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The Delusion Behind “America Is the Greatest Country on Earth” A deep dive into the question: If America is so great, why

Why do you always have a chip on your shoulder? That is how your posts come off. Be well.
I agree with this. I tried to read some of you posts but most are locked to pay to read it. Do many people pay to read an article? Anything I want to read is online free. I don't understand but I hope you are making money.

I don't know why you seem agitated. For leaving the US to be happier it doesn't seem like you are happy.
 
Jerry believed that America is the source of all evil and leaving the USA would deliver him to the world of honey and chocolate unfortunately reality dealt a painful blow
I know a lot of people that think America is evil or politicians. And sure our politicians are disgusting. But the more I look around the world it is worse in almost every country I see. Argentina for example I had high hopes for Milei and he does seem to be doing some good. But the more I read and talk to people I know in Argentina he just seems like he is doing the same of other presidents that have stolen. In fact, the evidence seems more clear cut with him. I just saw that about his sister stealing from the social program that is supposed to help the poor. How can anyone else trust anything else after these things?
 
Actually, forums like this are kind of a Rorschach test which says A LOT more about the reader than the writer. So there's that.
☝️That☝️is the meaning of "delusional." Thinking “America Is the Greatest Country on Earth” is just an opinion. If opinions like that, which have no bearing in your life, triggers you so much... You're lucky to be in a country with the most psychologists per capita.
 
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That☝️is the meaning of "delusional." Thinking “America Is the Greatest Country on Earth” is just an opinion. If opinions like that, which have no bearing in your life, triggers you so much... You're lucky to be in a country with the most psychologists per capita.
You've left the country. You live somewhere else now. America is getting along fine without your physical presence, and yet here you are — absolutely vibrating with patriotic indignation on a different continent, and in a different time zone.
 
You've left the country. You live somewhere else now. America is getting along fine without your physical presence, and yet here you are — absolutely vibrating with patriotic indignation on a different continent, and in a different time zone.
☝️That☝️is the meaning of "hypocrisy." Unfortunately, no amount of therapy sessions can cure hypocrisy.
 
You've left the country. You live somewhere else now. America is getting along fine without your physical presence, and yet here you are — absolutely vibrating with patriotic indignation on a different continent, and in a different time zone.
"If opinions like that, which have no bearing in your life, triggers you so much... You're lucky to be in a country with the most psychologists per capita."

And yet, YOU are the one vibrating about how 'great' America is from another country. You're right. I hope you find an appointment with a psychologist.
 
And yet, YOU are the one vibrating about how 'great' America is from another country...

Can you provide any evidence that supports your opinion that I am "vibrating about how 'great' America is from another country"? If you cannot, that would mean you of one of those people you have a strong dislike for. 👇

My strong dislike for people who cannot support their opinion with evidence...
 
Yes. Just re-read your earlier posts in this thread. It really isn't so hard, especially for a rocket scientist such as yourself.
In this thread, I didn't make a single statement about my personal opinion about America, where I am from, or where I am now. Therefore, it seems like when you said "you", you actually meant everyone else and not me specifically... That explains a lot. Feeling like it's you against the whole world and a strong dislike of yourself,
 
Great article! Just too bad others won't take the time to read it.

Fortune reports net migration in the US has actually turned negative — more people are leaving than arriving — for the first time since the Great Depression. This isn't a fringe movement anymore. It's a trend.


The Economist just put into words what brought me to Buenos Aires


I've been living in Argentina for a while now, and I still get asked the same question by locals: "But why would you leave America?" I used to fumble through the answer. Now I just send them this Economist article.


For me it wasn't one single thing. It was an accumulation. The political polarization, the feeling that there's no middle ground, the endless debates that seem to generate nothing but exhaustion and division — at some point I just got tired of it. Jessica Cellura, a teacher from North Carolina who also left, described it perfectly: "I feel like the America as we knew it growing up is slipping away pretty fast." That sentence hit me hard because it's exactly how I felt sitting in my apartment back home, scrolling through the news every morning wondering what had broken overnight.


In the first quarter of 2025 alone, departures of US citizens were 102% higher than the same period the year before. We are not a handful of eccentrics. We are a wave.


And here's the part that genuinely humbles me since moving to Argentina: one global mobility report pointed out that Americans are now "catching up to their Latin American counterparts, who have long suffered the consequences of societal instability and traditionally recognized the value of having an exit option." I read that and felt a little embarrassed, honestly. Argentines have been navigating political chaos, economic crises, and institutional collapse for decades — and doing so with a resilience and dark humor that I find remarkable. I showed up here running away from uncertainty. Most people here were born into it and built a life anyway.


That's been the unexpected lesson of living in Buenos Aires: the US does not have a monopoly on a good life. Not even close. The food, the culture, the sense of community, the pace — things I didn't even know I was missing. Yes, the economy here is complicated and inflation is no joke. But I wake up without that constant low-grade dread I carried around for years back home.


I'm not saying Argentina is perfect or that I've got it all figured out. But for the first time in a long time, I feel like I made a decision for my life rather than just reacting to the news cycle.


To anyone back in the States still on the fence: the article is worth reading. And if you find yourself nodding along — maybe that nod means something.
 
Great article! Just too bad others won't take the time to read it.
Read it long before you did.

For me it wasn't one single thing. It was an accumulation. The political polarization, the feeling that there's no middle ground, the endless debates that seem to generate nothing but exhaustion and division — at some point I just got tired of it.
So you moved to Argentina??

And here's the part that genuinely humbles me since moving to Argentina: one global mobility report pointed out that Americans are now "catching up to their Latin American counterparts, who have long suffered the consequences of societal instability and traditionally recognized the value of having an exit option." I read that and felt a little embarrassed, honestly. Argentines have been navigating political chaos, economic crises, and institutional collapse for decades — and doing so with a resilience and dark humor that I find remarkable. I showed up here running away from uncertainty. Most people here were born into it and built a life anyway.
You were repelled by the occasional volatility of US politics, yet somehow feel completely at home amidst Argentina's chaos and insanity? What the hell kind of argument is that.

That's been the unexpected lesson of living in Buenos Aires: the US does not have a monopoly on a good life. Not even close. The food, the culture, the sense of community, the pace — things I didn't even know I was missing. Yes, the economy here is complicated and inflation is no joke.
You can live a good life in many many countries around the world, by itself that says nothing.

But I wake up without that constant low-grade dread I carried around for years back home.
You should try to disregard your instincts. US GDP per capita has doubled since you left while Argentina's is not only flat but has been absurdly chaotic.
 
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