Minister of Truth
Practically Perfect
You're just plain wrong about them considering themselves Englishmen! There are very few examples of this, MOST of them preferred "Colonialists" over "Englishmen." They LEFT England, you dimwit! Traveled across a huge ocean for weeks, came to a country without running water and nothing but the clothes on their backs, to get away from the British Monarchy and authoritarian rule of the King. Without fault, MOST of them were NOT big fans of Britain!
There is nothing ignorant in what I have stated, and if you've read any historical accounts of the period, you should understand this. It sounds like you half-ass read the history, then assigned your own intents and reasons for the actions. It's the only way I can explain how you would think what you've articulated. This is not the first time you've interjected your personal opinion regarding the sentiments of the day, you do this all the time, and it's often some perverted abstract of how some people might think today as opposed to 230 years ago. It's almost like you want to make some kind of statement against Iraq based on some fake perspective you claim people had in 1776!
I read through your little 'explanation' of the mindset, and it appears you think the only valid reason for war is disdain for someone's culture. Like that is the only reason we would ever go to war, and that's what made it so hard to go to war against England, we didn't oppose their culture! In 1776, we weren't in any position to be opposing someone's culture, and the fact is, our own culture was just being formed, and it was quite radical to most of the traditional world. It's absurd to presume Americans had any animosity toward others because of a difference in culture! In short, you are totally full of horse shit.
1) Most of the Founders did not come from England, but instead came from a line of established colonial families. The attitudes of their respective regions had changed since first being established. The only region that had ever really been all that hostile to Britain was Puritan New England, and you can see how numerous the Anglophiles had become in that area.
2) I inferred nothing about Iraq. With regard to war, the French & Indian War had been a source of hyperpatriotism amongst the colonists, who were proud to have faught as Englishmen against the evil French nemesis.
3) If you don't think American Colonists were prejudiced against non-English cultures, look no further than the speeches of evangelists/ministers/etc. of the time who constantly berated France as an evil, decadent, hellish nightmare of a culture.
4) You are an ignorant Southerner who has no qualms about the idea of separation on the spur of the moment without regard to tradition or culture. The South at the time of the Revolution was a very different place than the one we remember from the 19th Century to the present day. It was more loyal than the Middle and New England colonies, as it had been established exclusively as a commerical enterprise and not as a safe haven or religious mecca, and as such it had a disproportionate number of Loyalists in it compared to the other regions.