You guys argue over basic liberties that the civilised west long ago agreed should be protected and provided by the state
I think maybe we have different definitions of what is a "civil liberty".
The US in general still has far more liberty than many other places. I spoke with someone from France for instance, and they surprised me with their comments. Along the lines of "In France, the default for most things is 'it is forbidden'. In the US, the default is 'you can do it.' "
Interestingly this was contrasted with their observation about how confusing and complicated the US health care system is compared to that in France. And how our cheese is terrible, and when it's good it's ridiculously expensive (they were surprised that we have decent wine though).
Also, corruption in the US is generally limited only to the higher echelons of society; there is very little "consumer level" corruption. Generally you only get it from local power structures if at all - like small town permit approvals or something. Anything larger than that is very rare and generally makes headlines. It's really easy to find instances of public officials going to prison for corruption (mostly taking bribes to select a contractor or misusing public resources) here in the US. We don't generally have corruption like "sorry you won't get power to your house unless you pay us extra" kind of stuff.
Now, that's not to say the US is the best at anything - but I really don't understand how people can look at the US and say it's "hell". Unless maybe you're looking at specific urban areas and what makes international news which tends to focus on the sensational...