Monday, July 18, 2016
The 11 Greatest Musical Moments in Disney History
With Moana coming out in the next few months, Disney is stepping up its music game by inviting Lin-Manuel Miranda to contribute to the soundtrack. And judging by the man’s track record, it will be phenomenal music that will accompany a hopefully entertaining movie. With Zootopia being a spectacular film, and previous films winning Oscars and breaking records, I’m not worried at all about this upcoming flick. And let’s not forget: The Rock improves nearly everything he is in (Couldn’t save Doom though…)
So, I am going to take a look back and bring out what I believe are the 11 best musical moments in the history of Disney. And this isn’t just about the song, it’s about the way the sequence was filmed and directed and how well it ties to the rest of the movie---as well as how deep it digs into your conscience. So yes, a variety of your favorites will be left out, for there are too many great music moments in Disney; the history is quite deep.
Before we start the list, honorable mentions:
1) The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh’s “Winnie the Pooh” (Beautiful opening sequence that immediately sets the harmless and charming tone of the movie)
2) Tarzan’s “Strangers Like Me” (Best scene of the movie, which shows Tarzan’s growing intelligence, growing curiosity, slow and sad separation from the gorillas, and subtle rising affection for Jane----all in a couple minutes)
3) Nightmare Before Christmas “Jack’s Lament” (Soundtrack is far, far, far stronger than the movie, but Jack revealing his personal demons in front of a lit sky is a nice sequence)
4) Lion King’s “Circle of Life” (Because I have to…)
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#11:
Song: I’ll Make a Man Out of You
Movie: Mulan
Hercules had a training montage, but Mulan ups it with a superior song and far superior scene. Mulan and the boys have to be whipped into shape before heading out to war, and Li Shang was having none of it. He takes off his shirt, and shows off how awesome they can be within the first couple lyrics. And it looks bad, in the midst of his clamoring that he will improve them. At one point Mulan is kicked out, but she proves that despite gender, she can still be just as brave, just as strong as the best soldiers out there. By the end of the song they are motivated, and we as viewers are just as moved and motivated.
#10:
Song: Friends on the Other Side
Movie: Princess and the Frog
This definitely isn’t as recognized or as memorable or as loved as other Disney classics, but contains one of the best villain entrances in the history of film. Immediately takes over the movie with his swagger and what winds up becoming the best song in the film. The color palate changes, the music gets eerie, and the dark side of New Orleans comes into play with trickery, voodoo, witchcraft, and curses galore. Dr. Facilier winds up being the best character in the movie with his wordplay, delivery, and energetic presence---and his song is the definitive evidence as to why.
#9:
Song: Bella Notte
Movie: Lady and the Tramp
Alright, the love montage is a very clichéd and very cheesy concept----but way back in the 50s you just didn’t see it as often. Lady and the Tramp, already a very charming movie, delivers one of the most popular kisses in cinema, and then follows it up with a nice romantic song as you see the lead dogs frolic in multiple locations through the course of the beautiful night. Animation is gorgeous, the pacing is relaxed, and you just can’t find a flaw within the 3 minutes of Bella Notte. This would become the modern template for a romantic scene.
#8:
Song: Belle
Movie: Beauty and the Beast
This is how you start a movie. Immediately displaying Belle’s character and mannerisms, as well as her unique placement in the small town, Belle is arguably my all-time favorite opening song to any movie. We get to see the fun cast of villagers, see Belle in her bookworm ways, and immediately get introduced to the egotistical and narcissistic Gaston----who winds up becoming the lead villain in the second half. The song is spotless, and showcases why we are watching more than a film, but something seemingly straight out of the best of Broadway.
#7:
Song: When Somebody Loved Me
Movie: Toy Story 2
Pixar is known for heartbreak, utter disastrous heartbreak. But the first time we were truly emotionally disintegrated was Jessie’s montage about her history with Emily----which ended with her being abandoned in a box. Thanks to Hall of Fame Tearjerker Sarah McLachlan, the song is perfect, the transition from being best friend to footnote feels all too real, and Toy Story 2 emerges from kids movie to a film that touches every viewer regardless of age. It spoke layers about the themes of the film itself, all in a couple of minutes. It’s a beautiful sequence, despite the tragedy.
#6:
Song: Friend Like Me
Movie: Aladdin
I could have picked the beautiful Whole New World, but no, the best scene in Aladdin has got to be the appearance of the Genie. Robin Williams would change the film industry forever by applying a gallon of energy into his performance and into the movie itself. Friend Like Me feels like it was written for Williams, and the zany song brings out the best animated sequence in Aladdin, as its speedy, creative, and sometimes outwardly abstract. Aladdin was already very entertaining before the halfway point, and once the Genie was thrown into the picture you couldn’t predict how the rest of it is going to go. Friend Like Me wasn’t just a great song in a great scene, it would launch Aladdin in an entirely new direction and a higher stratosphere of quality.
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#5:
Song: Feed the Birds
Movie: Mary Poppins
Religion is hardly discussed in Disney movies, but Mary Poppins wasn’t your typical Disney flick. Feed the Birds is Disney’s first true jump into religious imagery and combine that with a hauntingly beautiful Julie Andrews performance and you have a scene that stands out not only in Disney, but in cinema history. The importance of the scene meanders through the rest of Mary Poppins, and the soul of the entire company was represented in those three minutes. Mary Poppins was a generally happy film, but took some time off to deliver a powerful message about charity and being good to everyone—which is quintessential Disney.
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#4:
Song: Let it Go
Movie: Frozen
Truth: Let it Go would never have been such a big song is the sequence hadn’t been so visually stimulating. The song is phenomenal (I know, overplayed and probably ruined by 21st century Disney marketing), but the scene where she lets go of her fears and starts using her powers is simply, quiet powerful. As the song intensifies, the castle starts forming around her in an impressive long take and brings Disney back to 90s level Broadway aesthetics. It was right here when Disney shed its dependence on Pixar and started rediscovering its voice in the animation industry. Let it Go was the beginning of Disney’s rise towards the top of the animation world, sharing it with once-unbeatable Pixar. And, hands-down the best scene in the movie. And yes, Frozen is better than Tangled.
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#3:
Song: Hellfire
Movie: Hunchback of Notre Dame
Hellfire is hands-down the greatest villain song in Disney’s entire history. Hellfire is Frollo going up to God and engaging in an inner struggle of Biblical proportions, and of course ends with him declaring war or anything that stands in his path as he tries to find Esmeralda. This song is toned down (literally) to avoid the PG rating (box office poison back in the day), as the crazy mix of imagery, harsh lyrics, intense religious themes was not only too much for kids, but even adults were struggling back when it first came out. Frollo came into the scene as a simple foil to Quasimodo, and left the scene as a frighteningly powerful villain. Dark, gritty, masterful, and Tony Jay is absolutely perfect as Frollo verbally and when he sings. Best scene in Hunchback, and if the movie had stayed in this course we would have seen a much better movie.
#2:
Song: Married Life
Movie: Up
The opening 10 minutes of Up will stand as some of the best, strongest, most beautiful, and most heartbreaking filmmaking you’ll ever see animated or not. But it wouldn’t be complete, it wouldn’t fully work or fully be engraved in Disney history without the beautiful instrumental piece that accompanies it. The backend 4 minutes didn’t use a single line of dialogue, yet told everything you needed to know about the characters through music and images. This is peak Pixar, as to this day 7 years later we have yet to see a Pixar film quite as good as Up, and its partially because they haven’t developed a score as memorable as Michael Giacchino’s masterful work here. Not a lyric or word required, just pure cinematic magic. And it hits so close to home, its hard to watch with dry eyes.
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#1:
Song: Be Our Guest
Movie: Beauty and the Beast
Welcome to the Renaissance. Little Mermaid was the jump-starter, but Be Our Guest is the defining moment which sent Disney from a great animation studio into a powerhouse factory of artistic filmmaking. This was the moment when you realized Disney just wasn’t making a comeback, but was here to stay. Be Our Guest is the best number in the movie, the most fun part of the movie, and visually the most creative and impressive. Combine that with great vocals, tons of Broadway energy, humor, and a level of glee you just don’t find in regular movies, and this adds up to the best musical sequence ever made by Disney. There is no other answer, this scene represents the Disney Renaissance, the Modern-Day Disney in general.
Friday, July 15, 2016
Bernie's Last Stand
Welcome to the fire of 2016.
We are witnessing a very violent era, as mistakes of the past and the present has led to widespread chaos that has resulted in far more lost lives than we could have ever imagined when the New Year rang in. We’ve seen the top tourist spot in America get attacked, we see cops and Black citizens butting heads and exchanging gunfire, we see more mass shootings in the United States than ever before, we see France once again get pummeled with bad news, and let’s not forget the oft-forgotten horrors of the Mexican Drug War (financed by our fine folks at the NRA), Syria, Iraq, and the Israel/Palestine battling. Then we can throw in rising immigration fears happening in the United States and in Europe, electric rise in public racism as opposed to silent and hidden, continued radical racist attacks on a president whose biggest crime is being black, and last but not least a middle class that is shrinking thanks to the richest class scooping in more money while continuing the greed. Even though there is a lot to be thankful and happy about, we’ve reached a rough year. And we have an upcoming election that will force us to switch leaders.
Enter the Bern.
I’ve supported Bernie Sanders the second I researched him. The minute I heard him speak about the problems this nation and world is facing, I was locked in. Bernie wasn’t blaming a party, wasn’t blaming Republicans or Democrats specifically, he was blaming the system and the small group of rich billionaires that was running the entire show. Money was the root of all the issues: from incarceration rates to shrinking middle class to ridiculous spending of the fat cats and how it affects everyone underneath. We are seeing more jobs than ever before being thrown overseas, and we haven’t seen much punishment dished out to the fiscally irresponsible. Bernie also wanted the taxes to truly pay off; which is why he campaigned for free tuition, increase in minimum wage, and a continued health care system that would be even better than ObamaCare. His track record was spotless, as he had been fighting for minorities for decades and long before it became the norm. He is fully against war, and doesn’t want our soldiers scattered in all kinds of conflicts. This was the guy. And I knew it was a major, major long shot, even if he was eating away at Hillary’s lead and was dominating the debates.
I was part of the loud annoying wave of Bernie supporters that challenged the Democratic Party that was so sure Clinton would cruise into the election. I always said I would fight until the end. I said I’d ride the Bernie Train until it stops. And even when it looked grim, I stayed put. During his losing streaks and winning streaks, I battled the Hillary fans on Twitter, shared Sanders wisdom on Facebook, and calmly stated my points to those willing to listen to me talk about a Brooklyn candidate that looks 100 but speaks for the 15-25 crowd.
And the end came, he was inches away from losing, as Hillary was drawing more supporters, more votes, more voters, and more momentum. Her reputation took a vicious hit thanks to Bernie Sanders, but it wouldn’t be enough to appease those already prepared to lock her in as president. She is the Diet Coke Obama: doesn’t deviate too far from the Obama ideals while lacking the speech skills that Barack had displayed over the years. But she was going to become the nominee, whether you liked it or not.
We lost, simple as that. Despite all the screaming, facts, video footage, uplifting moments, delightful little glimpses of faith, our magical run had ended. Now, Sanders had a few upcoming options. Bernie Sanders isn’t an idiot. He knows an independent run would create more noise, and could potentially even produce an upset. He knows how much momentum he had created, and was poised to continue his run to revolutionize American politics and the country in general. He got the youth and the independents more excited than ever before. Politics didn’t just become an adult/old person ballgame, the late teenagers, college students, and millennials were all on-board towards this revolution. Maybe with a few speeches, a few dramatic moments, more victorious debates against the competitors and who knows? The ceiling was high, as we were in unfamiliar territory of being the best-looking third-wheel candidacy since Lincoln.
But then there’s Donald Trump.
Donald Trump also ignited a fire in groups of people relatively quiet: the racists, bigots, and those selfish enough to blame everything on others, not accept the responsibility, and still manage a way to make it all about them. I truly don’t care about your disdain for Hillary Clinton, it should never overshadow the fact that the leading Republican figure has no experience, no set course, no consistency, no mute button, and no reason to attempt to reason with others. He has been part of the Wall Street problem by hiring illegals and pissing them with extremely low wages, outsourcing thousands of jobs elsewhere (including Mexico, by the way), and just not giving any crap about the middle and lower class. Trump is part of the wave of high-end people that has helped craft a variety of the problems facing America. And any man that recommends the bombing of families to combat terrorism is just unfit to hold any position within miles of the White House.
Under Trump’s rise to popularity we see Neo-Nazis rising, the KKK becoming its most powerful since the early 1900s, a rise in disdain towards smaller groups like Muslims and Hispanics, and just this vigorous hatred towards the current America and an awkward desire to be a certain type of America in the past. And we even see the most supposed-Christian of people willing to overlook all the vicious things he has said in order to try to better themselves in society. There is a Twitter account that quotes the Bible (“Use your voice for kindness, your ears for compassion, your hands for charity, your mind for truth, and your heart for love. Matthew 22:36-40”) and then has the Trump hashtag!!!! Has she not seen what occurs in these rallies? So now we see a majority of White America and Christians (Joel Osteen, come on now…) suddenly waging a silent war against minorities, Muslims, and pretty much the entire community of Democrats. There was even an incident about a truck driver that refused to help a person just because he saw the Bernie Sanders sticker in the back of the vehicle. A nation that is supposed to be united is slipping away.
Now, is every Trump supporter a racist? No, not to start. But they become racist by association because of their affiliation with a man that caters only to a very specific crowd and continues to promote separation as opposed to some type of unity. This is extremely dangerous, and would send America a century backwards while tanking the economy, ruining everything that makes America unique and a more desirable destination, and worst of all would give the platform to the racists and bigots to continue finding ways to torment and attempt to eliminate those that don’t look/sound/act/behave like them. We are already seeing a rise of people being persecuted just because of appearance, and Trump hasn’t even won yet. His numbers are devastatingly high for a man of his caliber and (lack of) experience. Which means, all efforts must be made to ensure he gets slaughtered during Election Day. Not just a defeat, a landslide defeat is required to pretty much save America. The sane must unite to defeat the insane, no matter what the cost.
Even if it means having to cooperate with your competition.
Using a film example, Spider-Man 2 (keep up, hang on, I’ll explain) towards the climax has Harry discovering that the person that killed his father (Green Goblin) was his best friend Peter Parker---a.k.a. Spider-Man. Harry knows the location of the main villain, but is still absolutely furious and in shock that his own friend was responsible for his father’s demise and all the torment that followed. Peter/Spider-Man had a major opportunity to discuss his role, but knows that time is of the essence and New York was in serious danger. He calmly responds to Harry with this:
“There are bigger things happening than me and you”
The Democratic Party has become that quote: they need to set aside their differences, their bickering, their battling, the history, the tough words and statements of the past, and the intense competition to fight the bigger fight, since there is a much larger issue looming in the distance.
Bernie Sanders is choosing the controversial, but required path of unity. He has to take all the support he has gained and find a way to move them towards Hillary territory so she can win and can prevent America from becoming the next unstable country in an already unstable world. Sanders is seeing societies splitting apart, other nations bowing to fears and bigotry (England, how’s that economy coming along?), and seeing warfare fought from all angles, especially the severely-battered Middle East. Although he believes he could run the country better than Clinton, all this must be set aside to fight the larger issue: Trump potentially winning. He couldn’t risk the severe loss by becoming a third wheel and separating the votes and making the race closer than it ever should be---it has to be a two-person race, each person stockpiling on as many important people as possible. And no weapon Trump possesses is as strong as Bernie Sanders and his small yet potent following.
Sanders prolonging the inevitable doesn’t just allow him to build a larger audience to ship into the right path: he’s already changing the Democratic Party with a slew of ideas that have been building steam. Hillary Today is not the Hillary of before, as before Sanders came in with a very attractive (albeit long shot) platform. Bernie Sanders gave it the best long shot fight he could possibly deliver, and did it without stooping low and without attacking on clickbait issues. And now he risked his reputation, all his supporters, and his image in favor of the greater good.
The sacrifice here is underrated honestly. Sanders gave everything up to join Hillary and help fight the cause. He won’t be able to run again, not after these actions (some of the Bernie Bros have already turned on him), and also because of his age. Bernie’s one opportunity as president and making a dramatic move was thrown to the side to support the Democratic Party. If it had been ANY other Republican candidate, be it Herman Cain, Ted Cruz, or even Mitt Romney, the results would have been different. Even if the three previously mentioned candidates aren’t strong choices, there’s at least some sanity and stability in their behavior. We don’t have that with Trump, which scares some, and attracts others.
The world is crumbling, and the United States needs a decent stable candidate to ride the waves and steer the ship. Hillary Clinton is like that boss you don’t like but secretly know their experience and expertise. Clinton is definitely the lesser of two evils, and couldn’t possibly do a quarter of the damage a Trump presidency would accomplish. Bernie Sanders knows this, and that is why in the midst of the madness, he is willing to be a voice of support. And if anyone brings up Jill Stein, I assure you that if Bernie couldn’t beat Hillary/Trump, what on earth makes you think Stein has a smidget of a shot?!!?
This won’t be Bernie’s best hour, but it’s his final major stand in his political career. He has peaked here, and can never rise this high ever again. So in this platform he is challenging the Republicans, he is challenging Trump, and is fighting for the soul of the United States---and that required losing it all. Bernie Sanders shouldn’t be ridiculed or criticized, as I assure you he didn’t come to this conclusion easy, and I’m sure to this very moment a part of him feels slightly sick. But we have a country to save and preserve, and a presidency in need of someone who isn’t going to flip everything upside down. 2016 has been sheer insanity: under the wrong circumstances it was only going to get much, much worse.
Thank you Bernie Sanders, for everything. Sorry we couldn’t do more. And sorry it’s come to this point. But I know you are doing it for your country.
And if you do run again, I will be there, once again, running alongside you.
Saturday, June 25, 2016
The Fog of Nationalism
Yikes.
We have witnessed the United Kingdom literally tank its economy, as it voted to exit the European Union, a group of nations that made trade, employment, and many other factors much easier to maneuver through the continent. Whatever the reason, being immigration, racism, islamophobia, nationalistic pride under the shadows of Trump, or just simply disliking the notion that other countries dictate some of the policies of England, the United Kingdom voted to leave the union, say no to millions of pounds per week, and send the value of its currency on a downward spiral. Similar to Trump supporters it is silly to argue that everyone in favor of exiting are racist or awkwardly nationalist, but the idea was founded on nationalism pride, this supposed stance that England is losing its identity.
The stock market managed to claw back within the same 24 hours, but that was only after investors poured their heart and soul to diminish the bleeding. The damage is done, we’re not sure what happens to England from now on, especially since they won’t be depending on the European Union anymore. They’ve already dipped in the global standings. And a major part of this is because of the fears that the borders have been left too open. And their scenario is far different from the American scenario, but the curious debate about immigration lingers.
Like England and some of the European Union, we’ve seen an influx of immigrants traveling to safer lands in desperate hopes of a better life---and some from within Europe (even within the Union itself) as opposed to the more notorious areas. As the world became smaller, the scattering of refugees has become a major part of the population movement. The Middle East is in shambles, as it continues being a war torn area full of terrorist groups, uncertainty, and struggling economy. The Israel/Palestine conflict seems to become a daily tragedy, Libya is a disaster, and nations like Iraq and Afghanistan cannot go a month without a major attack. And then in a smaller scale, we’ve seen Poland and Spain losing citizens in favor of England. And let’s not forget the issues of Greece.
My curiosity is sparked: how much of this immigration control is race-related? How much of it is entrenched in phobia? And how much of it is legit concern over the well being of the country? Unlike Radical Republican America blaming their current issues on Mexican immigrants (despite it being only 28% of all American immigrants), United Kingdom is seeing millions of people pouring in from different corners because of the Union, because it has the stronger economy, and because of reputation. They might have a point.
However…
Germany receives more people, by a lot too. As a matter of fact the only country that receives more immigrants than Germany is the United States, and sometimes Russia. In 2015, Germany declared itself as an immigration country, openly and politely accepting pretty much anybody willing to move there. If you are part of the EU, then it’s your right to seek employment there. If you aren’t in the EU, as long as you are a skilled worker (university degree/years of experience) or at least working towards becoming a skilled worker you have the opportunity to enter and ultimately become a German citizen.
Now, I might be simplifying things (most likely simplifying things), but this is what I see: similar minimal requirements, same amount of opportunity, same freedom to roam, and an economy that is the strongest in the European Union despite receiving more immigrants than the United Kingdom. I don’t see Germany wanting to drop out of the Union at all. As a matter of fact, Germany has become an even stronger country because of immigration—legal and/or illegal. Opening the borders has given the nation an opportunity for the German name to be a stronger global brand, a stronger global power and presence. AND the German unemployment rate is much smaller (4.2%, 5 points under the European Union average). So what am I missing?
Why is it an issue in England and the United States, when Germany has embraced it and has benefited from the inclusion? Germany has even promised free college education for anyone that enters the country for crying out loud. So what am I missing England? What is the excuse? Why hasn’t it worked for you?
The problem is Nationalism is overcoming and overpowering the desire to limit foreigners from entering and seeking the same opportunities, and it’s disgusting. England has become Republican America by waving its flag and claiming a country that already belongs to them. They exited a profitable and peaceful European Union in favor of being in charge towards what to do with their borders and their country, when it wasn’t an issue 5, 10, 15 years ago---and it might cost them dearly. Their pound has already dropped to its lowest since the 1960s, and won’t get the weekly payout it used to get unless the EU becomes sympathetic.
The United States is at risk of veering down the same path, using their nationistic pride to drown out the bigger issues plaguing the borders within: ridiculous education system, big business damaging the economic structure of the country, a Washington that has recently become even more disruptive because a black man became president, this Civil War-like viewpoint towards the two political parties, a surge in racism, a surge in gun violence (USA is #1 year in and year out on that category), a dumbfounding gender war (with a lax rape culture that feels straight out of the 1800s) and rising living costs. But fine, let’s just blame the Mexicans and claim that we are “losing our country,” as opposed to the hundreds of large businesses throwing their jobs overseas.
We are ignoring screams of help from a conflict that Americans helped create.
Yes, it’s time to go there: The United States and England is partially responsible for the rise of terrorism because they continuously plant their presence and their flag towards unwanted and ungrateful territory. Yes, we have to face the elephant in the room. Not saying all terrorism would be eliminated from this country and from the other nations (because homegrown terrorism exists) but whenever you dig in other lands you create enemies. We are seeing an area that is not enjoying the appearance of other countries (and not in an immigration sense either), and this has been going on since Bush. The Middle East is seeing thousands of its citizens dying in the crosshairs of warfare from America and the rebels that scatter the area.
What did you think would happen when you decided to suddenly invade Afghanistan and Iraq? What did you think would happen once you started throwing bombs left and right to defeat terrorism? You think you won’t get any innocent casualties? You think there won’t be saddened people and towns vowing revenge? ISIS was founded during the Iraq War, taking advantage of shell-shocked citizens watching their homes go up in smoke. And I don’t condone the actions of any terrorist whatsoever, but their origin story is connected to American involvement in the Middle East whether you like it or not. Whether you agreed with the Iraq War or not, it accidentally created the most hated terrorist group in the planet.
So now we see an America that is willing to head out thousands of miles to start crap for years, and then not be willing to accept the victims of their consequences. And the truth is, the United States should be prouder and more open towards the idea of so many people wanting to enter and become American citizens. Let’s be honest, nobody comes into the country with the full intent of becoming illegal and with the intent of changing everything American. If there was an easier system to becoming an official citizen with the ability to vote and qualify for a variety of the American perks then you’d see a total spike in entrants. If the nations America helped destabilize would recover then you wouldn’t see any many battered souls seeking a new life.
You think Mexicans want to leave Mexico? No, it is a beautiful country with layers of culture and personality---but most times they have to go. You think the Middle Eastern families want to fully abandon the only land they know? No, but there’s nothing left. That is the sad reality. The Drug War has secretly murdered tens of thousands of Mexicans with the help of the NRA, the American Drug Trade, and America’s refusal to even attempt to help their neighbors to the south. You think the millions of Puerto Ricans leaving the impoverished island want to flock to Florida? No, but sometimes in life you don’t have a choice. America isn’t their favorite option, it’s their best option. Have you seen Puerto Rico? Outside of its political and economical issues, the place is absolutely gorgeous.
The United States has a responsibility to help those in need, and help those that have been affected by the decisions made in the United States within the past decade. The United States just needs to pull out of the Middle East entirely and focus on defending and improving their soil while simultaneously being more sympathetic towards those in dire need of help. As a supposed-Christian nation, this is what we should be doing, opening our doors to help, embracing the emotionally scarred, and showing why at the end of the day America is one of the better nations to join. You want to be proud of your flag? Then be willing to share this flag with others, period.
The United Kingdom needs to also pay for its colonizing ways. It still has territory all over the world, so it’s rather ironic that they want to close the borders when they’ve invaded the borders of other nations for the past forever. But this isn’t on the great citizens, but they need to duplicate the actions of Germany and find a way to continue to receive immigrants in search of a better life while trying to solve the issues of unemployment and a deteriorating middle class. People coming in with nothing except the clothes on their back cannot be the blame.
Immigration doesn’t link or lead to crime and overall poverty—and Germany is an outstanding example. And if you want another example, let’s use France, Canada and Australia---with a whopping 20% immigration rate on the latter two nations and all 3 ranking among the best in overall economy in the planet. We need to drop the Nationalism and realize that we are lucky nations to not have been fully tainted—unlike Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, and Libya which need decades of help to try to prosper once again.
Our problems are apparent but not unsolvable. Our issues are existent but not erasable. We need to drop the guns, and open our arms to embrace. Once collectively we start helping others then we can achieve the goals of a safer, more open, and friendlier world that still has so much to offer. Love trumps hate every single time, but under the shadows of Trump, the Trump Supremacy fandom that has gotten far too big, Nationalism, Phobias, and refusals to accept responsibility for some of the larger issues plaguing the continents, we can’t solve anything. Hate will cloud the real problems, and will destroy you in a heartbeat. Look how fast the economy dipped after an emotional vote. And this is just the beginning.
Brexit is an ugly example of what might happen to America. Don’t let this happen.
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