How is the United States such a powerful superpower and yet Americans seem to be so stupid? I mean, seriously, haven’t we all pondered this at one time or another – or just about every frickin’ day since November, 2016, when 63 million Americans walked into voting booths and pulled the lever for Donald Trump? No matter how dreadful and flawed a candidate Hillary Clinton was, only a simpleton could imagine Trump would turn out to be a better president. But even before that low point, evidence of American stupidity has been in abundance for decades.

So, for instance: Electing Republicans who want to dismantle their health care system ​The U.S. is the only wealthy industrialized nation without a universal health care system. Instead, Americans have a system run by profit-making insurance companies – which costs 17 per cent of their GDP, despite the World Health Organization (WHO) recommending countries spend no more than 10 per cent (Canada spends 10.4 per cent). Countries that spend in excess of 10 per cent of their GDP on health care are wasting money – cash better spent on innovating your economy, education and infrastructure. Prior to Obamacare, if your employer didn’t provide you with health insurance, or you couldn't pay it from your own pocket, you had extremely limited health care, if any at all. Thus, by 2010, nearly 50 million Americans did not have health coverage – which meant going into debt if an operation was needed, or simply not having the procedure. Forty-five thousand Americans were dying every year by 2009 because they had no health insurance. And even those who do have coverage, insurance companies – not your physician – decide on whether you get an operation or not, based on cost. If they feel it’s too expensive, then you’re shit out of luck.

This awful system led to Obamacare, which is far from perfect, but clearly better than what existed before. Obamacare prevents insurers from denying coverage to those with pre-existing conditions, offers subsidies for poor people, expanded Medicaid and forced insurers to cover certain services. Since its adoption, the number of Americans without health coverage has fallen to 28 million. Yet, despite Obamacare clearly being a vast improvement, Americans have elected Republicans to the presidency and both houses of Congress – whose number one priority is destroying Obamacare and replacing it with nothing. That’s how dumb Americans are. Tolerating a corrupt, undemocratic electoral system Americans like to pride themselves on being a truly great democracy. This is utter nonsense. The US is unique among Western democracies for having only two political parties. When Bernie Sanders decided to run for president two years ago, this lifelong socialist was forced to join the Democratic Party in order to have any chance of being heard. Yet the Republican and Democratic parties are often indistinguishable from one another. The neoliberalism of Reagan and the Bushes is no different from the neoliberalism of the Clintons and Obama (all of whom, for example, support free trade agreements, which have devastated the American working class). And both parties have supported military interventions abroad and massive defense spending. Meanwhile, in the 2016 presidential election, Hillary Clinton beat Trump by nearly three million votes. In the 2000 election, Al Gore received about 500,000 more votes than George W. Bush. But due to the archaic electoral college system, Bush and Trump “won” those elections. Moreover, the U.S. system has no barriers for rich people and corporations pumping money into the system – ensuring only people who support the rich and corporations get elected. And the Republicans have gerrymandered Congressional and Senate districts so effectively that while more people can vote Democratic than Republican, the Republicans win more seats, which is one reason they control both houses of Congress. And yet Americans are not in the streets protesting the fact their democracy is a sham. That’s how dumb Americans are. No gun control ​Americans love guns. They own 357 million of them, according to one estimate, or more guns than actual US citizens (by 40 million weapons). And because there are no restrictions on buying a firearm, any whack job can get their hands on them with ease. Every year, about 33,000 Americans are killed with guns – of which 12,000 are homicides, or about 25 times the average of other high-income countries. On an average day, 93 Americans are killed with a gun (most are suicides). There were 372 mass shootings in the US in 2015, killing 475 people and wounding 1,870. One study found that the annual rate of mass shootings has tripled since 2011. In 1982, a mass shooting occurred an average of every 172 days. Now they happen every 64 days.

Overall, the number of gun murders per capita in the US in 2012 - the most recent year for comparable statistics - was nearly 30 times that in the UK, at 2.9 per 100,000 compared with just 0.1. Of all the murders in the US in 2012, 60 per cent were by firearm compared with 31 per cent in Canada, 18.2 per cent in Australia, and just 10 per cent in the UK. Countries with strict gun controls have much fewer gun-related fatalities than countries with no or poor gun controls. This is incontrovertible. Yet Americans continue to vote for politicians and donate money to the National Rifle Association (NRA) to ensure gun controls are never implemented. That’s how dumb Americans are.