. Doesn't mean it wasn't bad, true. But it's different from foreign forces invading you in a ground war.
So, the only war that comes to my mind where US troops had to deal with foreign troops in a ground war covering large quantities of area is the American Revolutionary War and that wasn't foreign troops invading the US either, strictly speaking.
If I look at Europe, there have been a lot more wars with foreign forces invading in ground war even since the formation of the US.
Now, this is not to say that the US is any worse than the EU for that reason and in fact I think it's quite a good thing if one doesn't have frequently foreign forces invading nations in large scale gound war. Still, that Europe has a history of such stretching up to at least the generation of my grandparents lead to quite a different view on wars in Europe than the US and I think that part of why Europeans see war quite different from USAmericans.
So, the point I really want to make is: Europeans have a quite different history in regard to the wars they had to experience, how those were conducted in their contries, the area of their contries which was covered by those wars and thus how much they were effected by said wars from antiquity onwards to modern times. This goes hand in hand with the US being quite a young nation compared to European nations which have unbroken or broken histories stretching back into late antiquity.
This history translates to another way to deal with wars and that Europeans are more hesitant to project power through armed conflict than the US is quite a lot informed by that history and experiences and not so much - in my opinion - a loss of will to 'weigh in internationally'. For example the EU/its member states pour a lot more money into ODA then the US. If we had no will to weigh in internationally, I'm sure we wouldn't put that much money in there. Europe - and especially Germany just prefers other instruments than waging war.
And I'm quite sure that those are at least as conducive to peaceful Europe as the US threat of military intervention.