You should read at least the first few paragraphs....and the dude wrote this in the 1950's.
http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/12/muslim-brotherhood-jihad-advocate-sayyid-qutbs-writings-newly-popular-in-egypt.html
It originally wouldn't let me copy but I FOUND A WAY TO COPY SOME.
His disgust with the gaudy materialism of postwar America was intense. He wrote to an Egyptian friend of his loneliness: "How much do I need someone to talk to about topics other than money, movie stars and car models." Moving to Greeley, Colorado, he was impressed by the number of churches in the city, but not with the piety they engendered: "Nobody goes to church as often as Americans do. . . . Yet no one is as distant as they are from the spiritual aspect of religion." He was thoroughly scandalized by a dance after an evening service at a local church: "The dancing intensified. . . . The hall swarmed with legs . . . Arms circled arms, lips met lips, chests met chests, and the atmosphere was full of love." The pastor further scandalized Qutb by dimming the lights, creating "a romantic, dreamy effect," and playing a popular record of the day: "Baby, It's Cold Outside." He regarded American popular music in general with a gimlet eye: "Jazz is the favorite music [of America]. It is a type of music invented by [American] Blacks to please their primitive tendencies and desire for noise."
Ultimately he concluded: "I fear that when the wheel of life has turned and the file on history has closed, America will not have contributed anything." He didn't find American prosperity to be matched by a corresponding wealth of spirit. "I am afraid that there is no correlation between the greatness of the American material civilization and the men who created it. . . . In both feeling and conduct the American is primitive (bida'a)."