Not to nit pick, but the US didn't win the war on its own. We were part of a coalition of countries that fought against the Axis.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean here.
I'd concede that US produced media sees a lot of global circulation, but the "culture/language" exports I'm not clear on.
When I think of what a "US cultural export" would be, I think of backwards hats (and lame fashion trends in general) and McDonalds being built in China. I don't know if these are the types of things that we should be proud to wear on our sleeves and call our "culture". But then again, I'm a bitter, negative person. Maybe I'm just not noticing the positive cultural influences coming out of the States. I just have a hard time believing that media and "culture" exported from the US does us any good as far as how the world perceives us.
And, of course, I may have totally misinterpreted what you were getting at. :silence:
Lets put it this way.
If the US wasn't in the war, what would have happen to Europe and Asia?
Thus without US = lose, with US = win,
In addition to the enormous support (humanitarian aid, debt nullification, etc.) US
gave around the world in the aftermath of WWII and the benefits it obtained via the war...
so you do the math. US "won".
Culture and media wise, I didn't say it was a "positive" foothold the US has on the world.
A large part of it is negative such as capitalism in overdrive, vanity, etc.
Nonetheless, US TV shows, movies, publications, etc. are watched, read and utilized as
examples all around the world.
The whole "westernization" of the world is nations trying to incorporate individualistic social structure that USA promotes all around the world
into their normally collectivistic and conservative cultures.