Wednesday, December 5, 2012

A Nation of Generalizers



As long as I can remember I have been obsessed with (sports) statistics. I remember picking up the local newspaper and flipping immediately to the sports section to mesmerized useless baseball, basketball, and football statistics. As an 8 year old it did not dawn upon me that the numbers were not going to change much day to day (Still struggling at 26 to figure it out). In my mind it justifies or explains how valuable each player is to his/her team. As I have grown older and wiser, I have learned to attribute statistics to more of my opinions in life, but why am I so eager to generalize? Is this obsession my own or a by-product of being an American?
I traveled to Western Europe and Ireland in the summer of 2009 for a month vacation. Having already traveled fairly extensively for someone my age (I have been to 25 countries and 5 continents), I like to believe I fit outside the classic two week American vacationing in Bermuda stereotype. Traveling with my college friend, Brittany we hit Paris, Amsterdam, Geneva, and finally onto Cork, Ireland for a few days to visit my second cousin. My cousin, Caroline graciously picked us up at the Cork train station less than 5 days notice. We really did not have an agenda, but  I always attempt to see the city as the locals see it( We had previously stayed with a friend in Paris and met with a Swiss national friend in Geneva to experience the city). As I stayed with my cousin in downtown Cork, she lived with her boyfriend, the lead singer of a band called Fred, and another 30 something couple. The woman a local teacher and her boyfriend an American from Nebraska. Upon meeting them out at the bar, I could tell the fellow American was excited to talk to another American. A nice enough guy, who purchased me a few beers. As we spent more time with the group, I could sense the frustration the locals had with my fellow American in basing internet "facts" as his main points in a discussion. He was not basing things upon his own experience, but rather what he read in the New York Times opinion piece as to why the Greeks were in an economic downfall. After picking up several rolling of the eyes and witty sarcastic comments as to how short sighted he could be. It dawned upon me that many Americans (me being one) base our opinions largely on what we read rather than what we experience.
Think about it... everyone goes to whatever website they prefer to read their daily news or entertainment feed. A large portion of what we read, we are not concerned with the credibility, but the quote unquote content. I like to pride myself on trying not to read any US news feed and try to read foreign news feeds to base my political opinions. If I am traveling to a foreign location, I try and speak with any of my friends who have been there or lived there (this helps when the majority of your friends are Merchant Marines and can tell you about the best place to drink a beer in Tonga), but I am still guilty of generalizing. We (Americans) like to believe we have a place figured out by spending two weeks there and spending hours "researching" the internet what the culture and people are like. Lets put it this way, if you overheard a Portuguese national describing the US as an over cramped, rude nation and finding out they had only been to Disney World and New York City, you would chuckle at their perception. Lets focus on generalizing less to better understand everything... or else we might turn out like this....


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