Over the years, Miyazaki’s political stance about America’s involvement in global conflicts as well as the country’s contribution towards the globalisation of American culture has been unwavering. “Anti-jeans, Anti-bourbon, Anti-burgers, Anti-fried chicken, Anti-cola, Anti-American coffee, Anti-New York, Anti-West Coast,” Miyazaki once said while describing his beliefs.
According to excerpts from multiple interviews, Miyazaki’s dislike for all things American also extends to the realm of cinema.
“Americans shoot things and they blow up and the like, so as you’d expect, they make movies like that,” Miyazaki stated. “If someone is the enemy, it’s okay to kill endless numbers of them. Lord of the Rings is like that. If it’s the enemy, there’s killing without separation between civilians and soldiers. That falls within collateral damage.”
Miyazaki compared the visual politics of large-scale Hollywood productions such as the Lord of the Rings to the country’s international policies. Attacking America’s actions in Afghanistan, Miyazaki claimed that such projects are a dangerous addition to public discourse because they diminish the value of human life by weaponising the audience through cinematic violence.
As a non US person, if you go by what reach us culturally New York and the West coast are what the US is. Everybody in the tv lives in an apartment in New York. Everybody in the songs is from California
as a non West Coast / non NYC American, the cultural reach of America™ is absolutely as you say. it's their country. the rest of us are just here, extracting their food, materials, and energy before filling big holes with their garbage, waiting to be enlightened enough to be called to the metropolis.
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nothing says "homegrown culture" like homogenized, industrial food treat warming stations and stockpiles appearing along the federal interstate system like a web of slop troughs to facilitate the dislocated, transient labor necessary to support rapid resource extraction.