Roger that, GtoRA2. It's a compilation without academic treatment.
To be honest, I have no illusions that anyone here is going to read it (or anything for that matter) and say, "Maybe I should rethink this."
Don't get me wrong, there are some clever and knowledgeable people here about a variety of topics, but most are unreceptive to anything other than strident, superficial, teenage, verbal jousting using language designed to elicit an emotional response.
When you have people like Ripsnort, who's position is that he would wipe out the entire middle east with a massive nuclear strike if he had the power to do so, there is little chance of adult discussion and not much hope of opening his mind to other solutions.
People do not want their myths shattered. Myths are comfortable and reassuring. Without looking back, I think it was anonymous who made, what I think, is a good point about nationalism earlier in the thread. All cultures have their nationalistic myths and politicans exploit the weakness of the average voter to readily accept myths of superiority.
Here is a good example:
"If Japanese hadn't fought the white people, we would still be slaves of the white people. It would be colonization. We changed that."
At first reading, this must seem like a provocative stance from some radical, right-wing group in Japan. Amazingly, the speaker was Tokyo Gov Shintaro Ishihara, insisting that Japan need not apologize for its wartime invasion of neighboring Asian countries, arguing that Japan did Asia a favor by delivering it from Western imperialism.
Even more amazing is that this quote is rather benign in comparison to other statements and positions by the governor.
And he was re-elected.
Not only was he re-elected, he won in one of the largest landslides since Saddam Hussein won re-election. Ishihara beat 19 candidates to garner over 70% of the vote and continues to maintain this remarkably high approval rating. What politician wouldn't love to have a 70% approval rating?
Myths and nationalism are easy tools at the disposal of politicians.