10 Reasons AUSTRALIA is BETTER than AMERICA

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • Reasons AUSTRALIA is BETTER than AMERICA
    In this video I compare Australian and American culture. You will learn the differences between Australia and America. These are my personal reasons for why I think Australia is better than America.
    CHICKEN SALT!!!
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    10 Things Americans Hate About Australia:
    • 10 Things AMERICANS HA...
    10 Weird Things About Australia/Australians:
    (coming soon)
    10 Things that Will SHOCK you about Australia:
    • Most SHOCKING Things a...
    10 DON'Ts of Australia:
    • The DON'Ts of AUSTRALI...
    100 Differences Between America and Australia:
    • 100 DIFFERENCES Betwee...
    100 Aussie Slang Words and Phrases:
    • AUSSIE SLANG | 100 Wor...
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @brettholness6994
    @brettholness6994 Před 3 lety +487

    Australia used to have the drinking age at 21, But during the war it was changed to 18, The govt said if you are old enough to die for us ,you are old enough to have a beer

    • @rosssmith6205
      @rosssmith6205 Před 3 lety +31

      I'm an Aussie, born in 1948. Drinking & voting age for me was 21. Then around sometime in the 70's, the incumbent government was looking to lose the next election. They dropped the age limit of both of these to entice young people to vote for them. They succeeded.

    • @NitroCrypt
      @NitroCrypt Před 3 lety +1

      That’s the same as the voting age

    • @candycanessongs
      @candycanessongs Před 3 lety +4

      @@rosssmith6205 Never let the truth get in the way of a good yarn ... :P

    • @davidberriman5903
      @davidberriman5903 Před 3 lety +10

      Gough Whitlam lowered the voting and drinking age. I was in the last ballot for National Service. At twenty I could go to Vietnam and be killed but I couldn't vote. Labor came to power in December 1972 and pulled the plug on Vietnam and subsequently lowered the afore mentioned ages.

    • @davidberriman5903
      @davidberriman5903 Před 3 lety +4

      @@rosssmith6205 it was Gough Whitlam when he came to power in 72. He pulled us out of Vietnam and lowered the voting and drinking ages.

  • @mfanwelikeit3760
    @mfanwelikeit3760 Před 3 lety +426

    I feel like a lot of Americans care a lot about rights, where as Australians are a lot more concerned with responsibility. As in, we enjoy these rights we have with the knowledge that we share responsibility. You can get guns here, you just need a legitimate reason. Hunting, target shooting etc. The responsibility of having them outweighs the right every time.

    • @AydinZahedi
      @AydinZahedi Před 3 lety +42

      "I feel like a lot of Americans care a lot about rights, where as Australians are a lot more concerned with responsibility"

    • @alexlanning712
      @alexlanning712 Před 3 lety +3

      good concept

    • @darnaejackman7208
      @darnaejackman7208 Před 3 lety +2

      In Australia you can get guns for hunting and target practice

    • @alexlanning712
      @alexlanning712 Před 3 lety +2

      @@darnaejackman7208 yes but not assault guns

    • @pronumeral1446
      @pronumeral1446 Před 3 lety +12

      ​@@alexlanning712 To be clear: To own guns you need a license, and they must be registered (so a lot like driving a car). If you are a member of a gun club / range, then you can get pistols. If you are a hunter, farmer or target-shooter, then you can get single shot or bolt-action rifles and shotguns. If you are a professional shooter you can get semi-automatic rifles (but this is rare). The police also have semi-automatic rifles but don't carry them on patrol (they only carry a pistol sidearm).

  • @alanahjade27
    @alanahjade27 Před 4 lety +491

    I feel so so bad for people who've never known life with chicken salt... nothing is the same without it

    • @cLaudSy
      @cLaudSy Před 3 lety +20

      Normal salt is sh*t. It has no flavour. BUT CHICKEN SALT! Life is waaaayy better

    • @tvsinesperanto7446
      @tvsinesperanto7446 Před 3 lety +9

      How is it possible that the US is bereft of this nectar of the gods?

    • @harveyfamily988
      @harveyfamily988 Před 3 lety +6

      CHICKEN SALT!!!!

    • @MrTripleXXX
      @MrTripleXXX Před 3 lety +8

      CHICKEN SALT IS THE BEST haha

    • @reneepope-munro8115
      @reneepope-munro8115 Před 3 lety +11

      Alanah S literally eating KFC chips with extra chicken salt as I read this 😂

  • @johncartwright4041
    @johncartwright4041 Před 3 lety +152

    There is an unwritten law with BBQ's and that is "you leave it as you found it ". If you don't someone will say something or give you a nasty look.

    • @ktwashere5637
      @ktwashere5637 Před 3 lety +6

      I love how all that will happen is you get a nasty look. In America someone would put a cap in yo ass.

    • @tulinfirenze1990
      @tulinfirenze1990 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ktwashere5637 Or some Karen would call 911.

    • @artemthedeitylobov8012
      @artemthedeitylobov8012 Před 2 lety

      @@ktwashere5637 yeah that’s not something to be proud of 😂 imagine shooting someone for no reason

  • @samliveshere88
    @samliveshere88 Před 3 lety +291

    on guns, as an Australian I've never ever worried about someone having a gun

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety +5

      The police DO have them correct?

    • @samliveshere88
      @samliveshere88 Před 3 lety +39

      ​@@carlgharis7948 yeah but police aren't scared of everyone possibly having guns so they never really draw them or imply they're going to

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety +9

      Makes since. Most Americans officers have to imply they're going to every other week. Australia officers almost never

    • @classicalhero7
      @classicalhero7 Před 3 lety +17

      We never had the gun culture that America has.

    • @hotaruFirefly2
      @hotaruFirefly2 Před 3 lety +5

      You'll see more gun owners in rural towns. One of my brothers would go out hunting Roos every now and then.

  • @hyumotoki2322
    @hyumotoki2322 Před 4 lety +414

    As a fellow Australian I appreciate your honesty and your probably the only American that sees the facts

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +45

      Thanks. You have an amazing country so and it's easy to share good things about it

    • @zaksuliman2567
      @zaksuliman2567 Před 4 lety +5

      He made a video criticising our country go watch it.

    • @zaksuliman2567
      @zaksuliman2567 Před 4 lety +4

      Tristan Kuhn fuck sake mate, you previous video was aggressive, shit and really fucking rude.

    • @LarryDaLobstah
      @LarryDaLobstah Před 4 lety

      Danielplayz21 OI OI OI!!!

    • @LarryDaLobstah
      @LarryDaLobstah Před 4 lety +9

      Zak Suliman he also made a video praising our country. What’s your point? The criticisms were menial things so who gives a shit?

  • @randalllasini8772
    @randalllasini8772 Před 3 lety +162

    I am Australian - I love the Australia health system and support it all the way. I had a stomach problem, when into the emergency at hospital. They examined me within a few hours, diagnosed me as appendicitis, within 20 hours of getting to the emergency entrance, they operated on me, and I was home after that (for 2 weeks sick leave) in 3 days. Total cost - about 40$ for the pain killers/anti inflamitories pills to take home. All the rest operation/scans/xrays/etc were covered by the public health system. Follow up checkup after 2 weeks was also covered.

    • @ianmontgomery7213
      @ianmontgomery7213 Před 3 lety +12

      yeah it handy for someone who has skin cancers like I do. i would have 200 burned off at the GP, numerous full theatre ops (probably 8 or 9) and the same number of See and Treat ops where a single nurse and plastic surgeon cut it out. I even had the end of my nose done. It has codt me nothing but my 2% Medicare levy.

    • @mackmarshmallows
      @mackmarshmallows Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah I just had surgery and I only paid for prescriptions when I got home.

    • @a00141799
      @a00141799 Před 3 lety +14

      Yeah, what a great system. That is what we need here in the US. We have he money but not the will. This country would rather spend its money on the military and giving big corporations excessive tax breaks that just make them richer and more powerful. Very screwed up.

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety +4

      In the U.S. they have to treat you when you walk into the emergency room. That's a federal law. However you would have been sent a bill that they know you'll likely NEVER pay. Have some debt collected in probably Pakistan call you up and harass you for 3 months. Then really do ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about it. In reality it's a waste a paper and postage to even send a bill. We have no health care system in the U.S. people often walk into the emergency room for something far less serious then appendicitis. If they could go to the doctor 80% of such circumstances they actually would. Can't go to a doctor's office in the U.S. to figure out if something might or might not be so serious.. Walk into the emergency room. It's sad so many people have no other choice

    • @heatherrowles2580
      @heatherrowles2580 Před 3 lety +6

      Ive had 20 surgeries and countless tests and procedures, including open heart surgery to have 2 heart valves replaced.......Ive never paid a cent outside of what I pay into medicare through taxes.......I also know, because I belong to a lot of US heart failure groups, that I pay about a tenth of what they do for exactly the same medications thanks to our pharmaceutical benefits scheme....I pay about $400 a month for my medications just to give you an idea.....and of course we have the safety net so I only pay that $400 for part of the year. Our healthcare system, although it has its faults, is brilliant and without it I would have been dead back in 2015.

  • @ActionJackson1982
    @ActionJackson1982 Před 4 lety +186

    Honerable mention, no tipping. Because we get paid higher then the US there’s no need for it. When I visit America I’m so annoyed the first time I had no idea how many people you had to tip, its not just restaurant staff. Tour bus drivers, taxi drivers. And you never really know how much to tip. I’m no mathematician so I don’t wanna work out each percentage. I’ll round it down, but I don’t exactly know whats too low that it’s insulting or too much. I think US restaurants should just include it in the price, or pay their staff more.
    So annoying in the US having to pay tax on top of the price, the first time I visited I had no idea. Bought something, price said $20 and ended up being more and I had a $20 bill ready to pay but cashier told me a slightly higher price. Thought huh?! It takes some getting used to and much prefer it our way.
    As far as wages I work at a supermarket and get paid around $23 an hour, it also depends how old you are. 18 year olds get around $20.
    As for health care, watch the Michael Moore documentary ‘Sicko’, that’ll give you an idea how bad the US healthcare system is. I pay a monthly bill for mine and I’m pretty much covered for everything.

    • @zyaravie911
      @zyaravie911 Před 4 lety +11

      So agree with the tipping, tax on goods, healthcare system. I reckon US was superior then but now in some respect they're more like 3rd world just like Tristan mentioned. I hate it the first time I went shopping and handed the exact amount only to be told the price didn't have the tax on it. I looked like a bloody fool. US is amazing for holiday but definitely not for living unless you're crazy rich like the Kardashians where you won't have to worry living paycheck to paycheck

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +16

      Agree with most of those points and I can even agree that tipping is annoying if you're not used to it. But personally I still like it because you can get better service and you can get extra alcohol in your drinks if you tip a little more

    • @ActionJackson1982
      @ActionJackson1982 Před 4 lety +3

      Zya Ravie I love to visit but wouldn’t live there. I can’t wait to come home when I go

    • @dreadlord5581
      @dreadlord5581 Před 4 lety +12

      Unfortunately matey that mindset only exacerbates the dividing line between the 'haves' and the 'have nots' .
      Got plenty of money, no worries , tip well and you'll get the best service and best drinks - don't have loads of cash - you'll get the bare minimum and shitty service.
      I actually experimented with this in a couple of NY bars on one of my 4 trips to the States. I went from having having bartenders eagerly anticipating my next order and then pouring [to my joy, haha] obscene amounts of alcohol into it to literally having them turn their backs on me when i raised my hand for a drink and then under-pouring when they eventually had to serve me.

    • @OilBaron100
      @OilBaron100 Před 3 lety +6

      The big problem I see woth the tipping system is that alot of service workers get paid in cash, and then don’t pay any tax on it.
      The lack of tax revenue makes it difficult for the government to provide Americans with universal healthcare, just like the rest of the developed world.

  • @melindabartolazo922
    @melindabartolazo922 Před 3 lety +89

    I lived in Sydney for 17 yrs. and I wish I never had to come back to America. EVERYTHING about OZ is supremely better than US!!

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 3 lety +14

      yeah, it sure is great here!

    • @tdb7992
      @tdb7992 Před 3 lety +18

      That's really nice of you to say Melinda. Anyway, if you've been here 17 years, you're def one of us now.

    • @wheezyrider5937
      @wheezyrider5937 Před 3 lety +13

      Shhhh stop saying nice things about this little treasured country. Soon every bastard will want to come here and it will turn sour. We're doing ok without too many more changes.

    • @lifewithalistair.
      @lifewithalistair. Před 3 lety +13

      Come back to Australia.
      You are always welcome.

    • @bigchicknboi6579
      @bigchicknboi6579 Před 3 lety +1

      Yea, your military is better, your economy is better, you have more freedom there. I’m being sarcastic btw

  • @shirleymartin2442
    @shirleymartin2442 Před 3 lety +69

    Tristan. I know you didn't want to get in to a discussion about gun control, but if you want to own a gun, you have to have a good reason to need one in Australia. The person must apply for a liscence with a letter from a land owner who wishes the owner of the gun to help with vermin control. The gun is then kept in a specific locked gun cabinet. We do not feel unsafe under most circumstances without the need for a gun. I noticed that you commented that you felt safe here. I am so pleased you feel safe with the freedom we cherish here.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 3 lety +8

      Yeah, its way too easy to get a gun in america. And I do feel safer here. Love it here in AUS!

    • @3506Dodge
      @3506Dodge Před 3 lety

      What's a 'good reason" to own a gun?

    • @n1ght822
      @n1ght822 Před 3 lety +1

      actually your wrong u can also own guns if u have a license and are a member of a gun club such as the SSAA.

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety

      I speculated it would be some type of rules as such. Simular to Canada and cretin Eruopean countries you have guns for polar bare attracts. Australia you don't polar bares but you have other vermin dangerous pest as you put it. I'm assuming in Australia you can NOT get a license to buy a hand gun like in the U.S. correct?

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety

      I should also mention that only like 12% of Americans over all actually do own gun. It varies widely depending on ware exactly in the U.S. you are of course. Some places it can be over 60% of people. I personally really only know 3 people beyond casual aquantices who do.

  • @Midlifesports
    @Midlifesports Před 4 lety +52

    I lived overseas 10 years of my life, which is why I love your videos, but a national healthcare system, super and feeling relatively safe are all things we take for granted, but should be universal

    • @republichq9619
      @republichq9619 Před 3 lety

      America has the best medical advancement system that you all claim the high ground for free loaders

    • @JB-zs1oq
      @JB-zs1oq Před 3 lety +1

      @@republichq9619 The trouble is it is not available to those who cannot afford it.

  • @woodvineandco
    @woodvineandco Před 3 lety +19

    Two days ago I went a gp (free of charge) then I was sent to the hospital and I was operated on with I a few hours of visiting the gp. I went home the next day and didn't pay a thing. Super fast and efficient. So thankful for the Aussie healthcare system.

    • @baraapresley6366
      @baraapresley6366 Před 3 lety

      Completely agree! As somebody with a lot of health issues and frequent hospital visits, sometimes I cry as to how lucky I am

    • @victorpiscotta7560
      @victorpiscotta7560 Před rokem

      I hate the Healthcare system Because Doctors in Australia gave me a shit diagnoses, and it ruined my life I prefer to pay for my healthcare rather than Doctors saying the most dum things to me. USA,USA,USA,USA,USA

  • @martinmckowen1588
    @martinmckowen1588 Před 3 lety +46

    The main reason for owning firearms in Australia is for sport. We don’t see them for self defence

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety +3

      The police DO have guns in Australia correct? I know in the U.K. Norway and Iceland they don't. But every other place in Europe the police DO. And I'm 80% sure the also do in Australia am I correct??

    • @martinmckowen1588
      @martinmckowen1588 Před 3 lety

      Carl Gharis yes Australian police did carry sidearms. Each state has their own police force

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety

      @@martinmckowen1588 we have different police aganticies here depending upon which state county or city you live in also. We call 911. I think you guys call 000 so I've heard? But yes they will send the appropriate officers to respond in your area. Granted too many people abuse it. If you're being robbed or something call 911 of course. But we ask if you're upset about the neighbors dog taking a shit in your yard DON'T call 911. Call the non emergency number with is 7 digest to a local police station DIRECTLYwhich is different everywhere. Something that's NOT so serious

    • @AUmarcus
      @AUmarcus Před 3 lety

      @@carlgharis7948
      Yes. The standard issue is a glock 22 40 calibre. In NZ they dont carry side arms but they do carry assault rifles in their vehicles.

    • @codzy9384
      @codzy9384 Před 3 lety

      @@carlgharis7948 yeah for the dog thing in Aus you wouldn't call 000 you'd just call the council of your area

  • @zyaravie911
    @zyaravie911 Před 4 lety +26

    Don't forget our plastic money. When you go to the beach and your bathers have pockets, you can put money in there while swimming/surfing. It won't be ruined at all and colorful money means it's a life saver when in rush! Our cash lasts longer than American paper money. I also love the fact we no longer have 1cent coin. Our smallest is 5cent. Honestly anything below 5cent in value is so annoying and it costs more to produce. You're so right about Australian being more accepting. I'm an Asian Australian and I've been very accepted here. I know in the outback it'll be more racist but fortunately never happened to me before as I've traveled quite extensively around Australia. As Australian and anyone who has the chance to live here, we're bloody lucky!

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +1

      Good point about the money

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 4 lety +2

      @@TristanKuhn you can leave an Australian money inside your jeans pocket and wash your jeans in the washing machine and expect the Australian money still good - no fading in the colours.

    • @colonelbeatson6027
      @colonelbeatson6027 Před 3 lety

      @@TristanKuhn we invented it too

    • @whatgivesdude6807
      @whatgivesdude6807 Před 3 lety

      @@pinayladyoz8044 Crazy thing is, I never even thought about the money.

    • @BelicTransporter
      @BelicTransporter Před 5 dny

      @@TristanKuhn do you love Australia baseball?

  • @jtfinz
    @jtfinz Před 3 lety +33

    Plus Australians are more heartwarming and more friendly

  • @GTFORDMAN
    @GTFORDMAN Před 3 lety +67

    Australian gun laws; I'm an Aussie and i love guns i think guns are cool BUT having said that i support the current Australian guns laws because i know people that i don't want to see have access to a wooden spoon!

    • @saberint
      @saberint Před 3 lety +4

      @GTFORDMAN omfg.... the best comment about gun control ever... and very aussie

    • @shawnoladd
      @shawnoladd Před 3 lety +4

      Haha well put. It may sound mean but there was deffinatly some sketch people in high school that lost their shit. Id actually have anxiety if they had easy access to an AR-15 or other fire arms.

    • @FishSticker
      @FishSticker Před 3 lety +1

      @@shawnoladd well put

    • @wadegambetta7846
      @wadegambetta7846 Před 3 lety +1

      There’s a couple of stupid gun laws that are stupid like the appearance laws

    • @GTFORDMAN
      @GTFORDMAN Před 3 lety

      @@wadegambetta7846 that is actually a very good point!

  • @kittykitkat4968
    @kittykitkat4968 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm from India married to an Australian, we have two children. The health system and social benefits are excellent, good public transportation,, high respect for women,. They are so multicultural, friendly and helpful

  • @c.b.f8185
    @c.b.f8185 Před 4 lety +35

    Didn’t know Brett Lee was American

    • @footy2rock
      @footy2rock Před 3 lety +2

      Might be Brett Lees son lol

    • @drfill9210
      @drfill9210 Před 3 lety

      Haha was going to say the same thing!

  • @nessotty9790
    @nessotty9790 Před 3 lety +51

    Get your back checked out while you are in Australia

    • @somethingelse9535
      @somethingelse9535 Před 3 lety +2

      It would be expensive, non citizens/residents pay full price for health care in Australia, $2,000/day in hospital etc.

    • @lifewithalistair.
      @lifewithalistair. Před 3 lety +8

      Temporary residents with a Medicare card enjoy the same care as permanent residents and citizens.

    • @bh8671
      @bh8671 Před 3 lety +3

      @@somethingelse9535 except it’s still cheaper than America. I don’t think you understand how truly life altering the costs are. For example a 1 litre bag of saline costs between $2 and $5 to make. The cheapest they charge in a hospital is $1000. Their costs are massive and it’s only there to make money. Not to help the people. Also Australia has a Medicare exchange program with a lot of these counties so it would either cost nothing or very little and would be a tiny percentage of what it costs there.

    • @whatgivesdude6807
      @whatgivesdude6807 Před 3 lety

      @@somethingelse9535 Really? I know all Australians residents can get basic health care put on the government- my mum's a GP and it frustrates her how many people she gets who come in just to get a bandaid for a broken toenail etc. I didn't know that about non citizens though.

    • @somethingelse9535
      @somethingelse9535 Před 3 lety

      @@whatgivesdude6807 Permanent residents and citizens get a medicare card, temp residents can in some special cases. Foreigners should have travel insurance as they'll pay through the nose here.

  • @LoneWolf-sh1ph
    @LoneWolf-sh1ph Před 3 lety +30

    Whoa I don't even have to think about medical expenses, sometimes I don't realize how lucky I am to live in Australia. Hope your backs better now.

    • @republichq9619
      @republichq9619 Před 3 lety

      You're welcome for the medical advancement that us PROUD Americans invented for you free loaders

    • @republichq9619
      @republichq9619 Před 3 lety

      87 percent of all medical advancement comes from America

    • @LoneWolf-sh1ph
      @LoneWolf-sh1ph Před 3 lety

      Hmm and?

    • @akjvoksn
      @akjvoksn Před 2 lety +1

      @@republichq9619 it doesn’t really matter where it came from. Anybody could’ve made these medical advancements they just happened to be American. Also, the healthcare system is payed for with our taxes. So we ARE paying for it. Every place has free loaders! It doesn’t mean that we’re are ALL free loaders. I can tell you that my mum worked hard every day to feed my family. My dad left us right after I was born so I never met him, I don’t want to meet him anyways, he tried to kill my mum while she was pregnant with me! My mum is an assistant nurse. She was recently diagnosed with osteoarthritis. It was passed down by my grandmother but the main reason why she got it was because of overworking. Overworking just to make ends meet. And every day my family would still be starving. If you don’t know what osteoarthritis is, I would recommend you search it up! I just wanted to say this to tell you that Australia isn’t full of free loaders. In fact, 3.5 million of us suffer from the same thing that my mum suffers from. Coming from a place with 25 million people, that’s a huge percentage of the population. But no I’ll just forget all of this and insult a whole country to make myself feel better about myself!

    • @andysmith5806
      @andysmith5806 Před 2 lety +2

      @@republichq9619 That makes it even more ridiculous. You have all these medical advancements that no one can afford.

  • @nevmcc3884
    @nevmcc3884 Před 3 lety +23

    Tipping and bartering just makes life unnecessarily complicated. Just tell me the price and I'll pay, or not.

    • @shawnoladd
      @shawnoladd Před 3 lety

      True! Overall they did have alot more friendly service when i visited the states. Coming back i notice it even more now. It seems some employees actively don't want your service and are bothered your there. We need a way to change that without giving customers the right to be complete cunts obviously.

  • @shahancheong9792
    @shahancheong9792 Před 3 lety +14

    Couple of years back, I had a really bad foot infection which turned into cellulitis (look it up, but I warn it ain't pretty). Either way, it left me basically unable to walk for like a month. I went to the hospital, went in for treatment, had injections, antibiotics, the whole deal, and I had crutches thrown in to boot. I didn't pay for a thing. I handed over my public healthcare card ("Medicare") and they scanned it, and that was it.
    I'd hate to think what a night in hospital, crutches, and antibiotics for a month, would've cost me in the 'States.

    • @santyclause8034
      @santyclause8034 Před 3 lety +1

      I had cellulitis just above the ankle on my lower leg, started out as a scratch that got red and then increasingly sore. I got a massive headache with a fever that felt like Tetnus, every bone in my body ached. The scratch was now not only red and sore it was also burning hot, and visibly growing bigger. From my taxi ride the 800m to hospital it was first the size of a dime/10 cents, at the hospital even the taxi driver said it was growing bigger. it was maybe the size of a squash ball in that time, and the size of a tennis ball by the time I was admitted an hour later. I was immediately put on intravenous AntiBiotic drip. After that I was moved to an Aged Care residence at only Forty something years old. This was criticised by Press.
      By next morning at the hospital the cellulitis had spread over half my lower leg to one side of the shin.
      It burned like a fire if I moved it or lowered the leg to the floor to stand on it.
      The whole infected patch turned purple, this was blood, under a paste of skin turned into sludge that was quickly being eaten away. I was on medication for 3 weeks with canulas and tablets. When the bug died, the purple area dried to form a huge scab - blood tissue had risen to seal the skin layer being eaten by the disease.

    • @shahancheong9792
      @shahancheong9792 Před 3 lety

      @@santyclause8034 that doesn't sound like cellulitis!! That sounds NAS-TEH!!! :o
      What I had wasn't nearly that bad, but damn...I was recuperating from my infection for nearly two months.

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety

      Well not a damn thing from the standpoint when you go into the emergency room they have to see you federal law. They know 99% of the time you'll NEVER pay the bill. What's sad is many people have no other choice because they are unable to go to the doctor's office to get treated before it gets to such point. So it would cost an extremely high amount. But if you go into the emergency. Cost you $0. Because you'll never pay the bill.

    • @carlgharis7948
      @carlgharis7948 Před 3 lety

      Whoever asked me why Thier is a bill. That's anybodies guess 99.9% of the time it never gets paid

    • @heatherrowles2580
      @heatherrowles2580 Před 3 lety

      I spent over a month in hospital back in 2018.....including 12 days in ICU, 6 in a coma and had open heart surgery while I was there.......not one single cent out of pocket.....I am literally alive because of our healthcare system.

  • @PetePeteRepeat
    @PetePeteRepeat Před 3 lety +2

    Great video, aussie approved 👍 However, most of the laws (like cycling laws, and road laws) are wildly different in each state - Victoria is known for its aggressive speed limits, but NSW has many more Speed cameras (including average speed cameras, which take your speed down a main highway at two spots and average the speed to see if you were speeding in between) AS WELL AS Mobile Phone cameras (which have already earned the government upwards of $7 Million AUD). Having said that, the public transport IS GREAT, especially in the city part of Sydney, in which there are trains to almost every major suburb, the Sydney metro, and buses everywhere else. The public transport is also highly subsidised, so it is very cheap for daily travel!
    Chicken Salt is great on many things, including:
    - Hot Chips
    - Popcorn
    - Mashed Potato!

  • @TheRealMarxz
    @TheRealMarxz Před 3 lety +10

    (repost as first one seems to have got deleted) - public transport - Australia has nothing on places like Singapore, Hong Kong and particularly Japan which all take a dump on ours.
    Most of Europe is as good or better than ours as well.

  • @tdb7992
    @tdb7992 Před 3 lety +31

    I've always found Australia to be really accepting of "different lifestyles". For some reason, foreigners seem to think we were all really homophobic. I'm gay, and I don't think I've experienced homophobia in over a decade. The "live and let live" mentality is strong here. Another thing I noticed is that gay people are so accepted that the gay bars started dying because there wasn't a need for them, and it's very hard to tell who is gay from who is straight. I guess that's because we have a very macho culture, but those kinda intimidating straight macho blokes will probably stand up for you and voted for your right to get married.

    • @veronikaebbelaar198
      @veronikaebbelaar198 Před 3 lety +1

      TD B that’s great, but haven’t you recently visited a country town?

    • @garrywallace1007
      @garrywallace1007 Před 3 lety +5

      @@veronikaebbelaar198 Hay, Wagga and Broken Hill now have an annual Gay Mardi Gras....progress is being made.

    • @veronikaebbelaar198
      @veronikaebbelaar198 Před 3 lety +1

      Garry Wallace really? That’s great news 😍

    • @quizzlybear
      @quizzlybear Před rokem

      I love that!

  • @Dylan_the_damned
    @Dylan_the_damned Před 4 lety +3

    Those chicken salts you listed are NOT the ones used to put on chips just FYI. They’re like seasoning. It’s really hard to find the chicken salt for chips without buying a bulk version 😣 the closest you will find is in an IGA from a brand called Gfresh. Google IGA chicken salt. It will come up. It’s taken years of personal research to find a similar version to those used at take away shops. So think yourself lucky I am sharing this with you ;)

  • @Marty210268
    @Marty210268 Před 3 lety +1

    Like your style Tristan, well done mate. Comment on Metric v's Imperial, water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius (32 F) & boils at 100 degrees Celsius (212 F) ..............Simple & Sensible!

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah the metric system makes a lot more sense. And thank you!

  • @1980kellbell
    @1980kellbell Před 3 lety

    I’m so sorry to hear about the issues with your back. Not sure what sort of visa you have to live in Australia but you should check out if you can see a specialist here to sort out your back. Don’t get me wrong - you’ll still spend a few hundreds on a few visits but if your specialist recommends you to have MRI’s or scans you don’t have to pay for them. (I’ve had major heath issues for years and had to have many of them so I am very grateful for our healthcare system
    But please - check out your visa and see how you go! Take care ;)

  • @gregt7927
    @gregt7927 Před 3 lety +6

    I learnt this during the opening ceremony of the British Olympic games some politician named aneurin bevan claimed back in 1948 No society can legitimately call itself civilized if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means. So started the NHS and commonwealth countries like Australia Candada New Zealand took it up as well.
    We also drive on the left the hand side due to back in the day we controlled the horse with our left hand and used our swords with the right hand as we where passing each other on the road

  • @michaelpatterson5330
    @michaelpatterson5330 Před 3 lety +3

    I was in hospital in NSW for 10 months. Cost me $35 a week - to hire a television.

  • @eleanorfogarty9973
    @eleanorfogarty9973 Před 3 lety +1

    I have chronic spinal pain too, and being an Australian with our health system probably saved me. You should see if you can go to one of the pain clinics here! Ask if you can do the ADAPT program, and that specifically helps you cope with and treat chronic pain. It saved me after 2 years of constant pain, and I feel like you'd really benefit 😊❤

  • @MBear3
    @MBear3 Před 3 lety

    Healthcare - private health insurance. you can pay for private insurance that covers choosing your own specialists and covers things like chiropractors and glasses and dental. It costs about $40/month AUD so about $30 USD. Excess (what you pay yourself) is usually like $100 for a filling or glasses and maybe $500 for a hospital stay in a private room.

  • @whattovisitinromania5044
    @whattovisitinromania5044 Před 4 lety +19

    Great video, thanks for sharing! Lots of good information! Maybe I'll visit Australia in the future! 🇦🇺👌🌼🌏💕

  • @joystick396
    @joystick396 Před 3 lety +21

    I've been yearning for the day I land down in Australia and never have to come back to the USA. I've given America so many chances for me to try to like it but it's just a complete wretched country with too much racism, poverty, gun violence and a complete disregard for mother nature. It's embarrassing to admit to others I'm American when I travel abroad and it's crazy how I've met so many foreigners who do not view the United States as the 'land of opportunity'. RIghtfully so, it's the land of medical bills, insane taxes, endless student debt and chump change wages. Please give me some advice on getting Australian citizenship, I imagine it'll be much harder with the pandemic, but I want out of this country so so bad

    • @monkeydui7241
      @monkeydui7241 Před 3 lety +1

      Tell me a country with no racism or poverty

    • @gaple1995
      @gaple1995 Před 3 lety +2

      @@monkeydui7241 ...Australia...they have little to no poverty. High employment, healthy economy and very high wages. Highest minimum in the world in fact. Racism is obviously an issue everywhere but for the most part, we have laws in place to curb that non-sense and I think most people, even the dumb ass racists know it’s a social moor, other than making you an awful person aside.

    • @monkeydui7241
      @monkeydui7241 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gaple1995 Then tell me why the US's poverty rate was 10.5% & Australia was 13.6%

    • @glennoc8585
      @glennoc8585 Před 3 lety +3

      @@gaple1995 Australian house prices and rent to wages is at records Highs, Electricity prices are highest in the OECD. You earn more but it's relative to living costs

    • @germanlanguage5696
      @germanlanguage5696 Před 3 lety +3

      @@monkeydui7241 Switzerland, no open poverty and no open discrimination, also Australia is pretty good.

  • @shauntozer8005
    @shauntozer8005 Před 3 lety +24

    I have never had to worry about the potential of being shot in this country, like ever, nor do I know someone who has been shot where I feel like that should be enough to win that debate, also how Americans glorify the military is so dumb it's not even funny, joining the army in the US is something basically everyone can do which earns such an unwarranted level of respect considering the many negative factors that are incorporated into the US military system

    • @glossybxby2676
      @glossybxby2676 Před 3 lety

      What about being poisoned by a snake or a spuder

    • @glossybxby2676
      @glossybxby2676 Před 3 lety

      Spider

    • @glennoc8585
      @glennoc8585 Před 3 lety

      Ivan Milat had guns

    • @overkill7990
      @overkill7990 Před 3 lety

      If you live in a middle class neighborhood in America you basically never to worry about being shot either.

    • @big_mac1933
      @big_mac1933 Před 2 lety

      @@glossybxby2676 just leave it alone and it won’t fucking attack you

  • @bfnew4440
    @bfnew4440 Před rokem +2

    Great video. As an Aussie visiting America, I really enjoyed how well sign posted and cared-for the majority of US national parks were compared to Oz

  • @Dropbear64
    @Dropbear64 Před 3 lety +24

    I'm ex military so I've shot a few weapons i my time and blown up a few things along the way. However the "gun" debate. After the Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania in 1996 Australia reformed its gun laws making it more difficult to obtain weapons. Also when storing weapons we have certain guidelines (for example they need to stored in a gun safe and the action has to stored separately). Its much harder to obtain them, you have to go through checks and cooling off periods. All this means is that when you buy your first rifle it might take a month before you can walk out the gun shop with it. Since the new laws our gun related murders have bottomed out to the point that we have one of the lowest gun related crime rates in the world. Its why the NRA hates Australia. On the whole most gun relatyed murders are by organised crime gangs fighting other gangs and who cares if crims kill each other? Its saves space in prisons :)

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 3 lety +8

      You all of done a great job with your gun law reformation. I would love it if the US did a similar change. It's WAYYYY too easy to get gun

    • @polljones8921
      @polljones8921 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TristanKuhn - that's because we consider owning a gun a privilege, not a right. The "We" is more important to us than the "Me".

    • @polljones8921
      @polljones8921 Před 3 lety +1

      You almost have it right. However your claim about Australia somehow having a higher rate of death by shooting prior to 1996 is false. It really should be obvious to anybody that this claim is incorrect.
      In Australia: "The crude firearms death rate declined from 4.8 deaths per 100,000 population in 1980 to 2.6 in 1995." www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/productsbyCatalogue/9C85BD1298C075EACA2568A900139342?OpenDocument
      Compare that to the US. www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/08/16/what-the-data-says-about-gun-deaths-in-the-u-s/

    • @garrywallace1007
      @garrywallace1007 Před 3 lety

      "Australia had a higher rate of death by shooting per capita than America."...I highly doubt that..Australia only had 60 gun related homicides the year before Port Arthur (in a country of 19million), the USA had 14,000 (in a country of 270 million)..that makes the US rate about 16 times Australia per capta BEFORE Port Arthur.....

    • @Dropbear64
      @Dropbear64 Před 3 lety

      @@polljones8921 Yes after checking my facts I admit I made a mistake (I've corrected my statement, thanks for the heads up).....or more correctly I believed a doco I saw recently. However here are some interesting facts www.sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/news/2018/03/13/gun-laws-stopped-mass-shootings-in-australia.html

  • @Glenn66ful
    @Glenn66ful Před 3 lety +4

    I think your sense that Australians are more accepting of different lifestyles probably has more to do with the fact that you're here, a long way from home, and that gives you a greater sense of freedom. For those of us who grew up here, I imagine it's much the same kind of pressure to conform to societal norms. However, I would agree that generally there's less pressure to be a world-beating success story in Australia compared to the US.

  • @ireneauyeung4395
    @ireneauyeung4395 Před 3 lety

    In general, we work 5 days a week, some sector like Bank, after every 19 days of work, there is 1 day off called Roster day off 'RDO'. We have 20 days ( 4 weeks)of annual holiday. After 10 years of service, we will start having "long service leave" of 13 days.

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 3 lety

      13 days long service leave? are you sure? I work under Queensland Healthcare Public Hospital and I get 10 weeks long service leave for doing 10 years of service. Every year I get 4 weeks paid vacation leave, plus professional development 2 days.

  • @jackielia196
    @jackielia196 Před 4 lety +9

    You also didn’t mention annual leave and sick leave, you get 20 days of annual leave and 10days sick leave a year when you are full or part time.
    You also get paid out any unused annual leave when you leave a job, only time they can withhold, is if you leave abruptly without notice. Though you do not get paid out your sick leave. So if you are unwell, you can have a sick day and be paid to stay home 10 days a year. If you normal work day is 8hr that 1 sick day = value of 8hrs, some jobs show sick or annual leave as hours, as if you work half a day or go home sick, or have a doctors appointment, you can use your sick leave to cover the 2-4 hrs you may not have worked that day too.
    I agree with the tax thing too, I went to america for 3 months in 2011, also the money 🤯 1c coins, we round up or down based of a 5c coin, so if your food/shopping comes to $5.22, you pay $5.20 if using cash, if you use card you pay the $5.22.
    But I also agree that living is cheaper there, so out bottom wage is different, but I think we also pay a liveable wage, in america I can see why people have to work 2-3 jobs also.
    There is also a lot more job security here as well, you have a 3-6month probationary period, where you can be dismissed on the spot of you don’t suit the position, but after that, unless you really mess up, like abuse someone, be caught with drugs in your system or drink on the job etc. something stupid you can be let go on the spot, however, mistakes or say someone feeling you bullied them depending on the level if intent, they give you a written warning, after 3 written warnings a business can let you go.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety

      Good points

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety

      Good points

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 4 lety

      In Australia we get 5 weeks paid vacation leave plus 9% loading and 12 days sick leave (healthcare industry).

    • @joshuawillmott7547
      @joshuawillmott7547 Před 3 lety +1

      No u don't get 5 weeks everywhere. Minimum is 4 weeks in some companies and others can be more.

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 3 lety

      @@joshuawillmott7547 I get 5 weeks vacation leave working full time shift worker in the public hospital, plus 10 weeks long service leave after working 10 years the same hospital. I also get 2 days professional development days every year, plus $2,000 dollar with tax professional education fee every year.

  • @jean-paulnewcombe9042
    @jean-paulnewcombe9042 Před 4 lety +35

    Tristan, you copped a bit of flack in our press, do I need to translate? This video shows a the other side of you and how you were not deserving of the bad press. Keep up the good work. Cheers Mate

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +17

      Thanks mate. The press had a fun go at me but I can’t blame them, it was excellent clickbait “American backpacker list things he hates about Australia” loo

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +5

      Lol*

    • @zjiujiu
      @zjiujiu Před 4 lety +1

      Why did you think he made this video? This guy is taking living in Australia for granted and then openly bashes Australia, I think it's a bit of a Joke and the flack is justified.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +9

      This video was made before the other one was ever posted. I referenced this video in my “hate” video

    • @Ruby-uw2ks
      @Ruby-uw2ks Před 4 lety

      I’m worry mate, but he *mostly* stated the most shittiest reasons.

  • @alilbitlost2389
    @alilbitlost2389 Před 3 lety +6

    WHATTTT no chicken chips in America???
    Or chicken salt
    I never knew this

  • @jennyhelen9452
    @jennyhelen9452 Před 4 lety +1

    I love all these vids Tristan and I love you, keep up the good work!! ❤️

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety

      Thank you! Love you too and I hope your book blows up!

  • @pc-sv5pk
    @pc-sv5pk Před 2 lety

    I love watching your videos, you seem really into what you’re talking about and that’s awesome. I’m Mexican and I live in California. Don’t get me wrong I love this country but there are things that need to be fixed here and Americans don’t seem to care about the topics you were discussing, they care more about their freedom, and I get that, but there needs to be a balance between caring about basic freedoms and caring about fixing americas environment and how things are done here

  • @rhodes1948
    @rhodes1948 Před 4 lety +3

    Love your enthusiasm...

  • @danial804
    @danial804 Před 4 lety +12

    11: The Australian accent is amazing!

    • @Figjamxlaststar
      @Figjamxlaststar Před 4 lety +4

      Are you kidding our Accent is so harsh compared to other... still at least we don”t sound the Kiwi’s ( you know we love you guys! Thanks Cous!)

    • @adriennehunt1799
      @adriennehunt1799 Před 3 lety

      Gidday David. Cheers Mate. Ta for the grouse compliment.😊

    • @0p3r8r
      @0p3r8r Před 3 lety

      @@adriennehunt1799 "Grouse"... Eastern stater. :P

  • @gavin9574
    @gavin9574 Před 3 lety

    Great Videos. I love hearing the differences, as we have no idea what different things we have compared to the US.
    Cheers. Melbourne Aust.

  • @johnstenton6023
    @johnstenton6023 Před 3 lety

    G'day Tristan, great videos. I was lucky enough to visit the USA in the 80s and 90s. It was one of the best adventures I've had. America and Americans are a fair dinkum mob of sheilas and blokes. Looking forward to my next trip there. Take care cobber.

  • @MatthewHarrold
    @MatthewHarrold Před 3 lety +5

    You have a reasonable appreciation of Australia. Well done for such a short amount of time here. You are very observant and articulate. $0.02 Cheers.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you! I do my best to closely observe my surrounding

  • @ted552
    @ted552 Před 3 lety +3

    As an Australian I actually don’t hate the drinking age in America being 21, I appreciate Australia having a younger drinking age and it matches far better with other milestones like military service and driving licenses being able to get tattoos etc. however a drinking age of 21 males more sense in terms of brain development etc.

    • @captaingalaxy5265
      @captaingalaxy5265 Před rokem

      Only thing that confuses me about America having the age is that you can go and die for your country and what not before you even go to college (not counting the military gives you free collage) but not drinking.

  • @necromancerbb
    @necromancerbb Před 3 lety +1

    Oath mate! Loving your vids.

  • @yew2533
    @yew2533 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video mate, hope you enjoyed your time in Australia!

  • @hyello1294
    @hyello1294 Před 3 lety +4

    Yeah, I love your beautiful Australia. I've never been outside of Australia, but I'm alright with that, because it's so amazing here.

  • @Sian660
    @Sian660 Před 4 lety +8

    All the farmers have guns in Australia , i think the main thing is we have a much better mental health system in Australia. Many larger schools also have an on site psychologist or therapist that any kid can go to and if they’re over 16 the parents won’t be informed that they are going to the psychologist. There is also free clinics for mental health and your family doctor can deal with some mental health issues if you can’t afford a psychologist. Irony is the places we have the most guns (because farmers) we have the worst free mental health care. That’s the main issue Australia has to deal with concerning guns.

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 4 lety +1

      This is true, farmers need guns to shoot kangaroos, rabbits and some wild dogs. However, farmers are responsible gun owners.

    • @antaraskysoftwaredesign1703
      @antaraskysoftwaredesign1703 Před 3 lety

      The difference is that Americans have guns to protect themselves from other Americans.
      When I had a gun it was for hunting and it never occurred to me to think of it as a self defence weapon.

    • @Sian660
      @Sian660 Před 3 lety

      @@pinayladyoz8044 They are responsible I'm specifically referring to suicide deaths in the country due to poor mental health facilities. If Australia had better mental health care in the country this would help with that issue.

  • @jks8922
    @jks8922 Před rokem +1

    Totally agree. I’m an Aussie living in USA for a decade. I miss these things about Oz very much. Never resisted seeing a doctor for ailments before moving to the states.

  • @bevanlevett4575
    @bevanlevett4575 Před 3 lety +1

    Great videos guys. there's no place like OZ. I agree with you whole heartedly. I have actually been to the US 8 times during the 1980's and 90s, even Guam and Saipan and I loved it big time.

  • @gemmel3197
    @gemmel3197 Před 3 lety +4

    In addition to the superannuation if when your old your Superannuation money is not enough (due to circumstances not all will have enough )we have a aged pension of about $550 pw.

  • @andrewmichaelcrook340
    @andrewmichaelcrook340 Před 3 lety +3

    Hi mate as a x ADF service men Australian army weapons
    Okay I understand in
    the United States of America it is part of the constitution
    your right to bear
    "BUT" WHEN it was written
    one had a single shot flint taking 38 seconds to reload
    but I have myself owned a Remington 30 od 6 7000 sniper rifle single shot bolt action and me being in the Australian army as a combat engineer with weapons training as the person with a 'responsible and experienced in weapons '
    that rifle was all i ever needed!!! semi automatic weapons have
    NO PLACE
    outside of the military at all and that is why Australia is so safe

  • @gemmel3197
    @gemmel3197 Před 3 lety

    Here is a Australian healthcare example for you. In Feb I had to have a Stint installed into a vein in my heart. My total out of pocket expense for a couple of initial scans was a couple of hundred dollars. Once diagnoses was confirmed everything was free. It was all quick too. From initial pain in chest to operation was 2 weeks.

  • @sharonandrews5798
    @sharonandrews5798 Před 3 lety

    Chicken Salt is at Coles for around $5 and it's the Nice and Easy brand.

  • @treeliniusmaximus8412
    @treeliniusmaximus8412 Před 3 lety +18

    Medicare in Australia is OK, its definitely better than the "system" the US has. It has limits though. Not everything is covered. Chronic illnesses can exceed the amount of Medicare you can get and you will be out of pocket. My mother had terminal cancer and she lasted longer than was predicted, Medicare stopped covering a bunch of stuff and my Old man had to borrow around $50 grand to help out. The NHS in the UK is way better than the Australian system.
    Also, give me Australia's gun laws over the US any day.

    • @heatherrowles2580
      @heatherrowles2580 Před 3 lety

      Say what?? Im in advanced heart failure and everything is most definitely covered here in Western Australia, bear in mind that health care is run by the states not by the federal government so parts of it are different. Here in WA your mother would have been covered by Silver Chain's hospice in the home system with nursing care available 24/7 too.....Im sorry that you had a bad experience, but that is not uniform across the country.

    • @somethingelse9535
      @somethingelse9535 Před 3 lety +1

      @@heatherrowles2580 Medicare funding is all federal, the states own the hospitals and employ the staff. Hope you get better.

  • @thomasmartin8917
    @thomasmartin8917 Před 4 lety +19

    As an Australian I am very sad I can't own a gun but on the other hand I am very happy we don't have it to be legal which I know makes Australia very safe with really only police and army being able to carry them.

    • @OilBaron100
      @OilBaron100 Před 4 lety +5

      Why can’t you own a firearm? It’s legal here.

    • @tishbrett
      @tishbrett Před 4 lety +2

      Unless you have a criminal record you can have a gun

    • @lawson9686
      @lawson9686 Před 4 lety +1

      You can have a gun but only for hunting purposes.

    • @OilBaron100
      @OilBaron100 Před 3 lety +2

      Ay.la411 there’s a few legal reasons that one can own a firearm.
      Target shooting/sport
      Vertibrae pest control
      Professional needs/job requirement.

    • @monakei440
      @monakei440 Před 3 lety

      Thomas Martin me too i want my own gun

  • @jaxon7905
    @jaxon7905 Před 3 lety +2

    You can buy chicken salt in coles and woolies. It is called chippy.

  • @FemtoTheFox
    @FemtoTheFox Před 3 lety

    For the wages are you converting both to AUD currency or are they in their seperate currencies. Cause 7AUD is like 4USD

  • @nessahill6574
    @nessahill6574 Před 3 lety +3

    Issac butterfield needs to react to this because he reacted to his what Americans hate about Australia and I wanna see his reaction to this lol

  • @markway8208
    @markway8208 Před 4 lety +3

    The main reasons I like Australian Gun Laws is the fact the Police feel more relaxed when doing their job unlike in the US where a friend who is a Police Officer in NY told me he is always on edge and his adrenalin is sky high while Patroling and is always so mentally tired when his sift is finished. Australian Health Care and Super are awesome in Australia and I would recommend the US adopt them.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety

      Yes, yes, and yes.

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 4 lety +1

      Police in Australia often spend their nights in major emergency department in public hospitals guarding drunk aussie men.

    • @thatb1h855
      @thatb1h855 Před 3 lety

      PinayLady OZ lmao yea i was watching one of those breathalyser shows on netflix and they had to contain this drunk idiot

  • @michellemartin1418
    @michellemartin1418 Před 3 lety +2

    Which city are you living in ? I’d love to move my family from US to Australia or New Zealand and I love to hear opinions about specific cities that would be great to raise a family ! Thank you for making these videos !

    • @andymack75
      @andymack75 Před 3 lety +1

      From the USA?? I hear New Zealand is lovely.......

    • @BelicTransporter
      @BelicTransporter Před 13 dny

      Australia is better and lovely, but in some sports, you can train baseball in some baseball fields and baseball diamonds.

  • @twilightroach4274
    @twilightroach4274 Před 3 lety +2

    I’m ex military & a current member of two shooting clubs, & I fully support our current gun laws. I’ve owned & used various semi automatic firearms, & used machine guns in the military. I don’t believe we need semi automatic firearms in the wider community. Yes, the overwhelming majority of people would be completely fine owning them! But let’s face it there are some people that I wouldn’t trust with a pencil!

  • @JacSull24
    @JacSull24 Před 3 lety +3

    Dang... this video reminds me of how lucky I am to be Australian!
    We have it good, we have it really good.

  • @roybennett6330
    @roybennett6330 Před 3 lety +8

    We got rif of guns because of the he port Arthur massacre.. 1996...no need for guns

    • @sheffield99
      @sheffield99 Před 3 lety +2

      And you havent had a big massacre since. We did the same in New Zealand after the big massacre last year. We followed Australias' model.

  • @PhotogNT
    @PhotogNT Před 3 lety +2

    Regarding hospital care, if I need a hospital I just go, knowing no matter how long I stay all tests medications surgery ALL FREE.
    I had hospital stay a couple of years ago after an accident, I was in hospital for 4 months hundreds of tests multiple surgeries lots medication. No charge, at the end of my stay I just got out of bed and walked out easy peasy no money changed hands ever.

  • @LoveTheMusicOz
    @LoveTheMusicOz Před 3 lety +2

    What a lot of people don't understand, the expense of ensuring your population is healthy is recouped many times in productivity output.

  • @samcarver1656
    @samcarver1656 Před 4 lety +10

    #11: No rabies!

  • @AngrySkipperGC
    @AngrySkipperGC Před 3 lety +5

    Number 1 reason to love Australia. Because it’s Australia.

    • @andrewthefatwatso5639
      @andrewthefatwatso5639 Před 3 lety +2

      Reason why Australia better
      No guns
      No most dangerous animal like bear and wolf (but in Australia there also dangerous creatures named huntman spider and snakes)
      No gangs with drugs
      Most powerful law unlike America low law
      Freedom
      Safety school

    • @cya_synchro1308
      @cya_synchro1308 Před 3 lety

      @@andrewthefatwatso5639 But people in Australia haven't been killed by a spider in years...

    • @deannaduhigg6629
      @deannaduhigg6629 Před 3 lety

      @@andrewthefatwatso5639 huntsman spiders are not dangerous. They are just big

    • @monkeydui7241
      @monkeydui7241 Před 3 lety

      @Milan oh no you have guns don’t deny it

    • @andrewthefatwatso5639
      @andrewthefatwatso5639 Před 3 lety

      @@monkeydui7241 no I don’t

  • @Bigsnag
    @Bigsnag Před 3 lety +1

    the drinking expectations are similar here in aus, all though the legal age is 18 in alot of places you are expected to be drinking at 16 and 15 is kind of okay

  • @bhys16
    @bhys16 Před 4 lety

    You are picking up our way of life very quickly.. You in Cairns? happy to show you some local spots if so..

  • @williamgunter6802
    @williamgunter6802 Před 4 lety +6

    You are so persuasive! Now you have me convinced that Australia is awesome 😀. You are right about our healthcare system being terrible. Australia is better in that regard and they are better off with their stricter gun laws. We have to much gun violence here. I live in Portland Oregon and we started the New Year with seven shootings.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +2

      That's a sad way to start the new year. 2020 has been crazy

    • @nightinghood
      @nightinghood Před 4 lety +2

      We haven't had a national shooting for 14 years, you should move here.

  • @eni420oner8
    @eni420oner8 Před 4 lety +3

    theory: the drinking age is 21 so when people go out to liquor licensed clubs/restaurants/bars there are less people out drinking and less likely to have 16-17 year olds using Fake IDs
    fact: i think depending on the culture in your household some parents assume their kids are drinking by 14-16 y.o idkkk

    • @Zimzamzoom95
      @Zimzamzoom95 Před 3 lety

      yeah it definitely depends on the household. when i have kids, I'd expect them to be drinking by 15 or so. I'd monitor it and be very careful to prevent any major issues, but I don't believe in strict punishment like that. honestly, hoping for 15 is optimistic for me because my family generally has a very high openness to new experience - this meant that I was doing LSD and ecstasy regularly at 14, on top of regular drinking and weed.

  • @registerme2
    @registerme2 Před 3 lety

    The key aspect that the US vs Australia Healthcare debate misses is cost control.
    In Australia. Most of Big Pharma sales is to a small number of very big, highly educated medical bodies. Those staffed with specialist medical professionals. So the Healthcare system has the power to drive drug prices down to a reasonable level. It is smart enough to force Pharma companies to compete in areas where they each offer products designed to treat the same medical condition. It compels them to substantiate their claim of efficacy. So a drug with a huge list of side effects will not be prescribed when someone else offers a safer or more effective product.
    Australia does have Private Healthcare providers. They benefit from the above too. A vendor would be accused of price gouging if they charged 10x to the private market.
    In USA. Big Pharma's cost of sale is higher as it constantly advertises directly to the consumer. Their profit margin can be way higher. It is more profitable to charge 20 times as much even if only 10% of the market can afford their drug. They have doubled their profits. It doesn't matter to them that they've priced the drug so that 90% of Americans can't afford it & no longer have a viable treatment for their condition.
    The US consumer is getting seriously scr*#wed as they happily wave the flag, ignorant of how far behind the rest of the world they are.

  • @jakefoster5611
    @jakefoster5611 Před 3 lety

    The reason sales tax isn't included in the sticker price in the US is that there's no federal or national sales tax. Each state has their own sales tax and even different cities have different sales tax as well. The sales tax in the US is highly varied, therefore it can't be added into the sticker price. Well, unless individual cities, counties, and states want to do that themselves, but that would be way too much work.
    Tl;dr: In other countries, they usually have a standard national sales tax. In the US, it's determined by the states, counties, and cities.

    • @rocketsensor
      @rocketsensor Před 3 lety

      The cash register knows the actual price so the sticker machine could actually print it.

  • @moniquem783
    @moniquem783 Před 3 lety +6

    And Australians don’t say “go ahead” constantly. Watch a few cooking videos or mask sewing tutorials by Americans and you’ll see what I mean. Drives me nuts!

    • @andymack75
      @andymack75 Před 3 lety +1

      Watch "Office Space". Or maybe don't based on your comment.....

    • @moniquem783
      @moniquem783 Před 3 lety

      Andy Mack yeah I think I might pass. It still drives me nuts.

  • @ameliekretzschmar7528
    @ameliekretzschmar7528 Před 3 lety +4

    I shotguns growing up as well (I’m from Australian) my dad has a license and we did it when we went on camping trips.
    I just think it’s okay to have a gun for the right reasons, I think America has this idea like everyone needs a gun to feel safe and that’s what made people feel unsafe. especially gun violence in schools. 😊

  • @dancunningham5800
    @dancunningham5800 Před 4 lety +4

    Health Care is great but make sure you pay Ambulance Insurance (depending on the State/Territory).. In NSW I got a $1400 Ambulance bill.

    • @TristanKuhn
      @TristanKuhn  Před 4 lety +1

      Still better than the $4K-$10K bill you'd get in America haha. But good to know! Thanks for the info

    • @pinayladyoz8044
      @pinayladyoz8044 Před 4 lety +1

      If you are Australian citizen or permanent resident you don't pay the ambulance.

    • @lisc7204
      @lisc7204 Před 3 lety

      We don't have it as an additional expense in Qld. It's part of another bill

    • @antaraskysoftwaredesign1703
      @antaraskysoftwaredesign1703 Před 3 lety +1

      In Victoria family ambulance cover is about $28.00 very three months.
      It is cheap as chips and even covers a helicopter flight if you need it.

    • @xXFMAroxXx
      @xXFMAroxXx Před 3 lety

      It’s free here in NSW if u have a healthcare card

  • @lawrenceospina4779
    @lawrenceospina4779 Před rokem

    I found your review to be very insightful. The healtcare and superannuation were very interesting. Those two things alone would be seismic changes for Americans to have mandatory funding of retirement for employees as opposed to optional. Also the healthcare is key. What it really exposes is the fact that America could care less about its elderly and those who have worked to generate tax revenue while they were healthy and young. Kind of like the VA where veterans who have fought on behalf of this country routinely get sub standard treatment. You dont have to read between the lines to figure out that America could care less about you once you cant work and generate tax revenue or squeeze a trigger and kill someone. As opposed to having a system that almost guarantees that the people will have a retirement fund and healthcare and wont have to fear about either once they are old. A very sad and real expose on the American way of life

  • @tvsinesperanto7446
    @tvsinesperanto7446 Před 3 lety +3

    You can still easily get a gun in Australia. I have several. You do have to be a member of a gun club and have a gun safe though. If you aren't a criminal or a psychopath, it's pretty easy to get gun licence.
    Contrary to popular opinion, in my experience at least, people who shoot are, in general, the most safety conscious people you will lever meet.

    • @lisc7204
      @lisc7204 Před 3 lety +1

      But could you get an assault weapon?

    • @thescot9768
      @thescot9768 Před 3 lety +1

      @@lisc7204No, except illegally. That's why the nutcase who did the mosque massacre in NZ moved there from Aust. to access assault rifles. Thankfully the Kiwi government quickly brought in tougher gun laws. Sadly the US will never do this.

    • @ThunnusAlbacares
      @ThunnusAlbacares Před 3 lety

      Or A Primary Producer, Or have enough land on which to hunt you can get a cat a,b & C license. as i have had for many years now. But most definitely an approved gun safe, and random checks from the Police to make sure your abiding by the law.

    • @nickryan4975
      @nickryan4975 Před 3 lety

      ​@@lisc7204I'm assuming by "assault weapon" you mean a gun that looks scary? I own a AR-15 variant (DDM4V7 to be exact) in Victoria. I have category D licence and despite what 7 News might tell you, I'm responsible and a threat to nobody.

    • @lisc7204
      @lisc7204 Před 3 lety

      @@nickryan4975 all guns look scary, even when we were trained with the old SLR and F88 steyr, doesn't mean that I require these in my home which is a big difference between America to Australia

  • @danmastellotto9862
    @danmastellotto9862 Před 3 lety +4

    STOP telling everybody about Chicken Salt! LOL!
    IT'S OURS... PRECIOUS!!!!
    Cough... GOLM... Cough...

  • @dagsy70
    @dagsy70 Před 3 lety

    The US uses US Customary Units. Although a lot of imperial units are similar to US Customary units, there are some key differences: 1 imperial ton = 1.12 US customary tons and 1 imperial gallon = 1.2 US gallons. Until post WWII, the foot and pound also varied slightly.

  • @justinotherguy-ed1it
    @justinotherguy-ed1it Před 3 lety +1

    Very cool vids mate but you still have a couple of things to address before we call you one of us.
    For a seppo you're doing great champion 👍

  • @earthcrow3538
    @earthcrow3538 Před 4 lety +5

    Australia does not have a universal healthcare system. We have a mixed health system created by the Howard Government which made the health system more expensive. We need to return to having a universal healthcare system.

    • @lisc7204
      @lisc7204 Před 3 lety +1

      The point is that if you end up with cancer, you can gain treatment without being left bankrupt unlike the unfortunate cases in the US even with some insurances they have

  • @jaxon7905
    @jaxon7905 Před 3 lety +4

    Australian gun restrictions are good

  • @thisisathrowaway514
    @thisisathrowaway514 Před 3 lety

    Aussie here, one thing i'd like to bring up is that technically you still can "tip" people here. It's usually reserved for waiters/waitresses that have provided a customer with outstanding service, going far above an beyond the job description. A customer is never expected to tip because our staff are paid well, so when a tip happens it's usually a big deal. Even if it's just a small one, like $5.
    Not having this tipping culture also means that every customer gets the same level of service. Top notch Australian service is not like anywhere else in the world, funnily enough. Australians are so laid back naturally that usually the best service people are the ones that can stand there with a table full of happy (possibly drunk) people and fit right into the conversation, have a laugh and sling a few jokes back and forth like they're part of the group. It's very genuine, down to earth service.

    • @haha-eg8fj
      @haha-eg8fj Před 2 lety

      Although I think Australian services are generally pretty good, I have to say no other place can beat the Japanese services. And there’s no tip too.

  • @jasonlockwood7992
    @jasonlockwood7992 Před 3 lety

    A note about sales tax in both countries - because the GST is a uniform 10% in Australia, it's straightforward to add it to the price of the item ahead of time. For example, when I invoice my clients, the GST is a built-in calculation in the software. In the US, sales tax rates vary from one place to the next, and in some cases, it can vary within the same metropolitan region. Example: the sales tax rate in LA County versus Orange County is different. Thus, there is no easy way to pre-calculate the tax. Add to that confusion the fact that some items are NOT taxed in the US, like certain foods in supermarkets. Moral of the story: Without a uniform rate across the board, there is no way to pre-calculate the total amount of tax.

    • @coopsnz1
      @coopsnz1 Před 3 lety

      Australia has 10% import duty + custom fees at port that add to high prices in Australia = net profit for business is shit = middle class worse off

    • @andymack75
      @andymack75 Před 3 lety

      @@coopsnz1 you don't know the basics, so probably shouldn't comment. Oh no, wait, we live in a fact-free world now. Carry on.

    • @andymack75
      @andymack75 Před 3 lety

      We used to have the same system as the USA, until the GST was introduced in the year 2000, by the Howard govt, one of the few things he got right. The best thing about it is that its a tax worked out by business v business, and the consumer does not need to worry about it. Its built into the price.

    • @coopsnz1
      @coopsnz1 Před 3 lety

      @@andymack75 45% wholesale tax was worse before 2000

    • @andymack75
      @andymack75 Před 3 lety

      @@coopsnz1 Worse than what? The GST that I have already said was a good move? Face it, you don't know what you are saying. I know it, I used to work for the ATO. For years. So you are just saying absolute bollocks. Admit it. You will feel better.....

  • @ghidorahs1fan209
    @ghidorahs1fan209 Před 3 lety +10

    The gun laws in America is actually the only reason I won't go to America.

    • @veronikaebbelaar198
      @veronikaebbelaar198 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, I’m too scared to take my family to the U.S. for this reason and for stories from friends who have been there and experienced hyper-aggressive and intrusive police officers.

    • @andrewthefatwatso5639
      @andrewthefatwatso5639 Před 3 lety

      Yeah because of problem by gangs and criminals police doesn’t care about community they are too late to come thank god in Australia it dosent have guns

    • @nickryan4975
      @nickryan4975 Před 3 lety

      @@veronikaebbelaar198 You're saying how you're too scared to go to the US because of guns yet you're also complaining that the police there are hyper-aggressive? Can you imagine policing a community with the level of gun ownership that the US has? You're only scared of US police because you've been programmed by the media to believe that they're the bad guys. I've traveled to the US three times and have never had an issue with the police, or guns for that matter.

    • @veronikaebbelaar198
      @veronikaebbelaar198 Před 3 lety

      Nick Ryan yes, I imagine policing a country where citizens have easy assault rifle access would be a different story. I am going on two stories from friends on being pulled over and frisked etc for a tail light that was out. I would like to visit the U.S. (not possible now, obviously) but I would be pretty nervous fir awhile. Depending on which state I was in, too, I guess.

    • @veronikaebbelaar198
      @veronikaebbelaar198 Před 3 lety

      I have been also listening to stories black people are taking re their experiences with the police from a very young age. It is the same story in Australia. I happen to be white so would probably have that privilege and feel safer. I don’t think I’ve been programmed; In trying to educate myself on reality.

  • @JacSull24
    @JacSull24 Před 3 lety +3

    On the gun thing...
    I have never touched a gun, I’ve never really seen one, I don’t know anyone who has one or has been hurt by one..
    it’s not a thing here.
    I feel safe.

  • @yoesomite2199
    @yoesomite2199 Před 3 lety

    I had an MRI - here is Australia - and it cost me $500.00 , but my insurance (NIB) covered most of it. If I wanted to get the MRI for free, I would have to go on the waiting list for 3+ months and only if there was no other option. Most likely they would give me a CAT San because its cheaper.

  • @owenanderson9395
    @owenanderson9395 Před 3 lety +2

    Aussies are way ahead with doing the right things for controlling COVID-19 too.

    • @Adityaclone4
      @Adityaclone4 Před 2 lety

      Now they got over 20k cases in Sydney

  • @ivankeytan
    @ivankeytan Před 4 lety +8

    11th reason: Tristan is in Australia!!!

  • @kereoblox9041
    @kereoblox9041 Před 3 lety +4

    Ty finally someone is being kind to Australia
    Btw America is 96% of guns
    Australia is 1% of guns

    • @hannaelawil8793
      @hannaelawil8793 Před 3 lety +1

      That’s not true. To be honest, people making all these assumptions about Americans is hurtful. Not all Americans are uneducated, not all Americans are idiots, not all Americans are stuck up, etc. please don’t make any assumptions

  • @JessEmoSixx
    @JessEmoSixx Před 3 lety

    Can I ask what happened to your back? I have Moderate Scoliosis and early shaurmans disease. (Sorry I can't spell it).

  • @millsaddy4739
    @millsaddy4739 Před 3 lety

    Tristen you need to order chips with chicken salt and barbeque sauce and wash it down with a coke. Also spring rolls with chicken salt (buy from a cafe not the mini ones) and potato scallops with chicken salt and a bit of beef gravy mmm.