There were countries with freedom of speech thousands of years before America was even discovered as a continent. People around the world continuously fought for their freedom for centuries before and after America.It takes more than a fictional man in tights to claim freedom as exclusive to a country.
Sincerely, all this talk is rather idiotic. Freedom? An exclusive right? Do Americans really believe they were the first to fight for freedom? Maybe the first in that continent, but almost EVERY country fought for freedom (of speech or even worse) throughout human history. If America's fathers believed in those values, it was because millions struggled for these for centuries and some even achieved them.
And on a side note, the United States today is just a child with guns. What the current governments are doing is crimes against humanity. They get to decide who is to have "freedom" (which of course translates to "being directly under US control") AND fight their wars for them? When in some cases there was not even a war to fight prior to their involvement? And, seriously, "there's still work to be done in Iraq"? What work? Kill even more human beings?
I don't want to start a political debate and I know most of you are going to tear me to shreds and damn me to hell. I just think that other voices should be heard every now and then because America is not the center of the world nor its judge and jury (and lately executioner). Like every country, the USA has fought its wars. But the whole world has done the same and Freedom is not anyone's exclusive right.
Bottomline, "the American Way" would not sit right with millions outside America. So, why include it? Superman is an American icon (he was created in America by Americans), but he's a world hero. He doesn't need a stamp. Spider-man is American too, but that flag at the end of SM1 is just painful. Ending a Spider-man movie with an American flag? Or any flag for that matter? Why? So, after all this rant, I find the writiers did well leaving that one out.