‘A uniquely humiliating moment’: London journalist explains why allies went from ‘admiring’ the US to ‘feeling pity’

AlterNet logoContrary to the claims of the United States’ right-wing media, most residents of Europe, Australia, Japan, Canada or New Zealand are not longing to move to the U.S. — they have heard all the horror stories about medical bankruptcies, mass incarceration and a lack of upward mobility. The rest of the developed world has continued to hope that the U.S. will overcome its problems, but in 2020 — with the U.S. being rocked by the coronavirus pandemic and huge protests in response to the killing of George Floyd on May 25 — long-time allies are worried. And London-based journalist Tom McTague discusses their worries in an article published by The Atlantic on June 24.

In the past, McTague explains, Europeans felt everything from admiration to envy to resentment where the U.S. was concerned. But in 2020, many of them are feeling “pity.”

“It is hard to escape the feeling that this is a uniquely humiliating moment for America,” McTague writes. “As citizens of the world the United States created, we are accustomed to listening to those who loathe America, admire America and fear America — sometimes all at the same time. But feeling pity for America? That one is new, even if the schadenfreude is painfully myopic. If it’s the aesthetic that matters, the U.S. today simply doesn’t look like the country that the rest of us should aspire to, envy or replicate.” Continue reading.

New Zealand says it has ‘won the battle’ against coronavirus

The Hill logoThe New Zealand government proclaimed on Monday that the country has reached its goal of eliminating the coronavirus after reporting just four new “probable cases” of COVID-19 and one death over the weekend.

“There is no widespread undetected community transmission in New Zealand,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said at a news conference, according to reports. “We have won that battle. But we must remain vigilant if we are to keep it that way.”

Ashley Bloomfield, New Zealand’s director general of health, said that the small number of cases gave health officials “confidence that we’ve achieved our goal of elimination.” She added that elimination never meant complete “eradication” of the disease, but rather a point where health care workers felt confident about where infections were emerging. Continue reading.

The Memo: Questions sharpen for Trump after New Zealand massacre

Friday’s mass shooting in New Zealand is sharpening scrutiny of the rhetoric of international political figures, including President Trump.

Even trenchant Trump critics have not accused him of a direct line of culpability for the shooting at two mosques in Christchurch that left at least 49 people dead. It was the worst mass shooting in New Zealand’s modern history.

But the massacre has reinvigorated criticism that Trump has empowered extremists and Islamophobes globally since his 2015 call for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.” 

View the complete March 16 article by Niall Stanage on The Hill website here.