It was directed by Paul Verhoeven who is Dutch. I read that originally they wanted Nils Gaup from Norway who was relatively unknown and had made the Norwegian-Sámi movie Ofelas (Pathfinder) the same year as RoboCop came out. Why did they seem to want a European director? It's a very American movie. Budgetary reasons?
No, not necessarily, but if they're unknown and can get a shot at a breakthrough, they might. Verhoeven wasn't unknown in his home country of the Netherlands, though, so maybe my theory falls flat there. But there might have been a completely different reason as to why they wanted a European director. Artistic?
Yes, but that they wanted Gaup first kind of makes it seem a little like they specifically were looking for a European one. I guess it might have been all a concurrence, though. Two can be a coincidence, three are probably not.
Politically, there's a difference as Europe is 'socialist' with national health care and no guns (with a few countries like Austria and Switzerland being exceptions to the rule). Did you know that on that continent, liberalism is considered right? In the US, liberal Democrats are considered radical left. Europe has no real right aka conservatives, only different degrees of left. From an American perspective, that is.
Then you have the cultural clashes like Europeans love soccer and call it football, while Americans hate it. White Americans also get circumcised for the most part, while in Europe that is regarded as a Jewish and Muslim custom.
I think the Democrats are a liberal party and some say that the so-called corporate-wing Democrats (to which Joe Biden and Kamala Harris belong) are actually right and not very different from warmongering neo-conservatives. The thing is that because of the two-party system, Democrats are forced to pander to the radical left as they cannot afford to lose their votes. For the same reason, Republicans have to to pander to white nationalists. This leads to Democrats calling Republicans Nazis and Republicans calling Democrats communists.
You can want a bit of central planning and still be a fan of free enterprise
The definition below says "democrat" to me 100x more than it says "conservative"
Dictionary
Definitions from Oxford Languages · Learn more
liberal
/ˈlɪb(ə)rəl/
adjective
1.
willing to respect or accept behaviour or opinions different from one's own; open to new ideas.
"they have liberal views on divorce"
2.
relating to or denoting a political and social philosophy that promotes individual rights, civil liberties, democracy, and free enterprise.
Similar:
tolerant
unprejudiced
unbigoted
broad-minded
open-minded
enlightened
forbearing
permissive
free
free and easy
easy-going
laissez-faire
libertarian
latitudinarian
unbiased
impartial
non-partisan
indulgent
lenient
lax
soft
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Opposite:
narrow-minded
bigoted
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noun
1.
a supporter of policies that are socially progressive and promote social welfare.
2.
a supporter of a political and social philosophy that promotes individual rights, civil liberties, democracy, and free enterprise.
"classical liberals emphasized the right of the individual to make decisions, even if the results dismayed their neighbours or injured themselves"