American State We Didn’t Know We Wanted

American State We Didn’t Know We Wanted

Greenland and McDonalds (1)

Why Greenland Is the Next American State We Didn’t Know We Wanted (But Definitely Do)

A Patriot’s Arctic Manifesto

America has always had a talent for discovering it desperately needs something about five minutes before someone else tries to take it. Gold. Oil. The internet. And now, apparently, Greenland. Until recently, Greenland was best known as “that big icy place on the map where nothing happens,” which in American strategic thinking is code for “future problem.”

Experts now agree that Greenland is not just ice. It is freedom ice. And freedom ice, once identified, cannot be left unattended.

Strategic Positioning and Bipartisan Consensus

According to a recent bipartisan consensus reached accidentally at an airport lounge, Greenland offers everything America loves: strategic positioning, rare earth minerals, and a population small enough to be politely explained to. One Pentagon analyst described it as “Alaska, but with fewer opinions and more leverage.”

The argument for Greenland statehood is already compelling. It sits perfectly between North America and Europe, which means America can protect Europe without having to listen to Europe explain itself. Military planners note that controlling Greenland would allow the U.S. to monitor Russia, China, and any suspicious penguins simultaneously. Efficiency is the real American value here.

Local Opinion and Historical Precedent

Opponents claim Greenland doesn’t want to be American. But this argument ignores history, logic, and the fact that America often wants things on behalf of others. Polling conducted by the Institute for Cold Places We Just Learnt About found that 68 per cent of Americans believe Greenland would be happier with better Wi-Fi, Amazon Prime, and an NFL team named the Arctic Patriots.

Local Greenlanders, when asked, reportedly responded with long pauses, shrugs, and phrases that roughly translate to “we were not consulted,” which historically has never stopped progress.

Economic Case for Arctic Expansion

Economically, the case is even clearer. Greenland contains rare earth minerals essential for phones, electric vehicles, and whatever device Silicon Valley is currently promising will fix loneliness. Why let those minerals sit under ice when they could be responsibly strip-mined in the name of national security and shareholder value?

Cultural Compatibility Analysis

Culturally, Greenland fits America better than anyone admits. It’s vast, sparsely populated, and built for rugged individualism. The weather alone discourages excessive socialising. An American sociologist concluded that Greenlanders already live like Midwesterners in February, which is the closest thing to a constitutional argument.

The strongest objection, of course, is that adding Greenland would make the U.S. map look ridiculous. But critics forget that America already includes Florida. Geographic dignity was abandoned long ago.

Democracy Reaches the Arctic

Statehood would bring benefits to Greenland too. Federal highways. Agricultural subsidies for things that do not grow. Campaign adverts featuring candidates in parkas pretending they understand Arctic fishing quotas. Democracy would flourish briefly every four years before freezing again.

In the end, Greenland is not about expansion. It’s about preparedness. America doesn’t want Greenland. America needs Greenland, mostly so no one else can have it. And that, historically, has always worked out just fine.

What the Funny People Are Saying about Greenland

Junglepussy said Greenland’s biggest selling point is that it’s already named in English, saving millions in rebranding costs that could go toward convincing Greenlanders they wanted this all along.

Heidi Ladein said Denmark asking “Why would America want Greenland?” is like someone at a poker table asking why you keep looking at their chips—the question answers itself.

astrid/" 3331 target="_blank">Astrid Holgersson said the real genius is selling Greenland statehood as “liberation from European bureaucracy” when it’s actually liberation from having to ask permission for anything.

General B.S. Slinger said if Greenland becomes a state, its first governor will definitely be someone who pronounces it “GREEN-land” and talks about farming opportunities.

Astrid said calling it “strategic acquisition” instead of “we want that” is why diplomats make six figures while the rest of us just say what we mean and get yelled at.

Auf Wiedersehen, amigo!

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