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Americans Fail History Exam
Journalist Blames Historical Ignorance, Sense of Entitlement for Nation's Ills
| Source: Anthony Pour
MARINA DEL RAY, CA--(Marketwire - October 9, 2009) - Don't complain to Anthony Pour about the
economy, failed foreign policy or the lack of healthcare coverage for many
Americans. He'll likely just throw a history book at you.
And from the looks of a recent study, most Americans need it. The
Intercollegiate Studies Institute's National Civic Literacy Board recent
Civic Literacy Report found that more than 71 percent of Americans would
fail a basic test on American history.
Pour - international journalist and author of the spy novel "The Undercover
Gentleman," (www.pourbooks.com) -- believes that it is this lack of
emphasis on history that dooms our country to the rest of the world's most
fatal mistakes.
"Intentionally or not, history is no longer a priority in American schools
and what most folks know about the extinct civilizations and formidable
empires of the past is what they learned from simple-minded Hollywood
epics," he added. "Only a few diligent students of historical facts still
realize that it was not the titillating sexual depravity, intrigue and
murder inside imperial palaces that sells
pseudo-historical movies, but the dull, all-consuming epidemic of
entitlement mentality in the streets that would, in the long run, undermine
the glory and prosperity of any empire and turn a grand state into an
impoverished bunch of blundering little people."
Pour, who lives in Marina del Rey, California but holds a dual citizenship
in the Principality of Liechtenstein in Europe, uses his international
perspective to formulate his simple hypothesis on what might help the U.S.
emerge from its troubles.
"In California, I recently visited a friend of a friend, a single mother
living from paycheck to paycheck," he said. "She was truly one of
the unsung millions of working stiffs like me that politicians love to
depict as wallowing in a morass of oppression and dire need. Yet her house
was spic-and-span, complete with a couple of handsome,
well-behaved,
well-dressed, well-educated teenagers -- and all that without a penny of a
charitable or other politically correct assistance. In her living room was
a handwritten sign that read 'no whining.' If we had, say, 300 million more
like her, we'd be on easy street."
Anthony Pour
Anthony Pour is an acclaimed international journalist and author. He has
been writing for newspapers, magazines and television both in California
and Europe for more than twenty years.