The United States View of the World
Posted by onehundredflowers on January 8, 2011
This is part of a series of maps created by Yanko Tsvetkov. The rest can be seen and purchased on this website.
Posted by onehundredflowers on January 8, 2011
This is part of a series of maps created by Yanko Tsvetkov. The rest can be seen and purchased on this website.
This entry was posted on January 8, 2011 at 11:23 am and is filed under >> analysis of news, art, imperialism, USA. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Temet Nosce said
Seems to be a rather accurate depiction of our mental geography, I’m sorry to say.
Actually, scratch that – I don’t think Americans know enough of our own history to draw the parallels between Vietnam – Cambodia and Afghanistan – Pakistan. Clearly that one is an inside joke for non-Americans. :P
Aunt Vic Keller said
http://www.doorbraak.eu/gebladerte/30048v01.htm
mlw said
It should be nintendo not toyota
Aunt Vic Keller said
Mocking Americans for, say, believing in UFOs, is not constructive. Also it is no surprise that allegiance to US interests against rival imperialist powers such as Iran, Venezuela, Brazil, and Bolivia, just as an Iranian proletariat may be easily sold a mass-manufactured anti-American and pro-Iranian ideology. This T-shirt is an elitist joke that doesn’t help in spreading clear messages to smash false consciousness and rally the international class struggle. Rather it enforces anti-Americanism which is counter-productive.
Aunt Vic Keller said
*allegiance to US interests is common among US workers
Grac said
rival imperialist powers such as Iran, Venezuela, Brazil, and Bolivia
Are you really saying that those countries are imperialist?
Aunt Vic Keller said
“imperialism is not the creation of one or any group of states, but is the product of a particular stage of ripeness in the world development of capital … and from which no nation can hold aloof at will” – Luxemburg, Junius Pamphlet