It seems that every nation has its dramatic phase.
We went through our own teenage the-world-is-out-to-get-us phase back in the 1700s. Only a misunderstood teenager would wax poetic in a revolutionary document and change "property" to "the pursuit of happiness." Our parents back in England proposed a curfew of sorts and we got ourselves legally emancipated. Happens all the time.
France went through the same thing a decade later. Except they chose the nice-neighborhood-kid-who-is-actually-a-serial-killer avenue. Whatever works. I'm not here to judge.
And of course our own revolution was borne out of a centuries-long selfish stage in which all the colonial powers grabbed as much land as they could despite the glaring fact that the enterprise was economically and logistically unsustainable.
In the 1800s most of the colonial empires dissolved as colonies chafed under imperial rule and wanted to strike out on their own. Unfortunately, most of the colonies rebelled against their parents before graduating high school and now are stuck in a minimum-wage, third-world McDonald's type of existence.
Argentina hit its teenage years in the early 1900s and never really grew up.
The Bolsheviks eventually got what every impudent teenager needs...a swift kick in the pants and some strict discipline.
The Pacific side of WWII was precipitated by a Japanese tantrum, who, like many teenagers, had a false sense of immortality and moral correctness.
India's hunger strikes were going to bed without dinner taken to the extreme.
Tiananmen Square? You have one teenager standing in the street playing chicken with a tank driven by another teenager. Take that and multiply it by a billion to get China's little dramatic phase.
And now we have Venezuela, Iran and North Korea, who have the advantage of global media in their efforts to hurl childish taunts to their bigger neighbors. I know you are, but what am I?
The latest example is Afghanistan. The UN-sponsored election review found that Karzai's election commissioners were stuffing the ballot box. The UN interceded to ensure a runoff would be required. We spent untold millions and gave American and allied lives to get a fair runoff for the nation. But Karzai's challenger, Mr. Abdullah Abdullah (so nice, they named him twice!), with a flair for the dramatic, decided to boycott the runoff, effectively handing the presidency to Karzai and abrogating all the efforts expended on Abdullah's behalf. Dude, you don't quit in the middle of a pivotal election because you think its unfair. We know its unfair. The world knows its unfair. What are you proving by pouting?
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/11/02/afghanistan.election.runoff/index.html?eref=igoogle_cnn
Stupid teenagers. In another century or so, we should be done with all these dramatic countries. In the Future of the World (According to Bryan), the world is full of nations that have grown past their teenage years and have settled into a jaded and cynical middle age where no one really gets excited about anything anymore. We will all get along, more or less, in a perpetual state of mutual skepticism and global apathy.
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