Americans Living Abroad: First Time You Realized America Really Messed You Up - American Reacts

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2022
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Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @jonntischnabel
    @jonntischnabel Před 2 lety +1471

    When you were referring to the US healthcare system, you said it's "heavily flawed" , no it isn't, it's working exactly how it was designed. To make as much money as is possible. And who are the best customers? Desperate, vulnerable people.

    • @fitzy7079
      @fitzy7079 Před 2 lety

      Yeah they're never going to fix it unless a politican can stand up and say hey, the way we fix this means some billionaires are going to make less money, without getting called a communist. I don't see it happening.

    • @EpochUnlocked
      @EpochUnlocked Před 2 lety

      Corporations and Government collusion gauranteed this.

    • @hypsyzygy506
      @hypsyzygy506 Před 2 lety +129

      A vicious assessment, but so true.

    • @rokibuca
      @rokibuca Před 2 lety +60

      works fine for the big greedy companies but for average joe is "heavily flawed"

    • @peterdavidson3890
      @peterdavidson3890 Před 2 lety +91

      As a Brit my experience in the U.S. was a night in The Heart of Florida hospital for “observation” because I had a dizzy spell. I had to ask for food after 9 hours in the hospital which cost $43. Then 3 doctors popped into my room asking if I was O.K. Resulting in 3 extra bills coming my way. 5 different tests from separate clinics resulting in another 5 bills. Another doctor came to see me saying I could go home once I had paid the hospital charges but would I go to his office the following day which cost $430 for 10 minutes conversation. TOTAL COST $34.000.00 (thirty four thousand dollars) TOTAL COST in the U.K. = NIL

  • @itsenergybob8917
    @itsenergybob8917 Před 2 lety +613

    I'm an American and after three trips to Europe, 6 countries, I came away with the realization that Europeans spend their time and attention living their lives while Americans spend their time and attention preventing their deaths. The basic reason is they have the basic survival needs covered for all, then what you do after that is up to you.

    • @Vlad-bs1js
      @Vlad-bs1js Před rokem

      To me it looks like Americans spend their time paying off debt because nothing seems more important than "living" beyond your means over there

    • @itsenergybob8917
      @itsenergybob8917 Před rokem +3

      @@Vlad-bs1js That too. It's all about image.

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 Před rokem +27

      Literally......I feel bad for middle class and poor U.S Americans. Like.....I broke my wrist, needed surgery to put a plate in and 13 screws......ali I had to pay for was pain medication....which was about $50-$100 for 20 oxycodone tablets.....I'm so glad I was born in and live in Australia.

    • @davedave6010
      @davedave6010 Před rokem +17

      USA spends taxes on military... That's why health care is so expensive... Here in Europe u won't get that much money from ur salary but in return you're gonna get nearly free health care and so many benefits and also everything is cheap here in comparison to USA...

    • @itsenergybob8917
      @itsenergybob8917 Před rokem

      @@davedave6010 The military is not all. No taxes at all go to health care. It's all up to each person. There is a controlling middleman called private health insurance that takes twenty percent off the top just to do paperwork. It used to be unlimited until Obamacare capped it at 20 percent. And they can still deny treatment regardless of what the doctor says. The only way they can make money is to deny treatment. It's the third biggest scam in world history.
      Plus, the "Farmaceutical Defense Agency" makes sure that the drug companies continue to thrive because their lobbyists pay their congress people more. Then, they turned themselves into "Health Maintenence Organizations." They don't make drugs to cure anything anymore, only to control whatever disease one has.
      Greed at the expense of others sucks.

  • @peterwarner553
    @peterwarner553 Před rokem +145

    An American friend was visiting me here in Australia, he cut his foot badly on broken glass, it took me ages to talk him into going to the ER, he wanted to tape it up with duct tape, he refused to believe that he would get stitched up for free, he only believed it when we were driving away from the hospital, he ended up moving here.

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 Před rokem

      yep, that's how brainwashed U.S Americans are......They are like 35th in the world for Healthcare, not only is Australia's system much cheaper for everyone, but it is much more efficient and faster.

    • @gingerdrake9158
      @gingerdrake9158 Před rokem +3

      Was this before some laws changed or something? Because only Aussie citizens and residents (people with medicare cards) get free medical

    • @peterwarner553
      @peterwarner553 Před rokem +12

      @@gingerdrake9158 simple matter of loaning him my Medicare card

    • @gingerdrake9158
      @gingerdrake9158 Před rokem +5

      @@peterwarner553 ahh sneaky bugger :P

    • @COC0st4rry
      @COC0st4rry Před rokem

      American system profits before people

  • @AntPDC
    @AntPDC Před rokem +23

    America is an odd country in many ways. My astronomer friend and I set up our telescopes to view Mars at opposition in a completely empty field in the vicinity of Tufts University Campus in Massachusetts USA. The field was well away from the campus buildings, pretty much a half mile distant from any populated area. After around 30 minutes a Tufts' police cruiser arrived (there are literally thousands of "police" agencies in the US) and shone searchlights on us as if a terrorist threat (destroying our night vision). We politely explained what we were doing, as if that wasn't obvious given our astro equipment, but it was clear these armed cops saw us as proto-terrorists and ordered us to dismantle our astro stuff and "get out of the area". We mildly protested, so they threatened to arrest us, touching their guns. Odd mindset.

    • @albertvalerysmith2380
      @albertvalerysmith2380 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Perhaps we should better evaluate the meaning of "land of the free."

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 Před 2 lety +1008

    In Australia, they won’t let you out of the hospital unless you’ve recovered well enough to take care of yourself, or unless you have family members who have time to take care of you at home.

    • @mariahewitt9787
      @mariahewitt9787 Před 2 lety +41

      And if you don't have anyone, we have NDIS
      National Disability Insurance Scheme, they provide you with a place to live, and provide you with carers.

    • @chrisrumble2665
      @chrisrumble2665 Před 2 lety +40

      @@mariahewitt9787 The NDIS doesn't actually work that way.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Před 2 lety +20

      That’s not correct. A hospital can’t detain you. I once marched out of north Sydney hospital. I told them I was out of there and if they didn’t like that, tough luck. They tried to talk me out of leaving but in the end the doctor just said ‘have you passed water today?’ (I’d just had my appendix removed). I said ‘watch this’, went into the room toilet, had a whizz, came out, amd the doctor signed me off and I was out of there in less than 1 minute. After I had heart surgery last year I told them if they didn’t sign me out I was just going to walk out (although, in hindsight, I know I couldn’t have walked very far). They signed me out and took me to the discharge area in a wheelchair.
      They tell you that you need to be picked up by a responsible person etc but if you insist, they can’t stop you.

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Před 2 lety +85

      @@tileux They don't detain you, and that's NOT what he meant, they Look after your best interests, you cause people in the hospital stress by doing what you do.

    • @mariahewitt9787
      @mariahewitt9787 Před 2 lety +27

      @@chrisrumble2665
      Yes it does. They stepped in and provided me with accommodation, and carers, when my husband abandoned me, in Concord hospital in Sydney.

  • @craigslattery1901
    @craigslattery1901 Před 2 lety +470

    I'm an Aussie. I work an even time roster with annual and sick leave I work 23 weeks a year, for $120,000. One day I get a phone call to say I had cancer. After all my annual leave and sick leave was used up, I was still getting paid. I rang the boss, and he jokingly said, "I'll look into it" and then added, "come back when you're better." For nearly 6 months I didn't miss a pay, I've been back at work for nearly 2 years all good.

    • @midnightkitchen8379
      @midnightkitchen8379 Před 2 lety +33

      Wow. I’m sorry to hear that but glad you got to take the time you needed off of work and still got paid. That is awesome. Hope you’re doing well :)

    • @craigslattery1901
      @craigslattery1901 Před 2 lety +29

      @@midnightkitchen8379 Thanks very much. I'm doing very well. And on my way to work for the next 7 days right now. Stay safe everyone.

    • @zimbo246
      @zimbo246 Před 2 lety

      Great to hear you beat that b+tch

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před 2 lety +1

      @@midnightkitchen8379 workcover does the same if youre injured. not sure exactly how it works but its less of a good thing that you do and more of a bad thing if you dont. obvs insurance companies dont want to pay out more than necessary, but obviously if youre unable to work how can you live?

    • @kevincarlson668
      @kevincarlson668 Před 2 lety +6

      You truly are the lucky country.I wanted to renounce my (Yank) citizenship.

  • @pedrodionisio8789
    @pedrodionisio8789 Před rokem +222

    About pepper spray, it's forbidden almost everywhere in Europe too.
    The thing some Americans don't understand is, once you allow any type of self denfence tool that is capable of causing harm to another person, it's out there and, people being people it's gonna be misused.
    Ta daaaaa....that's what happens with guns in the US.

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch Před rokem +4

      Criminals follow these rules? Yeah, didnt think so. When seconds count, Nanny is only minutes away. How emasculating.

    • @yashjoseph3544
      @yashjoseph3544 Před rokem

      Gun violence is at a historic low despite how many guns are in the country. If a state deprives you of self-defense, it is a state that cannot be trusted.

    • @ondragirgosko2152
      @ondragirgosko2152 Před rokem +4

      Lmao in Czech Republic you can use both for self deffense (if you have firearms licence of course)

    • @mremtb7689
      @mremtb7689 Před rokem +17

      @@MyBelch In Australia it is banned. Can not imagine a reason to need it.

    • @kevin_mitchell
      @kevin_mitchell Před rokem +18

      @@MyBelch In many countries pepper spray is legal to use, especially for women. Generally speaking, if you have nothing to defend yourselves with, a criminal will have a stick, if you have a stick, they will have a knife ... if you have a gun ... It's a mindset. Nothing about Dr Who using only his intellect to defeat powerful enemies is emasculating. The issues surrounding gun ownership is another issue, but in general doesn't make anyone any more or less safer, just that the consequences of an unfavourable encounter is generally much worse. And it's not the guns that kill, yes we know.
      The cultural differences between countries must be respected, which also means that saying that any country that allows its citizens to possess weapons more potent than another are somehow less emasculated is a stupid and condescending comment.

  • @jesuschristpose896
    @jesuschristpose896 Před rokem +142

    I lived in Memphis TN, for awhile and was dating a German girl, her parents came over to visit and on our way to Graceland we passed a large homeless tent village, her parents asked me who they were and when I explained that they were homeless, they got so upset and were actually crying that people were living that way, they said they have never seen such a thing like that in all of their travels in Europe, it really broke their hearts

    • @Mamba-Kush
      @Mamba-Kush Před rokem

      We have those places too, but here they're full of migrants and illegals (golddiggers as we call them here, because they only come here to receive welfare and free housing... which is considerable).

    • @jesuschristpose896
      @jesuschristpose896 Před rokem

      @@Mamba-Kush sorry I have to call bullshit on this racist hateful comment, get real

    • @Mamba-Kush
      @Mamba-Kush Před rokem

      @@jesuschristpose896 Come over here and look at it for yourself... I'm not lying, so I guess by your logic the truth is racist.

    • @Mamba-Kush
      @Mamba-Kush Před rokem

      I one can travel 1000's of miles trough several perfectly safe countries, always to the same countries, it just proves it's only about money for them... and once they're there, good luck trying to live "with" them.

    • @azureliteyahoo
      @azureliteyahoo Před rokem +15

      I have been to 24 countries. Only in the US do I see homelessness in numbers. (Was in LA). Other countries were sporadic at worst

  • @vaclavkrpec2879
    @vaclavkrpec2879 Před 2 lety +345

    The last girl talking about trespassing: I work for a US-based company here in Czech Republic and when we take our American colleagues for a hike around here, they're always concerned about trespassing... And we always need to explain that it's not a problem. It's actually perfectly legal---when it comes to properties like woods and meadows, unless fenced and/or clearly marked as "keep off", you can legally enter even if it is private property. Simple logic: don't cross fences, they're there for a reason. If there are none, you're fine...
    One of the American colleagues once told me "you know, it seems to me that here in Czechia, you actually have more freedom than we have back in the States..." ;-)

    • @eleveneleven572
      @eleveneleven572 Před 2 lety +44

      I was watching a few American fishing videos a while back. A constant feature seemed to be people being threatened with guns, being shot at, being bawled out and accused of trespass.
      Absolutely crazy. What is wrong with these people?

    • @vaclavkrpec2879
      @vaclavkrpec2879 Před 2 lety +19

      @@eleveneleven572 Well, you can't consider a few CZcams videos to be representative of a huge country like US... But yeah, the kind of freedom they opted for seems of the sort of "what you can keep _yourself_ is what you get". I don't think there's something wrong with the people, I think it's their system which forces them to a situation where they (think they) must protect what they've got literally by all means---because the system is not capable to protect them and their property for them.
      Some of them are proud of it and call it freedom. And the same people call Europe "socialistic" and "undemocratic" and so on... Well, suit yourself.

    • @steveneardley7541
      @steveneardley7541 Před 2 lety +8

      I worked the Census in New Mexico. People in my crew were constantly threatened, had shots fired over their heads. My first day, I had a pit bull and a rottweiler sicced on me. I would go to meetings late so I wouldn't have to hear the latest "war stories." By the way, in Pecos, New Mexico, it is perfectly legal to shoot any dog that is unleashed. That's what animal control is like there. The sheriff admitted to one woman that he had already shot and killed over 100 dogs that year. P.S. I was in Czechoslovakia in '68, two weeks before the invasion.

    • @vaclavkrpec2879
      @vaclavkrpec2879 Před 2 lety

      @@steveneardley7541 Wow, that's wild! 8-o
      The Prague Spring in '60s Czechoslovakia was an attempt to give socialism "human face" (that was actually the official motto of the government). When I say socialism, I mean "real socialism"---the dictatorship that we had in the '50s it was only vaguely similar to what socialism was supposed to be by the utopic socio-political ideas. And after 1968, the "normalisation" era reinstated the '50s terror again... So you probably caught the only narrow window possible to even get here in 'bout 40 years. :-)
      In any case, I'd definitely advice US to implement some regulations in the European manner; however, the communist monstrosity of the past must serve as a dire warning---of what happens if the state gets far too much power over the citizens. The world isn't black-n-white though, and what's the point of even having a state if it fails to fulfil such elementary purposes as providing safety and law enforcement?

    • @steveneardley7541
      @steveneardley7541 Před 2 lety +3

      @@vaclavkrpec2879 There were plenty of signs of "Prague Spring," but the country was still totally repressive, with armed guards everywhere, and people whispering to each other on the street for fear of the police. Meanwhile, people were passing out anti-Communist literature on the street. I asked some students why they weren't afraid the Russians would come in, and they said that Russia was their friend. I brought up Hungary, but they thought that was "totally different." Anyway, I'm really glad you are out of that awful phase.

  • @mrgrumpy6408
    @mrgrumpy6408 Před 2 lety +546

    Some Americans will tell you " it starts with socialized medicine, free education, a living wage and ends with no freedom, Gulags in Alaska and a Stalin like communist leader in the white house"
    As an Australian I think its wild to feel the need to be armed just to go to the local 711 for milk.

    • @marionthompson3365
      @marionthompson3365 Před 2 lety +26

      Couldn't agree more

    • @JanHejn
      @JanHejn Před 2 lety +1

      We had no freedom under Russian communist oppression, political prisoners and murders, intelligence persecuted and forced to emigrate etc. After the 89 we now have complete freedom but free healthcare, education, minimum wages have obviously stayed because that is what makes you actually free. Not to worry about basic needs and not to be the slave of the system.

    • @kerrymathers7439
      @kerrymathers7439 Před 2 lety

      But women need a police escort to go to the toilet at Bathurst

    • @gregmullins6927
      @gregmullins6927 Před 2 lety

      The American's have an illogical way of thinking about healthcare,socialised healthcare is a fantasy ideology that every other western country rejects except in US.

    • @marionthompson3365
      @marionthompson3365 Před 2 lety +22

      @@bonnie7898 Couldn't agree more. Beyond belief. Their right to arm themselves is far more important.

  • @nugrohoookarlianto7218
    @nugrohoookarlianto7218 Před rokem +75

    I'm Indonesian and seeing this made me laugh and cry at the same time, I know about America but don't know about that situation. In Indonesia, a developing country with the fourth largest population in the world, health care is handled by the government. Call it BPJS. There are levels, for poor people to get free. For middle-class people, it can be free or pay half.

    • @Jill-mh2wn
      @Jill-mh2wn Před měsícem

      @nugrohoookarliant07218, I visited Indonesia from the UK in 2022, to see my son, Indonesian daughter-in-law and grandchildren .
      I was very impressed with what I saw and was told about your country .
      I particularly remember hearing that people on a very low income can have a card to produce at a petrol station ,which gets them a reduction on the price of fuel ( Indonesia produces it`s own petrol and also many minerals )

  • @Honerkamp
    @Honerkamp Před rokem +77

    Funfact: You said a lot of smaller towns don't have a lot of homeless people.
    Usually, in most other (or at least in European) countries, those smaller towns have none and bigger cities have very few because those countries actually provide services for people who lose their jobs and healthcare helps those who need help getting off drugs or other addictions.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před rokem +1

      Most homeless are homeless because they don’t feel comfortable trying to integrate again into society (in Europe)

  • @manuele.itriagom.728
    @manuele.itriagom.728 Před 2 lety +225

    I also live in Austria, I actually get 36 days vacations and I'm just a bartender. Those 36 days are full pay. We can go have a beer after work to any park near by, there's no "no drinking in public".
    I saw a homeless guy that was bleeding for some reason and the amount of people try to help him out before the ambulance arrived was amazing. Guys in full suits taking care of him, giving him water. Once the ambulance was there, they took care of him and took him to the hospital. He probably didn't have to pay a dime for that service.
    One of the biggest thing I've seen here is that everyone minds there own business (shit you can be topless at the river and no Karen will pop up to you and tell you to put some cloths on). BUT, when someone needs help, everyone will try to help.
    It's not just healthcare. It's education, it's food quality, it's the public transport, it's the working hours, the vacations. The quality of life. America is the richest country in the world, but it's not the only rich country. And a lot of Americans think that all of what I mentioned is socialist. Bro, Austria is super capitalist haha Red Bull, KTM and fucking GLOCK are from here haha. But the government system is welfare capitalism, meaning that what's considered RIGHTS are payed with our taxes. You can have a private insurance, there are private clinics and private universities, but the public options are just as good and in many cases even better.

    • @paddypleiner5518
      @paddypleiner5518 Před rokem +16

      Actually, you are obliged to help as long as you don't put yourself into danger, otherwise you could be charged with failure to provide assistance (or in German Unterlassene Hilfeleistung) if you are a first-aider (a course every driving license holder has mandatory to do) you should know what to do if somebody is bleeding or going into any sort of shock, at least the basic stuff until professionals arrive, same with seeing people getting problems in the water, if you did a rescue swimmer course, what was at my time, quite some time ago, still pretty popular, you must help, as long as not putting yourself into danger. The only thing is, everybody is afraid to be the first to assist to not do any mistakes, as soon as the first aider is moving, more will come to aid as the barrier is broken...

    • @maxschon7709
      @maxschon7709 Před rokem

      But do have a Master or a PhD? No, most Austrian don't have because free education doesn't mean everyone can do it.

    • @WanderfalkeAT
      @WanderfalkeAT Před rokem

      @@maxschon7709 FREE EDUCATION EXACTLY MEANS THAT EVERYONE CAN GET A PhD! You realise that you need Education on University Level to get a PhD? What if you cannot afford it because your family is poor? No PhD for the Poor in Murica! Tough luck!

    • @blackwater009
      @blackwater009 Před rokem

      @@paddypleiner5518 czcams.com/video/AfdaTWOCTnk/video.html

    • @dimiathan
      @dimiathan Před rokem +7

      @@maxschon7709 You have the option if you want to though. In Germany university is free (with many English speaking universities too) for EVERYONE. Not just Germans. Literally people from anywhere in the world.

  • @mathiasfrecon475
    @mathiasfrecon475 Před 2 lety +301

    As a french man , seeing this made me laugh and cries at same time. Here in France (which is not the best Country for Healthcare in Europe btw) , we're paying taxes for our health. If you're sick, u go to your doctor, they stop u for working if its dangerous or difficult for your health, and most of the care is free, or nearly that. Very hard to see that a sickness can kill u because u need to work. and yes, we got 5 weeks of vacation obligatory (by the law), and yes, the days off for illness is limitless ...
    Sorry the my bad english btw

    • @marco_grt4460
      @marco_grt4460 Před 2 lety +1

      Still better then the Italian Healtcare

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Před 2 lety

      its better than some of the rubbish i see on line

    • @waynebuckland7879
      @waynebuckland7879 Před 2 lety +20

      Your English is very good. I read through your comment without any trouble.

    • @IrKeNoVa
      @IrKeNoVa Před 2 lety +2

      @@marco_grt4460 better than Mexican, here the waiting times are the problem, unless you're literally dying you can wait 6 hours for an appointment.

    • @LM-oh3vw
      @LM-oh3vw Před 2 lety +1

      @@marco_grt4460 It depends on the place, but the worst problem in Italy is definately TAXES!

  • @mrtim5363
    @mrtim5363 Před rokem +14

    If I'm not mistaken at 3:28 the country the lady is from is called 'Austria', a country in the southern part of Central Europe, situated near Eastern Alps.
    People seem to be talking as if she said Australia, which is in no way related to Austria.
    I could be wrong but that's what I heard.

    • @lalyc3705
      @lalyc3705 Před rokem +3

      Me too, but its also interesting to see the aussies discuss their own situation. Here in Austria, we actually do sozial work for homeless ppl, and in vienna (population 2 million) there usually is a major addiction problem (normally alcohol) or a psychological problem which causes about 1000-2000 ppl in vienna suffer homelessness. Especially in winter there are about additional 1500-2000 hungarians and other ppl from the surrounding countries who come to the winter shelters of vienna, usually provided by our public transport companies. We also have an institution which is called "Cold telefon" : if the temperatures go under zero Celsius, there is a public call if you see a homeless sleeps anywhere, approach him and call the "Kältetelefon" which is a cell number for a social worker, who tries to convince the homeless to come to a shelter and finds him a free place in a shelter, so nobody freezes to death in winter at night. Works really well. see: www.meinbezirk.at/tag/k%C3%A4ltetelefon-wien

    • @TheGrace020
      @TheGrace020 Před 11 měsíci +2

      She did indeed say that!

  • @craigsowers8456
    @craigsowers8456 Před rokem +24

    Bonjour from your native Texan living in the French Riviera. Had to take an ambulance last month ... it was 96 Euros (but included 28 Euros for EMT folks). I guess my first "lightbulb" on how America's culture shocked me compared to my Host Country. I moved from Fort Worth to Israel. One of the first things I noticed was how the streets of Tel Aviv were being manually "swept" by older folks ... complete with "Wizard of Oz" styled Brooms. So I asked an Israeli buddy why they didn't buy "Street Sweeper Machines" (Trucks) and he looked at me and said "We think that giving Older citizens the opportunity to make some extra money to supplement their pensions is better than buying a $250,000 machine".

  • @Raven-fh2yy
    @Raven-fh2yy Před 2 lety +65

    Problem with your health care is NOT that its broken. It's working exactly as it has been designed to work. That being for profit above all else. Its of no use whatsoever to have excellent care if no one can afford it.

  • @Thomas.deNorth
    @Thomas.deNorth Před 2 lety +119

    Pepperspray is illegal in Norway as well. I am 48 years old, living in Oslo and I have never seen a robbery or assault of any kind. I might have seen a street brawl between drunks. Of course things happen here, but unless you seek out the areas where trouble is most likely to happen at night, most people here will never even witness violent crime or aggression on the streets.

    • @danielsmith5088
      @danielsmith5088 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm 51 currently living in Iowa but moved extensively for work (including time in the military), living in dozens of places in America for 6 months to a few years. I have never seen a robbery, mugging or any other similar type of violent crime in my life either. This includes multiple years spent in both LA and Atlanta. And I am not unique. Nor was I particularly careful in my youth to avoid "dangerous" areas. I understand it's popular and enlightened to say how dangerous it is to live in America but if that were actually true would we still receive 1 mil immigrants per year? There's no doubt crime in some places in the US is out of control but it has nothing to do with guns being legal and everything to do with 'progressive' governance and courts.

    • @johnj3577
      @johnj3577 Před 2 lety +9

      @@danielsmith5088 First time I visited NYC back in the 90's the cops shot someone dead outside our hotel entrance on day 2. Couple of weeks later, I was doing a road trip around the south west starting out from Vegas and passed some cops retrieving a body from the side of a deserted desert road. Looked like a robbery or maybe unpaid debt and some guy got shot and dumped at the roadside. Everywhere else I visited felt safe though (Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah), although I didn't visit major cities much apart from Vegas, San Francisco and Salt Lake City. I think all big cities int he world have their idiots, its just that in the US, they're very likely armed as well.

    • @danielsmith5088
      @danielsmith5088 Před 2 lety

      @@johnj3577 Not a fan of huge cities, will never move anywhere with more than a million people again. Lived in KC for about 5 years (1.7 mil metro pop) and it wasn't bad, had my car broken into once was the worst I ever saw. But it goes in waves, too. NYC in the late 80's and early 90's was awful but cleaned up a lot since then getting down to crime rates lower than the 60's. Though that's pre-2020 numbers. With all the stupidity happening since then, crime had skyrocketed in many large cities.

    • @bernadettelanders7306
      @bernadettelanders7306 Před 2 lety +2

      @@danielsmith5088 are people from other countries watching too much American criminal TV? I love NCIS lol. From what you’ve said, other countries have a false impression of every part of America. But still I’d be terrified living there. As for all our dangerous animals here in Australia, I’m of senior years and I’ve never seen a snake. Only One wandering kangaroo hopping down a street but houses backed on to acres and acres of land. We have those big huntsman spiders, totally harmless, mum used to say Re huntsman , ‘Harry’s visiting, he’ll eat the flies then go’. We were never scared of them.
      But people do own guns there, strict regulations and you need a reason and a license, but I bet there are illegal guns here, but I’ve never ever seen a real gun.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Před 2 lety

      So you stopped with the long ships and looting abbeys? 😁

  • @Geschichtelehrer
    @Geschichtelehrer Před rokem +6

    homeless in USA: 1,500,000 (population 338 million) EU: under 700k (population: 450 million).

    • @grzegorzach3891
      @grzegorzach3891 Před 2 měsíci

      "EU: under 700k" Plus: vast majority do not live on the street (as there are public shelters available where you can seek help).

  • @johnbratley6926
    @johnbratley6926 Před rokem +11

    25 years ago I worked for an American oil company in the UK and I provided regular holiday and sickness staff cover for all of our 23 distribution depots. By a strange quirk of fate I was staying in a certain 5* hotel in Norfolk when our UK CEO turned up with a very senior US executive. (they were visiting Lotus with a view to sponsoring them) The Maitre D "helpfully" informed them that I was staying there also. After dinner I was invited to join them for drinks. Feeling mischievous I steered the conversation round to pay and conditions and managed to seriously wind up the American. First he couldn't believe that even at my lowly grade I automatically qualified for a minimum of 4* accommodation, had an expense account and a company car. I had a final salary NON CONTRIBUTORY pension, 35 days annual leave plus 8 bank holidays, I also qualified for 52 weeks sickness on full pay and 52 weeks on half pay. The one that really pissed him off was that I could retire at 50 with a lump sum and a slightly reduced pension, which I did and took redundancy on top.

  • @pureone26
    @pureone26 Před 2 lety +213

    Gotta say when I first started meeting americans travelling in the 90s, I was so shocked by how much fear/ stress and anxiety they seemed to have, yet the next minute talk about USA being the greatest country on earth (and everyone knew there was no arguing with that, even by basic statistics). And their convo was constantly about drugs, divorces, pills, sleeping pills, dramas, mental health issues, trauma, ptsd, abuse... very sad. Hope that is changing.

    • @brontepetropoulos4755
      @brontepetropoulos4755 Před 2 lety

      Exactly
      Ozz

    • @user-or6yn8pm3c
      @user-or6yn8pm3c Před 2 lety +13

      It was easier to do that back then because America was less insane back in the 90s. The facade is gone now.

    • @Saintphoenix86
      @Saintphoenix86 Před 2 lety

      Its changing alright, its getting worse, the US has more than 1 mass shooting a day, its getting worse not better

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch Před 2 lety

      Your gall bladder is not my business. If you fall apart, it's not my responsibility to fix you. It's called personal responsibility. Look after yourself, eh!

    • @Edmlady92
      @Edmlady92 Před 2 lety +28

      @@MyBelch Health issues can happen to healthy looking people too. It's not always self inflicted. Things just happen. Keep up with that individualism mindset you have.

  • @rdevries3852
    @rdevries3852 Před 2 lety +111

    From the Netherlands here. Early last year I had an accident at work resulting in my foot being broken in multiple places. I spend 7 weeks recovering at home. For the first of those 7 weeks I got paid 100% of my normal salary, for the remaining 6 weeks I got paid 70%. I never saw a bill from the hospital. And for the entire period I was on sick leave (and for *_97 more weeks,_* if it had come to that) I was legally protected from being fired by my employer for missing work.

    • @bentels5340
      @bentels5340 Před 2 lety +9

      Have you ever seen the movie "Sicko"? There's a scene in there with Tony Benn, a British old-school socialist, reading from the flyer that was sent to everybody when the NHS started. Said everything so clearly and simply it was enough to bring make you cry. Basically, "you pay your taxes when the taxes are due; when you're sick, you don't worry about money -- we've got you covered".

    • @hillbillycatfishin5860
      @hillbillycatfishin5860 Před 2 lety

      We had a fellow employee get hurt on the job and he was paid 100% and medical was covered for just short of 8weeks. His job was secured the whole time. I hear these stories of the opposite here in the US mainly social media and social news but none in my community or in the surrounding area, until you get to big cities.

    • @hannahgregor470
      @hannahgregor470 Před rokem +1

      I was afraid to even take the 1 day off when I broke my ankle and was still doped up on pain meds from the hospital. Then I was driving to work daily and navigating getting myself and my knee scooter in the car so I didn’t lose my job and still earned money.

    • @rdevries3852
      @rdevries3852 Před rokem

      @@hannahgregor470 That is, if you'll pardon the language, really fucked up. I'm genuinely sorry you had to endure that.

    • @BillandcharliesPub
      @BillandcharliesPub Před rokem +2

      In America it is all about personal responsibility. Americans aren't supposed to have the government tend to us, AKA high taxes. An American is supposed to take some of that extra money from having bigger pay checks and save it for "Things" . . . . . But Americans have gotten greedy and have a spend spend mentality , topped off with the government becoming bastardized . . . . . . . The American system could work much better if we get our government out of the equation !

  • @pmdpaula
    @pmdpaula Před rokem +9

    I know a story about an US family who were on vacation here in Rio de Janeiro. The son had a problem with sunburn on the beach with a jellyfish. They went to the emergency of a public hospital and the boy was treated. In the end, the father was stunned when he realised that he wouldn't have to pay for anything.

  • @kamilomar9134
    @kamilomar9134 Před rokem +4

    I have an American friend who is married to a Brit and has lived over here for 7 years. She broke her leg 6 months after getting married and i took her to the bospitsl and she was panicking all the way there. She was immediately checked in, x-rayed/scanned for any head injuries/prepped and made ready for surgery (all in 2 hours) and when i visited her with her husband just before she was taken in for surgery we found her in tears. She was panicking about the cost as she didn't know if she had enough health cover from America. Her husband called in a nurse and asked her to explain how the health system worked in Western Europe - on hearing that EVERYTHING was free including her post op medicine and physio treatment - she burst out crying again with relief and joy.
    American politicians call the Western European health care - Communist/Socialist policies - it's NONE OF THOSE THINGS - BUT, IT IS HUMANE/DECENT AND CARING FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE WHETHER YOU'RE A NEWBORN /LIFE LONG DRUGGY/WINO/RETIRED - EVERYONE GETS BEST FREE TREATMENT BECAUSE IT'S ABOUT 'DOING THE RIGHT THING'!!.
    In Western Europe we don't give you a life saving op then turn you out of your house to die like a dog on the street because you can't pay so your hiuse has to be sold. It's a catch 22 with only real winners beimg - the Doctors/Surgeons/Hospitals and Medical Insurance companies - that's not Commy/Socialist policies - NO IT'S NOT, BUT, IT IS BARBARIC !!

  • @Greg....
    @Greg.... Před 2 lety +156

    On the healthcare thing. Talking from Australia. Went to the emergency room at the local hospital. Got checked over but the place was full. So they put me in a taxi (paid by the hospital) to a hospital with beds. Got plastic surgury as they had to rebuild my index finger. Only cost to me was $5 per day for tv. The anaesthetic person, surgeons and all the rest were government funded.

    • @metarugia3981
      @metarugia3981 Před 2 lety +8

      The anaesthetic person, surgeons and all the rest were -government- taxpayer funded.

    • @Greg....
      @Greg.... Před 2 lety +30

      @@metarugia3981 i pay my taxes

    • @anserbauer309
      @anserbauer309 Před 2 lety +9

      Similar story here.... This last March, I spent 8 nights in hospital (4 of which were in the ICU), had an air ambulance fly me 200km to the city, land ambulance to hospital, CT scans, x-rays, ultrasounds, daily endoscopies, 1:1 nursing for 5 nights in a private room, three IVs at 6-hourly intervals every day, nicotine patches, pain relief, free TV (because of covid changes) and a taxi voucher to the train station to get home. Total paid: $36 to get the train home. $25 for 4 prescriptions lasting a month. I've been paying my medicare levies for 33 years and it saved my life. In the US, I'd be bankrupt..... even with private health insurance.

    • @AndrewFishman
      @AndrewFishman Před 2 lety +17

      @@metarugia3981 We all pay a medicare levy on our taxes. I do not use the medical system in a normal year, my contributions are used for others to receive their care. However, if I do need the hospital or a doctor, it is there for me, little or no cost.

    • @zybch
      @zybch Před 2 lety +7

      Some years back I had a 3 and a half week hospital stay including a couple of surgeries, and ambulance transport the 160Km (100 miles) trip to the hospital itself. After the 4th day I was moved to a private room, had the option of a beer or wine with my lunch and evening meals, own TV etc; it was almost like staying in a hotel apart from the automatic drip in my arm. Total cost, $6.70 (I think) for painkillers when I left.
      Unfortunately our current government are doing everything in their power to rip the guts out of our health system and change it to a US-style user pays affair. Thankfully next weekend we get to vote those bastards out!

  • @thebusinessfirm9862
    @thebusinessfirm9862 Před 2 lety +223

    So grateful that when my parents left Italy as teenagers, both their parents chose to come to Australia, rather than America. I have cousins who grew up in New York rather than Adelaide...and their lives have been much more difficult as Italian Americans, than ours as Italian Australians. Thanks for making the thoughtful content that you do, mate.

    • @IndyMotoRider
      @IndyMotoRider Před rokem

      Yeah, you left out the part where you were forced to stay in your homes like prisoners during Covid. No thanks. And New York is fine if you are not in the shit hole city.

    • @SilentHotdog28
      @SilentHotdog28 Před rokem +9

      You're Australian, wherever you're born, you're Australian as soon as you move here.

    • @ehmzed
      @ehmzed Před rokem +3

      ​@@SilentHotdog28 You know you can be two things at the same time, right? Being Australian doesn't take away the fact that his parents are Italian immigrants. You can be Australian while still having the origin of your parents play a however significant or insignificant part of your growing up and life in general.

    • @deividasnavickas
      @deividasnavickas Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@ehmzedyou can be two if you got experience of being in two. Having paremts, that is relating to two people doesn't mean you relate to entire country and culture.....

    • @tyronevaldez-kruger5313
      @tyronevaldez-kruger5313 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@deividasnavickas I was born in Eritrea but my parents and I moved to Germany when I was a toddler. Do I have experience of being in both even though I have not one memory of Eritrea? If not would I have if made a trip to Eritrea for an experience? I have dual citizenship and I am a legit Eritrean German btw

  • @borissarmatov4391
    @borissarmatov4391 Před rokem +11

    Being Russian i was studing in China in an american school... yeah i know that's messed up. so they advised me to get an american health insurance. i though sure better be covered and all, went for the top plan they offered, i think it was $1400 or smth like that. then i happened to have a severe case of tonsilitis. it was so bad i couldn't even eat. so i had to go to that american hospital to get my doctor's note for the uni. in russia you can call a doctor and he'll just come visit you if you're ill and give all the medicine for free. bet it's same in china with state hospitals cause they just modelled their thing after us but ok. i go there by myself having fever to see a doctor and get my note, must be a fancy private hospital i think, after all they charged me so much. i get the appointment.. doc recieves me for like 10 min, confirms that i have a tosilitis, gives a note, doesn't give any medicine and charges me for another $400. i could apply for refund from the insurance later but first i had to pay cash.
    that moment i realized communist propaganda wasn't lying us about the US lol

    • @gklkjuhylpoiuyuiojhjklkjuh9976
      @gklkjuhylpoiuyuiojhjklkjuh9976 Před 22 dny

      А нафига ты в Китае купил американскую страховку? Не проще ли было использовать местные услуги?

  • @Roedeadeye
    @Roedeadeye Před rokem +11

    I'm a Brit and honestly mad respect to you guys for breaking out of the American mindset and being objective about your countries flaws but honestly we have some issues here in Europe too haha. I'd love to live in the U.S. Maybe one day fingers 🤞

  • @tomoliver2961
    @tomoliver2961 Před 2 lety +122

    Wow I can’t even imagine being allowed to be armed with anything here In Australia. We don’t even contemplate carry a weapon here ever. You can’t even buy pepper spray here.

    • @Lupi33z
      @Lupi33z Před 2 lety

      only criminals are armed in Australia

    • @MrAkaacer
      @MrAkaacer Před 2 lety +19

      Well... rural Australia has guns. Lots of guns. Its actually very easy to get a gun in Australia if you live on a property or have access to a property. Guns are hard to get if you live in the city. Its not the guns, its the culture.

    • @Captain_Terp
      @Captain_Terp Před 2 lety +17

      @@MrAkaacer you’re right here, Australia does have lots of guns, but they’re not cheap and they’re not easily acquired on the dark market or at swap meets. Guns need to be stored safely at all times or in suitable lockable transport containers when not in active use. We can’t just go and buy guns as we feel and amass a small guerilla army revolt’s worth of munitions. If you own guns you will be visited every 12 months by the police to inspect their safe storage. I have friends who have to let the cops straight into their house on arrival.

    • @smartassdroid5149
      @smartassdroid5149 Před 2 lety

      PLenty of people WISH they could eve defend themselves. But our Authoritarian govt doesnt want us to be able to defend ourselves against the govt. Why they ban everything. Yet criminals do not follow laws, so have free reign to commit crime.

    • @MrAkaacer
      @MrAkaacer Před 2 lety +1

      @@Captain_Terp Yeah, everything you said applies in the US as well. Difference is, in the US city folk can get guns as well. In Australia, only rural people can buy guns... well they make it really hard for an Aussie city dweller to own a gun. Yeah, I don't think the police visit gun owners every 12 months.

  • @neonknees
    @neonknees Před 2 lety +160

    Took my Kiwi wife (a nurse) and kids back to PA for a holiday. Her and I went to the local American Legion for a few drinks one night. We got talking to the bar maid about health systems. She asked my wife how much it costs us to have our 2 kids and my wife was confused. The girl said she still owed nearly 8000 for her childrens births and my wife was like "You have to pay to have kids here??"! We paid nothing, by the way.

    • @brianmilosevic8400
      @brianmilosevic8400 Před rokem +23

      In Australia, parents get paid to $5,000 for each child you have

    • @philipmccarthy6175
      @philipmccarthy6175 Před rokem +26

      It's all very well being the richest country in the world but , if 1% of the people own half the wealth It's academic.

    • @braaitongs
      @braaitongs Před rokem

      Not really free, it is paid for by your taxes

    • @philipmccarthy6175
      @philipmccarthy6175 Před rokem +20

      @@braaitongs yes but it's free at the point of use for all citizens. American's need to realise their system is broken. Healthcare for profit is morally wrong and private healthcare should just be an option . Universal healthcare should be a human right

    • @braaitongs
      @braaitongs Před rokem +1

      @@philipmccarthy6175 Healthcare for profit is not morally wrong in my opinion. Also I don't think it should be a human right, because it implies that you have a right to someone's labour (ie doctors) which is just a fancy way of saying slavery. Only negative rights make any sense. Ie right not be harmed.

  • @MonsieurNarlan
    @MonsieurNarlan Před 9 měsíci +3

    How can an ambulance cost you 2000 to 5000 dollars ?! There is no way to justify such a cost. Once I was hit by a car, got the police, the firefighters and the ambulance taking care of me, bringing me to the emergency room, got a x-ray, and a nurse came and said: no fracture, you are free to go. I left the hospital like a GTA character, without paying any money. What's the point at being so powerful and rich if the most important things are not accessible.

  • @mariainesxf5940
    @mariainesxf5940 Před rokem +5

    "Some places are really safe and you don't even need a weapon". Meanwhile, me going to walk the dog at night and forgetting even to bring my phone, being super relaxed. I don't even need the means to call for help!

  • @reclusenz
    @reclusenz Před 2 lety +44

    I moved here to the states to be with my wife (from New Zealand to NYC).
    'Healthcare' here is a joke - if something serious happened to me, it would be cheaper to fly back home on a private jet and get the care I needed for free.

    • @eagle1de227
      @eagle1de227 Před 2 lety +3

      Move back to NZ ...fast !

    • @Luubelaar
      @Luubelaar Před 2 lety +8

      Australian living in NZ here. Trying to explain to people "no, seriously, your prescription is $5 no matter which pharmacy you get it from" and it blows their minds.
      My family is from Scotland, where prescription medicine is free. I just didn't have the heart to tell them that.

    • @razzmatazz1974
      @razzmatazz1974 Před 2 lety +2

      My husbands uncle is an important surgeon working in the US (he has loved there since the 60s). When he needs surgery he flies back to Argentina, he can have the same attention for a very little fraction of the cost that it would cost him in his own clinic!

  • @mikeythehat6693
    @mikeythehat6693 Před 2 lety +85

    Countries as rich as ours should have ZERO homelessness , and full access to healthcare . It's just disgusting to treat access to healthcare as a business .

    • @ToddSauve
      @ToddSauve Před rokem +3

      The problem is you get people who won't work. Or would rather sit around and get drunk and stoned. Or who are criminals and get put in jail and no one trusts them enough when they get out of jail to hire them. I agree we are certainly rich enough as western nations to not have homelessness, but we don't have enough character either as employers or employees for that to ever be the case. Greed is what does everyone in.

    • @steffensegoviahelbo5065
      @steffensegoviahelbo5065 Před rokem +13

      @@ToddSauve we hear this argument of people who won't work all the time in my country. however Every single empirical investigation of this comes up with results that basically says this is a non issue. everyone who can work want to work. everyone who cannot work still want to work. the percentage of people that don't want to work is negligible at worst and none existent at best. it is such a small issue that it really should not affect policy at all, as any policy that want to take it in to consideration to motivate people to want to work cost society more on a whole than just ignoring them all together..

    • @ToddSauve
      @ToddSauve Před rokem

      @@steffensegoviahelbo5065 I'm 64 and what I wrote is what I have experienced in my life. I think health care is a human need not a want. But I have met people who are such screw ups that they can't be trusted with a job or simply don't want a job. They certainly do exist and tend to drift off into a life of petty crime and drunkenness or drug abuse.

    • @steffensegoviahelbo5065
      @steffensegoviahelbo5065 Před rokem +6

      @@ToddSauve I talk about emperical evidence and you choose to counter with anecdotal evidence... The kind of evidence that you always try to avoid as it has several possible flaws, like feelings, cherry picking, being a statistical odd ball, low sample sizes, etc.

    • @ToddSauve
      @ToddSauve Před rokem +1

      @@steffensegoviahelbo5065 I trust my own life experiences before I trust you, but have a good day!

  • @NemanjaRajic
    @NemanjaRajic Před rokem +2

    My wife and I live and work in Germany. Couple years ago she had stomac surgerry and she had some problems with her backbone, nothing so bad but she pain from time to some and she was prohibited from doing her job as waitress so Germany paid her to go to some kind of school where she will remind her self to work in pc in office package and some other thing like that for full year, school costs nothing and she was getting paid aroung 1000€ monthly and after that they found her a job where she can work without lifting anything heavier than 5kg...year and a half later, she sent her to rehabilitation for three weeks where she can additionally rehabilitate her backbone with some kind of trainings and it was also free, stay and 3 meals, trainings and everything and she got paid her salary as she was working. In case jou stay without job, Germany is providing you with around 1300e monthly which is enough to pay rent and bills and live normally while you are searching for another job and you don't have to give them that money back. Germany have the best social system in world

  • @taniaPBear
    @taniaPBear Před 2 lety +332

    It always hurts my heart how hard it is for Americans to afford healthcare, it should be a basic human right. We send aid to third world countries for this very reason. It seems to me there is no excuse in America, for this to be the case. Also people being forced to work such crazy hours to make ends meet, no life balance, it's so wrong. The reason we have better conditions is that our tax dollars go to pay for these things, yours don't I think, it's just not fair.

    • @viktoriyaserebryakov2755
      @viktoriyaserebryakov2755 Před 2 lety +20

      If you want universal healthcare then stop talking about universal healthcare and start talking about figuring out why these pharmaceutical companies are charging a hundred times what they are elsewhere. When people say it isn't possible for America to afford that, they aren't bluffing. America can not afford to pay that price to ten times the population of Australia. Fix the price first, THEN it might be possible.

    • @jennatransgirl
      @jennatransgirl Před 2 lety +5

      A family of four is easy 1000$ a monthly i heared. Then still the high deductible s ( for me in Belgium that is 500€) i would not take health care in the usa i would put that money each month in the stock market.

    • @brainsmatterpodcast
      @brainsmatterpodcast Před 2 lety

      It IS a basic human right under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 25, section 1 www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/2021/03/udhr.pdf). Some so called “civilised” nations don’t follow it though.

    • @davehocking4091
      @davehocking4091 Před 2 lety

      @@viktoriyaserebryakov2755 Theyre doing that because the government doesnt regulate the prices like they do anywhere else.
      Its one and the same. Government run health care controls pharmaceutical prices.

    • @akiram6609
      @akiram6609 Před 2 lety

      @@viktoriyaserebryakov2755 Oh we know why healthcare is so expensive here and a lot of us aren’t just talking about it but also working at it. Unfortunately, a lot more Americans would rather see healthcare as a privilege only available to the rich rather than make it affordable and available to the poor, especially to poor non-white Americans. Too many Americans worship the rich and hate the poor.

  • @bobturtlefrog2846
    @bobturtlefrog2846 Před 2 lety +63

    Here in Oz it's a bit of an institution to take a random day off work for yourself to just chill or catch up on things at home. We call it "Chucking a sickie".

    • @irdairda514
      @irdairda514 Před 2 lety +12

      Here in New Zealand I've heard it referred to as a mental health day

    • @tileux
      @tileux Před 2 lety +7

      @@irdairda514 ‘mental health day’ is starting to be used here in Oz too - it’s funnier, just for starters.

    • @thegallantsaint2034
      @thegallantsaint2034 Před 2 lety +2

      My company has made them official “wellness” days. 😀

    • @xkimopye
      @xkimopye Před 2 lety

      For lazy fucks it’s an institution. I’ve only faked one in 20 years of employment and that was because I was stuck in the other side of the state. We all get payed less because of fake sickies. Maybe we should remove sick days altogether and the money come out of savings rather than the company.

    • @jurgentreue1200
      @jurgentreue1200 Před 2 lety +1

      Usually on a Monday or Friday.

  • @OnzaRob
    @OnzaRob Před rokem +30

    Great video content again! The concept of Universal healthcare is lost on Americans because they feel if they are taxed and don’t use it, they’ve lost money. In actuality with universal healthcare you pay less and if you never really need it, great. But being looked after when Ill and not having to worrying where your check book is how any society should work.

    • @ronnyhansson8713
      @ronnyhansson8713 Před rokem +3

      also they pay private ensurance fees every month (usaly at a higher rate than the added tax would been) and still the insuarnce says - cool, you pay the first 5000 and we think we MIGHT pay the rest.... unless it is to expensive then we find some way to back out - now hand over this months money

    • @ceha9517
      @ceha9517 Před rokem

      But they hate to pay for others. They have no interest in a social system. You have to look after yourself.

    • @giuseppeanoardi3973
      @giuseppeanoardi3973 Před rokem +1

      @@ceha9517 which is moronic, since taking care of members of your community means taking care of yourself, even if not directly. A healthy neighbour is a working and law abiding neighbour, most of the time.

    • @fionagregory9147
      @fionagregory9147 Před 11 měsíci

      Cheque* book.

    • @fionagregory9147
      @fionagregory9147 Před 11 měsíci

      It's not vacation, it is called holidays.

  • @BrapMan
    @BrapMan Před rokem

    Dude, I'm from the UK, and I found you earlier tonight while watching your Kimi Raikkonen funny moments vids, and have started to binge watch your reaction vids.. your vids are great, man ;)

  • @IcanbePsycho
    @IcanbePsycho Před 2 lety +24

    One time I was in the US & there was an old guy sweeping the shop entrance, he must’ve been 80+, I asked him why he’s working? He said he has too, to pay for his medical.
    Poor old bugger, he should’ve been retired & enjoying his time left.

  • @archie1299
    @archie1299 Před 2 lety +124

    I do the payroll for an Australian branch of an American company.
    Last US auditor I had was like "woahhhh wtf? This guy has 600 leave hours, what happened?!" I was going to get in trouble lol
    Had to explain to him that, if we don't use our leave (Annual and Long Service, not sick) it just accumulates and it gets paid out when you resign..
    He's like "so people just sit on their leave, and that's their nest egg?! Back home it's use it or lose it, it resets each year!" his mind was blown.
    I've paid people out more than $25k in unused leave.

    • @deadkodo
      @deadkodo Před 2 lety +5

      I work for payroll in a NSW govt department and it's like that here. Often have payouts over 40-50k and that just for a retirement or resignation. You aren't supposed to have more than 40 days annual leave or they will tell you to take it but use it or lose it sucks, especially when they mostly only get 2 weeks leave a year how can you plan a real holiday for that. I use annul and LSL and go to USA for at least a minimum of 6 weeks. Will be 10-12 weeks this year as haven't been able to visit for last 2 years.

    • @dorkiedoodles2297
      @dorkiedoodles2297 Před 2 lety +2

      @@deadkodo most of the local people i know don't even get 2 weeks for vacation. My dad only got one week of paid vacation so he would save it for the week before Christmas because all the crews would be off the whole week of Christmas. Basically he "cheated" his way into a two week vacation every year. Same with my Aunt who works for a news station. One week of vacation.

    • @raxxo69
      @raxxo69 Před 2 lety +4

      I had to take out my unused vacation and collected hours in cash at a previous place of work (here in Sweden).. I've still got the record in collected hours with over 900 hours (collected by working night and or weekend shifts) plus 90 vacation days.. 😳

    • @TheProteanGeek
      @TheProteanGeek Před 2 lety +2

      Sick leave also accumulates but doesn't get paid out by default. Can happen but it is rare. My mum worked at a company for 15 years and rarely too sick leave. Had over 120 days when their area was sold to another company. 6 years prior we moved interstate and she had the option of a redundancy that included her sick leave at the time.
      Some organisations have policies in place pushing people to actually take their leave. For example most QLD government departments now start pushing you to take annual leave if you are going to go over 6 weeks accumulated. Ten years ago that was done at around 8. This isn't including long service leave which I imagine is a totally foreign concept to people in the US.

    • @deadkodo
      @deadkodo Před 2 lety

      @@TheProteanGeek I have worked in State and federal government and sick leave doesn't get paid out. I remember one time I had a guy who was going to retire so e had a friendly Dr arrange so that he took is last 6 months off as sick leave. 8 weeks ( 40 days) is the usual now that that they want you to start using up unused leave. IT also has some to financial situations and leave liability as the govt agencies are funded based on not having excess leave and it can throw out some budgets if too many people have excess. In some cases if you transfer between agencies within Government the agency you are with may decline to accept leave over a certain threshold so your previous agency will pay out that excess leave when you leave.

  • @AbsoluteAbsurd
    @AbsoluteAbsurd Před rokem +1

    im really getting into your videos recently, i like learning stuff so learning how your country works is always enlightening, also I think you're funny lol

  • @sparksmacoy
    @sparksmacoy Před 10 měsíci +2

    I feel America should be brought before some sort of international court for their healthcare system and how they treat their people

  • @littlecatfeet9064
    @littlecatfeet9064 Před 2 lety +83

    Congratulations on New Mexico having free education! I’m surprised. I wonder what other states think of that.

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm Před 2 lety +3

      Then you'd be disappointed to find out nothing is free.

    • @littlecatfeet9064
      @littlecatfeet9064 Před 2 lety +18

      @@uni4rm I do know how tax works. But Americans pay roughly the same income, property and sales taxes as countries that have free education and then they pay for the education.

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před 2 lety +11

      @@uni4rm Then why are you paying more?

  • @FionaEm
    @FionaEm Před 2 lety +128

    As an Aussie, it seems to me that American life is still based on the frontier mentality - survival of the fittest, every man for himself etc. It seems precarious and exhausting. We are lucky to have universal basic health care, even if the current govt would love to destroy it.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Před 2 lety

      Just wait until some of those drop bears start mangling those Tory MPs, then they will think twice about getting rid of universal health care. 😄

    • @kateemma22
      @kateemma22 Před 2 lety +12

      Former government! HIGH FIVE!

    • @lagringa7518
      @lagringa7518 Před 2 lety +6

      More like profit at any cost to the citizens while the health industry rakes in a fortune. America is run by and for the corporations.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Před 2 lety +4

      @@lagringa7518
      *ahem* Corporate gangsters.

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm Před 2 lety +1

      @@kateemma22 YESSSS!

  • @bordeaux1962
    @bordeaux1962 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I never will understand why one can be proud only because to belong to a nation. I say this as a German. I am proud of our social, scientific and technological achievements. Not about my nationality or a flag. Except during true football World Champion Ships. This is what it's all about. To live in peace and prosperity. For all people. I would be happy if America (US) would realize this as soon as possible.

  • @VoidCosmonaut
    @VoidCosmonaut Před 6 měsíci +1

    3:52 In the company i work for (French company) in Poland i have 30 days off sick and still being paid 100% and after that it is 80%. Days i can be ill are limitless but after im ill for 3 months i have to see a doctor to check if the illness isn't pernament.. Normally Polish law states if You are sick You get paid 80% of Your wage.I have 26 holiday days (ruled by Polish law) and within that i have 4 days when i can just call my company and state i won't show up without even giving reasons. Normal working week is MAX 40 hours. If you work anything more you have to get paid 150% of your wage during working d ays and 200% on sunday (in the company i work for, working on Saturday is also paid 200%).
    Fun fact too: If a holiday (bank holiday or a day free from work because it is some kind of our national holiday) happens to be saturday and saturday isn't your normal woking day (fe. if You, by contract, work only Monday to Friday) then the company is obligated to give you work-free day within working week.

  • @thetrustysidekick3013
    @thetrustysidekick3013 Před 2 lety +56

    The US could fix everything wrong with how it treats its own people.
    The cruelty is in knowing they'll never do what's right.
    And that is ironic coming from a country that once stood for doing the right thing.

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Před 2 lety +12

      The internet exposes the reality . While everyone was watching Rockets going to the moon they had racists laws against Black people drinking water out of drinking fountains, sitting in buses , going to schools etc

    • @eagle1de227
      @eagle1de227 Před 2 lety

      Because SOCIALISM is EVIL !!!

    • @cheekyftoro8962
      @cheekyftoro8962 Před 2 lety +1

      I think half americas problem is the people dont realise its a problem. They have so little understanding about the outside world they dont know their is a better way.They cant possibly imagine that their country sucks after they have spent their whole lives being told its the best in the world. And they really have no idea what is actually going on in their own country. They are taught to love there amendment rights so much that they defend them even when you point out that free speech allows the spread of bigotry racism hatred and the recruitment of home grown terrorists. That freedom of religion is used to force underage children to be married of and rapped legally by adults. That their refusal to update the 2nd amendment has lead to the fact more children under 5 are shot and killed each year in america than on duty cops.

    • @eagle1de227
      @eagle1de227 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cheekyftoro8962 no further comment. So sad...

  • @Lei1600.
    @Lei1600. Před 2 lety +50

    American student speaking here. I'm currently in high school and you can actually see a lot of these things everyday in our highschools. (At least mine) My friends and I are so terrified of missing school for anything. The classes move so fast and if you miss just one day, it could take you about 3-4 days to catch up. I've seen fellow classmates literally choosing school over their health just to make sure they get good grades. Only if they have something contagious or super serious do they not show up. I've had friends, and myself included, force ourselves to go to school even if we have a rapidly declining mental health or have a cold. The schools give out certificates to students with perfect attendance at the end of every school year and almost every kid that had received one had at least gone to school twice sick or feeling massively depressed. They are rewarded for ignoring their health just to come and learn. It's so sad. And It is true that we are taught to run in a zig-zag pattern and other ways to survive a literal attack when we are young children. This was very shocking to me, watching this video and finding out how people in other countries are able to afford and take care of their health. I hope you all have a great day!

    • @giuseppeanoardi3973
      @giuseppeanoardi3973 Před rokem +2

      The most shocking thing should be that even after that, Usa High school education does'nt fare that well when compared to other first world averages. Sad indeed.

    • @tyronevaldez-kruger5313
      @tyronevaldez-kruger5313 Před 8 měsíci +2

      you can have a better high school education in developing countries like Thailand and Rwanda. These nations don't appear in global rankings but they provide schools for young students that are somewhere on European level

    • @isabellechevereau7539
      @isabellechevereau7539 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Just so you know, we genuinely feel sorry for you all. You are welcome to come and experience the European way of life. Not always perfect or stressless but ...so much worth it

  • @danielpontini79
    @danielpontini79 Před rokem +2

    I grew up in Bavaria (Germany) and moved to Austria 22 years ago. One thing gets swept under the rug a bit when it comes to the welfare system here. The Austrian social system is NOT for free. Each of us "throws" a small part of his or her salary in the form of a social security contribution into the pot, so that if someone gets sick and he or she needs help, it can be used immediately. One thing I can say is that the system here is even better than in Germany. You get 25 paid Vacation days, 10 Days of paid dependent care leave, Unemployment benefits if you lose your job and a very good health care system. Therefore, if you have the choice, do not move to Germany, come to Austria. ;)

  • @manweoettam
    @manweoettam Před 5 měsíci +1

    I never be in US (I wish to do an holiday there in the future... When I can afford it), but I went to holiday in France several times and I didn't know the ambulance and emergency have a cost there. It shocked me!
    In Italy if I call an ambulance for an emergency it's free.
    Here basically all things related to an health emergency (ambulance, first aid, emergency room) are free (covered with taxes, even if it's starting to appear some private emergency room whom will have some cost in big city areas). We pay some cash with medical specialists visits when they're not emergency visit.
    So, basically, we pay a ticket that represents a part of the total cost of the health we need (the rest is always covered with taxes) when it goes to routine exams and visits from specialist (a part from specific cases, the basic family doctor services are free and granted with the National Healthcare System) or when we buy drugs and medicine.
    But the emergency situation is totally free (maybe you could pay a ticket on a specific exam you need to do some days after the emergency situation).
    And I can tell you that emergency could be a large term, because I remember a new years party of like ten years ago... A guy was too much drunk (and maybe he get some drug, like Marijuana). We take him to the emergency room to give him a cure and they take him under observation for the night there... Totally free.

  • @hammer8809
    @hammer8809 Před 2 lety +208

    I think it’s way scarier living in the US than Oz even with our wildlife 😳🇦🇺.

    • @LouisTheBlackCat
      @LouisTheBlackCat Před 2 lety +18

      I'll take drop bears over dropping bombs any day 😉🦘🇦🇺

    • @patdavis6383
      @patdavis6383 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, the most dangerous wildlife in the US is the people!

    • @AndyViant
      @AndyViant Před 2 lety

      All the Australian wildlife combined would only kill 1/1000th of what the US "healthcare" system kills each year.

    • @dentray
      @dentray Před 2 lety +6

      Australia second most dangerous place in the world for Backpackers just behind Brazil and it aint the wildlife!

    • @bobbiusshadow6985
      @bobbiusshadow6985 Před 2 lety +8

      The wildlife is dangerous in the US .. by wildlife I meant people

  • @lindakarlsen4459
    @lindakarlsen4459 Před 2 lety +33

    Aussie here. Nearly three years ago I had double surgery. Two days later I had a heart attack that was not connected to my surgeries. I spent one day in hospital after my surgery and five days in hospital after my heart attack. I am currently waiting for a possible double surgery. The cost to me so far for all of this. ZERO. I do pay about $8 a month for some meds that I am now on as a result of my heart attack but that is it. I love our system and hope it never changes.

    • @countrye3013
      @countrye3013 Před 2 lety +1

      if the liberals win again they're definitely going to push through some more policies that will lead to the americanisation of it all

    • @lindakarlsen4459
      @lindakarlsen4459 Před 2 lety +2

      @@countrye3013 Agreed. We do not want them getting back in!!!!

    • @valerieh84
      @valerieh84 Před 2 lety +1

      Best wishes for your recovery

    • @lindakarlsen4459
      @lindakarlsen4459 Před 2 lety

      @@valerieh84 Thank you so much!

  • @MultiMattRogers
    @MultiMattRogers Před rokem +3

    The really wild thing about the American healthcare system is that the government spends more per person on it than the UK does and the public still needs to pay thousands and thousands of dollars each time they use it.
    Government money is just syphoned to private companies. That would not fly in the UK. People get really angry when their tax money goes to shareholders.

  • @mar1usro884
    @mar1usro884 Před rokem +1

    I was born and live in Romania, here if u feel sick and go to hospital they take care of u make xrays rmns and all kind of checks they give u treatment everything for free, just check your id card not health insurance, only receipe u will have to pay but if u go to your family doctor they will give a 50% off or free depends of cost and here bigger price means bigger discounts. Also if u call ambulance at home ride or no ride to hospital is free. Also if u work even 2 hours is mandatory that company to pay full time tax ( 8hrs per day-5days per week )means u get full benefits .

  • @macman1469
    @macman1469 Před 2 lety +34

    Something most might not know is in the US if you can't afford legal representation in a criminal case some one will be appointed for you. In Australia if you can't afford legal representation you can apply for Legal Aid which will pay for the Barrister/solicitor of your choice . That way you get quality representation. Not cut price service.

    • @AndyViant
      @AndyViant Před 2 lety +1

      Unless of course the other person you are in a legal stoush with has already accessed legal aid.

    • @macman1469
      @macman1469 Před 2 lety +4

      @@AndyViant In ccriminal cases only defence has access to legal aid.

    • @ct96
      @ct96 Před 2 lety

      Not true, most good Barristers/solicitors won't do legal aid work.

  • @evaadams8298
    @evaadams8298 Před 2 lety +25

    Ian, but in Austria and many other countries, people with higher wages pay higher taxes. A lot of people in the US try and get out of paying taxes (including your #45!), Most people expect to pay tax as it helps pay for amenities, including health care, infrastructure etc. I have been to the US and was shocked at the Wealth divide. The US does not take care of its poor enough.

    • @T0MT0Mmmmy
      @T0MT0Mmmmy Před 2 lety +3

      That's the American dream. But only 1% of the people get rich, the others stay poor and go on dreaming.

  • @michaelmiddleton8098
    @michaelmiddleton8098 Před rokem

    Watched a few of your videos I like the balance approach

  • @Direkin
    @Direkin Před rokem +1

    That running in a zig-zag bit reminds me of Generation Kill where the reporter was running in a zig-zag from sniper fire, and one of the soldiers asks "What the hell was that?", and the reporter responds with "Serpentine!"

  • @Danceofmasks
    @Danceofmasks Před 2 lety +44

    I've read some studies about homeless villages in the US, and apparently, homeless people move to those states because of the weather.
    You get disproportionate numbers in places where the winter won't kill you outright.

    • @paulhadfield7909
      @paulhadfield7909 Před 2 lety +7

      well it makes sense, same withmoving to cities where more people are,they have to survive

  • @carriebizz
    @carriebizz Před 2 lety +28

    It'd extremely sad and makes me angry that Americans cannot get free healthcare. From a country that seems to think they are the wealthiest in the world, it treats its citizens like crap.
    I'm Australian and I am so thankful that we have free healthcare. If you don't have you're health you don't have anything. Health before wealth. It's very sad.

    • @lallas92
      @lallas92 Před 2 lety

      The biggest fears people in the United States have are (1) somewhere, someone is getting something they don't deserve (such as healthcare, an education, food), and (2) getting shot to death at a grocery store or elementary school.

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm Před 2 lety +2

      No one gets free health care. In the US, it is an insurance payment system. In other countries, it is a combination of insurance and taxes. For example, in Canada I would be taxed an additional $10,000 dollars a year for healthcare, that I wouldn't be using. Or I could be in the US, and my boss pays my insurance as part of my benefits so I am taxed nothing and get to keep my $10,000. Granted, that means my boss is paying for my healthcare, so again, it isn't free.

    • @simrangill5459
      @simrangill5459 Před rokem +1

      @@uni4rm in australia even if you don't work (so you can't pay taxes) you still get health care. If you do work and have to pay taxes it's generally not a lot. i probably only pay $10000 a year but I can claim all of that back so most of the time I'm only left with paying not even $1000. medicare levy is usually less than 2% of our pay tho and gets taken out every pay.

  • @suomenpresidentti
    @suomenpresidentti Před 10 měsíci +1

    First time heard of the zigzag running... 😮
    And I am pushing 60.
    Greetings From Finland!

  • @lord9562
    @lord9562 Před rokem +3

    This is an interesting one from my storybook and i happened ay back in 1998.
    So we have this senior project manager from a very large IT vendor the GM from Michigan and he had traveled halfway around the world to see if we had what it took.
    A meeting was fixed on the second day for finalization and he did not turn up. So, another PM and I went to see what was up (no cell phones back then) and we found that while coming down the stairs, he had missed a step sliding from one to the other and probably had a hairline crack in the ankle.
    Too him to a good doctor who got him X-Rayed, diagnosed and put his leg in a cast. When the time came to pay up, the Doc told him it would be Rs 100 (2 dollars at that time).
    I can still recollect the look on his face !!!
    Since then, India has become a fairly trusted destination for pretty complex procedures involving the heart, lungs, kidneys, etc at maybe 20-25% of the cost in the US only for their procedure (all other costs extra), while this cost in India included flying them in and out, procedure and recuperation at hospitals with the finest equipment and doctors with significant experience all over the world.
    I read a report an year ago where the fraud in medicare in the US was estimated to be in excess of 100 billion dollars.
    Once again, America is teaching the world how to organize mega scams.

  • @bigoz1977
    @bigoz1977 Před 2 lety +10

    Gotta love POETS day (piss off early tomorrow’s Saturday) hahaha

  • @johnwilson5743
    @johnwilson5743 Před 2 lety +29

    Note: The girl at 3.25 was from LA but now lives in Austria, in Europe, NOT Australia. Yes, I know you were just using it as a comparison but Europe is quite different to USA.

    • @IWrocker
      @IWrocker  Před 2 lety +3

      Yes I know that (I personally never mix them up like some people) haha thanks for the comment as it may help others

    • @XxmillerniaxX
      @XxmillerniaxX Před 2 lety +1

      Well considering some Americans seem to be confused at how well Australians speak English apparently Australia is quite different from the USA as well.

    • @JamesDavy2009
      @JamesDavy2009 Před 2 lety +1

      @@XxmillerniaxX Here are some differences I can list off the top of my head:
      • Our clocks are set way ahead since we're on the other side of the International Date Line.
      • We use a dialect of English that's like a foreign language to you Yanks-try translating into Yankee tongue, "I'll have a sanga with some snags and a bottle of Bundy."
      • We only (legally) use guns for hunting and the eradication of feral animals.
      • Our vote is mandatory.
      • Our food is unique to certain parts of Australia-in QLD a gyro is called a kebab and crumbed steak is a delicacy in their regional area; and we like pies with meat in them and meat rolled with puff pastry.
      • We eat the animals on our coat of arms.
      • We prefer to use the local names of certain Aboriginal sites like Uluru and Kata Tjuta (Ayers Rock and the Olgas respectively).
      • Our football codes are more easily understandable than gridiron.
      • We drive on the left hand side of the road like every other former British Empire country.
      • We measure things (mostly) in metric units.
      • We have cricket tournaments during the summer.
      • Our season cycle is the opposite of yours and because of that we celebrate Christmas during the summer.
      • Our view of Orion and the zodiacal sky is upside down.
      • We find the south celestial pole by triangulating the vertical part of Crux (the constellation on our national flag) with the perpendicular bisector of the line between the Pointers of Centaurus.

    • @akiram6609
      @akiram6609 Před 2 lety +3

      @@XxmillerniaxX A lot of Americans are confused on how well the English speak English.

    • @XxmillerniaxX
      @XxmillerniaxX Před 2 lety

      @@JamesDavy2009 I am well aware being an Aussie myself...

  • @CaptianInternet
    @CaptianInternet Před rokem +3

    I had a Major Burnout in 2017. I went to a rehab clinic for 8 weeks. I never paid anything but I asked the doctors how expensive this would be and they told me it is about 18.000€ per day upwards. I can not imagine to live without the freedom to just care for my health.

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz Před rokem +1

    About the sick leaves, one of the main point of is that YOU don't cause health or life threatening situations by being sick at work.
    There is a clause in the insurance policies that companies have for their employees, if the company neglects work safety by allowing sick people to work and someone gets hurt because of it they have to pay. If the accident because of it is grave enough you get can go to prison for it.
    And who the hell wants to put their workers in harms way anyway, it does not benefit anyone.
    If you cause an accident by neglecting your health and safety of others, youll go to court for it.

  • @esaedvik
    @esaedvik Před 2 lety +55

    The whole going to work sick is so insane and SO EXPENSIVE for the company if it's an infectious disease. It's also crazy how my flu rate dropped to zero after starting working from home like 6-7 years ago. One of my former employers made it even worse and started giving prizes for people who didn't take a single sick day that year. Just insanity. Rewarding for messing other people up...

    • @couldbeworse1488
      @couldbeworse1488 Před 2 lety

      We use this "bonus" system. A lot of sick leave is unnecessary or used as extra holidays. The countries average sick leave for last year was 5,4%, our company did 1,4%

  • @MrNatebain
    @MrNatebain Před 2 lety +73

    Hey Andrew ... Love being part of your community ... Just gotta say, when I saw you trying to weigh up your healthcare in the US vs the rest of the world and you sqid "Well, it is good healthcare here", .... Well, I believe healthcare is pretty good all around the world (if standards are followed) ... The pure truth of the matter is that the US medical "system" is corrupt, bias, negligent (in it's inaccessability) and just plain wrong.... Yes, it's THAT bad.... It's like an abuser and you have lived with it so long that you don't see the abuse, but everyone else who looks in is horrified.
    THAT bad sir.

    • @christyzeeaquarianated2600
      @christyzeeaquarianated2600 Před 2 lety +12

      Agreed.
      I'd also like to add that, unfortunately, most Americans who can afford healthcare believe that they have a good - or even great - standard of healthcare, which isn't exactly true when compared to industry standards around the world.
      What an American might think is a good standard in terms of the quality of care they receive, is often considered abysmal by metric comparison.

    • @hillbillycatfishin5860
      @hillbillycatfishin5860 Před 2 lety

      Hasn’t been the case for my self and family. Nor anyone I know has had such a rough time with health care. I am not rich as my family is a middle class, if not under. So crazy how just town to town city to city or area in general makes such a difference in so many or these issues. Area is affordable, wages are fairly decent all around, healthcare is easy excess able with or without insurance. I’ve never heard nor seen anyone get turned away. I do know people who had no insurance and got medical attention and never paid the bill. Those individuals really haven’t lost anything nor even a credit score impact. Other than just self conscious thought about not having paid the bill.

    • @verasambience
      @verasambience Před měsícem +1

      @@christyzeeaquarianated2600this. Americans believe the rest of the world is midieval

  • @croat1455
    @croat1455 Před rokem

    I like your character. Nice vibe bro. And on point in your videos. Cool and keep it up.

  • @mrbushlied7742
    @mrbushlied7742 Před rokem +1

    I immigrated to the UK from the USA back in '98 and became a naturalised UK citizen in '03. I started my first job in the UK with 6 weeks vacation and healthcare that is free at the point of service. America, love it or leave it! I left it!

  • @Goatcha_M
    @Goatcha_M Před 2 lety +50

    Pepper Spray is completely illegal in Australia too, as are credit card knives, tasers, batons and a whole lot of other weapons.
    Pocket knives and multi-tools aren't illegal, but you need a valid work reason to carry them, otherwise they are an illegally concealed weapon.

    • @chrisrumble2665
      @chrisrumble2665 Před 2 lety +1

      It's crazy that people can't use it to defend themselves here.

    • @IcanbePsycho
      @IcanbePsycho Před 2 lety +3

      You can buy pepper spray in WA.

    • @aprocessofchange6251
      @aprocessofchange6251 Před 2 lety +1

      We all carry multi tools and have never had an issue.

    • @badwerds
      @badwerds Před 2 lety

      Even using an improvised weapon can get you into trouble

    • @Kayenne54
      @Kayenne54 Před 2 lety +1

      Even a rifle, licensed, has to be broken down into its constituent parts, locked away in a burglar proof lock box, with the ammo in a separate lock box. Also local police have to be informed that you have said weapon and up to date licence. As a woman, if I carry a metal nail file in its pouch in my handbag, apparently I could be prosecuted for carrying a concealed weapon.

  • @karenglenn6707
    @karenglenn6707 Před 2 lety +38

    On my third trip to the US my husband came, and we went shopping at a place called Ontario Mills in California. Walked into a KMart or Walmart and there were guns lining a whole wall. Our eyes were boggling as we couldn’t believe what we were seeing, even my husband who is a Corrections Officer was gobsmacked. You can’t have that here (thank goodness).

    • @glennllewellyn7369
      @glennllewellyn7369 Před 2 lety

      Cool name!
      NSW here - we have rifles and guns. What’s the problem?

    • @karenglenn6707
      @karenglenn6707 Před 2 lety +5

      @@glennllewellyn7369 of course we have them here, just not in Kmart. And not at swap meets where anyone can buy them. Checked the juvenile murder rate lately with guns there? Or the mass shootings. Thanks for the comment re the name, yours is good and spelled the right way.

    • @glennllewellyn7369
      @glennllewellyn7369 Před 2 lety

      @@karenglenn6707
      Hello again! yeah...I'm a dedicated farmer/gun nut...from a long line of nuts. We even shot a few baddies during the wars. Kids with guns is not good. Stupid drugged up gang members? I say give 'em more guns and let God sort them out.

    • @xXSinForLifeXx
      @xXSinForLifeXx Před 2 lety +2

      @@glennllewellyn7369 We definitely don't have rifles and guns lined up and being sold in Kmart or BigW.
      Idk what your trying to imply or say but I live in NSW and that's not true. You can legally own a gun sure but more regulated.

    • @Just_For_Kixz
      @Just_For_Kixz Před 2 lety

      @@glennllewellyn7369 not enough IMO…

  • @mistylee717
    @mistylee717 Před rokem +1

    I just had major surgery. I had the cartilage removed that was broken connecting my ribs, and then 3 plates were attached to hold my ribs in place. Didn’t even stay over-night. I was recovering in a hotel room. I couldn’t even reach most parts of my own body to clean or anything.

  • @markboardman100
    @markboardman100 Před rokem +3

    Europe is amazing, lived here for the last 22 years. 12 years in Germany(Dresden, Berlin) 10 years Romania (Brasov, Cluj , Bucharest) speak fluent German, Romainian lovely latin language that it is not quite fluent but working at it, been a fan of F1 since i moved to Europe. NASCAR , short track lover before and Still am. But F1 blew my mind.

  • @kempaswe4022
    @kempaswe4022 Před 2 lety +10

    here in sweden most of us works 5 day/week 8h/day. 4-5weeks paid vacation, if we work on the holidays (red days) we get the double pay, if we start work before 06:00 or after 18:00 we get more paid per hour. when we get a child we have to take 14 days of with pay and we have another 365 days that we can take with pay until the year the child gets 8yo. and you get totaly free health/toothcare/meds until you get 18yo. 2 of our kids got autism (soon 11 and 13yo) they are getting everything for free, I even get paid when I have to take a day of to take them to doctors, school meetings etc. I was home for 1 1/2 year when I stressed too much and finally hit the wall. First 365 days I received 80% of the salary the other days 70%. If you feel like going out into the forest and picking mushrooms, berries or just camping in the forest, you can go out into any forest you want. It is called the right of public access where you have the law on your side to enjoy nature.

  • @jameswitt605
    @jameswitt605 Před 2 lety +12

    1. My first job in Australia, they did not have a position open for me, but hired me anyway because I had experience too valuable for them to pass up. The week I started was after a long weekend, so I started on Tuesday, on Thursday before noon the pay lady came around, and to my surprise I got a pay packet. Not only that, it was for a full weeks pay and I was only half way through my third day. 2. Finding out I got 4 weeks paid vacation per year, after 6 months I decided to take a 2 weeks off. When I got my pay packet the Thursday before leaving, it was bulging. It had 3 weeks pay plus a lot more. It was then I found out we got 17.5% leave loading when on vacation. That's right you got more money being away on holiday than working. 3. I was asked when employed if I wanted to have the private health insurance aromatically deducted from my pay every week. A bit unsure about the cost, I asked how much. It came out a 50 cents a week at that time. ( It now costs @A$1700.00 per year for me). 4, I was involved in a serious motorcycle accident and when I woke up in the hospital I was in traction with a broken hip and told I would be there for 10 weeks at least. I was frantic about what would happen with my job, my apartment and of course the cost of it all. My employer said no problems all is ok, My friends rallied around and kept my apartment for me. The hospital visit which ended up being 6 weeks cost me nothing, not a bloody cent. It was covered by the third party insurance we pay as part of the cost of registering a vehicle. I was on crutches for 6 weeks after the hospital and all my out of pocket expenses until I was deemed fully recovered were also reimbursed. An additional point, I had only been in Oz for @ 10 months at that time, yet in the 6 weeks I was in hospital i only went without a visit from someone on 1 day. of the entire period. Made quite an impression!

    • @marvindebot3264
      @marvindebot3264 Před 2 lety +2

      "not a bloody cent", we have successfully converted you sir :)

  • @suomenpresidentti
    @suomenpresidentti Před 10 měsíci +1

    Pepper spray is illegal here in Finland too.
    Carrying ANY item suitable for harming others is illegal.
    You can not even carry a big stick, hammer, bat, cane or a knife, if you do not have a legal reason to do so.
    You can carry your phone, wallet, handkerchieves, waterbottle, some snacks and that's pretty much it.

  • @Seventh7Art
    @Seventh7Art Před rokem +1

    Paid leaves in Europe include holiday, vacation, sick, parental etc. Around 1 year is the parental leave, 1 month per year is the vacation/holiday leave while sick leave can be a lot of days... even unlimited.

  • @tSp289
    @tSp289 Před 2 lety +15

    As a Brit visiting Japan, I almost couldn't believe the trains. They have this system where they tell you what time the train's coming, and then you go there for then... and there's a train! You can get on it, and it doesn't break down and you don't need to sell a kidney to afford the ticket. Amazing.

    • @Davey-Boyd
      @Davey-Boyd Před 2 lety

      As a fellow Brit... Are you sure you weren't dreaming lol!

  • @TheMrJoshTaylor
    @TheMrJoshTaylor Před 2 lety +47

    From Australia here, thought I broke my foot on a night out, knew it wasnt worth waiting for an ambulance becuase the system works on severity and potential harm basis so I jumped in an uber. Saw a Dr, had an X-ray, saw the Dr again. The uber was the most expensive part of the whole thing

    • @defeatstatistics7413
      @defeatstatistics7413 Před rokem

      Same here when I broke my elbow. Paid £4.50 in bus fare in total, for the A&E visit and the followup two weeks later. That was the total cost of the whole thing. I fucking love the NHS.

  • @markwandy
    @markwandy Před 20 dny

    I'm in the UK, and I went on the sick due to severe illness, I got 100% pay for six months, then 75% pay for a further 4 1/2 years (yes years not months) I was then medically retired (at 48 years old) and recieved a very large payoff from the company I worked for (ironically a large US company).

  • @enzo5630
    @enzo5630 Před rokem

    love all your videos man

  • @katymcdonald5481
    @katymcdonald5481 Před 2 lety +31

    In Australia in rural areas there are a lot of dirt roads, it can sometimes be difficult to tell if you’ve crossed from a public road to private property. Many years ago my partner and I would go on lots of country drives and occasionally we’d accidentally end up on private property. A few of those times the farmers simply gave us the directions back to the main road. Unless someone was going near their livestock or maybe rolling up at night I cannot imagine farmers threatening people with a gun especially if their property backed onto walking tracks etc. After living in the country myself I think If young hikers walked on to their property they’d probably ask if they were ok/lost/had enough water etc.

  • @sigmaoctantis1892
    @sigmaoctantis1892 Před 2 lety +69

    I became interested in what the actual cost of health care was in different countries. That is, cost inclusive of out of pocket, tax and insurance. I found various reports about the cost in the US versus other OECD countries. Two major reports came to the same conclusion comparing US costs to other OECD countries. Bear this in mind when you hear the "it isn't free you pay for it with tax' argument.
    When averaged across populations, in the US health care costs twice as much (per annum) compared to other OECD countries, for less care and poorer medical outcomes.

    • @Thedemonlord66
      @Thedemonlord66 Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah, because healthcare is a business like any other in the US which is really sad and It really should be a basic human right.

    • @jonasandersson5778
      @jonasandersson5778 Před 2 lety +7

      When adding things up you end up paying more of your paycheck to cover your basic needs but lack the safetynet that paid by taxes options provides. The harsh difference between for profit and for people

    • @sigmaoctantis1892
      @sigmaoctantis1892 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jonasandersson5778 The difference is that, as far as health costs are concerned, when it is for profit, you pay more and get less than you do with a socialised health system.

    • @baktru
      @baktru Před 2 lety +3

      @@sigmaoctantis1892 Yeah that is the biggest problem with US healthcare. Healthcare is for profit companies and some of the healthcare companies in the US make massive profits. Here in Belgium by law health insurance providers and hospitals must be non-profits or they are excluded from the tax paid system.

    • @sigmaoctantis1892
      @sigmaoctantis1892 Před 2 lety +8

      @@baktru Just checked OECD figures, Belgium is slightly more expensive than the mixed system we have in Australia.
      What attracted my attention to health care is that in many on street interviews with Americans, they mention socialism. That is, the ideas expressed are that a socialised medical system is one step on the path to the dreaded dark, evil sin of socialism (whatever that might be). My current speculation is that these beliefs are a product of cold war era (1950s) propaganda. In support of this speculation, I note that, during the 1950s, many social welfare programs were removed for being unAmerican.

  • @TisTheDamnStickSeason
    @TisTheDamnStickSeason Před 2 měsíci

    I am a 48yr old New Zealander with Spina Bifida. I've had more than 25 surgeries, several of which were 4hrs+, and have had hundreds upon hundreds of doctors appointments and prescriptions. When I do have to pay for the doctor, it's only around $10. As for everything else, literally nothing.

  • @weeno92
    @weeno92 Před rokem +1

    5:49 you were talking about Australia, but this wonderful woman is located in AUSTRIA. :) Huge difference.

  • @alexwtf80
    @alexwtf80 Před 2 lety +32

    The population density in Europe is 34 per Km2 (87 people per mi2), in the US is 36 per Km2 (94 people per mi2). But this is because eastern countries are less developed. If you take western countries you have Netherlands 508 per Km2 (1,316 people per mi2), Austria 109 per Km2 (283 people per mi2), Belgium 375 inhabitants per km², Italy 206 per Km2 (532 people per mi2).
    Homelessness rate has little to do with population density and all with social support. I will talk about Italy:
    - free healthcare means people a) don't go bankrupt and b) mental illness (primary cause of homelessness) is properly threated.
    - special loans: to buy your first house loans interest rate is set by law and it's much lower than normal
    - social housing programs: not only there are house available from little to zero rent for family in needs, those family can also apply to slowly buy the house they were assigned too.
    All of this doesn't erase the problem, but makes it much smaller for sure

    • @Captain_Terp
      @Captain_Terp Před 2 lety +3

      I like the sound of that Alex, they sound like ideas australia could have implemented to prevent the impending housing crisis

    • @alexwtf80
      @alexwtf80 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Captain_Terp yup, it's a policy that pays off over time. In Italy 73% of population owns at least an house

    • @deviouskris3012
      @deviouskris3012 Před 2 lety

      @@Captain_Terp technically we do under the housing commission loans and first home buyers grants.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před 2 lety +1

      if youre going to cut out eastern europe you should also probably cut out the deserts in america my dude.

    • @alexwtf80
      @alexwtf80 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jonathanodude6660 it's a different matter. You americans have the bad habit to compare yourself to Europe as a whole, but Europe ISN'T a country.
      So maybe you should start to compare US to Italy, Germany, France, UK, Belgium, ..., ono by one, and see the results, Because if you want to compare to Europe, let's also include Canada, Mexico and the other minor countries...
      But that wouldn' t make much sense.
      In the specific analysis, EVEN taking into account eastern countries the difference in density is less than 10%. Also, crime rate is LOWER in western countries with higher density. My point is therefore absolutely valid: high density isn't an excuse for an insane crime rate.

  • @rosiec1974
    @rosiec1974 Před 2 lety +21

    In Australia..trespassing MIGHT get you prosecuted..not shot.
    I had a Csection.. Babu spent days in NICU.. we were in a single room and in for a week. All Baby Specialists, Therapists, Consultants.. nothing out of pocket.

    • @julesmasseffectmusic
      @julesmasseffectmusic Před 2 lety +2

      In oz 9 times out 10 wandering on to someone's property gets you someone to have a beer with at the local once you find it.

    • @kateemma22
      @kateemma22 Před 2 lety

      Most of the time trespassing will get you laughed at.

  • @jmbig
    @jmbig Před rokem

    correction... in France... if a pedestrian is knocked down and injured... you have to call the fire brigade the treatment is completely free... on the other hand... it automatically triggers the arrival of the police or the gendarmerie if you are in a rural area for the findings with presentation of the driver's license, vehicle papers, blood alcohol control and drug screening, measurement of brake marks to estimate the speed if there are any... and you will be summoned before a judge... for not having kept control of your vehicle and depending on the injuries you have caused... with a fine, possible withdrawal of the license, even prison...

  • @thomasdonadt227
    @thomasdonadt227 Před rokem +2

    I have been following your Reaction video closely and I am glad to live in Germany. Social security for working people has a very long history and goes back to a message from Kaiser Wilhelm I in 1883. Otto von Bismarck laid the foundation for the German social security system. Health insurance has existed since 1883, statutory accident insurance since 1884, pension insurance since 1889 and unemployment insurance since 1927. These insurances are mandatory for workers in Germany.
    Germany's social security system is still considered one of the best in the world

  • @tomoliver2961
    @tomoliver2961 Před 2 lety +27

    Your logic in the homeless is flawed. Yes by the math there are going to be more total homeless people but you also have more cities, more houses, more people paying tax etc. the girl states that you don’t see homeless people in the Austria, I assume Vienna. I’ve been there twice and you simply don’t see them. I’ve also been to LA and there are homeless everywhere. It’s quite shocking coming from Australia to see it. Yes we have homeless in Australia but there appear to be far more services available Le here for people if they are homeless to assist them back in their feet. Most homeless in Australia are for mental health reasons or serious drug and alcohol problems. Very rarely purely economic as if you have your faculties here you will be able to access support.

  • @philliplynch5943
    @philliplynch5943 Před 2 lety +88

    Hi Ian: Being homeless in Australia is more about family breakdowns or personal choice. Every unemployed Australian gets $650 per fortnight from the Government. Also Australia's GDP per capita is $53,000, whereas in the US it is $59,000. So I'm a bit confused by the lack of support for Americans. So Glad to see education in New Mexico is Free. Keep up the good work.

    • @aussiebornandbred
      @aussiebornandbred Před 2 lety +16

      The trouble is that ,,,,that $650 is barely enough to cover rent, let alone food ,power, phone, transport etc,etc,etc, which makes it almost impossible to get off the streets

    • @philliplynch5943
      @philliplynch5943 Před 2 lety +10

      @@aussiebornandbred. True and it could be much better. But there is $142 per fortnight rent assistance and free medical. I was comparing what happens in the US. They do not get any sort of support like us.

    • @TitanSummers
      @TitanSummers Před 2 lety +7

      @@aussiebornandbred As someone who is in the system they also give you a hand to get into a renal plus ongoing rent assistance and a discount on phone power and transport. This is on top of your fortnightly payment.

    • @jacobgnech5187
      @jacobgnech5187 Před 2 lety +7

      No every unemployed does not earn 650 p/fn. If you're under 22 and classed as a dependent. Meaning living with a parent - even if that parent barely makes enough for their rent and their bills- it's 350p/fn with no rent assistance. Or less than 200 a week to co er your share of rent, registration, food and bills etc. If you're classed as independent and under 22 then it 550 and rent assistance p/fn. So no, every unemployed Australian does not get 650

    • @readhistory2023
      @readhistory2023 Před 2 lety

      You sound like the EU living off the US's largess while they depend on the US for their security.

  • @brugudel
    @brugudel Před rokem +1

    Europe (continent) has 747 million people (2.5 times the US), big cities like Moscow, London, Paris, Madrid, Barcelona, Istanbul, Milano... so much for the homelessness "excuse". Also population and homelessness are totally unrelated (lots of homeless in San Jose, San Diego... Few in comparison in Hong-Kong, Tokyo, London, Brussels, Berlin...) Love your videos man, you are a very cool guy

  • @arturomieussens
    @arturomieussens Před rokem +1

    On the homelessness issue, population density in Europe is very similar to that of the US. Homelessness is caused by the lack of health and social services, without them just getting sick can make you homeless. That’s the whole point of social services and it’s not just charity, taking care of people is good for society.

  • @stephennewton2777
    @stephennewton2777 Před 2 lety +8

    Lived and worked in the US for four years. I have never seen so many homeless people on the streets in any other industrialized country.

  • @GenesisDanes
    @GenesisDanes Před 2 lety +25

    Mine was when we first moved to Iceland and my kids got super excited that they didn't have to have clear or mesh backpacks. The teachers who were showing us the school looked a little confused and I explained that our district back in the states had had a shooting a couple years prior and all the kids had to carry clear or mesh backpacks since.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před rokem +5

      Wow

    • @karlbark
      @karlbark Před 9 měsíci +1

      Welcome to you all from Iceland. 😄
      🇮🇸 -Karl Trausti

  • @herculanovalada2910
    @herculanovalada2910 Před rokem +2

    In Portugal calling a ambulance in a emergency is free of charge

  • @Zendard
    @Zendard Před rokem +2

    6:00 : Belgium(where I live) and Austria has an average population density of respectively 383 people per km^2 and 109 people per km^2 with some homeless people but almost none while America has an average of 36 people per km^2 with apparently a lot of homeless people, so it isn't a population density thing

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 Před 9 měsíci

      From Canada: Belgium. Now there's a history. Your King Leopold was quite the nasty piece of work. Killed and maimed thousands of Africans.

  • @javiervelasco3921
    @javiervelasco3921 Před 2 lety +33

    Thanks for doing this! I appreciate your channel, it takes some guts. I'm from Chile and spent 10 years in the US, and I was shocked of how the clueless people were to the rest of the world. One of the things I appreciate about bein back in Chile is my son doesn't have to learn to run in zig zag at school, that makes so sad for all the great people I met there and the friends I left behind.
    I discovered your channel from the ones you start to look into F1, but this is priceless content. In terms of cars, I'd recommend looking into Ayrton Senna!

    • @IWrocker
      @IWrocker  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for your kind words!! Welcome to the channel, I’ll take a look at Senna 😎🎉