• spoderman
    +5

    Please don't get me wrong, I definitly didn't mean to imply that Americans are crazy. What I meant it that politics in the US are such gigantic money- and advertisement loaded events that you get the impression that it's all just a huge meaingless show for the peoples entertiainment. Comical characters like Trum and dynasties like the Clintons or the Bushs kinda complete the image.

    • kraftykitty (edited 9 years ago)
      +5

      Bread and circuses, my friend. Bread and circuses.

      • spoderman
        +3

        Huh? Did I miss something?

        Have I dropped some popcorn?

        • kraftykitty
          +5

          "Bread and circuses" (or bread and games; from Latin: panem et circenses) is metonymic for a superficial means of appeasement.

        • FRIK
          +4

          No, you're good. "Bread and circuses" is a phrase meaning that people want and are satisfied by huge spectacles and free food.

        • stareyedgirl
          +2

          Wikipedia page for Bread and Circuses

          From the article:

          In the case of politics, the phrase is used to describe the generation of public approval, not through exemplary or excellent public service or public policy, but through diversion; distraction; or the mere satisfaction of the immediate, shallow requirements of a populace,[1] as an offered "palliative." Its originator, Juvenal, used the phrase to decry the selfishness of common people and their neglect of wider concerns.[2][3][4] The phrase also implies the erosion or ignorance of civic duty amongst the concerns of the commoner.

    • FRIK
      +2

      I agree to a sense. I'm also saying you can see something of the same over in Europe and, to an extent, the world.