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1[[quoteright:300:[[WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/uncle_sam.png]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:An [[AmericaTakesOverTheWorld anti-patriotic joke]] made by people from the very country it's poking fun at.]]
3
4->''"If what your country is doing seems to you practically and morally wrong, is dissent the highest form of patriotism?"''
5-->-- ''The Use of Force in International Affairs'' (1961). [[note]]The quote has been misattributed to UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson, but has been used by Howard Zinn in his ''Dissent In Pursuit of Equality, Life, Liberty And Happiness: An Interview With Historian Howard Zinn'' (2002).[[/note]]
6
7While patriotism can be noble or nice, there can be times when one is ashamed of their country. Usually it's politically or socially motivated. Some people dislike the imperialistic, militaristic, [[PatrioticFervor chauvinistic]] or nationalistic approach of their own government and fellow citizens. Others, especially minorities, have been victimized by their government or their fellow citizens and resent the majority.
8
9These are the people who feel that MyCountryRightOrWrong is mostly wrong and have nothing but contempt for UsefulNotes/MisplacedNationalism. They will vocally criticize their own country and feel that they are in their right to do so since they were born there themselves. Though they can sometimes be categorized as misanthropes or a BoomerangBigot there are also enough examples of people having good reasons and/or arguments to criticize their country of birth. This can result into active protest marches with the intent to change things. Or, in a less drastic fashion, result in SelfDeprecation comedy, done for satirical purposes.
10
11In some countries such criticism is seen as highly unpatriotic, even treasonous. Dictatorships are the most obvious example, but even in some democratic countries expressing such opinions can bring people into serious trouble, and politicians opposing those in power will take pains to emphasize that they love their country despite their disagreements. Yet, in a truly free society criticism of your own country should be respected. Lots of sociological revolutions and changes have occurred just because people questioned the ideas of their government and society, and many modern countries trace their founding date to such uprisings, celebrating them with patriotic songs and holidays. People who embody this trope usually consider criticism of their homeland as an act of patriotism in itself, reflecting the other part of MyCountryRightOrWrong: if wrong ''to be set right.''
12
13Contrast with PropagandaPiece. See UsefulNotes/MisplacedNationalism for criticism of one people or country towards another. OffendingTheCreatorsOwn would be the religious and ethnic equivalent of this trope. See also CulturalCringe, when this is done against a creator's culture, and BitingTheHandHumor, when this is done against the production's distributor. Compare HailToTheThief, when criticism is directed toward the head of state, often in song.
14
15Please make sure that only examples are added where the criticism is made by a person born in the country they criticize.
16 ----
17!!Examples:
18
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
22* ''Anime/CodeGeass'': Lelouch vi Britannia hates Britannia for what it did: used him as a political pawn, invaded Japan among other countries with him still in it, and has been responsible for occupying most of the world and taking away the rights of other nations. He's made it his goal in life to completely overthrow Britannia's government and see the empire either reformed or utterly annihilated.
23* Shigeru Mizuki's ''Onwards Towards Our Noble Deaths!'' is equal parts a WarIsHell story as it is a scathing criticism of the Japanese Imperial army's suicidal patriotism mindset.
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:Comic Books]]
27* ''ComicStrip/LifeInHell'', a.k.a. Creator/MattGroening Satirizes American Society, especially its government and educational system (one comic collection is called "School is Hell"), and Republicans in particular. Bongo's parody of the Pledge of Allegiance sums it up:
28-->I pledge impertinence to the flag-waving of the unindicted co-conspirators of America. And to the Republicans for which I can't stand, one abomination, underhanded fraud, with liberty and justice forget it.
29* ''ComicBook/SuskeEnWiske'': The early stories criticized the Belgian government quite often, especially in its treatment of the Flemish population. In the reprints most of these comments have been removed.
30* ''ComicStrip/{{Nero}}'': Also enjoys satirizing Flemish/Belgian society and politics.
31* Creator/RobertCrumb: Criticized the U.S.A. several times, most notably in his one time comic strip: ''"Why I Hate the U.S.A."''
32* ''ComicBook/DeFamilieDoorzon'': A Dutch comic strip satirizing Dutch society and families mercilessly, especially regarding political correctness.
33* ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'': Since the 1970s this Pullitzer Prize winning political cartoon has addressed and criticized all American political presidents and other events.
34* ''ComicBook/TheSmurfs'': In the story "Smurf vs. Smurf", the Smurfs get divided over linguistic differences between the North and the South of the village. This was Peyo's take on the [[SillyReasonForWar language strife]] between the Flemish [[note]]who speak Dutch[[/note]] and the Walloons [[note]]who speak French[[/note]] in Belgium.
35* In ''ComicBook/YoungAvengers'', Patriot frequently criticizes America, despite wearing its colors, because as a black kid whose grandfather was wrongfully imprisoned for decades, he knows that his country is not always right.
36* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'': Where the only people more evil than the English politicians, military, policeman, and aristocracy controlled by TheLegionsOfHell are the English politicians, military, policeman, and aristocracy who are not, has been written by Englishmen like Jamie Delano, Paul Jenkins, Warren Ellis, and Neil Gaiman.
37* ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'': In Issue #43 of the Animaniacs comics, the Brain gets money by suing a tobacco company. When Pinky points out they don't smoke, Brain points out that the great part of being an American is that "the law has nothing to do with the facts".
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
41* ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo'':
42-->'''Chum:''' Humans! [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters Think they own everything.]]
43-->'''Anchor:''' [[TakeThat Probably]] [[EagleLand American.]]
44* ''WesternAnimation/CoonSkin'' had Miss America, a FemmeFatale who seduced walking bystanders--mostly African Americans--before murdering them as a reflection of the country's racial politics.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
48* ''Film/TeamAmericaWorldPolice'':
49** The anti-terrorist squad is portrayed as causing more damage to other countries than actually helping them. An important story arc too, as Gary the actor is shocked by their actions and refuses to help his country any longer.
50** On the other hand, the [[KnowNothingKnowItAll Film Actors Guild]]--one of many critics to the titular Team America--are portrayed as a negative version of this trope as they are so obsessed with stopping the group that they are willing to sponsor ObviouslyEvil people like Kim Jong Il for a World Peace conference [[spoiler: without realizing his plan to use the conference to launch a massive terrorist attack]].
51* The Grim Reaper in ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'' complains: "Be quiet! You Englishmen... [[BritishStuffiness You're all so fucking pompous and none of you have got any balls]]."
52* ''Film/KingRalph'': After the entire British Royal Family died in an accident the palace manages to find one still surviving heir:
53-->'''Phipps''': "Sir Cedric! Sir Cedric! Good news. We've finally found an heir!"
54-->'''Sir Cedric Willingham''': "That's wonderful, Duncan. Who is he?"
55-->'''Phipps''': "His name is Jones. Ralph Jones."
56-->'''Sir Cedric Willingham''': "A good man?"
57-->'''Phipps''': [embarrassed] "Well... he has his strengths and his weaknesses. You see, he's... American."
58-->''[anguished pause]''
59-->'''Sir Cedric Willingham''': "Quickly, Duncan! The strengths!"
60** To top it all off the next scene shows Ralph (the American they were talking about) in a bar indulging himself with a pinball machine, coming across as a complete oaf.
61* ''Film/{{Popeye}}'' features "Sweet, Sweethaven -- An Anthem":
62-->'''Townspeople''': Sweet Sweethaven, God must love us,\
63We the people, love Sweethaven,\
64Hooray, hooray, Sweethaven...\
65Flags are wavin',\
66We're people from the sea, Safe from democracy,\
67Sweeter than a melon tree, Put here for you and me,\
68Sweet Sweethaven, God must love us,\
69We the people, of Sweethaven...\
70God must have landed here, why else would He strand us here, where the air is nice and clear?\
71Sweethaven even sounds so close to Heaven...\
72God will always bless Sweethaven...
73* The films of Creator/MichaelMoore are notorious for criticizing American politics (''Film/Fahrenheit911''), multinationalism (''Film/RogerAndMe'', ''Film/CapitalismALoveStory''), gun policy (''Film/BowlingForColumbine'') and the health care system (''Film/{{Sicko}}'').
74* ''Film/AFishCalledWanda'': Creator/JohnCleese's character Archie gives the following speech:
75-->''"Wanda, do you have any idea what it's like being English? Being so correct all the time, being so stifled by this dread of, of doing the wrong thing, of saying to someone "Are you married?" and hearing "My wife left me this morning," or saying, uh, "Do you have children?" and being told they all burned to death on Wednesday. You see, Wanda, [[BritishStuffiness we're all terrified of embarrassment]]. That's why we're so... dead. Most of my friends are dead, you know, we have these piles of corpses to dinner. But you're alive, God bless you, and I want to be, I'm so fed up with all this. I want to make love with you, Wanda. I'm a good lover - at least, used to be, back in the early 14th century. Can we go to bed?" ''
76* Many westerns from the Sixties on have criticized the USA's wars against Native Americans in the 19th century: ''Film/DancesWithWolves'', for instance (whereas previously the native peoples were generally [[TheSavageIndian bad guys]]).
77* "America" from ''Film/WestSideStory1961'' is partially a PatrioticFervor song as well as a song that is critical of the USA. The Puerto Rican immigrant women all prefer the life in "America" over life in Puerto Rico, while their men are far more critical. This is a departure from the stage version of the song, where the lyrics had very little explicit criticism of America, if any. In-universe, the "My Country" part of the trope applies because Puerto Rico is actually an American colony, something lampshaded in the song itself. From an out-of-universe perspective, the song was written by American Music/StephenSondheim.
78--> '''Anita''': ''Lots of new housing with more space''
79--> '''Bernardo''': ''Lots of doors slamming in our face.''
80--> '''Anita''': ''I'll get a terrace apartment''
81--> '''Bernardo''': ''Better get rid of your accent''
82--> '''Anita''': ''Life can be bright in America''
83--> '''Bernardo''': ''If you can fight in America''
84--> '''Anita''': ''Life is all right in America''
85--> '''Bernardo''': ''If you're all white in America''
86* Documentary ''Film/HeartsAndMinds'' is a scathing indictment of America's involvement in Vietnam that doesn't just stop at questioning geopolitical or military decisions, but indicts the American character, portraying the nation as loud and aggressive and violent and racist. Daniel Ellsberg is quoted as saying "We weren't on the wrong side; we ''were'' the wrong side." The film was made by Peter Davis, born and raised in Southern California.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Literature]]
90* Creator/AmbroseBierce was a master of this form in his short stories and especially his ''The Devil's Dictionary''.
91* Creator/JamesJoyce's novels and short stories, ''Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man'' and ''Ulysses'' were highly critical of Irish society, especially the hold of the Catholic Church on society, its antisemitism and narrow nationalism.
92* Roman author Sallust criticized the Roman Empire in his writings, especially their imperialism, and predicted the fall of that same empire.
93* ''Literature/GulliversTravels'': The first two parts satirized English politicians of Swift's days. The third part is a satire on the English Royal Academy of Science.
94* Author Creator/GeorgeOrwell criticized the British colonial policy in South-East Asia in his book ''Literature/BurmeseDays'', and its complacency in the face of fascism in ''Homage to Catalonia''. The latter ends with:
95-->''Down here it was still the England I had known in my childhood: ...the familiar streets, the posters telling of cricket matches and Royal weddings, the men in bowler hats, the pigeons in Trafalgar Square, the red buses, the blue policemen--all sleeping the deep, deep sleep of England, from which I sometimes fear that we shall never wake [[HarsherInHindsight till we are jerked out of it]] by [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII the roar of bombs]].''
96* Creator/SalmanRushdie is quite critical of post-independence Indian society, though he does have a few choice words for his adopted homeland the UK as well. His favourite targets are corrupt politicians and religious fundamentalists.
97* Author Creator/AleksandrSolzhenitsyn was banished from the Soviet Union for criticizing Stalinist Russia in his book ''Literature/TheGulagArchipelago''.
98* Creator/LeoTolstoy was highly critical of Russian society, Tsarism and the Orthodox Church despite being raised as a Russian aristocrat. He opposed the Russo-Japanese War and would eventually be excommunicated by the Orthodox Church despite being the most popular and respected Russian author in the world at the time. Many other Russian radicals and liberals also did the same in that period, with differing criticisms/depth of criticism.
99* Creator/EmileZola wrote a famous newspaper article accusation near the end of the 19th century, simply called "J'accuse" ("I Accuse") in which he criticized the French government for condemning Jewish military officer Alfred Dreyfus. Dreyfus was convicted of treason, but as it turned out antisemitism was the real reason he got made the scapegoat. Zola's written attack was a huge scandal back then and he was prosecuted too, but later he was VindicatedByHistory, with Dreyfus being released and exonerated. The scandal had a tremendous impact both on France (where it entrenched secularism) and Jewish life in Europe as a secular Austrian Jew of the name Theodor Herzl who hadn't felt particularly Jewish up to that point came to the conclusion that Jews would need their own state if they were ever to live free of prejudice and persecution, thus giving birth to Zionism and the state of UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}.
100* South African Alan Paton criticized his country's racial issues with books like ''Literature/CryTheBelovedCountry'', although that actually predated the formal beginning of apartheid. He continued to do this for the rest of his life.
101* Although Jose Rizal did love his country greatly, his two novels ''Literature/NoliMeTangere'' and ''Literature/ElFilibusterismo'' harshly criticized the Philippine society of his time, especially the clergy.
102* ''Literature/HorribleHistories'': The books have a very sarcastic tone and don't shy away from criticizing the British army, royalty and colonial system throughout its historical track record of atrocities.
103* ''Literature/JeevesAndWooster'': An amusing satire of the early 20th century British upper class system.
104* Creator/GeorgeOrwell commented that Creator/RudyardKipling, far from being [[MyCountryRightOrWrong a blind British patriot]], criticized Britain bitterly in many of his poems and stories.
105* ''Literature/TheGrapesOfWrath'' by Creator/JohnSteinbeck strongly criticizes the United States and especially Steinbeck's home state, California.
106* Just like in his lyrics and interviews Music/FrankZappa criticized the USA in his autobiography ''Literature/TheRealFrankZappaBook''.
107* ''An Utterly Impartial History of Britain (or 2000 Years of [[UpperClassTwit Upper Class Idiots]] in Charge)'' and its sequel ''An Utterly Exasperated History of Modern Britain (or Sixty Years of Making the Same Stupid Mistakes as Always)'', both by John O'Farrell.
108* Creator/GoreVidal's novels and essays are supremely critical of American society, politics, history and culture, especially for its SmallReferencePools and conservative attitudes to sexuality and basic hypocrisy.
109* Creator/AlFranken had this to say in ''[[ThatLiarLies Lies, and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them]]'' regarding the difference between the liberal viewpoint and the conservative viewpoint of the US.
110-->'''Franken''': We love America just as much as they do. But in a different way. You see, they love America like a 4-year-old loves his mommy. Liberals love America like grown-ups. To a 4-year-old, [[MyCountryRightOrWrong everything Mommy does is wonderful and anyone who criticizes Mommy is bad]]. Grown-up love means actually understanding what you love, taking the good with the bad and helping your loved one grow.
111* Many books, beginning in the 1960s, have attacked the US government's treatment of Native Americans (both now and in the past). However even [[OlderThanTheyThink in 1881]] (when the wars were still an ongoing issue) ''A Century of Dishonor'' strongly criticized this.
112* ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'': Italians, especially those from Florence, populate Hell so completely that Dante manages to find five Florentines immediately in the circle for Thieves. This prompts him to tell Florence to be joyous in its greatness, since her name extends everywhere in Hell. Additionally, though he was a Catholic Dante puts a number of corrupt Popes in Hell too.
113* Creator/JohnLeCarre employed this trope throughout his entire output. One memorable quote from his anti-hero George Smiley appears in ''The Secret Pilgrim'':
114-->''Now, please remember that the privately educated Englishman is the greatest dissembler on earth… Was, is now and ever shall be for as long as our disgraceful school system remains intact. Nobody will charm you so glibly, disguise his feelings from you better, cover his tracks more skilflully or find it harder to confess to you that he's been a damn fool. Nobody acts braver when he's frightened stiff, or happier when he's miserable; nobody can flatter you better when he hates you than your extrovert Englishman - or woman..."
115** One writer for ''The Atlantic'' opined "[Le Carre] revealed more about the country's ruling class than any political writer of his era."
116* Creator/SinclairLewis was famous and controversial in the interwar period for his satires of American life. His BreakthroughHit ''Main Street'' was set in a [[NoCommunitiesWereHarmed transparent parody]] of his childhood hometown of Sauk Centre, Minnesota, the residents of which were so displeased by his depiction of the town that he set many of his later novels in the [[FictionalProvince fictional Midwestern state]] of Winnemac to deflect similar criticism. When he became the first American author to win the UsefulNotes/NobelPrizeInLiterature in 1930, many of his horrified American contemporaries suspected that it was chiefly because he [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff flattered the Europeans' biases]] in depicting Americans as boorish social climbers, to the point where Lewis Mumford called it a StealthInsult towards America on the part of the Nobel committee.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
120* ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'': The team took a lot of shots at the British class system, most memorably in the "UpperClassTwit of the Year" sketch. The British military also got mocked a lot.
121* ''Series/LittleBritain'': Every episode proudly praises the glory of "being British", only to feature a lot of Englishmen[[note]]And ''Ladies''.[[/note]][[note]]And Welshmen and Scots.[[/note]] who are hardly something to be proud of.
122* ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'': It targets the British upper class society frequently.
123* ''Series/SpittingImage'': This satirical puppet show mercilessly lambasted everyone, but since it was made in the United Kingdom a lot of attacks were directed at British society too: the monarchy, government, class system, the low-budget film industry, advertising campaigns, UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers,...
124* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': It dealt with issues that polarized American society in the 1970s and ridiculed them.
125* ''Series/RootIntoEurope'': Despite poking fun at other European countries the show also mocks British tourism. Mr. Root feels that all other countries should be just like the UK, but many of his ideas about European countries are very stereotypical. Thus he frequently makes a fool of himself.
126* An episode of ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' shows a world in which America lost the American Revolution and is still under British rule. After helping a Second American Revolution to succeed, as they're sliding to the next world, Professor Arturo (played by John Rhys-Davis) drops this humdinger:
127-->''Remember: the reason the sun never sets on the British Empire, is because God doesn't trust the British in the dark.''
128* On Series/ShaunMicallefsMadAsHell (and earlier) ''Creator/ShaunMicallef'' likes to portray Australia as being a country of minor importance which is lucky to get invited to major global events, sometimes portraying Australia as a woman desperately trying to win a date from a man out of her league or just a general suck up (like in the segment "whose bottom should we be kissing now?") looking for bigger more powerful nations to align themselves with.
129* The ''Series/AdamRuinsEverything'' episode "Adam Ruins...America" centers around deconstructing the myth of American exceptionalism by stating that: the American dream is unattainable due to massive economic inequality; the U.S. constitution is notoriously hard to change because legislators insist on interpreting the original language instead of keeping it relevant to the times, and the constitution actually made it legal to own slaves, and thus Lincoln's emancipation proclamation was unconstitutional; finally, after the end of the Civil War, former slaves were able to benefit from their new rights, but groups like the [=KKK=] and their sympathizers stripped them of their rights, and the Civil Rights Movement wasn't so much for creating new laws to give people new rights, so much as forcing the government to enforce the laws that had already been written one hundred years before.
130* In ''Series/TedLasso'', Sam learns that the parent company of Dubai Air, the sponsor of his football team, is causing extreme environmental damage in his home country of Nigeria and bribing the government to look the other way. In response, he pulls out of an ad campaign Dubai Air was featuring him in, tapes over the sponsorship logo on his uniform (with the rest of the team then doing the same in support) and openly accuses the Nigerian government of corruption during the post-match press conference.
131* ''Series/LastWeekTonightWithJohnOliver'': Although the British-born Creator/JohnOliver acquired American citizenship, he will still mock his native United Kingdom in addition to the United States.
132* ''Series/WorldsDumbest'' commentator Wes Denning may be a proud Aussie, but he'll still take a cheap shot or two at his homeland.
133-->"No one in Australia goes to music festivals for the music. Everyone goes for the drunken shenanigans."\
134\
135"What can I say? There's not much to do in Australia."
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Magazines]]
139* ''Magazine/{{Mad}}'' Magazine: A decades long tradition of this magazine.
140* ''Magazine/HaraKiri'' and its follow-up ''Magazine/CharlieHebdo'' were so pointed in their satire of French society that the government banned it up to three times!
141* ''Magazine/PrivateEye'': Also well known for satirizing British politics.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:Music]]
145* Music/JacquesBrel: The Belgian singer attacked his home region Flanders and its inhabitants in three songs. The final one, ''"Les F..."'' was such a scathing attack on Flemish nationalists that the number was banned from airing on the radio.
146* Music/TheClash criticized the British class system and economic policy in ''Career Opportunities'' and ''Something About England'' from ''Music/{{Sandinista}}''.
147* Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival: On ''Music/WillyAndThePoorBoys'' they attack discrimination of poor people over rich ones regarding the draft in "Fortunate Son".
148* Music/DeadKennedys were infamous for criticizing American politics and society, most notably on their album ''Music/{{Frankenchrist}}'', where they satirize the US government, political corruption, bureaucracy, capitalism, MTV, the public education system, the military,...
149* When the Music/DixieChicks' singer Natalie Maines told a London audience in 2003 that they were against the invasion of Iraq and were ashamed that President Bush came from their home state of Texas, they got savaged in the US media and by many country music fans. They found a defender in, of all people, Music/MerleHaggard, who also released a song critical of the Iraq war, and said that he thought that attacking the Dixie Chicks for exercising their right to free speech was "an insult for all the men and women who fought and died in past wars".
150* Music/{{Eminem}} had in the early part of his career, taken shots at the hypocrisy within American society, which accuses artists like himself (and Music/MarilynManson) for tearing down the fabric of society and inciting violence, when they've taken a blind eye to the underlying problems that cause events like mass-shootings by teenagers, as addressed in "What I Am". "White America" is a little more pointed, taking jabs at [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin (white) America's]] MoralGuardians that crusade against his work, while their children listen to his music, and musing on the factors that allowed his commercial success in rap music, particularly within suburban America.
151--> ''Look at these eyes, baby blue, baby just like yourself/If they were brown Shady'd lose, Shady sits on the shelf''
152* Music/WoodyGuthrie: "Talking Dust Bowl Blues" from ''Music/DustBowlBallads'':
153--> ''An' my wife fixed up a tater stew''
154--> ''We poured the kids full of it,''
155--> ''Mighty thin stew, though,''
156--> ''You could read a magazine right through it.''
157--> ''Always have figured''
158--> ''That if it'd been just a little bit thinner,''
159--> ''Some of these here politicians''
160--> ''Coulda seen through it.''
161* Music/BobDylan:
162** ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin'': "With God On Our Side" criticizes the American government and army for their genocide on the Native American during the 19th century and the bloodshed during the American Civil War and Spanish-American War. It also criticizes the Red Scare and the nuclear arms race. From the same album "Only A Pawn In Their Game" and "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll" are both inspired by real-life injustices in the USA, namely a hotel barmaid getting struck down by a wealthy white man in a hotel in Maryland and the murder of black civil rights activist Medgar Evers.
163** ''Music/{{Desire}}'': The song "Hurricane" criticizes the imprisonment of Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, a boxer falsely accused of murder and tried by an all-white jury. Dylan's song actually raised awareness of this man's false imprisonment and made people do the trial over, which would eventually lead to Carter's release.
164--> ''To see him obviously framed''
165--> ''Couldn't help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land where justice is a game.''
166** "Slow Train" from ''Music/SlowTrainComing''
167--> ''Man's ego is inflated, his laws are outdated, they don't apply no more''
168--> ''You can't rely no more to be standing around waiting''
169--> ''In the home of the brave, [[UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson Jefferson]] turning over in his grave.''
170* Music/TheFugs were a 1960s underground rock band who were notorious for openingly criticizing the American government and the war in Vietnam on albums like ''Music/TheFugsFirstAlbum'', ''Music/TheFugsSecondAlbum'' and ''Music/ItCrawledIntoMyHandHonest''. They were even shadowed by the F.B.I. as a result.
171** "Wide Wide River" from ''Music/ItCrawledIntoMyHandHonest'':
172--> ''Who was it that set up this system?''
173--> ''This supposedly democratic system?''
174--> ''Where we're always voting for the lesser of two evils''
175--> ''Was George Washington the lesser of two evils?''
176--> ''Sometimes I wonder. Some politicians say we've got to stop violence in this country''
177--> ''While he's spending 15,000 dollars a second snuffing gooks.''
178* Music/SergeGainsbourg caused a stir among French military veterans when he released a {{Reggae}} version of the French national anthem called "Aux Armes" ("To Arms").
179* The songs "American Idiot" and "Holiday" from ''Music/AmericanIdiot'' by Music/GreenDay are critical of president UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush's government and the 2003 war in Iraq.
180* Music/FelaKuti openly protested the Nigerian government in his music. It brought him in a lot of trouble. He was arrested several times and beaten up by soldiers who rampaged his house.
181* Music/TheLevellers in "England My Home"
182--> ''Oh, what happened to''
183--> ''My green and pleasant land?''
184* Music/{{Madonna}}: "American Life" from ''Music/AmericanLife'' criticizes the American Dream. The original music video showed her throwing a hand grenade to a lookalike of US President UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush. "Hollywood" is a CelebrityIsOverrated song.
185* Miriam Makeba, the South African singer best known for the song "Pata Pata", was very critical of her country's [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra apartheid regime]] and even banned from entering her own country. As a result she became a vocal critic of her government and did a lot to draw international attention to South Africa's apartheid's regime.
186** Afrikaaner folk singer Bok van Blerk has provoked similar controversy in the modern UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica. Several romantic songs idealising the struggles of the Boer War have been interpreted as coded criticisms of the new management, and incitement to white South Africans to go back to [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra the Good Old Days]]. When these songs were taken up as anthems by old-time white nationalists and used as rallying cries, they were banned from public performance on SA's television and radio. ''De la Rey'' [[note]]On the face of it, a paean to a hero of the Boer War, with a chorus calling for a similar charismatic leader to rise and lead the Boer people to victory[[/note]] and ''Afrikaanerhart'' remain firm favourites and crowd-pleasers - with white audiences - [[StreisandEffect and the banning made both anthems ''very'' popular]]. Far more than they might have been if not banned.
187* Music/MarilynManson's entire career is built around criticizing the hypocrisy within American society, especially by organized religion, schools and the government. Take a song named ''We're from America'' (2009): ''We're from America, we're from America, where we eat our young.''
188* [[Music/PaulMcCartney Paul and Linda McCartney]]: Took an anti-British stance in their song "Give Ireland Back To The Irish".
189* Music/MidnightOil [[TitleDrop title drops]] this trope in their song ''My Country'', though it is more a critique of PatrioticFervor than this trope specifically.
190--> ''I hear you say the truth must take a beating''
191--> ''The flag a camouflage for your deceiving [...]''
192--> ''And did I hear you say:''
193--> ''My country right or wrong''
194--> ''My country oh so strong''
195--> ''My country going wrong''
196** Many of their other songs are no less critical of politics in their home country. Including but not limited to "Beds Are Burning", "Dead Heart", "Truganini" (plight of Aboriginals); "Blue Sky Mine" (asbestos mining pollution in Western Australia); "Dreamworld" (the 1980s Queensland government's demolition of built heritage); "Power and the Passion" (Gough Whitlam's dismissal, Pine Gap); "Read About It" (Australian media, including Rupert Murdoch)...
197* Music/RandyNewman's song ''"Political Science"'' pokes fun at the U.S.A. who are so angry that everyone seems to hate them that they decide to ''"drop the big one now"''. They will bomb the entire world, except for Australia, and ''"turn the entire world into one Americatown"''.
198** Music/RandyNewman also released an anti-Gulf War (the first one) song in 1991, [[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-01-24-ca-969-story.html Lines in the Sand]].
199* The ConceptAlbum ''Music/YearZero'' by Music/NineInchNails is set in an dystopian future where the American government has gained total control over her citizens. It was made in criticism of the UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush administration.
200* The Plastic People of the Universe, a Czech underground band named after Music/FrankZappa's song ''Plastic People'' from ''Music/{{Absolutely Free}}'', criticized the Czech communist regime in their songs and were arrested several times because of this.
201* Music/PublicEnemy are among the most vocal PoliticalRap groups. On albums like ''Music/ItTakesANationOfMillionsToHoldUsBack'' and ''Music/FearOfABlackPlanet'' they criticize America's long running history of oppression of minorities, but don't shy away from addressing criticism of Afro-American people either.
202* Music/GilScottHeron didn't shy away from addressing racial and social issues in the USA either. ''Music/TheRevolutionWillNotBeTelevised'' is one long litany against the USA, with "Whitey On The Moon" perhaps the best example. In this song he says that "while Whitey is on the moon" black people's problems on Earth have basically not changed for the better.
203* The Music/SexPistols: "God Save The Queen" from ''Music/NeverMindTheBollocksHeresTheSexPistols'' is a fierce attack on the British royals, with the immortal line: "There is no future and England's dreaming!"
204* Music/BruceSpringsteen likes this one. "Born in the U.S.A." is probably the most obvious example, but it's in the background of songs like "[[DyingTown Youngstown]]" and "[[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanDream Atlantic City]]."
205* German punk band ''Music/DieTotenHosen'''s "Tausend gute Gründe" lists "a thousand good reasons to be proud of this country" only to admit that at the moment, they can't actually come up with a single one.
206* Music/StevieWonder: Even lovable Stevie hasn't shied away from criticizing his home country. "Living For The City" from ''Music/{{Innervisions}}'' tackles discrimination of black people in the USA, while "He's Misstra Know-It-All" is aimed at UsefulNotes/RichardNixon, who had resigned that same year.
207* Italian HardcoreHipHop artist Fabri Fibra has written a handful of songs that include this trope, but its most liberal use is in the song "In Italia" ("In Italy"), where he tirades against the Boot of Europe's problems - including but not limited to political instability, medical malpractice, unemployment and the common belief that praying to God will magically fix everything.
208* Music/FrankZappa: Zappa criticized his country both satirically, in his songs, as during interviews.
209* "Some Girls" from Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}' ''Music/SomeGirls'':
210--> ''English girls they're so prissy''\
211''I can't stand them on the telephone''\
212''Sometimes I take the receiver off the hook''\
213''I don't want them to ever call at all''
214* ''Music/{{Roots}}'' by Music/{{Sepultura}}: While the album celebrates Brazilian culture, it also criticizes the dictatorships from the past, poverty in the ''favelas'', the disrespectful treatment of the Indian tribes in the country, and the environmental destruction of the Amazon rainforest.
215* Music/{{NOFX}}'s 2003 album ''The War On Errorism''. The whole album is very anti-Bush administration, staring with the cover [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_War_on_Errorism]] and going on from there. The back inset is captioned "Somewhere in Texas there is a village without its idiot."
216* "AMERICA" by Music/MotionlessInWhite.
217-->''A-M-E-R-I-C-A''\
218''Home of the free, the sick and depraved''.
219* Music/ChokingVictim pulled no punches in their views on the United States for misleading the masses via media and aggressive globalization ("Fuck America"), its police ("Crack Rock Steady"), prison practices ("Apple Pie and Police State"), making the masses complacent with television and drugs ("500 Channels"), and so on. Long before 9/11, the band were known to burn models of the World Trade Center in protest, and even after the day in question, singer Scott Sturgeon went on to claim that he "wasn't exactly opposed to [the towers] falling down" and [[RefugeInAudacity kept burning models of the WTC for at least a couple of years afterward]] with his other band.
220* Swedish metal band Music/{{Sabaton}}'s 2012 album ''Carolus Rex'', [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools their first #1 hit in their home country]], is a warts-and-all retelling of the rise and fall of UsefulNotes/{{Sweden}}'s 17th century [[TheEmpire empire]], from [[UsefulNotes/NotableSwedishMonarchs Gustavus Adolphus to Carolus Rex]]. In particular, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHeRnaWMtDk the title track]] paints [[UsefulNotes/CarolusRex Charles XII]] as practically a madman, utterly convinced of his own God-given rightness, and the following song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YuoIwWSTnQ "Ett slag färgat rött"]] ([[http://lyricstranslate.com/en/ett-slag-f%C3%A4rgat-r%C3%B6tt-blow-colored-red.html translation here]]) harshly criticizes his army for murdering hundreds of Russian prisoners of war after the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fraustadt Battle of Fraustadt]]. Aside from this album, the band often takes PatrioticFervor to the point of comedy in live performances.
221* Music/NineInchNails’s “The Hand That Feeds” from “With Teeth” was a TakeThat to the W. Bush administration and had planned to perform the song at the Creator/{{MTV}} VMA’s with a giant poster of Bush, but Trent Reznor decided to let Music/FooFighters take his spot. Music/YearZero is an ENTIRE album dedicated to Trent ranting and venting about Bush’s policies and administration again.
222* Music/{{Pitchshifter}}'s "Un-United Kingdom" harshly criticises UK politics. Brexit prompted them to release a "redux" of it.
223* Music/AlienWeaponry's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HychlNvGq4 "Whispers"]] criticizes the government of New Zealand for pretending to value the indigenous people (the band members are Māori) but breaking its treaty obligations to them, and starts with a clip of a PompousPoliticalPundit arguing that "no, actually, colonizing the Māori was a good thing".
224* Israeli musician Ehud Manor wrote "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMD-g_YP2wA I Have No Other Land]]" during the 1982 Lebanon War, though it was inspired by his brother's death in the Six-Day War. Its message is decidedly of the MyCountryRightOrWrong, ''if wrong, to be set right'' perspective -- Manor loves his country, even when he strongly disagrees with its actions. It has become a popular protest song in Israel, including during the 2023 protests against the proposed judicial reform.
225[[/folder]]
226
227[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
228* ''[[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers The Guardian]]'''s long-running satirical cartoon ''ComicStrip/{{If}}'' skewers the more contemptible or ridiculous positions taken by the social elite and governing classes in Great Britain.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:Radio]]
232* Practically ''every'' Creator/{{BBC}} radio comedy show there's ever been, [[note]]even during wartime[[/note]], has taken a few digs at British society and British institutions. And then you get onto the ones which are actually meant to be topical and satirical, like ''Radio/TheNewsQuiz''.
233* ''Radio/DemocracyNow'': Amy, Juan, and their guests are usually critical of U.S. policy on a multitude of issues.
234[[/folder]]
235
236[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
237* There is a French board game publisher named Sorry We Are French.
238[[/folder]]
239
240[[folder:Video Games]]
241* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'': Dorian does have some love for the Tevinter Imperium; it's his country, after all. But he's also not ''blind'', and he knows full well that the Magisterium is corrupt and full of cackling supervillains who give mages everywhere a bad name. The tipping point that has him leave to join the Inquisition is his former mentor going off the deep end and joining the BigBad, and he often [[StopBeingStereotypical berates other Tevinters for acting like the boogeymen the rest of Thedas thinks them to be]].
242* ''VideoGame/WolfensteinTheNewOrder'': Compared to Wyatt or B.J., J doesn't have much patriotism for America, given his rather bitter (if valid) gripes about how blacks were treated by whites in America, especially as this takes place in a world where the Civil Rights Movement never happened and, as we learn in [[VideoGame/WolfensteinIITheNeWColossus the sequel]], the UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan is now practically running the show in America. On the other hand, he [[spoiler:goes out playing ''The Star Spangled Banner" loud enough for all of Berlin to hear.]]
243** Speaking of the sequel, fascism at home hits B.J. hard when he [[spoiler:visits his abusive father Rip, only to learn that Rip has proudly taken up the Nazi flag because it allows him to be the Confederate slave-owner he always wanted to be. The final straw is learning that Rip threw his Jewish wife, B.J.'s mom, to the Nazis for sport]]. B.J. murders him and has a MUCH lower opinion of "good-old" America from that point on.
244--> '''B.J.''': (To an American actor) Are you a Nazi? Can't even tell anymore...
245* The "Big Boss Trilogy": ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater'', ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPeaceWalker'', and ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'' is the epic tale of American hero Naked Snake's discovery of the sheer corruption and treachery of his homeland and heroes, to the point that he builds his own nation from the forgotten armies of other nations that also betrayed their soldiers.
246--> '''Snake''': We haven't forsaken our countries... We just left them behind.\
247([[CuteAndPsycho One psychotic Metal Gear pilot]] [[FalseFlagOperation and a plan from America to nuke the eastern seaboard so they can invoke World War III]] later)\
248'''Big Boss''': '''We will forsake our countries and become one with this Earth.'''
249[[/folder]]
250
251[[folder:Web Comics]]
252* ''Webcomic/ScandinaviaAndTheWorld'': The comic strip pokes fun at many Scandinavian stereotypical ideas about other countries. Despite being drawn and written by a Dane it pokes fun at the Danish too.
253* ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'': Quigley despises Alderode, at one point quipping that he'd rather be called the son of a whore than a son of Alderode.
254[[/folder]]
255
256[[folder:Web Original]]
257* ''WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic'': In his review of ''"The Magic Voyage"'' Doug criticizes the German company who made this film for making such a historically inaccurate film. Then he turns the tables by adding: ''"We can't even get our own history right!"'' and shows the poster for ''WesternAnimation/{{Pocahontas}}''.
258* Rational Wiki is not afraid to grill the countries most of those writing/editing the articles come from, particularly the US and Britain (though places like Canada and the Scandinavian nations have it better). That said, it's of the opinion that true patriotism also involves pointing out the flaws of one's country in order to make it all that it can be.
259* WebVideo/RottenDotCom: Several articles show the darker side of American history, politics and culture, yet other countries don't come off much better.
260* WebVideo/JonTron: Jon has some choice words in regards to the questionable techniques of the player character in ''VideoGame/SamuraiZombieNation'', as well as a jab at the country he's trying to "save":
261--> ''Can we look at this for a moment? I'm a goddamn head of an emperor's ghost come over from his creepy doghouse in Japan to the United States to save everyone... [[DestructiveSavior by killing everyone]]. Where did this guy learn how to save a country? The United States?!''
262* The American left-wing political comedy podcast ''Podcast/ChapoTrapHouse'' is known for its constant vitriol towards the (perceived) racist, sexist, classist, imperialist attitudes that animate American politics in general.
263* LetsPlay/{{Chuggaaconroy}} takes a potshot at [[ThatOneLevel Moray Towers]] returning in ''VideoGame/Splatoon2'' by blaming America (his home country) for it.[[note]]For context, fans were polled for their favorite levels in the first ''VideoGame/Splatoon1'' game. Despite it being one of the most hated stages in the game by competitive players, Moray Towers was ranked as the most popular stage in America, resulting in its return for the sequel.[[/note]]
264-->'''Emile:''' If you were ever mad about Moray Towers coming back for another game, that's right, It's ''our'' fault! Why is America dumb...?
265[[/folder]]
266
267[[folder:Western Animation]]
268* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Poking fun at America's culture, politics and economy is popular staple of the show.
269** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS1E11TheCrepesOfWrath The Crepes of Wrath]]": In which The Simpsons meet an Albanian foreign exchange student named Adil.
270--->'''Homer''': ''"Please, please, kids, stop fighting. Maybe Lisa's right about America being the land of opportunity, and maybe Adil's got a point about the machinery of capitalism being oiled with the blood of the workers."''
271** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS5E16HomerLovesFlanders Homer Loves Flanders]]": Flanders drives Homer to a sports game. When Homer notices Lenny and Carl he pushes Flanders' face down out of sight because he is afraid of being seen with him. Carl notices Homer's car is driving without a chauffeur and assumes he's driving "one of those robot cars." As the car crashes Lenny sarcastically remarks: "One of those AMERICAN robot cars."
272** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS6E16BartVsAustralia Bart vs. Australia]]": When the family flees back to the American embassy in Australia the staff tries to stop them from entering by activating an electrical fence near a sign that says "Made with pride in the U.S.A." The fence malfunctions halfway, causing the Simpsons to enter after all.
273** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS6E19LisasWedding Lisa's Wedding]]": When Homer and Bart hang out the Union Jack to welcome Lisa's British boyfriend Hugh they bring his attention to it by saying: "Here's some American hospitality!" whereupon it turns out the flag accidentally caught on fire. Homer and Bart try to extinguish the fire by throwing some compost upon it, then give the ravaged remains to Hugh.
274** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS8E1TreehouseOfHorrorVII Treehouse of Horror VII]]": Kang and Kodos disguise themselves as the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates but are unmasked. In a direct jab at the American political system they say:
275--->'''Kodos''': "It's true, we are aliens. But what are you going to do about it? It's a two-party system; you have to vote for one of us."\
276'''Man 1''': "He's right, this is a two-party system."\
277'''Man 2''': "Well, I believe I'll vote for a third-party candidate."\
278'''Kang''': "Go ahead, throw your vote away."
279** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E23ThirtyMinutesOverTokyo Thirty Minutes Over Tokyo]]": When the family visits an American themed restaurant in Japan:
280--->'''Waiter:''' Don't ask me; I don't know anything! I'm product of American education system. I also build poor-quality cars and inferior-style electronics.\
281'''Homer:''' [cackles] Oh, they got our number!
282** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS13E15BlameItOnLisa Blame It on Lisa]]": Homer and Bart are stopped by a Brazilian lifeguard who notices they are American by Homer's shirt, which shows Uncle Sam devouring the world with the phrase: "Try and Stop Us."
283** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS8E13SimpsoncalifragilisticexpialaAnnoyedGruntcious Simpsoncalifragilisticexpialad'ohcious]]" has Shary Bobbins teaching the children to clean up their mess by hiding it from view. This inspires Bart to sing: "It's the American way!"
284** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS6E21ThePTADisbands The PTA Disbands]]": '''Homer''': "Lisa, if you don't like your job, you don't strike: you just go in every day and do it really half-assed. That's the American way."
285** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS9E20TheTroubleWithTrillions The Trouble with Trillions]]": After returning back from Cuba the following conversation takes place:
286--->'''Homer''': It's hard to believe there's a place worse than America, but we found it!\
287'''Mr. Burns''': Yes, I too feel renewed appreciation for the good old US of A. Oppression and harassment are a small price to pay to live in the land of the free."\
288'''Smithers''': Sir, aren't you facing some serious jail time?\
289'''Mr. Burns''': Well, if it's a crime to love one's country, then I'm guilty. And if it's a crime to steal a trillion dollars from our government and hand it over to communist Cuba, then I'm guilty of that too. And if it's a crime to bribe a jury, then so help me, I'll soon be guilty of that as well!\
290'''Homer''': God bless America!
291** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS19E1HeLovesToFlyAndHeDohs He Loves to Fly and He D'ohs]]": Colby''' (Creator/StephenColbert in InksuitActor guise) describes America as having been made great by the fact that it does not understand the limits of its power and doesn't care about anyone else's opinion of it.
292--->'''Colby''': Okay Homer, I don't know anything about planes, but I know about you. You have what made America great: no understanding of the limits of your power and a complete lack of concern for what anyone thinks of you. So you'll land that plane. And do you know why? Because I heard some guy say you couldn't.\
293'''Homer''': What! I'll show him. I'll show that guy!
294** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS20E5DangerousCurves Dangerous Curves]]":
295--->'''Homer''': "I know parts of our marriage are based on lies, but so are a lot of good things: religion, American history,..."
296** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS18E4TreehouseOfHorrorXVII Treehouse of Horror XVII]]": In "Married To The Blob", Homer turns into a large cannibalistic blob. After eating some obese Germans he says: "Must eat more fat people. Thank God I'm in America."'
297** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS14E21TheBartOfWar The Bart of War]]": After a fight breaks out at the baseball game, Sideshow Mel suggests they sing a song. The Sea Captain recommends "Not a hymn to war like our national anthem, but a sweet soothing hymn like the national anthem of Canada". The entire crowd then joins hands in the shape of the maple leaf and sings "O Canada", with Marge holding Canadian and Quebec flags. "Well Bart, we've learned that war is not the answer," says Milhouse. To which Bart replies "Except to all of America's problems".
298** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS17E8TheItalianBob The Italian Bob]]": Lisa decides to pretend she's Canadian in order to avoid having to face America's unfortunate history, but this is made difficult by Homer's boorish Americanness.
299--->'''Bart''': What's with the Canadian flag on your backpack?\
300'''Lisa''': Well, some people in Europe have the impression that America has made some stupid choices in the past, oh, five years. So, for the next week, I'm from Canada.\
301'''Bart''': I think dad may blow your cover.\
302'''Homer''' (battling over a flag): That flag is mine! Don't mess with Texas! Shock and awe, losers! Shock and awe!
303** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS21E16TheGreatestStoryEverDohed The Greatest Story Ever D'ohed]]": When The Simpsons visit Israel.
304--->'''Homer''': Ned, I'm an American tourist. I'm just here to see some sights, try goofy new food and spread some shekels with my Carolina Panthers credit card.
305** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS20E14InTheNameOfTheGrandfather In the Name of the Grandfather]]": In the episode where the family visits Ireland, one of the locals mentions that the Irish bettered their country by sending all of their idiots to America, where they became police officers.
306--->'''Lisa''': Don't worry, Dad. We'll get out. America is the New York Yankees of countries. Powerful and respected until the year 2000.\
307'''Irish man''': It (Ireland) got a lot nicer since we sent all our incompetent half-wits to America. Where you, for some reason, made them police officers. Top of the morning to you.
308** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS15E21BartMangledBanner Bart-Mangled Banner]]": The whole episode is a satire of post-9/11 American patriotism, taking specific potshots at the American Republican Party. Despite the fact that the show has often mocked the United States and both Democrats and Republicans, quite a few Americans were not amused. Which is odd, because near the end of the episode the Simpsons do migrate back to the USA, because they miss it, despite everything that happened.
309** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS12E3InsaneClownPoppy Insane Clown Poppy]]": When Homer asks Marge if she wants something done right or fast, she says that, like all Americans, she wants fast.
310** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E15MargeSimpsonInScreamingYellowHonkers Marge Simpson in Screaming Yellow Honkers]]": The educational video about road rage says rage is what makes America great but people have to know the right place for it.
311* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
312** [[Recap/SouthParkS5E9OsamaBinLadenHasFartyPants "Osama Bin Laden Has Farty Pants"]]: Even though UsefulNotes/OsamaBinLaden is ridiculed mercilessly, the episode also points out that the Afghan children hate the U.S.A. because the American military bombed their country flat and built their bases on Muslim holy lands. This leads to an argument between them:
313--->'''Kyle''': Do you really think your civilization is better than ours? You people play games by killing animals, and oppress women!\
314'''Boy in Blue Vest''': It's better than a civilization that spends its time [[BreadAndCircuses watching millionaires walk down the red carpet at the Emmys]]!\
315'''Stan''': ...He's got us there, dude.
316** "[[Recap/SouthParkS7E4ImALittleBitCountry I'm a Little Bit Country]]": In the pro- and anti-war debate, America is described as "an entire country saying one thing and then doing another."
317** Creator/TreyParker and Creator/MattStone have described ''South Park'' as a show about ''what it means to live in America''.
318* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' has Brian (an extreme left-wing liberal) meeting right-wing Republican radio broadcaster Rush Limbaugh in the episode "Excellence In Broadcasting". Rush actually manages to convince Brian to change his political views and develop a newfound sense of patriotism. Brian moves in with Rush, and takes the liberty of replacing all of Rush's appliances with American-made versions. They all break catastrophically as Brian lists off what he replaced one by one, which includes: the toaster, refrigerator, dishwasher, stove, oven, coffee maker, coffee mug, fine china dishware, cupboard door hinges, light bulbs, ceiling fan, garbage disposal, faucets, Rush's man-bra, and his cat, [[SoundDefect which MOOS]].
319* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'': Also satirized a lot of aspects of American society and politics.
320* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'', a show primarily made in the UK, and the creator of which has both French and English heritage, at one point had Gumball compare kindergarteners to British tourists.
321-->'''Gumball:''' They just waddle around with their pants down, grabbing everything they see and putting it in their mouths, even if it's a part of your anatomy. They get into fights for no reason and end up crying and hugging. Then they just go on slurring unintelligible nonsense, until they pass out wherever they feel like it. They're like... They're like... British tourists.
322[[/folder]]
323
324[[folder:Other]]
325* Comedian Creator/LennyBruce spent a huge part of his career targeting American censorship laws, especially regarding obscenity (he was prosecuted several times for violating them).
326* Comedian Creator/BillHicks dared to criticize the American government at the height of the Gulf War (1991).
327* Comedian Creator/GeorgeCarlin also has a track record of criticizing American politics and society.
328* Music/JohnLennon sent his MBE medal back to Buckingham Palace in 1969 as a protest against Britain's involvement in the Biafran War. He is the only [[Music/TheBeatles Beatle]] who did this.
329* Actress Creator/JaneFonda protested against America's involvement in UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar during the 1960s and 1970s and, in an even more controversial act, traveled to North Vietnam to meet the Vietcong. She continues to be attacked (being nicknamed "Hanoi Jane" and even spat on by Vietnam veterans, among other things) for this to this day.
330* Noam Chomsky is well-known for criticizing American foreign policy. He has stated that everyone should be chiefly concerned with the crimes of their own country more than those of other countries, because those are the ones they can do the most about.
331* Like Noam Chomsky, Glenn Greenwald, the attorney and journalist who uncovered the NSA spying scandal, is very harsh on American foreign policy, especially counterterrorism.
332* In general this trope is also defined by cultural dissonance. In some parts of the world criticizing your own country is so common that it's hardly frowned upon (for instance, the United Kingdom). In others (like the U.S.A.) it can still cause a stir, despite the U.S.A. having the right to freedom of speech protected by the constitution.
333* Americans burning their flag is still a controversial act in the United States, despite it being legal (only if the flag's your property though). In further irony, burning a flag is how the Flag Code says you should dispose of it (meaning burning for protest reasons stirs up anger because of [[{{Thoughtcrime}} different intent]]).[[note]]It should be noted, the Flag Code also defines ''how'' a flag should be burned for disposal, which looks similar to cremation of human remains. And this is typically ''not'' how flags are burned out of protest.[[/note]]
334* In a 1954 speech, President UsefulNotes/DwightEisenhower said "Here in America we are descended in blood and in spirit from revolutionaries and rebels—men and women who dared to dissent from accepted doctrine. As their heirs, may we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion." This was a very important statement to make during the RedScare, since many Americans were blacklisted or otherwise punished (usually socially, not judicially) for dissenting views during the period.
335* UsefulNotes/NationalBasketballAssociation player Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf caused a stir and drew a one-game suspension for refusing to stand during the US national anthem before games. He felt that the US flag was a symbol of tyranny and that the US had a long history of oppression. A compromise was eventually reached in which he would stand but lower his head and close his eyes. In late 2016, UsefulNotes/AmericanFootball player Colin Kaepernick did the same for similar reasons, which while inciting a massive backlash, also caused a backlash ''against'' the backlash, with many people[[note]]Many of whom, notably, had served in the military; a [=#VeteransForKaepernick=] hashtag was trending for a while on Website/{{Twitter}}[[/note]] coming out in droves to support him. After speaking with US Veterans, Kaepernick decided to kneel instead of stand, as a compromise to respect soldiers but still protest (kneeling was [[https://www.snopes.com/veteran-kaepernick-take-a-knee-anthem/ suggested by Veteran Nate Boyer]], as kneeling is what soldiers do at gravesites).
336* The [[http://www.cafepress.com/americanapology/137430 "American Traveler International Apology"]] [[FunTShirt t-shirt]], which reads "I'm sorry my president's an idiot. I didn't vote for him." in the six official languages of the UsefulNotes/UnitedNations. It was first made during the presidency of UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush and a similar sentiment saw a resurgence after the election of UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump. It was nowhere near as popular during the administration of UsefulNotes/BarackObama, as he was generally much more well-liked than his predecessor or successor.[[note]]Overseas, at least. The others did win a few elections stateside, after all.[[/note]] It remains to be seen how it fares under UsefulNotes/JoeBiden.
337[[/folder]]

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