based on bias rather than data? you just didn't care to contribute back when we had that discussion or deliberately ignored anything i wrote since i posted more data supporting my stance in that debate than in most other ones we had here. for example, here are the two links of my initial post:
http://www.owen.org/musings/generosity
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...able_countries
i repeat this again, for you: americans are one of the most charitable people when it comes to classical charity. they also score the highest in absolute terms of aid which is no surprise since they are by far the biggest country in the west. though, absolute numbers don't have anything to do with the average citizen's contribution to aid obviously.
then, you post these links. the first one directs me to financial support of the NATO where the US, of course, gives most in absolute numbers. if you convert those numbers to contribution per capita you see that americans give less than most other rich nations such as germany, the UK, france, spain, the netherlands, norway, belgium, denmark, etc. the next link redirects me to the wikipedia article about the UN and i seem to be supposed to scroll down until i find some sort of ranking of countries which, again, measures financial support for this organization. and it's the same again. the US pays less than all other western nations that are listed here per capita.
fail fail fail. anyway, that was NOT what i meant when i said the US could be the greatest contributor of good which is why this sub-discussion emerged. do you think financial support is the only support? if you would use your resourced wisely you could be the leaders in all technological, including medicinal, fields, all social sciences, humanities, etc. you could make all other people of the world achieve this too.