Most obscure country for its size

That was a pretty pointless post.

No hay en Paraguay!
Does ANYTHING happen there?
And Bolivia-does anything go on there?

Bolivia has a very progressive president in Evo Morales, who is notable among other things for being the first indigenous tribal leader in the Americas to become a head of state. Evo is the apu mallku (supreme chief) of the Aymará nation. I think Bolivia is a country to watch.

And don’t get me started on the Guianas. All [del]four[/del] five of them.

Going by American news coverage, every country in the world had already disappeared.:wink:

America is where everybody emigrated to just to get the hell away from everywhere else. Like Satchmo says: Leave it all behind ya. That mindset of turning our national back on the rest of the world and forgetting about it is baked in from the earliest phases of US history.

Except for the Yankees and Cowboys: the former on the east coast came from old money and sought to build up the Atlantic alliances, especially with the UK. The latter out West sought to expand ever westward, and that came to include Hawai‘i, the Philippines, and Vietnam. Anyhow, that was 1960s New Left radical turned professor Carl Oglesby’s theory of US history. Johanna’s corollary: Apart from the Y. & C., Americans don’t know and don’t care about anyplace that isn’t America.

Huh. I would suppose most countries have a mix of people who are interested in the wider world and those who don’t care about much beyond their own country.

Every time I see a post from Ale or that Spanish dialects come up.

But the US stands out from all others in not knowing or caring anything about the rest of the world. It’s baked into the national character. The exceptions that exist (I’m one) are not enough to override Americans’ general will-to-ignorance.

And that is just the way God intended it. Now bow your head for our favorite song.

I have actually been there two times. One time was an overnight stay because the Air France plane I was on had problems with its navigation instruments. The first time was to visit a city that I assume most American’s have heard of - Timbuktu.

Here are some “facts” about Angola.

Most Americans have heard the name Timbuktu, but what is known of it beyond that? Precious little, except that it’s a byword for whatever is impossibly distant and obscure. Etymology of Timbuktu: from Berber tin buqt, meaning: ‘of the far away’. How many who know of the name Timbuktu could tell you what country it’s in?

Mali is an old favorite country of mine. I’m a fan of Oumou Sangaré and Rokia Traoré, as well as enjoying the Putumayo Records compilation Mali. What they are now calling “desert blues” originated from Tuareg music from the north of Mali and from other Malian ethnic groups in the Timbuktu region. Notably it uses the pentatonic minor scale, which forms the skeleton of the blues scale of America. Many believe that the roots of the blues are to be sought in Malian music. I think its ability to sound familiar to American blues audiences, and the intuitive ease for American blues and Malian musicians to get together and jam accounts for its rise in popularity.