Do you care what people think of you from a prejudice ideology?
Of course I care. I would rather have people exercise a little insight and maturity than see them take the easy way out with a mob mentality. But I also realize that people by and large are prone to harboring prejudices. I do it myself (to my occasional dismay, when I see the evidence). So I'm tolerant when it comes to how people perceive me. I know what I am, and my self-worth is derived from my own estimation, not that of others. Knowing for a fact that I am a good and honorable person makes it possible for me to accept and understand the less-than-true blanket asessments made by others, and deal with them in an appropriate manner.
What is more important to you, what you think of yourself or, what people who have never met you think you are probably like?
See above.
Does it make you feel good to pretend to be superior by putting others down?
Sometimes. Sometimes it just makes me feel ashamed.
Does being a citizen in the most powerful nation on earth make you better than everyone else?
Actually, I am only a citizen of the USA by the circumstance of birth. I think of myself as a citizen of Earth.
What do you think makes the world hate the United States so much?
Partly ugly truth, partly ignorant prejudice.
9/11 changed the world and America forever. For a brief moment the world stopped. Many people think that a valuable opportunity to come together as the human race was lost. Others think that it is time to abandon allies that will not stand beside the US. Do you have a opinion on this? What did America fail to do? What did it do right?
Your descriptive lead-in to the question is too vague for an intelligent reply. What "valuable opportunity"? How was it "lost"? Which "allies", and why did this question come up? Some exposition is needed before I can answer.