Woah. This thread kinda exploded when I was sleeping. Exploded and took a left turn. To be honest, I'm not nearly as well versed in the Ukraine situation and history as I ought to be. So I'm not going to chime in on that ongoing conversation except to point out a relevant but about precisely why I'm not. The primary reason for my lack of detailed knowledge is...that frankly the U.S. is bloody swamped in worldwide issues.
The U.S. may still have the single most powerful military in the world(by a very much decreasing margin), but it's currently deployed in Four ongoing armed conflicts. That's not even counting the huge numbers of other commitments, such as the nearly 30,000 U.S. troops stationed in Korea as of the last numbers update I can find. To be perfectly honest, the U.S. has pretty much hit it's limit of force projection.
The public, even those like me who do their best to keep up with it, are also beyond their ability to keep track of everything. Add a sort of spreading numbness to the population...to be blunt the average U.S. citizen is reverting to an isolationist mindset. We've been trying to act as a world police force, and the strong arm of the world government for so long, and getting so much hate in return for our efforts, that the public really just wants to withdraw from everywhere and let China and Russia do whatever the hell they want to the rest of the world.
This very thread has highlighted the reason why. Despite the best efforts of our military and political masters, every time anything in the world goes wrong, everyone and their brother screams "Where was America!". The American public has grown sick of it, of the whining and bitching when we help, and of the even worse whining and bitching when we don't. I'm not saying it's right. I'm not even agreeing with it. It's just an observation of reality.
Compare an Amtrak train to an Italian high-speed, an American interstate to a French highway, an international airport anywhere in Europe to one anywhere in the US. Americans think they're leading the world only because they've never seen the world.
First, and I want to make this point, because it's important: Amenities mean almost nothing about the population's interested in the public good. They are, generally, more related to country/city size and comparative affluence. Heck, in some places the public amenities are less...because the idea of the public good is higher and the money was spent to raise overall quality of life. I'm not sure where the two got associated here.
Second, and this is equally important if you're going to compare somewhere like France to the USA.
Size of France: 248,573 mi²
Size of United States: 3.797 million mi
France has things like a superior rail system because it's possible to have a better rail system. They can do it, practically, at that size. Moreover, where in the U.S. are you comparing it to? Some U.S. cities have very solid public transit systems, others not so much. The variance is so huge that I I'm unsure how, exactly, you feel able to make such broad statements? Same thing with the Highway. I've lived in places where the highway was incredibly well maintained, likely far better than the French system...and others not so much.
P.S. If anything in this post came off as irritable, I apologize. I'm having major trouble with the forums, had to rewrite it multiple times, and was pretty pissed off by the time it went through. Later rewrites were probably considerably more aggressive than the original text -_-.