To foreverserenity:
thanks for the clarification. I agree that it's the person, not the place. But I also think that an educational system that seems to have largely turned its back on the idea of promoting the virtues of the culture it's meant to transmit and perpetuate is at fault. It seems to me that every aspect of Western culture, its history and values, is under attack. Attack by those who deny that there is anything in the canon of Western culture to be proud of, and who wish to drown out the historical voices of Western achievement beneath a clamour of PC-guilt and tree-hugging apologetics for our treatment of native peoples. The twisting of the cultural commentary surrounding Colombus Day being a perfect case in point - no longer a heroic figure, an icon whose voyages and discoveries made America posible, Colombus is now some planetary rapist and villainous oppressor.
This turn around has occurred only over the last decades and is not irreversible. But while this cultural relativism and anti-historicity is taught in American schools it's unlikely that the numbers of young men in America who think like the young man in Ohio will decrease.