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Notes -
Without taking a side on who's ideology should be seen as the true one, doesn't the fact that the title of "the American ideology" is contested, make the whole idea of a propositional nation unfeasible? I can imagine a sustainable group that puts no barriers to entry on ethnicity, but limits it's members on creed, but I'm having trouble imagining it when the creed itself is not a requirement.
If you can contest the idea that there is an American ideology (or really, it is probably better to say American values) then you are signaling that you can't speak descriptively about the collective values of any group of people (at least at the level of a nation or broad culture that is not bound by explicit ideological tenets such as a party platform – and even then there are plenty of e.g. Democrats who do not agree with 100% of their party platform!)
I think that such a position obscures much more than it reveals, even if it is true that there are going to be outliers to every group and that there are and can be good-faith disagreements about what values are truly integral to a nation or a culture.
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