America is a nation that conceives many odd inventions for getting somewhere but it can think of nothing to do once it gets there.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When I think of invention, I always think of America. You're always seeing ads: 'Have you got the next big idea?' There seems to be that spirit in America of inventions and inventors.
You know that American dream and American spirit of innovation we always talk about? Turns out, the bulk of it was built by people who came to America from somewhere else, not people born American. We have no birthright or natural lock on these things.
The United States is still an enormous generator of innovation, from which other nations have long benefitted. But we now also have the opportunity to benefit from innovation taking place around the world.
You grew up with America on the TV, and you think you know a place before you get there, and you have this idea of it in your head.
America is a living idea. It isn't only the tenets of its founding, but also the terms of its future. Every day, we make America. Seeking to preserve and enshrine one vision of this country from one period of its past robs it of what makes it magical: its infinite possibility for adjustment.
America is not just a country, it's an idea, and real Americans are getting busy.
The United States is definitely ahead in culture of innovation. If someone wants to accomplish great things, there is no better place than the U.S.
America is truly special because it's founded on an idea. It's the ideological and philosophical equivalent of a formless God, in other words, you know? It's, again, the only great country in the world that it is formed out of words.
I have to tell you that the innovation and the technology and the entrepreneurship of the world still lies in the United States of America.
America has always fascinated me; it's a country where you can make it from one side to the other with no money, by hook or by crook.