Americanism.

Please listen to this song before proceeding.
youtube.com/watch?v=0nCwVhn … G2qEeHQ3Ki

That song is the definitive Americanism. The patriotic, noble urges within us all.

There is an idea of America, some kind of abstraction, but there is no real America, only an entity, something illusory, and though they can hide their cold gaze and you can shake their hand and feel flesh gripping yours and maybe you can even sense it’s advertised lifestyles are probably comparable: America simply is not there.

In the game, Joanna Dark is a field agent which works for a philanthropic terrorist organization, the Carrington Institute. It’s goal is contact aliens. After she inflitrates a corporate office and it’s science basement which is dominated by Reptilians, she is on a mission to rescue the President from the Illuminati, which is ran by NSA head Trent Easton. Before Trent Easton can assassinate the president (who resemble Obama) and replace him with a clone, he is executed by a Reptilian, Mr. Blonde, who has a Scandinavian humanoid avatar.

With this in mind, reflect on what America is. Maybe some day we can enjoy America, in the way John F. Kennedy imagined it - a real nation, not ran by jews, not ran by oil, not ran by Bushes, not ran by Nixons and warmongers, not ran by CIA and phone tappers, but America actually being what it pretends to be - the red white and blue, the country of freedom. Maybe someday we can make America great. Maybe someday, we can make America the illusion that it pretends to be - the land of the free.

Magnus Anderson?

The song from the Chicago state of the game is much better.

Yes, there is no actual Americanism. The ideal isn’t the actual. But isn’t that the case with just about everything?

Well it seems the ideal has inverted itself. Freedom has become slavery, and freedom has become slavery. Bush monitors our phones to “protect our American freedoms.” Laughably.

An Americanism is a linguistic absurdity, such as Americans are prone to make. For example, instead of saying “don’t have to”, they might say “don’t got to”. But they only ever get annoyed when you tell them, so there’s no point in doing so.

Hate to say, but british suffer froma psychological tremor. They get irritated when the slightest thing is out of place…they are fascist in nature.

If things are not done exactly by the book, they lose their minds, especially if someone takes language syntax in their own hands.