Sony Thăng@nxt888
I don't have "deep insights" about Americans as a species.
I have memory.
And I have pattern recognition sharpened by what it means to live under the consequences of decisions Americans call "foreign policy."
You grow up Vietnamese, you learn early that there are two parallel realities:
The one you live through.
And the one narrated about you on American television, in speeches, in films, in history books.
My family lived through the moment when American abstractions like "credibility" and "containing communism" stopped sounding strategic and became physical:
Bomb craters. Refugee boats. Bodies.
You watch villages renamed "collateral."
You watch coups renamed "restoring democracy."
You watch blockades renamed "pressure for reform."
You watch your dead filed away as "tragedy" so that no one has to call them what they were: crimes.
After a while, you stop getting angry at every sentence.
You start studying the grammar.
Who gets to remain human in the story.
Who gets turned into an adjective.
Whose violence is "regrettable," and whose resistance is "terrorism."
Which lives are allowed complexity, and which lives are flattened into body counts, talking points, and background noise.
Then you hear Americans speak about entirely different places, entirely different wars, entirely different enemies, and the same grammar is still there:
"Intervention" instead of invasion.
"Stability" instead of control.
"Responsibility" instead of domination.
"Sanctions" instead of siege.
If you grow up with that long enough, you learn that what empire calls "responsibility" usually means someone far away is about to bleed.
That's where my "insight" comes from.
From watching the same software run on different hardware.
From listening closely to the metaphors they don't even notice they're using anymore.
From realizing that, for a lot of good, ordinary people, this isn't malice. It's the water they were raised in.
The story is always written from the cockpit, never from the crater.
So when I write about American exceptionalism, I'm not claiming mystical access to "your people."
I am describing the hallucination I've been forced to survive under since I was born.
And once you see the pattern from outside the blast radius, it becomes almost impossible not to see it everywhere.