The view on America after living abroad (UK)

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
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    Meet Silbi. She's from America but has lived in Sweden and the UK for 7 years. We discussed what's wrong with American tourists abroad, why deadlines in Britain are often perceived as flexible, and how long it takes for an American to start understanding British English. Enjoy!
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    TIMESTAMPS:
    00:00 INTRO
    00:24 The biggest revelation
    03:31 How British see Americans
    06:11 British English for an American
    08:21 Differences between Americans and British
    10:27 Being Asian in the UK vs the US
    11:33 Things Silbi miss about America
    13:34 Safety comparison
    16:03 The main reason to move from the US
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @hustensaftvernichter3785
    @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před měsícem +535

    8:35
    As a German, I always found the Brits to be reasonably friendly.
    However, one then agreed to be my wife, which I now consider unreasonably friendly.

    • @silversurfer8278
      @silversurfer8278 Před měsícem +76

      Seems too many Germans have got a good sense of humour..... Bang goes another British joke resource!

    • @TheCornishCockney
      @TheCornishCockney Před měsícem +40

      As a Londoner,I lived and worked in Merc City (Stuttgart) for four years from 1999 and loved it.
      The German people I met and knew were so welcoming.
      It was also a great hub for travel around Europe.
      Great country.

    • @trevorsmith7753
      @trevorsmith7753 Před měsícem +21

      Don't mention the war or do silly walks.

    • @hustensaftvernichter3785
      @hustensaftvernichter3785 Před měsícem +12

      @@trevorsmith7753 Do you mean the one for the bathroom sink or the one for the last yogurt? No worries, we've got regular diplomatic summit sessions to sort those out.

    • @dropperknot
      @dropperknot Před měsícem +12

      @hustensaftvernichter3785. Would you care to be more specific, Was she English, Scottish, Welsh, Northern Irish? A 'Brit' can be anything from anywhere.We need to know which of us is to take the blame.

  • @charlesjay8818
    @charlesjay8818 Před 22 dny +14

    As a Brit i have NEVER had a problem with understanding any UK accent or US, Australian or any other english speaking person.

    • @ObakuZenCenter
      @ObakuZenCenter Před 21 dnem +1

      Cool story bro.

    • @Stephen-lx9nm
      @Stephen-lx9nm Před 5 dny +3

      ​@@ObakuZenCenterGlad you liked it boss

    • @pauldunn5978
      @pauldunn5978 Před 4 dny

      Try having a conversation with a Glasweigan old man. I can understand the Indians and Pakistanis, Greeks and Poles I work with, no problem. But I was sat with a Glasweigan, a friend of a friend, last year, and nodded through an hours worth of chat without understanding more than a few words. 😅

    • @sydryi3086
      @sydryi3086 Před 4 dny

      neither, after all it is all English.

    • @tobleramone
      @tobleramone Před 20 hodinami

      I can't believe that.

  • @russmartin4189
    @russmartin4189 Před měsícem +182

    That's LA. There are plenty of people and places in the USA that are down to earth and people judge you on your character, not what you own, the jewelry you wear, the car you drive, or where you eat.

    • @conniepr
      @conniepr Před měsícem +27

      yes it matters where you are in the USA. Not all Americans are like LA.

    • @garychin5321
      @garychin5321 Před měsícem

      Not All of England is Like the Home-Counties, or London; and/Or the Major Cities dotted up-North;
      there R; 'Rouge-Necks' where I'd uses to work!...They assume the entire Universe Should Speak;......English....(And do everything the way they Instruct!)
      I'd like to see the "Special Forces" in the U.K. Make the Head of State of a Superpower like Xi Jinping utter a Single Syllable of English when he puts his Foot on
      "Kingie"; Charles III's Head......(Very near and Up and Coming Future!)
      The Days of Windsor Popularity is certainly over!......Read: "Spare" with the 'Duke of Sussex.'
      The word "Spare" Certainly Applies to all the Upper-Crusts in the U.K. It's all that Inbreeding.....(Not too conducive to High-IQs and Balanced Mental Health.....)
      Remember the:-
      Russian Romanov and the Blight of Hemophilia in their Bloodline.....Not too Cool is it!
      The Onus and Center of the World in Shifting away from the West and China is definitely claiming the Seat of MARS; once again!
      See Architecture like the following:-
      Sheraton Huzhou Hot Spring Resort.
      Harbin Opera House
      www.archdaily.com/778933/harbin-opera-house-mad-architects
      And we haven't even reached the End of the 01St Quarter of the 21St Century!
      Can we Talk;.....................R we still Friendnemies.........
      @@conniepr

    • @wildbikerbill6530
      @wildbikerbill6530 Před měsícem +20

      Exactly. It was quickly apparent that when she lived in LA, she never traveled in the rest of the United States. Even California has plenty of 'rustic' places to go - like the multiple world famous National Parks that are within a days drive.

    • @paulgearing3018
      @paulgearing3018 Před měsícem +30

      I visited the US in 2013. One of the last places on earth, that i would like to live.The trouble with those less pretentious places is that the WHOLE country is brainwashed and they just dont realise it-Sad

    • @user-1rg9f2-g3l6d
      @user-1rg9f2-g3l6d Před měsícem

      Very true: people DO judge you on your character . . . You have to be COOL; you have to think cool, act cool, behave cool, talk cool, exude coolness. This can take on different forms. You can be sophisticated, intellectual, philosophical; and, or witty, a smart-aleck, wiseguy, gossiping and telling and laughing at off-the-wall-jokes and stories; and, or being tough and macho, swearing every other sentence, and really getting into sports and s___. And then there are the karens/darrens, Rednecks, Baptists, Hustlers . . .
      Only then will others be your friend. If you're just nice and friendly, you will be looked down upon as a childish, immature, naive, a nerd, a wimp. At worst people will bully, cheat, swindle, rip you off, and walk over you. At best, they'll simply ignore and shun you.

  • @davidsivills3599
    @davidsivills3599 Před měsícem +138

    I'm English and i don't always understand some British accents.

    • @pholdway5801
      @pholdway5801 Před měsícem

      I can do a good Brookside accent even though I SHUNNED ALL EPISODES The Channel 4 programmes of Brookie issued prequels earlier in the day without warning .For this reason only I heard the snippets of speech that over the years meant I heard the words and can copy the accent. I NEVER SAW EVEN ONE EPISODE

    • @ajtexas1100
      @ajtexas1100 Před měsícem +1

      bruh really ?

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +3

      Neither do the Brits. Go and talk to a taxi driver in London.

    • @BonVoyage861
      @BonVoyage861 Před měsícem +2

      ​​@@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kpNo... The people from London are easy to understand. It's more like people from the north of England are hard to understand

    • @anncoffey8375
      @anncoffey8375 Před měsícem +3

      I am English too. I currently live in Canada where I have no trouble understanding the accents, although I often cringe at the grammar. I have so much trouble with many US accents, not to mention slang, that I have given up watching US films. I have in the past (tried to) watch US films with Canadians friends and even they have had trouble deciphering a sentence or two no matter how many times we replay them. We usually end up by giving up.

  • @ForgottenMan2009
    @ForgottenMan2009 Před měsícem +25

    I moved from Wiltshire to Shropshire when I was about 11 and the only people I understood for 18 months were the teachers, so, I can relate!

    • @stevenicol1
      @stevenicol1 Před 28 dny

      Same

    • @bencarter2334
      @bencarter2334 Před 25 dny +1

      😂😂 I'm not surprised I live in Shropshire and know loads of people from Wiltshire and can't understand what they're on about 😂😂😂😂

    • @BattleBecause
      @BattleBecause Před 2 dny

      You lot are a bunch of re ta rds.

  • @bhslefty
    @bhslefty Před měsícem +58

    listening to this I was thinking just go to a different state. Like North Carolina has beaches, the Appalachian trail, a slower life where people will say hello to you on the street. It's a much calmer life and it still has everything you need from shopping, sports, restaurants. Just get out of LA.

    • @hanj5049
      @hanj5049 Před měsícem +11

      Yea, I think that's a LA problem lol

    • @bmwman5
      @bmwman5 Před měsícem +4

      Hush… don’t tell anyone the secret to the American South.

    • @klabkebash
      @klabkebash Před měsícem +9

      She's comparing the various British accents. ... Like America doesn't have different accents. Boston, Texas, Chicago/MidWest, NY/NJ, So Cal, or just Southern.. She reminds me of a girl I knew who moved to Florida from NYC and went on and on how much better Florida is because of the listing all these topics like ease of driving to malls, and restaurants etc.. I said that's because you never left NYC before. The whole country is like that if you have a car. 💩

    • @bhslefty
      @bhslefty Před měsícem +2

      @@klabkebash exactly!

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser Před měsícem +4

      @@klabkebash and then you go to other countries where many cities are even better even if you Don't have a car.

  • @pragmaticskeptic
    @pragmaticskeptic Před měsícem +27

    i'm Canadian and lived in Europe for 4 years and traveled extensively. I returned to Canada back in the mid seventies and don't want to live anywhere else. The only thing that has really deteriorated for me is the medical care in Ontario. You just can't get quick medical appointments or even find a doctor sometimes.

    • @iankuah8606
      @iankuah8606 Před měsícem

      And Justin Trudaeu has turned the country into a woke paradise?

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +2

      Don't blame "The country Canad" - blame the stooges who so-called "govern" in Canada.

    • @colonelfustercluck486
      @colonelfustercluck486 Před měsícem

      about getting a doctors appointment for routine things (in New Zealand) it takes a few days if you call them and make an appointment.... it will be the following week. Anything more urgent you go down to the Emergency Room / Accident and Emergency at your nearest hospital. You will be triaged and seen in order of medical seriousness.
      (Not because you are loud or insistent)..... so that can be a long wait also. But at least you do get seen and treated. NZ is way short of Medical Doctors and Nurses and is trying to recruit them from overseas. But the other countries all have the same problem.

  • @jamesadkins1780
    @jamesadkins1780 Před měsícem +83

    If she had moved to a different part of the US she would have had a similar experience. I’m from the Midwest and how she described Europe was how I see the us. LA is not typical of the country.

    • @iankuah8606
      @iankuah8606 Před měsícem +19

      And London is not England, Paris is not France etc.

    • @Minnie--ru2ew
      @Minnie--ru2ew Před měsícem

      Exactly! She’s one of those Asian immigrant kid brats. Always complaining. Always got something to say. Not realizing her origins or why her family migrated to the states.

    • @davidz7858
      @davidz7858 Před měsícem +8

      I came to US 35 years ago and 4 years later finished my graduate school in Midwest. Then I moved to east cost CT, it took me a couple of years to adjust, feel people are not friendly as in Midwest, 8 years later moved to New Jersey and feel even worse, never really like east coast people.

    • @frankmichaelchiara
      @frankmichaelchiara Před měsícem +5

      You probably live in the suburban or urban areas on the East Coast. Try moving further inland/west like Western NY area around Rochester. I have been living around this area in a few places for 35 years and people are
      generally friendly. East coast urban areas and NJ particularly suck when it comes to friendliness. See where those uncomplimentary labels NJ Boy or Girl come about. Been to the Midwest and I do agree that they are friendly people in general.

    • @marybusch6182
      @marybusch6182 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@davidz7858 same here east coast is classist, more so than Europe which massively changed post ww2 to prevent fascists resurgence.

  • @svlagonda7417
    @svlagonda7417 Před měsícem +21

    She sums up the cultural differences pretty well (I lived in UK/Sweden and briefly in the US). The only thing I would add is that there can be BIG regional differences throughout the US and UK, depending on whether you're in a big city or somewhere more rural.

    • @bakersmileyface
      @bakersmileyface Před 6 dny

      For sure. Living in rural Britain is a totally different experience to the urban lifestyle. And even then living in other cities in the UK is totally different to living in London. London is just distinctively different to the rest of England. And of course Wales and Scotland are entirely different countries in Britain and N.Ireland exists too since people forget about them poor sods.
      At the very least rural Britain is much safer and much friendlier. And right to roam means you can walk your dog around the fields with the sheep and the cows and the crops and the ponds and the canals and it's just lovely.

  • @conniepr
    @conniepr Před měsícem +14

    You never know what someone is going through and an offer to help someone or a simple smile or short friendly conversation may brighten their day. I don't think it's a bad thing.

    • @leec6707
      @leec6707 Před měsícem

      I couldn't disagree more. People like to be left alone. Some random comments can be fun but being stuck on a bus or train with someone trying to force a conversation is very annoying.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +2

      I made it an iron cast rule for me to at least "say something nice" to at least 5 people every day. It is actually simple. Starting with complimenting the cashier at the Supermarket on how fast he works.

    • @leec6707
      @leec6707 Před 28 dny

      That made me chuckle. It sounds very false to me (a Brit) but some would consider that a lovely gesture. We Brits are generally not great at receiving compliments and would often be embarrassed, awkward and struggle to respond. There are plenty of other ways of being kind/nice that are less direct.

    • @conniepr
      @conniepr Před 28 dny

      @leec6707 What are the other ways to be nice you speak of?

  • @ozpan5540
    @ozpan5540 Před měsícem +126

    true swedes are less superficial but make no mistake its a shitstorm here too

    • @lawrieflowers8314
      @lawrieflowers8314 Před měsícem

      My impression is that decades back the Swedes were very civilised people indeed, and Sweden was a very safe place to live.
      Then mass immigration happened, and now it has been transformed, with gang-fights in cities, no-go areas too, Stockholm ‘rape capital of the world’ etc.
      But nobody will admit it, or else it is frowned upon to speak openly about it?

    • @Frankabagnale33
      @Frankabagnale33 Před měsícem +2

      In what way?

    • @ozpan5540
      @ozpan5540 Před měsícem +8

      @@Frankabagnale33 you have to live here a few decades to see the schisms and paradoxes in society . most that upload videos about Sweden see the surface of it all .

    • @txdmsk
      @txdmsk Před měsícem

      Sweden became the US of Europe. The big cities are a cesspool of crime and trash quality immigrants, basically.

    • @CrankCase08
      @CrankCase08 Před měsícem

      @@borisnegrarosa9113 That depends upon what you refer to as a flaw.

  • @joebaird5874
    @joebaird5874 Před měsícem +118

    I visited New York from Ireland and expected something special. I got there and thought "Is this it?" They thought the below average pizza was 'awesome' as were the restaurants. The only thing that impressed me was the height of the buildings but I could've been in any UK city centre. Americans need to travel and not believe their own hype.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +3

      And that's how you know which ones are the tourists in NYC. They all walk with their heads bent backward adoring the tall buildings.

    • @mandabraithwate4962
      @mandabraithwate4962 Před měsícem +1

      Completely agree...

    • @joebaird5874
      @joebaird5874 Před měsícem +7

      @@BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp not sure I'd say 'adoring' tbh. I kept thinking that the ladders from a fire engine only go up 6 storeys so I wouldn't like to be any higher.

    • @dodgermartin4895
      @dodgermartin4895 Před 29 dny

      So I went to Dublin and thought "is this it?" That stinking spike in front of the GPO is a big dumb looking travesty, The RoI should be thankful to the UK & USA for its freedom in spite of its neutrality... because Ireland doesn't pay for its own defense. The old enemy UK does.

    • @curtismrasmussen
      @curtismrasmussen Před 29 dny +12

      You need to visit more than one state/city in America before making such sweeping generalizations. If you had gone just 60 minutes in any direction you would have seen places that are 180 degrees the opposite of New York City (if that is where you went).
      Or if you had just gone to Brooklyn or the Bronx or Queens (5 to 10 minutes from Manhattan) across the river to New Jersey you would have been exposed to drastically different perspectives, food, sights, etc.
      Peace.

  • @limian3599
    @limian3599 Před měsícem +53

    So interesting listening to her describing the differences at a personal scale. It actually reflects the policies made at the top levels of each of the country she mentioned. It shows. Hope she's happy wherever she decides to stay

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Před měsícem +54

    She's an Angeleno from a very specific group - well to do, college educated, it an industry dealing with consumption and superficiality. She doesn't represent that massive, very diverse city and the millions of everyday working class people who live there and it's suburbs. She doesn't even represent the majority of California, let alone the USA. Yes, I know she prefaced her interview saying that, but I feel it needs to be repeated.

    • @user-nh8zt9wl3c
      @user-nh8zt9wl3c Před měsícem

      The USA is garbage.

    • @war-painter
      @war-painter Před měsícem +10

      Agreed. I’ve been to 38 countries, five of which I’ve lived in more than seven years, born abroad, raised abroad, returned to Los Angeles for its cosmopolitan vibe. Where else can you find beaches, mountains, old growth trees and abundant birdlife fifteen minutes from one of the most technologically advanced cities in the world? It’s the multi-ethnic vibe I like the best. It ain’t too white, the music is great, and as long as they’re not making a movie on my street, I’m good. No plastic surgery either.

    • @theorncampbell4432
      @theorncampbell4432 Před měsícem +16

      100%
      I grew up in USA and have lived overseas for 15 years. I can still see that this woman is not a very good representation of much of the population of USA.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem

      She is a typical brat he detected that "treaty shopping" could get her benefits.
      Scandinavian countries attract these people like cow dung attracts flees - she will have a rude awakening once facts happen.

    • @evancycles
      @evancycles Před měsícem +9

      I agree with you, she's talking on emotional anecdotal terms of her own personal experience or interpretation. The reality is most people in LA, are pretty down to earth. In fact, I would also argue many of them are very focused on living a healthy lifestyle. Statistics also are not on her side. Far, FAR, more Europeans come to the US than Americans leaving for Europe.

  • @gopher4life1
    @gopher4life1 Před měsícem +75

    Grass is always greener on the other side. I am sure there are Swedish people who can’t stand their own country…as with British, German, French, etc…happy for her that she found a country that suit her best. As for obnoxious sports fans…every country has their fair share of ‘hooligans’

    • @TechToWatch
      @TechToWatch Před měsícem +11

      They've softened in recent years, but English hooligans were once the best in the world for mindless, yobbish, drunken behaviour abroad.

    • @priyer74
      @priyer74 Před měsícem +9

      Shouting the name of your country and supporting your team is just being Excited. But when the fans start to Assault the opposite teams supporters, that is really Hooliganism.

    • @garychin5321
      @garychin5321 Před měsícem

      "A Spice for Life"! Master Cheng....
      If U like your Scoff!....Like I do;.......U should Check out Master Cheng (2019).....Purist Ingredients from Scandinavian and Condiments from the East Asia.
      I've lost count the times I have Rustle-Up Chicken Chow Mein for my Geekie Computer; Buddies.....
      And I am only a Fair Cook!
      Secret Ingredients; A Smidgen of Good Scotch to Bring out the Zing...!!!.................Pucka!

    • @garychin5321
      @garychin5321 Před měsícem

      See Stuff like: "Fever Pitch"; Colin Firth.....Stiff-Upper Lip and All that!
      Ruth Gemmell is Gorgeous and Mr. Darcy has the most God-Awful-Perm; U have ever seen in your Life....
      I'd reserve Judgement Concerning any:- "Softening".....
      Ever Seen the Demented 'Oikes' who play Fanatical Soccer on the open Grounds in the Athletics facilities in Northern, Chelmsford (U.K.)!
      "Whisky-Tango"; in Hong Kong's Finest, Speak!
      N.B. I have never been to a Single Football Match in my life!
      @@TechToWatch

    • @DimitarBerberu
      @DimitarBerberu Před měsícem +2

      I live >36y in Australia which is better than any in EU but I think that Yugoslavia was the best/friendliest social system, before destroyed by exploitive West :(

  • @captainnerd6452
    @captainnerd6452 Před měsícem +3

    Sounds like she needed to see more of the US, there is a whole country outside of LA.

  • @RodFleming-World
    @RodFleming-World Před měsícem +9

    Point of info: the City of London is the Square Mile, the financial district. It's not a residential area.

    • @lesmartin8131
      @lesmartin8131 Před 8 dny

      Not so sure I know my Grandad was born in the city and grew up there , I too was born in the city but grew up in Clerkenwell. So not a huge amount of residents but they are there nonetheless. Just saying , oh and another thing this is where proper Cockneys like myself and some others come from . Not from out in the sticks of tower hamlets , glad i got that off me chest 😉

  • @nba6124
    @nba6124 Před měsícem +26

    The difference between Americans and British is exactly the same as the difference between Brazilians and Portuguese. We both speak the same language and yet Brazilians often do not understand Portuguese while we understand Brazilian Portuguese. As for cultural differences, they are exactly the same as the differences between Americans and British. In terms of conclusion, Brazilians are like Americans and Portuguese are like the British.

    • @oparadigma
      @oparadigma Před měsícem

      Dude, noooo, im not like U.S. american, dont curse me with that hahhahahahah... just kiding I understood your point

    • @laxyyorma7016
      @laxyyorma7016 Před měsícem +4

      Brazilians are like Americans? If I remember, Brazil is in America and so Brazilians are Americans. Just like Portuguese and Brits are Europeans?

    • @iankuah8606
      @iankuah8606 Před měsícem +2

      It is often said of the US and the UK that they are two countries separated by a common language!

    • @freedumb_3.0
      @freedumb_3.0 Před měsícem +1

      Not entirely true. Brazilians are mostly natives who just happened to speak Portuguese as a lingua franca. Americans are mostly Europeans who speak English as a lingua franca.

    • @BonVoyage861
      @BonVoyage861 Před měsícem +1

      @@freedumb_3.0 Incorrect. It's a very mixed nation and the US is also

  • @PhilippeOrlando
    @PhilippeOrlando Před 2 dny +2

    I'm from France, I've been in the US for 35 years, I don't know anybody who had plastic surgery and most Americans I know are very relaxed and I'm on the East Coast. Oh yeah, the Swedes are so friendly and outgoing, right!

  • @HARSHADtp
    @HARSHADtp Před měsícem +23

    As a 28 year old Indian working in corporate, i can totally relate to the part where you have mentioned about the nervous breakdown you had due to exploitation in corporates. This is too much in India, Japan, and now i know in US work culture also. I wish the lady my best with her new business.

    • @Arltratlo
      @Arltratlo Před měsícem +2

      i am sure, she loves to work in Europe now!
      like i do...
      40hrs a week and 30 days paid vacation each year and if i am sick, i am sick!

    • @acommentator4452
      @acommentator4452 Před měsícem

      well, not if you are self-employed, as she is ....@@Arltratlo

    • @colonelfustercluck486
      @colonelfustercluck486 Před měsícem

      @@Arltratlo .... pretty much the same in New Zealand. If people looked at me sideways when I left work at 5pm, I would continue to leave the building. My work contract specified my work hours, and I surely didn't want to break it by staying into the evening..... I saw that staying behind thing as butt kissing, and it didn't actually mean that you achieved more.

  • @JeremiahShowtyme
    @JeremiahShowtyme Před měsícem +5

    She was in an industry in a part of Los Angeles that is 80% of people that migrated from everywhere else in the world that’s not the real LA. California is 4 times the size of England so many other places within and outside of Los Angeles. She’s another example of someone that got chewed up and spit out by the demand of La so she was looking for a contrast not a better option in general just a better option for her.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny

      I'm British and have lived and travelled in both countries.
      The US may have faults but it is STILL the Greatest in most respects.. !! The US is a continent
      NOT a little country you can travel
      through in 6 hours.?!?

    • @mr_ozzio5095
      @mr_ozzio5095 Před 8 dny

      America is migration personified, baring the native tribes people the rest came from various parts of Europe spanning two hundred years!

  • @richardhargrave6082
    @richardhargrave6082 Před měsícem +17

    Work to live, not live to work, that's the European way.
    Here in the UK you have to take your leave, in the US, it seems you're encouraged not to take it, which causes burn out and stress and medical bills which cause more stress

    • @Bryt25
      @Bryt25 Před 23 dny

      As a Brit working in the US for a while I was appalled at the lack of holidays and the expectation that I would work overtime for free, but met some great people and had no real problems understanding difference as we've had a fantastic music and cultural back and forth over the years. I did start saying aloominum and tommaytoes as people were confused in those days about brit talk. When I got back to UK after some years my previous work buddies thought it was hilarious that i used terms like 'parking lot' and other simple stuff. Live and learn! :-)

    • @panchopistola8298
      @panchopistola8298 Před 7 dny

      Lol 🤣 I take 4 weeks off a year . You all are subjects not citizens so … whatever

  • @wolemai
    @wolemai Před měsícem +2

    I don't understand how we are told this woman was American, grew up in America and apparently had her "eyes opened" when she left and lived overseas - yet she does not speak with any native American accent, she seems to have an Asian or even South American accent. So what is her real background?

  • @kemprof
    @kemprof Před měsícem +3

    There is no typical LA person, except maybe a type portrayed in movies. In the vast populace of coastal So. California exists communities of people with every life style and value in the world. Our only commmonality is high housing costs.

  • @TheDysartes
    @TheDysartes Před měsícem +32

    I've met quite a few Americans over the years who no longer live in the US and they have all said, that when they go back even just for a holiday they feel that fellow Americans are entitled, obnoxious and have this self centred belief that they are the best in the world. I once asked why did they think Americans behave like this and the answer was; we grow up being told that we're the best and when you're told that every day growing you believe it. One American lad said, there is a belief by many Americans that everyone else in the world wants to be like the US.

    • @evancycles
      @evancycles Před měsícem +3

      But statistically those are the ones that clearly preferred living elsewhere so you would more likely get that response, what if you talked to the ones that choose to live in America? Well, all I know is that there is over a million European immigrants to the USA each year, so far more people coming to the USA than leaving.

    • @luckyneko1
      @luckyneko1 Před měsícem +2

      I have always lived in the US. Of course, there are obnoxious people, but most people I know are very kind and helpful.
      I know there are great things about the USA, but bad things too. I've no doubt every country has things to be proud of and things to be sad about. Most people just want a decent life and for their loved ones to be healthy and happy. I want that for everyone, too.

    • @annbeth6730
      @annbeth6730 Před měsícem

      Americans telling her to go back to her own country. Do they know that they stole that land from the First Nations of North America and make them live on land they call reservations. They tried to wipe the indigenous peoples out . WTF

    • @BonVoyage861
      @BonVoyage861 Před měsícem

      I don't like non-White Americans. I'm from Europe and I just don't like their attitude. The Whites built the US. The other lower races should be more respectful.

    • @user-bw5ib8ds1e
      @user-bw5ib8ds1e Před měsícem +6

      @@evancycles Have you looked at the breakdown of those entering the US? Most are coming from less developed countries so of course they want to move. Far fewer come from Europe and Australasia. I’ve lived in Europe, Australia and the Middle East and while I’ve not lived in the US long term I have been travelling there on a regular basis for 30 years. Having visited a dozen States over three decades I think I’ve seen enough of the place to know it would be the bottom of my list of places to live.
      Why? For the reasons outlined by the OP in this thread and the video. Of course there are some very fine people but the majority really do think they are head and shoulders above the rest of the world when in fact by many metrics they are not.
      I wouldn’t trade my American friends for anything but I would never be their neighbour.

  • @williamlee7782
    @williamlee7782 Před měsícem +21

    Gen X here. My online business did well and I had an excellent team so I started my dream in being nomadic at 2010. I've lived in many countries and started seeing the world from different lenses. It did not take long to realize that the grass was greener on the other side. There's no perfect country but there may be one for you.
    I realized just how sick the people in america can be. Mental illness (negative, scarcity and fear based mindsets), entitlement, arrogant and ignorant to global affair and foreign culture let alone anything beyond my neighborhood and I found myself reflecting some of these. My travels gave me that mirror and I shifted massively with this newfound awareness.
    It used to be only 11% of americans held passports. Today, it's 43%.

  • @BoltRM
    @BoltRM Před měsícem +7

    When the _perception_ is everyone around you are go go go & focused on status, trying to keep up is human nature.
    Many end up frazzled, deep in debt, let friendships slide & unhappy.

  • @abrin5508
    @abrin5508 Před měsícem +23

    All countries have pros and cons and I've lived in all 3 like this lady (UK, Denmark, USA). It's a wash on the normal pros and cons list but lets be honest - the weather and darkness is crap in the UK and Scandinavia. The USA in a sunshine area wrecks the other two - full sunshine from April to October where I am in the USA - its like being on vacation at home, I'm sure people in Spain feel the same. That alone makes it the winner for me as I like the outdoors. As for safety - yeah your typical UK town is a lot safer than say, east St Louis - but go to some normal OK town in a good area of the USA and it's got zero crime; actually safer. The USA is a big country and the comparison should be to the whole of Europe and not just one country in Europe.

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 Před měsícem +12

      I would hate to have constant sunshine for months on end. Because of our British climate, we have the most wonderful countryside and you're never far from a river, lake or the sea. Our seasons make the year so much more interesting and we know that even if it rains for days, it will get better. The other advantage we have is the long summer evenings.

    • @trevorhart545
      @trevorhart545 Před měsícem +7

      Biggest complaint that YANKS have about San Diego is the LACK of seasons, it just doesn't change. Europeans like the Sun BUT also the Seasons.

    • @leec6707
      @leec6707 Před měsícem +1

      So true. I dislike the heat but love it being light from 4 am to 10 pm. I love spring and autumn and a winter walk followed by a cosy evening in, is lovely.

    • @txdmsk
      @txdmsk Před měsícem +10

      Not even rural US is nearly as safe as Europe. The crime rate between the US and the EU is just worlds apart.

    • @PolferiferusII
      @PolferiferusII Před měsícem

      I'm a person who is, I think, pathologically over-stimulated, and I long to live in a place with "dreary" weather, so that bit wouldn't be a negative for me. If I could afford to move, I'd go to the Pacific Northwest. The glaring sun, migrane-inducing melting color, and excessive heat (above 70⁰ farenheit is overheating) are depressing for me, but winter is delightfully soothing and invigorating. The stark skeleton silhouettes of hibernating trees bring me a kind of joyful ecstasy and are a welcome relief my eyes. Obviously, though, even a cold lover like myself has limits. I wouldn't like to live in an arctic zone. I only comment this to show that climate preference isn't universal, though my own preference may not be in the majority.

  • @stevemillard2487
    @stevemillard2487 Před měsícem +4

    There are some common misconceptions/misunderstandings that are not corrected in this video, in fact it is apparent that the interviewee still holds these herself to some extent. For example, Americans speak American English which is now quite different from English in many respects. So, Americans should not be surprised when they are not clearly understood in the UK. Secondly, London is not representative of the UK. It is so different from the rest of the UK that many British people who live outside London consider it to be almost like a foreign country. Finally, in the UK civilians ARE allowed to have guns but there are fairly strict controls.

  • @paulryan2128
    @paulryan2128 Před měsícem +4

    Seems more about her own personal growth & development than comparison of US to other countries.
    Discovering "nature" in Sweden after growing up in an urban setting & majoring in MARKETING isn't a *failing* of the US at all.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny +1

      No " nature " in America ?!?!
      Oregon ? Wyoming ? Washington state . ? California.? 😳😳

  • @AlinaInUSA
    @AlinaInUSA Před měsícem +48

    very nice lady 🙂 I've lived in US for 13 years now (in Miami, Seattle, Portland) and Vancouver (Canada) She should not blame herself so much for not being a good friend in early 20-s, because it's the way labor market is set up in US, people are employed and being fired "at will" in one day, there are almost no unions here, it's a money-centered country and society, that's why it was so successful in capitalism, that's why there are so many great companies and startups were build over here - because money and success are #1 value, not people, people in Europe make less money at the same jobs but they are protected better (that's why there are so many homeless and mentally ill people in US and not so many in Europe). So it's a choice - want to make more money and build a great career - go to US, but it comes with sacrifices... And a note about LA people (the same goes for NY, Miami people) - yes, she is right, but majority of population in other parts of US are very simple-dressed, care a lot about family time and nature - because what else you can do in boring suburban USA?😅 Europe is definitely so much better at social life, medical care, easy, quick and cheap travel to many countries around, great beautiful centers of the cities, where you can walk, socialize, without stepping over needles and looking over shoulder because you not feeling safe... not mentioning gun violence, Pharma lobby... Americans deserve better government I think, it's not doing good lately...

    • @wongsy1704
      @wongsy1704 Před měsícem

      The speaker is just like a frog jumping out from one well right into an other.

    • @NorCalMoDo
      @NorCalMoDo Před měsícem

      American system is based on the natural laws of survival. It is all on yourself and for yourself...Forget about the social safet network... Survival o the fittest.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Před měsícem +10

      The US does worse than Western Europe not only on soft measures like happiness and well-being, but also on hard outcomes like murder rate, life expectancy and even maternal and infant mortality. These are not the diseases of affluence. It's because the US is so polarised. There are more very rich and also more very poor people. The rich act as if they believe they NEED to have a high level of poverty, which they disguise by blaming the poor for their fate.
      The newspapers make us THINK that London and the UK as a whole have high levels of knife violence, but the figures show that more Americans are killed with knives. It's just overshadowed by the greater number of shooting deaths. There are more motor vehicle accidents and deaths on the roads too.

    • @bullwinkle60
      @bullwinkle60 Před měsícem

      Hmm... we should send our homeless to Europe...

    • @user-zu6ir6kj5g
      @user-zu6ir6kj5g Před měsícem +5

      @@bullwinkle60 They'd almost certainly be treated better. Over here, most people are less self-centred, and a bit more focused on social co-responsibility. Maybe in the American Bible the bit about "thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself" is optional.

  • @soulkisschaoscrypt
    @soulkisschaoscrypt Před měsícem +89

    In the UK civilians ARE allowed to own guns, it's just that you have to have a good reason, be vetted, prove you will store and use it correctly and be subject to insoection of said storage.
    There is also the fact that most of us don't actually want to own a gun.

    • @yurig2530
      @yurig2530 Před měsícem +3

      Same as in California. She never been to other states, or even outside LA.

    • @txdmsk
      @txdmsk Před měsícem

      Nah man. You just need to make crime illegal, and people will stop doing it. Look at fentanyl, for example. It is illegal. People are forbidden to possess it. Are the streets flooded with fentanyl zombies? Do we have tens of millions of users and addicts? ... W-wait... It's almost as if the problem in the US is not guns, but people...

    • @Thenogomogo-zo3un
      @Thenogomogo-zo3un Před měsícem +3

      Laws regarding firearms in the UK are vert strict and you need a certificate that has to be approved by the Police

    • @peteralflat281
      @peteralflat281 Před měsícem +13

      That's only shot guns. Hand guns, rifles and automatic weapons are banned.

    • @malin5468
      @malin5468 Před měsícem +13

      On of the worst features of the USA is its obsession with guns. It is also notable that the European countries with the worst homicide rates are those with relatively lax gun controls (Germany and Switzerland). No country however is as bad as the USA. The UK has one of the lowest levels of gun violence and suicide, a direct result of the strict gun control laws.

  • @lindsayheyes925
    @lindsayheyes925 Před 29 dny +5

    I've lived in one English county, Herefordshire, for fifty years. A friend invited my wife and I for dinner at his house, which was on a hill amid a confusion of narrow leafy lanes in another county, Gloucestershire. It was just fifteen minutes drive away from our house and literally over one hill, then up to the top of the next, from where I'd worked for about ten years.
    We stopped to ask directions so we didn't take a wrong turn going up the final hill, because it was very steep. The man we asked was about eighty years old and had clearly lived in that parish all his life, judging from his Forest of Dean accent. Although I had been to school in Gloucestershire, his accent was so strong that neither of us could understand a word that old man said. We thanked him politely, and guessed which way to get to my friend's house.
    At about that time at my work, we took on a cook. She'd lived for thirty years in our village and was married to a local man, but had been raised in The Black Country. Her accent was so strong, and her vocabulary so rich with malapropisms, that I often had to think about what she'd said, as did all our colleagues. She must have thought that we were all a bit stupid.
    In South Wales, adjacent valleys each had their own distinct accents, both in Welsh and in English. And at family gatherings, my uncles would drop their Hampshire accents to do hilarious impressions of my grandfather's gruff put-downs in his Lancashire accent.
    Sadly, over the decades, all these beautiful accents have become much weaker, and their quirky dialect words forgotten or fossilised as the names of country lanes or of fields.

    • @specialunit0428
      @specialunit0428 Před 27 dny

      I have noticed everything is starting to sound like a neutral London accent which is common in the south east depending on where you go. All major cities have lost their accent and you have to go to the rural areas or the old imperial suburbs to hear the accents. Like in Kent, you have to go to Gravesend or around the Medway area to hear the Estuary accent and in the rural villages to hear the country accent which has similar pronunciations to the west country.

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 Před 26 dny

      @@hulkhatepunybanner You modern narrative does not stand up to scrutiny:
      Economist Juliet Shor has calculated that 14th Century peasants could - in some years - get away with working for just 150 days a year. Sundays were strict days of rest, as were "high days and holidays" maintained by the Church. Thus Holy Week was a week off in the run-up to Easter, then Whitsuntide was another, there were 12 days off at Christmastide, a day off for the patron saint of your church, another for that of your country, and another for that of your occupation. Most people rested on Saturdays, too.
      Weddings involved a week off, and travel was allowed for them. My family living in Dalton and Skelmersdale had their baptisms, weddings and funerals in Ormskirk for centuries. Journeymen (skilled tradesmen) could travel as Freemen (or Burgesses) and be exempt from tolls. Mothering Sunday was a day for going to the Mother Church of the Diocese, you could travel to market, and to Hiring Fairs. Restrictions on travel died out after The Black Death due to labour shortages, and effectively ended 600 years ago.
      Villages were not a thing until the 13th Century. They were planned settlements for agricultural projects that were expected to take centuries: Thus Whitchurch in Herefordshire was established for fenning a marsh, The Birches for clearing "waste". Land was offered on rent to attract villeins to them. They could buy manumission, but mostly preferred land. And that is at the heart of the stasis of peasants:
      They stayed for stability of land they could occupy, and for their family support network, not compulsion. Apples never fell far from their trees. Only starvation or conflict would drive them off their land - rarely opportunity.

    • @hulkhatepunybanner
      @hulkhatepunybanner Před 26 dny

      @@lindsayheyes925 *Yeah. Holiday wasn't the modern road trip to the nearest resort town.* Go back as many centuries as you want, it cost money and lots of time to travel so not everyone did it. Seventeenth century England wasn't 1960s US. The US isn't that old and in short time Appalachians developed an accent that many outsiders couldn't understand. That's 'cause dey couldn't afford to go a-travelin'. _Though I'm happy for you to have learned two lessons: history of the English peasant, and how not to respond in haste._

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 Před 26 dny

      @@hulkhatepunybanner I have learned neither lesson here. I've studied my family history from primary sources for over 20 years, and took a particular interest along the way in two things:
      1. The impact of gravitational trip attraction on personal mobility;
      2. Social mobility.
      The effect of gravitational trip attraction is stronger than any authoritarian attempt to confine people, because it follows an inverse square law - unless you or someone else "burns your boats" to make going back impossible or intolerable.
      Since the Norman Conquest, upward and downward social mobility in England have always been greater than most people imagine. After about seven generations, the differences between the descendants of the rich and the poor will be negligible - with the exception of for titled nobility.
      The latter (Dukes and the like) benefit (but may be burdened by) from their title being legally bound to an indivisible estate which is not theirs to trade, belonging to The Crown. Thus the present King is no longer the Duke of Cornwall. Custodianship of the estate - the Duchy of Cornwall - has been transferred to his son, on whose death it will revert to The Crown. Basically, if you ever become a Duke, you will own nothing and you will be happy - or you will own nothing and you will be Harry.

    • @hulkhatepunybanner
      @hulkhatepunybanner Před 26 dny

      @@lindsayheyes925 *You didn't learn how to be concise either.*

  • @Ming1975
    @Ming1975 Před měsícem +64

    A good world citizen she is. Very humble and honest. Nice lady.

    • @garychin5321
      @garychin5321 Před měsícem +3

      Skanky Stooge....Pops in my Mind!

    • @Minnie--ru2ew
      @Minnie--ru2ew Před měsícem +4

      Humility doesn’t put one down inorder to lift oneself up.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem

      Your view - not mine.
      Unless you know how pays for her "traveling" and bashing a country in which she is really just a guest like all immigrants - she is simply a freeloader and arrogant selfish individual to whom the ultimate in life is traveling and enjoying life.

    • @Thenogomogo-zo3un
      @Thenogomogo-zo3un Před měsícem

      A dog grooming salon in Fitzrovia 'humble'? are you kidding? That's an expensive upper class part of London, love.

    • @gerhardma4297
      @gerhardma4297 Před měsícem +1

      @@Minnie--ru2ew If you're not capable of criticism and have never moved your arse to another country to live there, you'd better stay out of this. Arrogance and ignorance rule the USA

  • @dj_paultuk7052
    @dj_paultuk7052 Před měsícem +58

    Im American and now living in the UK for the last 12yrs. Best thing i ever did !, and have no intention of ever moving back.

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +9

      Thank you - stay where you are.

    • @Kasadoll
      @Kasadoll Před měsícem

      A dumb assed american response. There's an entire world out there and to say we are the best is quite laughable. Now granted we aren't the worst, but I can think of some things where we definitely aren't the best ( our healthcare, infrastructure, how we treat our prisoners and our prisons in general, worker rights, etc )

    • @iangraham9050
      @iangraham9050 Před měsícem +12

      Welcome. You made the right decision. I like going to the States on holiday but would never want to live there.

    • @tc539
      @tc539 Před měsícem +1

      good stay there TRAITOR

    • @barryorbik215
      @barryorbik215 Před měsícem +2

      well done

  • @GoldiinKL
    @GoldiinKL Před měsícem +15

    I left Germany and now live in Malaysia, I do not regret it, it was the best move I made!

    • @propertyguru22
      @propertyguru22 Před měsícem +3

      How did you adjust to the heat and humidity? Which part of Malaysia do you live in?

    • @Kenan-Z
      @Kenan-Z Před měsícem

      Seems like you were infected with that tropical cordyceps fungus that took over your brain.

    • @GoldiinKL
      @GoldiinKL Před měsícem +3

      @@propertyguru22 I live in KL and I really do not have an answer to this question, I just got used to it after about 3 days, and now It doesn't bother me anymore. Also, the amount of malls with air-conditioning helps!

    • @yurig2530
      @yurig2530 Před měsícem

      Good for retirement, unless you're Jewish.

    • @pokeitwithastick1424
      @pokeitwithastick1424 Před měsícem

      You already said that from another account. Why?

  • @marco-58
    @marco-58 Před měsícem +4

    Big magnet for UK is Free Health care. Iv'e seen a couple of Yanks on YT, who have moved to UK because they are Diabetic, insulin costs a fortune in US, free here. One Yank even moved again up to Scotland (From England), as you also get Free Prescriptions in Scotland.

  • @LoneWolf731000
    @LoneWolf731000 Před měsícem +40

    Skip the tip and you'll realize very quickly what the "customer service" really is about!

    • @richardhockey8442
      @richardhockey8442 Před měsícem +9

      when you see signs in restaurants 'our servers rely on your tips' (this business can't be arsed to pay our staff a wage they can live on, so you should help us pay them as well)

    • @msjannd4
      @msjannd4 Před měsícem +6

      Servers in the USA can't be expected to live on three dollars an hour.

    • @theorncampbell4432
      @theorncampbell4432 Před měsícem +4

      Naw, Customer service in the USA tends to be better in many industries that don't involve tipping or commission.

    • @wildbikerbill6530
      @wildbikerbill6530 Před měsícem

      It's all about the culture of the country. One way or the other, the wait staff gets paid or they'll find other employment. But is it included in the price of the food or does the customer pay the server directly? TIP is actually an acronym - To Insure Promptness. And to get that desired effect, in the USA it's standard for the customer to pay the server directly. It's the server's incentive to get the customer's order to the kitchen quickly, and when the food is ready to get it delivered to the customers table promptly. And good servers can make considerably more than minimum wage, despite the paltry base pay from the employer. On the other hand, poor servers who pay attention to anything except the customer, simply aren't going to last very long.
      I imagine the problem for foreigners is the shock of discovering the price of a meal is more than the listed prices in the menu + tax, that there is this additional item to be paid separately.

    • @juliaw151
      @juliaw151 Před měsícem +2

      I​dk, subjective. I hate it, leave me alone and let me eat and converse with my dinner mates in peace.

  • @GA-ik6pi
    @GA-ik6pi Před měsícem +2

    I like her honesty. Appreciation for moving from US to Sweden then to our lovely city (to some degree 😂) London, and comparing versus living in LA and San Fran etc.
    London is a big city, and yes there is crime in any city and we are not immune naturally.
    Knife crime is a huge issue, and this is still an ongoing issue that needs to be dealt with. Unlike the US, where gun crime is a HUGE problem, and it’s easy to feel unsafe due to this🙁.
    When you feel you don’t belong somewhere anymore, you move.
    I’m born and raised in London, family is from the Caribbean. However, having travelled now 5X times to Kuala Lumpur (recently spent more 3x), I feel so at home there than here in London now.
    I hope to make that leap over to Malaysia, as I don’t feel like U.K. is home for me anymore.
    London will always be home, but the feeling is no longer the same as it was.
    The govt has screwed us over royally, and it’s not the people in this city or country that makes me dislike it, it’s just political part that does.

  • @clumsytriangle2436
    @clumsytriangle2436 Před měsícem +4

    As a South African, we also tip in the service industries, but we aren't arrogant and berate service industry workers if their service is bad. We just won't go to that place again...passive aggressive LOL

    • @infiad1275
      @infiad1275 Před 19 dny

      Most of us aren't arrogant and don't berate service workers here, either. You only hear about them because it's so out of the ordinary. Being normal is not news worthy.

  • @catsupchutney
    @catsupchutney Před měsícem +5

    I love my country, but certainly believe that there are other countries I might love more, especially if I were raised there. This view is only reinforced the more I travel. The US has it's bad points, and I prefer to think that pointing them out should be viewed as an opportunity to think constructively about how to improve.

  • @leanne2330
    @leanne2330 Před měsícem +3

    Hey hey Max, saw few of your wise white hair liao 😅. Thanks for sharing all these interesting interviews...

  • @LeeStewart
    @LeeStewart Před 29 dny +2

    As a Brit, I stayed in New York last year for six days. It's unlike the experiences you've experienced but I found myself having to divert from my British accent to a more posh English, if that makes sense? Otherwise no New Yorker I spoke to would've understood me. The only culture shock was how tall the buildings were and how huge the pizzas were. Other than that there wasn't much of a culture shock. In the 90's in the U.K. I was exposed to more Americanisms, especially New York.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny

      " a more posh English "..?!?!
      No ! You mean clearly enunciated
      English NOT the dreadful incomprehensible dialect that is
      now promoted by the BBC.
      eg.. Yorkshire / Manc / Geordie etc . ?? Bring back RP. !!

  • @fredpui
    @fredpui Před 18 dny +2

    Max, do you get any incentives from the Singapore government or any related entities for promoting Singapore?

  • @jabezhane
    @jabezhane Před měsícem +7

    I had an American girlfriend many years ago. I visted her in the US and it was fine, it was the US, no biggie for me. But she then came to stay with me in the UK for a while and when she went back it took her ages to adjust. It really messed with her head that maybe America wasn't all that.

  • @nativeamerican7563
    @nativeamerican7563 Před měsícem +9

    If she thinks UK has different accents. I feel Bad she never visited America. Completely different cultures outside LA lol

    • @lucylane7397
      @lucylane7397 Před měsícem +3

      She is American

    • @joewhite4080
      @joewhite4080 Před měsícem +1

      @@lucylane7397 --- She's from California. That's another ball of wax altogether.

    • @pauls3204
      @pauls3204 Před měsícem +4

      Think I miss the point, there are at least 27 regional accents and estimated another 40+ sub regional accents in the UK and Ireland , all of which could fit into a state like Texas about 9 times .
      I think that was her point, she could drive 5 miles and not have a clue what people are saying .

    • @evancycles
      @evancycles Před měsícem

      There are many cultures and ways of living inside of LA. There is no one LA experience.

    • @Thenogomogo-zo3un
      @Thenogomogo-zo3un Před měsícem

      @@evancycles Tent city is an LA experience

  • @selectiveoutrage6617
    @selectiveoutrage6617 Před 26 dny +3

    Strange that she says she couldn't understand Brits. She must have been in Newcastle. There are so many British TV shows and movies in the States. I loved English accents even as a child watching old movies on TV. However, it's the Scottish who are nearly impossible to understand and I've traveled all over the UK many times.

  • @mattycakes1161
    @mattycakes1161 Před měsícem +2

    LA and NYC aren't traditional America, you won't even find that many Americans there anymore, they're like London. Those places are full of people living there on visas and many living there illegally. So, of course you won't get an American experience in those places. I don't know how she didn't experience diverse cultures in those cities as you can go down each street and see different shops with products from those nations and speak different languages on each street. You take a train with people from every country in the world and hear hundreds of languages being spoken. There isn't another place as diverse as New York City. The US has forests to, you don't have to go across the world to find a forest, in fact, we have places where nobody lives and you can stay out there as long as you want or as long as your survival skills allow.

  • @alexandrasmith7682
    @alexandrasmith7682 Před měsícem +8

    After living in the US for ten years, I came back talking about "my purse" and "the elevator" .... So, I fully understand! What a lovely lady .....

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem +2

      No- this lady is not lovely. She is a grown-up and being part of something - that is the least on her mind She is the typical "freeloader" living on her family and "best friends".

  • @yuwmelon3868
    @yuwmelon3868 Před měsícem +4

    Haha! The Scottish accents and Scots(the language) are tricky, aren't they? Having been in Scotland for a year and a half, I still sometimes struggle to understand what the kids are saying when I work in schools.

  • @faner5302
    @faner5302 Před měsícem +11

    I am a Chinese from mainland China now living in Australia. I don't like US's politics (stared so many wars), but I must say to some extent I identify with the work ethic the most American hold (similiar to Chinese), which encourages hard working and is valued as part of foundamental moral standard. This does not mean I myself am or I think everybody should work like a workholic. Just because in Australia, some people are laid back too much. But to be honest, I am confused by myself, don't really know which I like more. For example, I don't like American movies in gegeral, for me it is all about winner or loser. Instead I like French movies more, because the are about human, ordinary people. But in working place, at least fir now I still prefer people work efficient within 8 hours during the day and get job done as possible as they can.

    • @LM-fn6qb
      @LM-fn6qb Před měsícem +2

      Everywhere I've worked in Australia the style is laid back, because they don't make a big deal about anything, but they work hard and don't mess around so they can leave at a reasonable time and have a life outside of work doing their surfing/art projects/sport etc. Also, I love French and other European films for the exact reasons you say 🙂

    • @kevinmoore8815
      @kevinmoore8815 Před měsícem +3

      @@LM-fn6qbYou cannot learn unless you have leisure time.

    • @charlesjay8818
      @charlesjay8818 Před 22 dny

      i hope u r enjoying the democratic freedom you don't get back home lol and when u go to a restaurant at least the use fresh oil.... not from the gutter hahaha China is horrible under Xi Jinping, he is destroying the country democrasy and relations with the west while stealing western tech and spying on everybody and his silly ideas in the South China sea, and Hong Kong and whats happenig to the Uyghurs. China = horrible. Australia better country to live... well done

  • @mattycakes1161
    @mattycakes1161 Před měsícem +2

    This isn't a unique experience. Lots of first and second generation immigrants come here and settle in a large city. They then live in an isolated community where they keep speaking their native language and never integrate, so they feel alienated in other parts of the country and then try to find themselves in another country. You'll notice she still has a Chinese accent in a lot of her words despite growing up in the United States, that isn't normal for Americans with immigrant parents in most parts of the United States. If you never try to integrate into your new country, then you're never going to fit in and you're always going to feel alienated.

  • @howardrisby9621
    @howardrisby9621 Před měsícem +19

    How do us Brits regard our cousins? My grandmother, a nurse, knew GIs in two world wars ... "Oversexed, overpaid and over here"!!. Reginald D Hunter scored a hit for the New World with his observation "You British drink like us Americans eat"!! Funny the Scottish accent got a mention. Rab.C.Nesbitt is one of the greatest comedy programmes ever .... even if most English need subtitles!!
    Two nations, separated by a common language"

    • @trevorhart545
      @trevorhart545 Před měsícem +1

      Rab C Nesbitt, Scotland Cultural Attaché to the UN.

    • @alanj9391
      @alanj9391 Před 24 dny

      There's no such thing as "the" Scottish accent, there are several different accents sounding nothing like each other.

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud Před měsícem +2

    A perfect way to show the difference.
    If I move to one of these places in America where all the neighbours come to welcome you. There's no where to go but down. If you don't talk to some but become friend with others. = friction
    The UK, if I move in to a new place, the neighbours don't go out of their way to get to know you, so the only way is up and no friction with thise you don't get to know so well

  • @BelgradeArch
    @BelgradeArch Před měsícem +1

    Sweden and Swedes are considered to be distant and formal in comparison to, for example, southern European peoples. Visit there and you'll see what to be laid-back and relaxed means.

  • @basseliskandarani3137
    @basseliskandarani3137 Před měsícem +147

    She has made the right decision ... the US is declining faster than anybody can think

    • @kenyup7936
      @kenyup7936 Před měsícem +6

      how ? USD is still the world reserve currency , the coolest tech like AI in the US still leading the world

    • @jasc4364
      @jasc4364 Před měsícem +5

      I am afraid your wish will not be granted.

    • @catsupchutney
      @catsupchutney Před měsícem +4

      You'll read people claim that to be the case in the UK and continental Europe as well. My question is whether people who say that are quietly happy to make that claim.

    • @Sobabe-el5ke
      @Sobabe-el5ke Před měsícem

      Speaking about the Empire, such as the USA, history (His-story) is written by the Conqueror.. "Slavery, Genocide, Colonialism and Colonization" are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers. 😔🤷
      For honest truths, pls read the supremely informative and insightful, multi-pages comment by 'Lonely Alaskan' at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism": czcams.com/video/z9SMN59vsGY/video.htmlsi=QZ4aX9jmUdrbRoYL , (which by the way, got pushed down below 200 other comments lately).

    • @Sobabe-el5ke
      @Sobabe-el5ke Před měsícem

      Speaking about the Empire, such as the USA, history (His-story) is written by the Conqueror.. "Slavery, Genocide, Colonialism and Colonization" are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers. 😔🤷
      For honest truths, pls read the supremely informative and insightful, multi-pages comment by 'Lonely Alaskan' at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism/Chronicle", on CZcams, (which by the way, got pushed down below 200 other comments lately).

  • @justhonest41
    @justhonest41 Před měsícem +20

    There is no perfect country in the world, it is about your perception. Every country has good and bad. I have been traveling to 54 countries and 47 States, every time I came back from other countries , I appreciate more about living in USA especially the conveniences, the friendliness, the number one is the customer service!

    • @LM-fn6qb
      @LM-fn6qb Před měsícem +8

      You must be affluent enough to travel. Most Americans can't. In other countries there is an effort to work together to solve social problems. In America, the solution is to become so individually wealthy that the problems don't bother you and that is just what you have said.

    • @Arltratlo
      @Arltratlo Před měsícem

      every time i left the USA, i took a deep breath and been happy i survived again...
      i dont have the same feeling after leaving every other country i went!
      i got only 8 states and 32 countries under my belt!
      but i barley travel!

    • @lindsayheyes925
      @lindsayheyes925 Před 29 dny

      What's so special about the toilets in the USA? Have I been missing something?

    • @charlesjay8818
      @charlesjay8818 Před 22 dny

      hahaha your silly gun culture, your lack of free universal healthcare and education, you spend $700 billion a year on stupid wars all over the world, your $30 trillion in debt your current politics is a joke bla bla bla US is one of the worst countries in the developed world lol

    • @ahoang9069
      @ahoang9069 Před 11 dny

      USA is only great if you have high disposable income ... and white ...

  • @caroljeanscholl7370
    @caroljeanscholl7370 Před 28 dny

    I'm curious as to why the front of your address that you shared here is boarded in or boarded up.

  • @fox39forever
    @fox39forever Před měsícem +5

    The "Pledge of Allegiance" has a lot to answer for. I had to say it, as a child, and it took me years of living in Europe, to jettison it.

    • @blue2mato312
      @blue2mato312 Před měsícem +2

      I’m Norwegian and those kids that went for an exchange year in the US were so shocked by this pledge as well as by the general education. Except my sisters friend because she didn’t make it back, she got killed by a drunk driver in the US.

    • @blue2mato312
      @blue2mato312 Před měsícem +3

      It’s a very authoritarian thing to do, I don’t think any other democracies has anything similar.

    • @fox39forever
      @fox39forever Před měsícem +1

      @@blue2mato312 Oh no, that's so terrible. R.I.P. your sister's friend. 🙏😥

    • @fox39forever
      @fox39forever Před měsícem +2

      @@blue2mato312 Yes, it's mind-numbing brain-washing, actually.

    • @blue2mato312
      @blue2mato312 Před měsícem +1

      @@fox39forever Thank you that’s very kind ♥️ It’s a long time ago but she was a lovely girl.

  • @bakerstreet101
    @bakerstreet101 Před měsícem +5

    I have lived in several countries outside of the USA. It made me appreciate the USA a lot more. It's more chaotic, competitive and cruel, but there is no country as innovative or productive.

    • @bakerstreet101
      @bakerstreet101 Před měsícem +1

      @@Artist1974CH China's a lot of things, but innovative is not one of them. The USA leads the world in technological and scientific innovation by a large margin. China just copies.

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před 22 dny

      China has become the leader in innovation in most fields and no country is as productive. One visit will shock westerners how modern and advanced it is.

    • @PaulK-ve1pu
      @PaulK-ve1pu Před 17 dny

      Being in a productive and innovative country is not much use if you have no access to healthcare, welfare, stuck in a menial job with no way out. Imagine how much talent is lost in the chaos.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny

      Exactly ! 👍 🇬🇧 !

  • @Gold_d_lion
    @Gold_d_lion Před měsícem +45

    I left Germany and Canada for a better life in Malaysia, best move I did!

    • @vincenttay2812
      @vincenttay2812 Před měsícem +15

      Try China. We love China. Excellent infrastructure and great security. Great food vibrant society as if you are in the 22nd Century 😅

    • @danh.8725
      @danh.8725 Před měsícem +4

      Hi, would be nice to have a Vlog on it. Why do you find Malaysia better then other options?

    • @selohcin
      @selohcin Před měsícem

      @@vincenttay2812 China's going downhill FAST.

    • @Minnie--ru2ew
      @Minnie--ru2ew Před měsícem +2

      @@vincenttay2812I’m sure that’s where her family came from. And yet no mention of it. 😂

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před měsícem

      Good for you. Who forced you to live in Germany or Canada and what did you try to gain by moving there?

  • @natehill8069
    @natehill8069 Před měsícem

    Ive never been in another country during the Olympics, but I was in Holland once when they won a World Cup semifinal or something and you would have thought it was an earthquake, the whole of Haarlem was out in the streets screaming and stomping around well into the night.

  • @arlissmccutcheon6495
    @arlissmccutcheon6495 Před měsícem +5

    I guess she is a Jeopardy fan, she ends every sentence in the form of a question!

  • @facemakerable
    @facemakerable Před měsícem +11

    There are plenty good kind , generous folks is LA

    • @user-lm2vs1sl3v
      @user-lm2vs1sl3v Před měsícem +2

      I agree but it makes my head spin just how selfish a lot of people here are.

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 Před 20 dny

      But they never turn up on time and a bit passive aggressive

  • @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG
    @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG Před měsícem +14

    Definitely better in quality of life to be an employee in Sweden than in BOTH the United States and Singapore. Especially due to Strong labour Unions. 💪🏼👍🏼

    • @KatJade269
      @KatJade269 Před měsícem +1

      An American being interviewed by a foreigner based in Singapore, so don’t bring USA and Singapore together into a comparison with Sweden.

    • @MaxChernov
      @MaxChernov  Před měsícem +7

      Why not?

    • @scootertooter6874
      @scootertooter6874 Před měsícem

      Socialism is a perfect system-- for those who are lazy and unmotivated and have been inculcated with an "entitlement mentality", that is...

    • @Rowlph8888
      @Rowlph8888 Před měsícem +4

      Sweden, like all of the EU isn't competitive in emmerging tech, because they are overregulated. In That, even though Brexit was a bad decision on most vectors for Britain, the only one that has been a benefit, is that the regulation has made them the 3rd most attractive nation for emerging tech in the world and far superior to any nation in Europe.They literally have 20 new unicorns in companies in emerging tech and also have 3 times the Investment of Germany and twice that of France in AI, laser, cyber and digitisation
      *Sweden, like all other EU countries needs to find a successful way around this issue, which has been a problem for about 50 years slowly growing more debilitating. The U.K.''s problem wil be whether it can hold on to any successful of the start-ups, once they achieve success

    • @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG
      @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG Před měsícem +1

      ⁠​⁠@@Rowlph8888
      Not true that “Sweden isn’t competitive on emerging tech”.
      Their Swedish build Gotland class non-nuclear submarine are among the MOST advanced in the world.
      In 2005, Submarine Gotland managed to penetrate the defensive measures of Carrier Strike Group 7 UNDETECTED and snap several pictures of USS Ronald Reagan during the December pre-deployment Joint Task Force Exercise 06-2 (JTFEX 06-2) in the Pacific Ocean (probably in the California Operating Areas), EFFECTIVELY “SINKING” the American aircraft carrier in the exercise.

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud Před měsícem

    There is a regulation that can't force your landlord to speed up getting repairs etc done, so this regulation allows you to call in work men and the bill sent to your landlord
    I may be wrong thinking it applies to commercial stuff. May just be residential

  • @lillieberger2883
    @lillieberger2883 Před měsícem

    I enjoy traveling and have been all over Europe and have family living in Italy, Scotland, Asia.. I love visiting them, but also love coming home to the US. I live in the Midwest in a midsized city and enjoy our four seasons and the outdoors.

  • @H-Zazoo
    @H-Zazoo Před měsícem +7

    Sweeping generalizations about America and Americans. I am sure the outdoors is wonderful in Sweden but it's also available in the US to anyone who wants it.

  • @lanabyk8012
    @lanabyk8012 Před měsícem +58

    America is the Greatest Country in the World - but, only if you remain in America!

    • @NoBullshitU
      @NoBullshitU Před měsícem +9

      it's greatest for the Rich

    • @TheCornishCockney
      @TheCornishCockney Před měsícem +11

      it IS the greatest country in the world……….for the 1%.

    • @FrancesSanchez-gw7lt
      @FrancesSanchez-gw7lt Před měsícem

      WHO SAYS-USA IS THe GREATESt COUNTRY, which provided nothing for it,s citizensbut wars and wasting money on istahell

    • @TheCornishCockney
      @TheCornishCockney Před měsícem

      We get on alright with the Russians,but you lot have to stick your noses in dontcha.@@bayoudude622

    • @andyf4292
      @andyf4292 Před měsícem +11

      it reminds me of north korea. they get told all this stuff too

  • @mariontanner7557
    @mariontanner7557 Před 29 dny +2

    We are all nice, all horrible all friendly or unfriendly in every country .People are people.

  • @TheAegisClaw
    @TheAegisClaw Před měsícem +1

    Fair assessment as a brit whose spent time in America and Sweden. As a quite intorverted person, i love the Swedish reserve.

  • @disappointedenglishman98
    @disappointedenglishman98 Před měsícem +4

    This is difficult to listen to with the constant "uptalk". This is just unpleasant to listen to.

  • @rogerterry5013
    @rogerterry5013 Před měsícem +3

    It’s only money, but Americans see everything in terms of money.

  • @davidjames3787
    @davidjames3787 Před měsícem +1

    When she's talking about the UK, I'm guessing that she's talking about London. Her experience would be different in other parts of the UK, especially with regard to speaking to strangers which is quite common in other parts of the country.

  • @mjpfl8131
    @mjpfl8131 Před měsícem

    Interesting video. LA has a high profile but represents only a tiny percent of America. Rural America is where it's at. I now live in a town in Florida that's so small it doesn't have any administrators at all (unincorporated county), but is only an hour from a couple big cities. I have the best of both worlds: friendly neighbors, little traffic and room to breathe while still within a fairly short drive of shopping, beaches and big-city cultural and entertainment venues. In NH I lived in a similar location. Places like this exist all over America.

  • @Bob_just_Bob
    @Bob_just_Bob Před měsícem +4

    Like Silbi I am an American who's moved abroad. For me it was when I was 35 at the end of the 1990s with a move to Asia with the idea to spend two years there and then move home but that move never happened and I don't think it ever will. Since then I have spent the majority of my life in Asia with a couple of years in the UK. At the moment I am here in London but I will return to Asia at the end of this month. Listening to Silbi speak it reminds me of my own experiences. Now going on 27 years abroad I can not imagine ever living in the US ever again.

  • @jerrymeadows5059
    @jerrymeadows5059 Před měsícem +3

    I had no idea this kind of America from which she has happily escaped existed except as a side note in a B movie. If you "hang out" with spoiled, entitled people I guess that's what you know. I never have and I'm perfectly happy living in America. Is it the best place in the world? I have no idea, but I do know that in America, if you want to live in a good place for you it's not that hard to find here. There is no "one" America, there's thousands.

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před měsícem

      Not many people who have grown up in the US have experienced other cultures but those who do, generally see some real advantages about living elsewhere. The US is in steep decline but few Americans know there are options once they are trapped in the credit system and really have no more options. It is a very divided country where anyone suspecting that another person is not believing identically as they do, is suddenly the enemy. It is very polarized with at least a 1000 factions where every one of them hates the other 999. When in public one has to self censor every world to reduce the rich of angering them until you find out what faction they believe in and the stranger aligns speech to agree with them. Americans live under incredible stress with debt and fear of crashing if someone in the family gets sick or a job is lost so everything can crash when so few have savings and so many services that are free elsewhere is very expensive in the US. It is very difficult now to start a family unless wealthy where as before about 1970 is was a normal and doable goal. The median price for a normal delivery of a baby now with a single stay in the hospital is $40,000 for a natural process. Doctors until recently when there was a lot of backlash prices increase to compensate for a doctor not being able to schedule 10-15 deliveries a day by insisting on turning a normal delivery into a caesarian section. But in every where, services that are free in other countries are debt items in the US. Any type of medication is 10 to 1000 times more expensive than anywhere else in the world. Very few countries do not have universal health care except the US. Education is extremely expensive and burdens the student with decades of debt that reduces marriage rates so birth rates in intact 2 adult couples is lower than almost any other country since housing, needing a car for each adult due to almost no public transportation, and the average number of bills a couple will have every month even with a very modest life style averages around 100 3-7 times more than any other developed country. The lack of culture is something no one can deny, is a problem making life in the US less rewarding. One in 10,000 Americans have ever seen a real opera or Ballet performance which are only for wealthy since two tickets can easily cost $1600 for a mid-grade performance and where moved to, every night I have a choice between many options for less than $20 with better cast, sets, orchestra and theater.
      Ask anyone who lived outside the US for a while for the difference. They were safer, lived better on far less, had governments that did not constantly lie to them, had little or no debt, better food quality, free or very low cost medical and dental care, had access to safe streets, parks and low cost of housing, and with few exceptions if living in a city has excellent low cost public transportation.
      I have spent time in 92 countries and have only visited my native USA(California) 5 times for 1-2 weeks each and have been shocked by the rapid decline in civil conversation, safety, economic security, and explosion of crime and homelessness..People are angry and divided. It is not like that elsewhere.

    • @jerrymeadows5059
      @jerrymeadows5059 Před měsícem

      @@stanspb763 I agree with you that America is unkind to the young and it is unfortunate that the problems you have enumerated are not a priority in the minds of those who could do something about them, but for most people living in the US, running away to the "verdant pastures of idyllic Europe" is not an option .But if you think about those people who could initiate changes in housing and healthcare and economic opportunity, I think that you'll find that the very ones who seem to most cherish the very political divides according to perceived social needs over practical survival needs, you'll find that there is a clear path to survival. Educate the political leadership and the pampered wealthy into understanding that things need to change and they are the sole reason things don't change. But you can't do this if you run away. If both sides would stop worrying about pronouns over making life for everyone more livable then maybe politicians could do some good for a change, but you runaways don't seem to care about the problems as long as you don't have to do anything about them.

  • @sirgaz8699
    @sirgaz8699 Před 6 dny

    I was taught by a Portuguese engineer in the northern English city of Newcastle. When he first moved over, he "thought" he had basic English but he couldn't understand what anyone was saying to him because Geordies have a thick accent. After about a month of learning by doing he still couldn't speak to Geordies but he'd picked up the Geordie accent so when he called his mother she couldn't understand him either lol. For about 8 months no one understood a word he said regardless of language. Eventually, he learned Geordie English and his mother learned how to translate Portuguese Geordie.

  • @thomasfarrell5396
    @thomasfarrell5396 Před měsícem +1

    in terms of language, people who speak english as a second language do speak simpler english than native speakers. So in multi cultural companies the common english in use does not normally contain clauses and the multitude of variations that native english speakers use. This makes it easier to speak to other non native english speakers and aids understanding.
    That said one of my hobbies is teaching indian colleagues the use of scottish phrases such a "fair scunnered wi that!" It is english but a we bit skewed. :)

  • @user-yk1cf8qb7q
    @user-yk1cf8qb7q Před měsícem +11

    I see that the interviewer mentioned stabbing in London, I guess that these have made international news, but on the other hand the vast number of stabbing incidents are not random, they are mostly gang or drug related. It is incredibly unlikely that a normal everyday person would be attacked or even hurt, unlike in the US where shootings are often random in cinemas, clubs, churches, supermarkets or even and often schools, for goodness’s sake etc. You are much less likely to be caught up in such random acts of violence in London as an exam moderator, checking school project marking to help and advise teachers on their marking levels, I used to travel to London areas such as Greenwich, Brixton and Whitechapel areas which have a bad reputation, but I interacted with the local teens on the street during lunch breaks, telling the odd slightly rude jokes and treating them with the respect they deserve, and I could walk among them and the locals without feeling any fear or animosity. The same goes for when I travel to another poor reputational city such as Birmingham, I love it. I have rarely in my felt fear walking alone day or night.

  • @danielrobertgorman3257
    @danielrobertgorman3257 Před měsícem +20

    I'm an American living in Italy - in the USA everyone is in a rat race chasing after the next buck.

    • @JayaMadhavadas
      @JayaMadhavadas Před měsícem +3

      EXACTLY

    • @pholdway5801
      @pholdway5801 Před měsícem

      No rat race without rats. Too many turned up to cash in on the early Nirvana and made it the HELL it is today. Nice in zones though, that are swiftly being legislated out of existence.....Sad............

    • @JayandSarah
      @JayandSarah Před měsícem +1

      Some cultures are about excessive consumerism. Others are about life first, work secondary.

    • @evancycles
      @evancycles Před měsícem

      Well when you get real sick in Italy, good chance you may be coming back to the USA.

    • @JayandSarah
      @JayandSarah Před měsícem

      @@evancycles or you just get the care you get. Not everyone is living life with the objective of living as long as possible. When you have a far better quality of life, it is okay if you don't go as long.

  • @paulkrisikos7553
    @paulkrisikos7553 Před měsícem +2

    Yes, and Swedish people who have moved to the US share your opposite view.

  • @glennkopris4607
    @glennkopris4607 Před měsícem

    every state, city, town will have its highs and lows throughout time. we are all humans trying to get along and at some point, hopefully find that special place we could call home.

  • @user-cn5ri5he4c
    @user-cn5ri5he4c Před měsícem +3

    Don't confuse loud with patriotic. Loud is just loud and realy quite ugly.

  • @wolfie854
    @wolfie854 Před měsícem +9

    Excellent video, thanks for posting. 'America is perhaps not the greatest country in the world'. Patriotism aside I think there are plenty of people in the rest of the world who do not remotely consider that America is the greatest country in the world. An interesting place to visit for many but that's about it.

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před měsícem

      Before the year 2000, many would have a good view on the US and see it in a good light, but over the last two decades and especially over the last decade, a lot more people see the US in a negative light and don't really find the country appealing.
      Personally, I think it's the internet, it's highlighting the problems far more which in many cases were there before, but thanks to the net, it's far easier to compare to other countries around the world on the differences, and even thought the US is a modern country, it's got elements of a first, second and third world country all rolled into one, which creates a lot of problems and division among its citizens.
      Europeans on the other hand, especially in the EU have it really easy, and I get the sense that a lot of them don't realise how good and easy they've got it compared to most of the world and even compared to the US, because Europeans really love to complain about everything, maybe that's why they have it good because it keeps governments in check, but that complaining makes it seem like the grass is greener on the other side, live a few years on the other side and you get to see that it's not what it's all cracked up to be.
      I even have a friend who lived in Australia for 7 years, he moved back to Europe because he said the quality of life, the pace of life is better, and the irony is, Australia is a modern country with a high quality of living, in fact, Europeans countries dominant the top 10 when it comes to quality of life with I think Australia and Canada being in the top 10, the US and even the UK have been slipping down the table.
      At the end of the day, I think it all boils down to having balance, work-life balance, strong safety net as well as strong social programs, safe place to live and so on, but I think where Europe has the advantage is geographies, it's very easier to move around, travel and all that, whereas other countries like Australia, they are nice places to live but are geographically isolated whereas Europe allows much easier access to many of the interesting parts of the world, not to mention that just in Europe allow, it could take you a lifetime just to explore the richness it offers.
      Europeans, especially in the EU don't realise how good they've got it.

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před měsícem +1

      @@paul1979uk2000 Europe has really declined in the last 20 years with cost of living increasing, crime increasing lack of self governance due to Brussels having different agenda than the people and the they have no accountability to the people. Especially in the last 3 years costs have greatly increased and decent jobs have declined. 30,000,000 who do not speak the languages and have exploded crime and assaults have really taken its toll on quality of life and home budgets. Supporting the mass migration and the billions given away to Ukraine while industries are collapsing and leaving and exploding commodity prices. It is not that rosy in most of Europe and the worst leaders in the world have managed to capture top political positions.

    • @testymann5045
      @testymann5045 Před měsícem +1

      ​​@@stanspb763Given away to Ukraine? Ukraine is fighting off the Russian horde not requiring one NATO soldier to die. The money spent in Ukraine is a bargain; the return on investment is way better than money spent on defense in the NATO countries.

    • @natalielang6209
      @natalielang6209 Před měsícem

      Have you forgotten that all EU member states vote on Europe-wide laws? If it gets passed, the majority of the EU voted for it.
      And maybe if the US and middle East stopped having proxy wars and focused on mitigating climate change immigration wouldn't be such an issue.

  • @woodspirit98
    @woodspirit98 Před měsícem +1

    Come to western ny if you love mountains, tree filled landscapes, pastoral farms and gorgeous lakes, streams and rivers. NYC is about 500 miles from here. People are laid back. Its not like California

    • @frankmichaelchiara
      @frankmichaelchiara Před měsícem

      Yup .... from Western NY area and think that even though it is not the best, it still definitely ranks as one of the best areas to live in the country! :)

  • @mrjackpots1326
    @mrjackpots1326 Před 28 dny +1

    It depends what you're looking for in a country. If you want to be looked after by the state then Europe is for you, but trying to start a business will make you crazy. America has unlimited opportunity for people with drive and determination, but the country will not look after you. You're on your own to sink or swim according to what you're made of. Nothing is guaranteed.

  • @EJKelly
    @EJKelly Před měsícem +7

    I agree with everything this wonderful lady says. Double it for living in Spain! Can not say I miss the States at all!

  • @freemenofengland2880
    @freemenofengland2880 Před měsícem +20

    What for heaven's sake is "British English"??? Oh you mean English English or even actual "English", as opposed to its derivatives!!!

    • @wolfie854
      @wolfie854 Před měsícem +1

      😄

    • @Hassan_MMM
      @Hassan_MMM Před měsícem

      British English as Official Language enable Indians to Communicate across regions on Daily basis,yet UK & Indian English are quite Different😂😂

    • @Gillsing
      @Gillsing Před měsícem

      Hollywood and the internet has made American English the regular English.

  • @DonForceFeedback
    @DonForceFeedback Před měsícem

    I can speak for people here in the UK that living in London and living outside of the big towns and cities is a very big difference. The smaller the community the better it all is (personal opinion). I wonder if living outside of LA in Cali is similar?

  • @sh4969
    @sh4969 Před 6 dny +1

    There's about 300,000 active shooters in UK from machine guns to pistols to shotguns to sniper rifles.

  • @SportsIncorporated
    @SportsIncorporated Před měsícem +3

    She lived in a high cost US city. Where you have to hustle to afford living in the city. She would have had a different outlook if she lived in rural America, maybe the suburb of a lower tier city. There are also stages of life. In her 20's she was in the accumulation phase. Where you're trying to build wealth and find a spouse. In her 30's she might be married and move to the suburbs, to a lower cost area, to a slower pace of life?

  • @user-lm2vs1sl3v
    @user-lm2vs1sl3v Před měsícem +9

    She’s right. Americans often say let’s hang out but don’t mean it.

  • @natehill8069
    @natehill8069 Před měsícem

    Ive lived in US, Iceland, UK, Italy and Germany. Ive never noticed any benefit to the customer from "tip culture" in restaurants. And the waiters overseas didnt seem to be starving or wearing rags, so including their pay in the price of the food doesnt seem to have killed them.

  • @nicholasbuttery511
    @nicholasbuttery511 Před měsícem +2

    I am from Birmingham pronounced Birmingum had a mate who thought he wa Damon Grant from Brookside . He adopted a Liverpool/Scouse accent and kept calling everybody Soft Lad ,Eating Baby Rusks and wore an Adidas hooded tracksuit Top identical.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny

      One of our great myths .!
      ie. That Scousers are all loveable witty rogues.

  • @vanityfairsosborne
    @vanityfairsosborne Před měsícem +174

    Wait till she moves to Singapore and realises UK is also not that great...

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Před měsícem +4

      😂😂😂

    • @howardrisby9621
      @howardrisby9621 Před měsícem +16

      I suspect a trip out of Central London to [insert your choice of UK turd towns HERE] would accomplish that, without sending her carbon footprint through the roof!

    • @monipenny408
      @monipenny408 Před měsícem +15

      that is the beauty of western propaganda.

    • @KatJade269
      @KatJade269 Před měsícem +27

      Don’t encourage. I’m a Singaporean and I love 🇸🇬 but not everyone would like our city state lifestyle.

    • @myoung1970s
      @myoung1970s Před měsícem +26

      Finland is voted happiest country in the world, Singapore 30th

  • @DonaldYoung-pn7tc
    @DonaldYoung-pn7tc Před měsícem +7

    "If you are not putting people first, if you are not committed to common prosperity, if you are not helping others develop, but rather exploiting others, your system is based on exploitation, slavery , oppression ... then can we call USA democratic?" Josef Gregory Mahoney, professor of Politics and International Relations

  • @josealeman332
    @josealeman332 Před měsícem +1

    You didnt need to go too far , you should have came to WA State, or any other state, no all are like California.
    but beside that , then is what you looking for, what is nice for me , it may not be nice for some one else.
    I lived in CA for 11 years and not even once the guys/ family next door talk to me, some people are not very friendly there and they all running / rushing.

  • @treboratat
    @treboratat Před měsícem +2

    this is from a city living perspective I bet country Americans are more relaxed and family orientated.

    • @fibber2u
      @fibber2u Před měsícem +1

      You are wrong on that one for sure.
      80 million American homes have guns for home defence, that is for protection against their own countrymen. Why?: because 10,000 plus get murdered with guns (knife murders are also significantly worse than in the UK too as are all other murders). 1200 plus Americans get shot dead by the police every year. Even their roads are dramatically more dangerous than the UKs. The suicide rate is much worse than the UKs. Race relations are much worse. Life expectancy is worse in the country with the most advanced medical capability in the world. Homelessness is much worse. The prison population is at least 5 times per capita larger than the UK. Hardly a relax and caring society.

  • @Arltratlo
    @Arltratlo Před měsícem +5

    i went to many times to the USA...
    the amount of uneducated people i met there would scare you...
    even the ones who called themself educated...been limited in their horizon..

    • @andrew_koala2974
      @andrew_koala2974 Před měsícem

      the number of uneducated people ...
      NOT
      the amount of uneducated people
      Amount refers to weight
      Number is countable
      Learn Correct grammatical legal English
      Undertake an extensive reading program to educate yourself to a higher degree

    • @hoppinghobbit9797
      @hoppinghobbit9797 Před 27 dny

      same in europe ha

    • @Arltratlo
      @Arltratlo Před 27 dny

      @@hoppinghobbit9797 sure, but most of them dont speak English at home,
      because everyone can learn English
      you dont need to be very smart for that!

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 9 dny +1

      Whereas everyone in Britain goes around quoting Shakespeare and
      discussing Existential philosophy.
      ??? You've obviously never been to Britain...!!

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 Před 2 dny

      In Germany the background of any
      TV news is the world map. What's on the TV news about the Standard background? If you always see only the USA you forget that there is a world abroad.