I'm not buying into the American exceptionalism - you become what your enemy is guilt trip. There are people out there that want to kill American citizens just because of our lifestyles. The same nations that want our support to police the world are the first ones to criticize us for our efforts. And that's over and over again. Genocide happens all over the world in places that doesn't make the news. Are these other nations doing anything about it? No. If the USA doesn't get involved then nothing gets done. I don't give a rat's ass about any other country's criticism. We will solve our own problems. Yea, we makes mistakes. So we treated our perceived enemies badly. If you become an enemy of us we may very well make more mistakes so be well warned.
Absolutely. Re: American Exceptionalism: I never bought into the concept and never thought is is something we should strive for. If you've seen the Aaron Sorkin rant that Jeff Daniels did an awesome job with about how American is NOT the greatest country in the work, "But we sure used to be". I think it is great writing and awesome acting, but complete fabrication. Sorkin, as he normally does got the history and the facts wrong to make it entertaining. We (I'm US born) are not "Exceptional". We are good people who are not perfect and try to do the right thing. A no time in our history were we ever the greatest. I'm Sorry if that offends anyone, but it isn't a bad thing. It is human.
WWII may have seen the greatest generation, but the US tried its best to avoid the fight. You can't pick a decade in our history where politics was not miserable and we (The U.S.) weren't doing something that we shouldn't be doing. Are we bad? Hell no. Who is spitting at US that can possibly related to the position this country is in with the world? The Brits? The Germans? The French? The Russians? China? If they try to take the high ground and complain about the US not being perfect, it would be too easy to compare.
I think the US is and has always been imperfect. We are successful. At the end of the day, I believe we try and do the right thing, but we are very human. I'm not going to try and live up to some lie that the US is a beacon of virtue. Knock down a couple of our buildings and I don't care who is president, you'll find out that we haven't strayed from our rough and primitive roots.
I think it is safe to say that the hazted for the USA (Don't call it 'America') stems not from the internal lifestyle. Because, very simply, that is exactly that: Internally
The actual reason is the 'Monroe Doctrine', and the path it paved for interventions, broadly using this word, wherever the USA saw it's interests in danger.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe_Doctrine
I hear what you're you're saying for the most part, but I don't agree with the theses you're trying to put forward. Does the USA get involved around the globe for its own interests? Yes. Gunboat Diplomacy doesn't start or end with Roosevelt and Taft.
However, the Monroe Doctrine isn't really the place to look for it. It is mostly about keeping European conflicts out of the Americas. It was mostly dead before Roosevelt. He pumped a bit of life back into it. I hadn't seen the the wiki link, but I clicked on it to look to see if it had Kerry's quote, and it did. That the Monroe document was dead. Now, if I was omnipotent I would bring Adams back to life to kick his ass for saying that, but it is true.
So, re: Monroe Document - I think you didn't hit the target.
Re: USA involvement around the world for our own interests. Yup. (We could debate the good/bad of that and show others examples of that as well - so I don't think it is that big of a point as you may)
re: American v. USA. First off, my European board buddy, Its 'Murica, not America
Its tough to be a USA-an or USer, so we're Americans. If it means we steal two continents to make that claim. So be it.
I'm not an apologist. I don't try to white wash what we are either. We stand proudly next to our English and German brothers who have committed horrible acts as well, but try to learn from their mistakes.