Yeah...maybe it is hubris. I"m just calling like the analysis call it. I actually have not pride in the U.S. Texas, hell yeah...
But I do see what they're talking about. That is what American history has show. Winning against all odds.
By all rights the Americans as an inferrior colony should not have won the Revolutionary War especially considering the mistakes that Washington had in battle..there was some tactics that in the end saved the day and the rifles of the Americans can actually be said to make a difference but on the whole...Fortune favored the bold.
Well I wasn't being serious with my remarks, I was just being a smartass.
But the other thing the US had in their favor during the revolution was new combat tactics such as guerrilla warfare and not standing in a straight line to be shot from 10 feet away by an out numbering force
(anybody would lose in that situation since it'd all be left up to who had more soldiers)
Also the targeting of officers, etc.... and the help from the French.
When all this unfolded, the British cried foul and considered the tactics those not of a gentleman or something along those lines and considered many US soldiers as terrorists, thus those they captured weren't given standard war/POW protections, etc.....
When you're up against a superior force that would defeat you under normal circumstances, you need to change tactics in order to survive..... ST examples of this would be the Bajorans against the Cardassians and later the Cardassians against the Dominion....... current day examples of this would be the Taliban and Al'Q.
I'm not saying I support the tactics the Taliban and Al'Q use, but none the less, as much as any of us may hate it, they are doing just what many other forces over the centuries have done in order to stay alive and be a thorn in a bigger force's side.
If they went toe to toe with US/NATO allied forces the way we'd normally expect them to, they would have been wiped out years ago...... just as if the US forces against the British stuck to the same old tactics the British expected, the same thing would probably have happened to the US.
The same with the War against the Japanese.
The Americans almost had no right winning the pacific. Midway...was unbelievable, Pearl Harbor should have been the end of the American Pacific Fleet, Lexington should have burned to the water...but they recovered her.
Tech was on our side that time. Radar and using carbon dioxide from the engine room to put out fires....It was creative.
Wars do have the tendency of bringing out people's imaginations in regards to solving problems...... as many countries during WWII came up with their own ingenious technologies and inventions which many of us all take for granted today.
The President pressing to keep the carriers moving instead of layed up in dock like Congress wanted as a show of force. I don't know how long that kind of luck is going to last for America but it has been the "Feel Good Story" that is intensely reflected in Star Trek.
Well generally speaking, how many shows do any of us know of, be that US, Canadian, European, Australian, Asian, South American shows.... where most of the episodes don't end happily and the main characters die all the time?
Not many to my knowledge..... it'd probably be difficult for most to get involved into a show when the main characters don't stick around long enough to let them grow on you or become attached to......
And if all the episodes of a show ended in misery and not on a happy note.... how many people would continue to watch it?
I don't think it has to due much with people always wanting happy stories and conditioned to be that way..... I think it has more to do with people hearing about bad and depressing stories all the time in the news, in our lives, in our communities, etc..... and people turn to shows, movies and entertainment in order to just balance it out some.
Shows that had all the main character die all the time and ended in depressing ways might attract the emos out there, but after a while, I imagine it'd grow tiresome to most.