6 LIES America Told Me! - Jovie's Home

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • Hi, welcome to Jovie's Home!
    Today I'm sharing some more of my perspective on what I believed before I moved to Europe from USA.
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @FrankenHerzEuropas
    @FrankenHerzEuropas Před 3 lety +2596

    Capitalism in Europe: You buy things that you need or like.
    Capitalism in the U.S.: You buy things, which you don't need, with money that you don't have, to impress people, who you don't like.

    • @arposkraft3616
      @arposkraft3616 Před 3 lety +20

      capitalism just means you use a fiat currency, the difference is a neolib neocon mentality vs a demlib and laboursocialist mentality in europe all of them functioning in a relative free market capitalist economy

    • @JoviesHome
      @JoviesHome  Před 3 lety +173

      That is pretty funny! In a sad sort of way.

    • @karimaogden3875
      @karimaogden3875 Před 3 lety +27

      Yep! Gotta keep up with the Jones-ses!

    • @zaklex3165
      @zaklex3165 Před 3 lety +80

      Correction, the U.S. economy is not based on Capitalism, it's based on Consumerism(with a trifle of Capitalism thrown in for fun).

    • @arposkraft3616
      @arposkraft3616 Před 3 lety +5

      @@zaklex3165 fair enough

  • @VRBLNSLT
    @VRBLNSLT Před 3 lety +4222

    Bulletproof backpacks for kids should be the global indicator for a failed society 🤦‍♂️

    • @helidude3502
      @helidude3502 Před 3 lety +110

      Lack of trash receptacles in public spaces are another.

    • @TTTzzzz
      @TTTzzzz Před 3 lety +70

      Even the police prefer shooting someone in the back. It think that 16 limes is the record.

    • @erict.watson2460
      @erict.watson2460 Před 3 lety +39

      @@TTTzzzz oh, so it's not to protect the contents of the rucksack then.

    • @helidude3502
      @helidude3502 Před 3 lety +8

      Peter
      And some thought those were for school shootings.

    • @jeffgraham6387
      @jeffgraham6387 Před 3 lety +32

      The US has 88 guns per 100 people......😨

  • @davewhetton8932
    @davewhetton8932 Před 2 lety +71

    Jovie, I am a Brit who has lived in America for over 20 years. The honeymoon period has totally worn off! I am utterly amazed speaking with some native born Americans regarding Communism and Socialism. The two words are used interchangeably in the US and most people don’t even realize they are not in any way the same thing. How can a society be so uneducated?

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před rokem

      "Uneducated" is when you post to someone as ignorant as this "Jovie" and attempt to make it sound like an educated conversation between educated people. What a joke. Ignorance is worldwide apparently.

    • @larryrivers6928
      @larryrivers6928 Před rokem +6

      The work ethics here in the america spelled with a lower case (a) is down right sad , job is number one , family life balance , really doesn't exist , try to achieve this and you'll be looking for another job , to take care of all , but still with the same work ethics,

    • @fredcollins8919
      @fredcollins8919 Před rokem

      No Worries as it's nothing which can't soon be fixed

    • @fredcollins8919
      @fredcollins8919 Před rokem

      @@larryrivers6928 that needs IMMEDIATE full reversal/changes for the better, towards a full European/Latín American modelo ASAP & more & despite all the trash news those changes in USA Are slowly starting to take shape & place (slow for Now but destined to speed up Big Time Very very soon) by both popular need & demand & more. A good work/life balance IS a top national/global priority, more so with each passing day (Long overdue)

    • @user-jo1ok4ev2h
      @user-jo1ok4ev2h Před 3 měsíci +2

      Because it is declared that America is the Greatest Nation in The World". If it is said often enough then it tends to be believed. It is like Baseball World Champion Series. When a team wins the fans go running around believing and declaring that they are "the world Champs", even though no team from other nations are allowed to participate. Sad, living life in a "Bubble"

  • @rorygee482
    @rorygee482 Před 3 lety +713

    As a European living in the states I can tell you that Americans need your sympathy. I’ve traveled widely but I have never experienced the level of brainwashing I’ve experienced here. There are wonderful people in the States but unfortunately even the highly educated are automatons. Most of it comes from a constant bombardment of fear. That fear leads to two things that make America exceptional. It incarcerates more of its citizens than any other country in the world and it has a military bigger than the next 26 countries combined. It excels in fear whilst it ranks 27th in education and in the 30’s for healthcare. It has a higher infant mortality than Cuba. It’s a sad society of ignorance, arrogance and insecurity.

    • @rorygee482
      @rorygee482 Před 3 lety +18

      @Oliver Smith The stats don’t lie. And nobody anywhere has free healthcare they just prioritize it the same way they do the military, it’s like an army but for healthcare. I think you make my point.

    • @rorygee482
      @rorygee482 Před 3 lety +27

      @Oliver Smith That libertarian wet dream looks like a dystopian hell hole. Or commonly known as Texas energy.

    • @asaenco
      @asaenco Před 3 lety +2

      @Oliver Smith yes and good hard working people are benefitting from it too

    • @yegmeshjwp
      @yegmeshjwp Před 3 lety +5

      Yes! Watching their TV, Holiday, I have never seen such disconcerting adverts geared towards increasing anxiety.

    • @asaenco
      @asaenco Před 3 lety +1

      And forgot to say, talk to you again after you were in a major trafic accident and need lots of surgery and hospital care

  • @catherinerobilliard7662
    @catherinerobilliard7662 Před 3 lety +1822

    I’m a European whose boss berated me for only taking two weeks holiday, when it was possible for me to take more. She insisted I take a month off and do something really special. I went travelling with my husband and came back feeling on top of the world, and raring to go. I still think of that holiday from time to time. She knew what she was doing.

    • @ThePixel1983
      @ThePixel1983 Před 3 lety +95

      @Rita Roork Really? You have nothing else that you enjoy in your life except for work?

    • @ThePixel1983
      @ThePixel1983 Před 3 lety +37

      @Rita Roork Okay, wow.

    • @andrecarvalho9637
      @andrecarvalho9637 Před 3 lety +56

      @Rita Roork Wow, that is really sad

    • @andrecarvalho9637
      @andrecarvalho9637 Před 3 lety +64

      @Rita Roork Because life is beautiful and short for us to waste. Time is precious and when I hear that people don't take time off, it blows my mind. Unless you are self employed and working on something really nice that deals with nature and you already enjoy everything that life can offer, then I agree with you.

    • @OzixiThrill
      @OzixiThrill Před 3 lety +52

      @Rita Roork There is really not much to understand there.
      You are either someone who really enjoys their work, or a workaholic, who pathologically obsesses over working; In either case, you are doing something that your psychology rewards you for already. A third alternative is that you have been psychologically abused into maniacally wanting to work, but I find that somewhat unlikely.
      Most people, however, are not workaholics and aren't fortunate enough to work in a field they enjoy, leading to them needing personal time to do things that they enjoy. It leads to their psychological states improving, allowing them to be "happier". It also leads to them having more energy to work.

  • @JeanAlb
    @JeanAlb Před 2 lety +133

    In the Netherlands:
    1. Kids can play safe on the street
    2. You dont get fired when you are pregnant
    3. You dont get fired when your sick and wanna stay home for a week your boss even support you here in the NL to stay home!!
    4. Cities have pavements to walk from A to B
    5. You dont need a car to do your thing
    6. Public schools are great
    7. When you work you have a lot of free time and holidays
    8. Money isnt king here
    9. Status, career or ego isnt important
    10. Affordable healthinsurance and good healthcare also mental healthcare for rich and poor. If you get cancer or a fertilitythreatment you dont get bankrupt.
    11. Kids are king here
    12. Studying is cheap here
    13. Not many homeless people and junkies here
    14. Great infrastructure and public transport
    15. Weapons are ilegal
    16. You dont need 3 jobs to survive
    17. Minimum income
    18. Vibrant citiycentres no giant malls and superstores outside the cities here
    19. Quality of life is much higher. We work to life comfy, we dont life to work.
    20. No fakepoliteness
    21. Kids can bike safe to their friends or school or sporttraining.
    22. Many playgardens, parks and places to relax
    23. No privateschools but good free schooling mixed with rich and poor, black and white.
    24. No ghettos
    25. Clean streets and cities
    26. No hierarchy on the job your boss is nothing more then your collegue.
    27. When you gave birth you get a nurse daily at your house!!
    28. As a consumer, you are extremely well protected against all kinds of things.
    29. If you cause an accident, you don't have to worry about losing your house.
    30. The government takes care of you in this country. For almost everything that happens and that you need.
    I can go on and on...

    • @tekstego9654
      @tekstego9654 Před rokem +3

      dude i was shocked by the first two things like, i thought that was like everywhere.

    • @manna6871
      @manna6871 Před rokem +1

      number 14 is not correct with the current climate lol.

    • @reddragonready
      @reddragonready Před rokem +1

      En aardig wat blinde fantasten🤣

    • @rudysmith1552
      @rudysmith1552 Před rokem +1

      About a quarter that it’s true for the US.

    • @Rina_TL
      @Rina_TL Před rokem +10

      @@rudysmith1552 Only a quarter?! These are all things you need to have a decent life. Not good, just decent.

  • @vapidrabbit198
    @vapidrabbit198 Před 2 lety +251

    i've lived in germany for 20 years, and i've learned to appreciate time and experiences much more than material things. in the end, you aren't going to remember all those cool clothes or expensive cars... you're going to remember time that you spent with loved ones.

    • @bunnymanmoe8819
      @bunnymanmoe8819 Před 2 lety +9

      Facts

    • @salatwurzel-4388
      @salatwurzel-4388 Před 2 lety +6

      Nothing but the truth.

    • @Alfv2009
      @Alfv2009 Před 2 lety +6

      This comment is gold!

    • @shallnotbeinfringed5087
      @shallnotbeinfringed5087 Před rokem

      You will own nothing and be happy

    • @kev3d
      @kev3d Před rokem

      The two are not mutually exclusive. Expensive cars, or even ordinary cars, can and often create a bonding experience between friends and family, particularly for males. Same with tools. And sound systems. And clothes. And Bicycles. And possibly even things like video game systems or cookware or furniture.
      What did you do with the time spent with your loved ones? Sit in an empty room? No. You went places and did things using cars or planes or special clothes, or equipment and so on.

  • @bcreason
    @bcreason Před 2 lety +26

    I’m Canadian and I often go on cruises where I meet Americans and discuss the difference between Canada and the US. The amount of misinformation is incredible. I got called a Marxist when I explained how financially inefficient having dozens of insurance companies with multimillion dollar salaries for their executives, sales staffs, marketing, and paying dividends is compared to a single government agency. I explained to one guy how the government uses bulk pricing to negotiate drug prices and was told that we must be using expired drugs.

    • @DjWellDressedMan
      @DjWellDressedMan Před 9 měsíci

      I grew up in the USA and Americans are Brain washed to think public healthcare is a commie threat.
      OHIP keeps me healthier, no costs and Canadians live longer than Americans.

  • @TheExplorder
    @TheExplorder Před 3 lety +1844

    Food for thought: The "radical leftist" senator Bernie Sanders would be a centrist in the Netherlands.

    • @juttalio1664
      @juttalio1664 Před 3 lety +355

      That is what Americans don't understand. Everything and everyone who wants the people of a state to have a good live, is communist in their eyes. What a joke.

    • @hape3862
      @hape3862 Před 3 lety +233

      @@juttalio1664 Like Rutger Bregman (a Dutch himself) put it: "It isn't communism, it is common sense."

    • @TheExplorder
      @TheExplorder Před 3 lety +46

      @@hape3862 his interview with Trevor Noah was great. I like it when Dutch people appear on American television.

    • @KootFloris
      @KootFloris Před 3 lety +105

      @@juttalio1664 That's the power of Red Scare propaganda for you. Over a 100 years of that, has made many Americans shout Marxism, when you just suggest something left of Biden. Crazy!

    • @dimitrivisser27
      @dimitrivisser27 Před 3 lety +22

      Trump about why to vote for him: You can choose between FREEDOM and SOCIALISM! ;-)

  • @jefflebuhn405
    @jefflebuhn405 Před 3 lety +506

    A 66 yo American, who has lived in The Netherlands and Germany totaling 18 years now. We chose to retire in Europe (Germany) for practically all the reasons you’ve mentioned.

    • @johnnyk3950
      @johnnyk3950 Před 2 lety +25

      nice to hear that you like it here. i'm glad i live in europe and most europeans don't know how lucky they are.

    • @fizbanw.9157
      @fizbanw.9157 Před 2 lety +24

      @@johnnyk3950 I live in germany and I think that Im lucky to be born here. I wouldnt want to live elsewhere. But I also think that germany could do much better. If I would put my words into numbers, it would be like this(1-10, 10 is best):
      South amerika gets 2-3
      USA gets a 4
      some others gets 5
      germany, france U.K. and so on gets a 6
      Denmark Sweden Finnland gets a 7
      My numbers would be somethg like this(sry if I did offend anyone). So while Im lucky that I live in a coutry with good numbers, I still would like to live in a 10.
      Maybe thats why u hear a lot europeans complaining. Most know how lucky they are, but they still think it could be better.

    • @newbris
      @newbris Před 2 lety +29

      @@fizbanw.9157 Well said. A true patriot recognises the issues with their country and tries to help fix them. An anti-patriot tells people to go back where they came from or don’t come home whenever they hear criticism. They make their country worse.

    • @jennifermenth-pavel1260
      @jennifermenth-pavel1260 Před 2 lety +5

      When my military service was done I almost got what they referred to as a "European out". Not a day goes by that I don't regret that because I'm trying to figure out how to get back to Europe.

    • @MyTubeSVp
      @MyTubeSVp Před 2 lety +1

      @@jennifermenth-pavel1260 You buy a plane ticket, fix lots of paperwork, and you’re done, no ?

  • @c.williams6903
    @c.williams6903 Před 2 lety +51

    I am an average American with an immigrant wife. It’s not until I started seeing the United States through her eyes that I started to realize I have been living in a red white and blue lie all my life.
    She has describe what the average day/year is in her home country, and it makes me extremely envious. Especially when you realize that they make more if not the same amount of money as Americans per year.
    And as you age you will realize how very important it is to be able to have access to affordable healthcare.
    I once was a Republican, a conservative, and a member of the US military. But once you visit other countries can you see what the average citizen is afforded, you begin to realize how badly you have been lied to. We are currently planning our immigration out of the US permanently.

    • @Venusbabe66
      @Venusbabe66 Před 2 lety +4

      As a citizen from an American ally country, I applaud your remarkable honesty, courage, intelligence and foresight to understand and accept the ugly truth of... how and why the corrupt, immoral, power and greed-driven unfettered capitalist US system is failing its majority non-elite population and is on the brink of a 2nd civil war. I travelled much of the USA in 1991 and was initially very shocked and saddened at the extent of the poverty and homlessness - whole families living and begging on the streets in San Francisco, LA, NYC etc. I would have loved to visit family, friends and places I missed the first time, however, I probably will never return. It's so sad because the USA has such amazing natural beauty and so much potential to be better. Best wishes for you and your family from Australia.🇦🇺👍

    • @Beedo_Sookcool
      @Beedo_Sookcool Před 10 měsíci +1

      I don't believe in luck, so I'll wish you success, mate.

    • @ashleighsparkle8810
      @ashleighsparkle8810 Před měsícem

      You will be back. There is a reason she moved to our country.

  • @acooksla
    @acooksla Před rokem +49

    I agree 100% - as someone who spent my whole life living in America and now live in Spain, it’s so wonderful to be living here where we are safe, treated equally, where there are no dangerous ares, no guns. It’s a real pleasure to be in an integrated and loving society. They all take care of each other here and the health care is top notch. We are finally stress free in our lifestyle.

  • @Nimitz_oceo
    @Nimitz_oceo Před 3 lety +571

    American here, living in Switzerland. Never going back

    • @annmcdaniel1092
      @annmcdaniel1092 Před 3 lety +58

      Please adopt me!! I'm already 70 years old so I won't be a problem for long.😇

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 3 lety +4

      Cool because we don't want you back.

    • @Nimitz_oceo
      @Nimitz_oceo Před 3 lety +94

      @@jasondonovan1408 I checked you out, you wrote"I don't think a bum should get healthcare" it is rather sad to discover that you have been lied to your whole life, I check your profile too, you are filled with negativity and hatred of people for absolutely no reason. You really need help. And if you were in Europe you could have gotten counseling free of charge. You also had mentioned that you had to pay $400 a month to avoid late fee? Well my question is how did you get into that situation to begin with? You come across as someone who rather illiterate when it comes to all finance, fiscal policy and just basic Civic duty. Oh let me guess you don't know what that last one is, probably because you were among those who stormed the capitol recently. And yet you call yourself a patriot. Open your eyes, You have too hatred for a common man, and most of them you have never even met. Get help

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 3 lety

      @@Nimitz_oceo Wow....talk about someone who can't seem to understand what they read. You have gotten every one of your points regarding me incorrect. It's not even worth me going into each as they are so wrong. $400 late fee??? Do some research if you care to comment on other countries policies. It was a penalty if you don't have healthcare. Surprise.

    • @Nimitz_oceo
      @Nimitz_oceo Před 3 lety +51

      @@jasondonovan1408 dude you are fuming with hatred. You are lying to yourself into thinking that if you are part of nation wide health care System you are therefore paying for someone else. Get your head straight. I got everything right. And you are wrong. I am an American citizen and I have every damn right to comment on everything American. It is people like you who are so ignorant to point that you are often convinced by politicians to vote against your own interests. You do it every year, it's a shame you can't see that

  • @KiffinGish
    @KiffinGish Před 3 lety +2100

    Before I came here to The Netherlands, I was led to believe that I should feel sorry for Europeans because they were poor and suffered under a repressive regime of socialism. I had also been brainwashed that America was the best country in the world, whatever that means. Boy was I wrong. When I compare my life with that of my friends and relatives, I feel very thankful that I had the courage to stay here and start afresh, although at first it wasn't that easy at all.

    • @mweskamppp
      @mweskamppp Před 3 lety +229

      Are there really people in the USA who tell others that the countries in the EU are socialistic?

    • @carimavandijk1091
      @carimavandijk1091 Před 3 lety +218

      @@mweskamppp yeah, some people in America see social democratic countrys as hardcore communist. Probably to do with the red scare of the cold war

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 Před 3 lety +36

      Parts of Europe are socialism and others aren't, since it's not one country. Most of Europe is in EU, they are EU member states, but still not one country

    • @mweskamppp
      @mweskamppp Před 3 lety +163

      @@dutchgamer842 I don't know a socialist country in europe. Would you name one or some more, please?

    • @Linda-hs1lk
      @Linda-hs1lk Před 3 lety +143

      @@mweskamppp I knew an American who wondered how I could live in a communist country. I mean, what?? He also got pissed when I talked about insurances (we insure about anything and it's affordable) and wondered why I even thought I EARNED those insurances. Lol.

  • @manxx25
    @manxx25 Před 2 lety +45

    Neighbor diagnosed Stage IV lung cancer. Worked at a hotel doing maintenance work. Had to work until a week before death because if he lost his job he lost his insurance. America seems hostile towards its citizens. She couldn't keep her slavery, but feudalism found a way. Middle Class shrinks and many learn the feel of lower-caste living. They punch down. They punch down.

    • @marnienorris
      @marnienorris Před rokem

      He could easily get Medicaid.

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před rokem +3

      They are hostile. Doesn't matter how hard you work. Or whether or not you're sick.
      Because they're just going to keep asking you to babysit them. It's not about what's logical or ethical to them. It's about their emotions and bias.
      It's not that we don't have kindness. We have plenty of it. But we don't do anything with the people who are unkind.
      And they push back against the rest of us. With as much weight (and money) as possible.
      They don't contribute anything. They don't mentor others. They just keep treating other people poorly.
      That's why we're stuck in this situation.

    • @Baritone45
      @Baritone45 Před 4 měsíci

      @@marnienorris But there is such a stigma to that. He probably never even considered it, because that seemed unthinkably dishonorable to him.

  • @sunnysnod7483
    @sunnysnod7483 Před 2 lety +18

    I'm in the UK. Someone very dear just passed from cancer. She was young, healthy but had a blister, thought nothing of it. Went to a Dr for diagnosis far too late. With no chance of saving her the NHS acted fast, it still offered every type of medication and treatment possible, including new expensive treatments, just to give her more time with her children. No death squad wrote her off. She sadly lost her fight yesterday. We her family don't have any medication,, hospital, hospice or transport bills. Everything medical has been paid without our involvement, we have not had to think about any of it. When crisis like this hits, the last thing you need is to worry about how you're going to pay for it.

  • @nickgov66
    @nickgov66 Před 3 lety +1233

    They have "death panels" in the US, they are called "Insurance company boards of directors".

    • @urduib
      @urduib Před 3 lety +27

      Valid point indeed

    • @timothycsauer1
      @timothycsauer1 Před 3 lety +2

      Except no one seems to ever point out valid examples of people dying from decisions made by insurance companies. In the US if a person's life is in danger they get needed health care that is always immediately available. Under socialized health care systems people die on waiting lists all the time because the treatments are not immediately available. Although far from perfect, US health care is the best in the world. The fact that every European and Canadian who can comes to the US for all their health care needs says it all.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Před 3 lety +100

      @@timothycsauer1 .
      Bollocks, emergency treatment is always available on the NHS and no large bills follow.
      At least no one has to beg people not to call an ambulance because they can't afford it, as seen in the US.
      US healthcare ranks lower in world rankings for quality than any European country.

    • @timothycsauer1
      @timothycsauer1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@grahvis those "Rankings" are produced by people trying to promote socialized health care.
      Every day people in Europe and Canada die over health care rationing, not in the US.
      Health care is expensive in the US mostly as indirect results of Leftist policies.
      No one uses socialized health care if they have a choice. Every European or Canadian who can come to America for all their health care needs.
      The biggest single reason European countries and Canada can have socialized health care and other welfare state policies is from indirect subsidization from Americans.

    • @nickgov66
      @nickgov66 Před 3 lety +111

      @@timothycsauer1 you really have been brainwashed by the far right, there is, I'm afraid no hope for you.

  • @ourworldfinallyelaine
    @ourworldfinallyelaine Před 2 lety +1414

    I left the states last October. I was tired of being told I was “free” while feeling trapped in a society that increasingly lacks humanity. I loved my country, but I also love work/life balance and health insurance. I’m now an EU resident snd do not plan to ever return.

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 2 lety +27

      And we are glad. Trust me.

    • @logann-mackenziefroste563
      @logann-mackenziefroste563 Před 2 lety +41

      How were you able to move to the Europe ?

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před 2 lety +74

      Sad that you left a country you love, but I admire that you went through with it. I'm sure that half the people on this globe dream of spending some time living somewhere else - because there's a country /place /culture /language they just fell in love with, or out of necessity and most never really make the attempt.
      I hope you'll be well in the EU. Best of luck :)

    • @eswarjj
      @eswarjj Před 2 lety +87

      Unlike @jason donavan’s schadenfreude, I am truly glad you made it over there and are enjoying it.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před 2 lety +65

      @@eswarjj Not so much Schadenfreude but rather hostility and ... I don't know, viciousness?
      That and the sort of intolerance that views critic / differing opinions as an attack and an insult.
      So basically: anti-democratic.
      You'll probably find them in any country, but once they approach being main stream and there's no escaping, I can certainly understand why somebody would want to leave.
      On some historical events, I wish from my heart that others had made the same decision while they still could.

  • @Driver2616
    @Driver2616 Před 2 lety +282

    There was an American guy here in Ireland a couple of months ago who couldn’t get his head around the fact that the emergency helicopter ambulance that brought him to the hospital, when he got sick, was free. He didn’t have to pay. And the treatment he got in the hospital, he didn’t have to pay….

    • @bjornh4664
      @bjornh4664 Před 2 lety +52

      My wife suffered a brain hemorraghe almost four months ago. She was flown by ambulance helicopter to one of the best clinics in Sweden, and was in intensive care for almost four weeks worth 8,800 USD a day. As she's recovering, she receives daily physiotherapy (she's still in hospital). All this for 11 dollars a day. I pay the equivalent of maybe 3,500 USD a year in taxes towards the healthcare system, and this year I've got that back so many times over.

    • @rubenjanssen1672
      @rubenjanssen1672 Před 2 lety +23

      @@bjornh4664 exacly and that is why i gladly pay taxes
      \

    • @bmw803
      @bmw803 Před 2 lety +5

      @@rubenjanssen1672 Then it means it's not free. The problem is that when it's paid thru taxes, there is mismanagement and abuse, which escalates costs. Having a safety net paid by taxes is fine, but it should be a safety net, not the norm.

    • @bmw803
      @bmw803 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bjornh4664 Who pays the gap?? If you put in 3,500 and it costs 8,800, someone is getting in debt. That's why most western governments ARE DROWNING in debt, but you don't see it on the individual level. Now, they're printing money out of the wazoo to pay for all the free stuff. It's basic math.

    • @brianmahoney3256
      @brianmahoney3256 Před 2 lety +19

      I live in Ireland. Dislocated my knee. Attended by two paramedics, carried out of forest by 6 firefighters, ambulance trip to hospital, two trips to hospital, including x-ray. All 100 euros (which I could have got away with not paying). Excellent help when I needed it.

  • @B20C0
    @B20C0 Před 2 lety +19

    "We buy shit we don't need, with money we don't have, to impress people we don't like." -- George Carlin

  • @charismahornum-fries691
    @charismahornum-fries691 Před 3 lety +768

    Happiness in social democratic countries is not laughing hysterically every day. It’s about a general sense of contentment, inner peace, trust in people around you and a life without a general fear.

    • @marybusch6182
      @marybusch6182 Před 3 lety +4

      Great descriptions!!!

    • @marybusch6182
      @marybusch6182 Před 3 lety +22

      @Oliver Smith are you crazy. I guess you like 5 million people going bankrupt due to healthcare. Nice! It’s fine if you get “professional courtesy” but that is no longer guaranteed.

    • @marybusch6182
      @marybusch6182 Před 3 lety +11

      @Oliver Smith wow wow wow.

    • @nazrtanginet1282
      @nazrtanginet1282 Před 3 lety +23

      @Oliver Smith are you drunk? Your lack of education is showing. Couldn't afford school?

    • @TheAverlorn
      @TheAverlorn Před 3 lety +7

      + knowing that you will be looked after when you need it without being displaced into poverty.

  • @rhondamiller421
    @rhondamiller421 Před 3 lety +1338

    I’m Australian and your definition of freedom collates with mine. The freedom to see a doctor and not stress financially. The freedom to know that if I’m unemployed, sick, disabled or aged I’m not financially abandoned and the freedom to walk out my door and the last thing on my mind is getting shot

    • @idaborgelt8751
      @idaborgelt8751 Před 3 lety +47

      🇭🇲 Were so lucky here in Aust. We've almost beat covid19 as well. It takes reading & seeing how other countries function to appreciate what u have. I think Aust has the best of both worlds. 1st time ever today that I feel proud of my country. Altho, Nederland is awesome, fantastic culture & gezelligheid ❤

    • @lancearn7332
      @lancearn7332 Před 3 lety +21

      You hit the nail on the head Rhonda. We are so lucky. We may not live on the best country in the world, but it is pretty darn close.
      ''
      Oh, and a big thank you to Premier Mark McGowan for keeping all West Aussies safe and alive in '' a Covid 2020 world ''.

    • @JosephKano
      @JosephKano Před 3 lety +29

      They are trying to take away what we have in Australia and the LNP are getting their mates rich while doing it. We must fight to keep it.

    • @gorillarawfare1963
      @gorillarawfare1963 Před 3 lety +10

      @@lancearn7332 West Aussies represent 👊. I also like you admitted we aren’t in the best country in the world, tbh no country is or can be, especially since the needs of each individual is different. But as long as it’s close, and we keep trying to be better, then you can be happy.
      My uncle was a state Liberal member for forty years, and my aunt has even said, I can’t vote for McGowan, but I also can’t fault him. Honestly you couldn’t understand how big of a praise that is.

    • @JosephKano
      @JosephKano Před 3 lety +5

      @@gorillarawfare1963 stay strong WA. I'm an easterner, I'd love to visit WA however I'm only going to do it once we have this thing beat. Then when it's safe I'll be bringing my tourist dollaryoos and catching up with my WA mates. McGowan has been a damn fine Premier. Kicked that F$& C$&t Palmer in the teeth repeatedly.

  • @dianyadira
    @dianyadira Před rokem +37

    When my husband and I were dating, we talked about these things and agreed with pretty much everything you said. We always talked about moving to a better structured country. Now we have a 5 month old baby and we are seriously looking into leaving. The brainwashing here is scary. My husband is selling his business (as it is a local business) and we are looking at leaving soon after the sale. Hopefully everything works out for us.

    • @JoshuaSchwarz107
      @JoshuaSchwarz107 Před rokem +1

      I am sure it will work out for you guys 😊
      Where will you go ?

    • @reddragonready
      @reddragonready Před rokem +4

      As a European..here's to hoping you will leave silly religion behind as well

    • @judithhope8970
      @judithhope8970 Před rokem +1

      Good luck.

    • @akaMokassin
      @akaMokassin Před rokem +2

      I wish you all the best for your future. I would say come to Austria, but I feel there are better alternatives out there :)

    • @karl-heinzdauben39
      @karl-heinzdauben39 Před rokem +2

      All the best. I mean that you can live well in the Netherlands or Germany. The Dutch speak better English, but we Germans speak it too.

  • @rzholland
    @rzholland Před 2 lety +6

    I am a Brit living in the US and I am constantly saying to people "Why do you all put up with this"

    • @Kevin15047
      @Kevin15047 Před rokem

      What you have to understand is the whole country has been brainwashed. We're told from the cradle this is the greatest country on Earth. And a good number of us are kept too poor to travel so what evidence is there to the contrary? For 12 years of school we're made to pledge our allegiance to a f****** piece of cloth and it has big North Korea energy. Coincidentally, to hear people talk you would think every other country on Earth was North Korea. And then we pat ourselves on the back for not being North Korea as if clearing THAT bar should be some kind of an accomplishment.
      I don't think I need to tell you how badly education has been gutted to hell. We are purposefully kept ignorant.
      In the words of George Carlin, "they want people just smart enough to run the machines, but not smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they're getting f*****."
      And sadly most of us have no idea how badly we're getting f*****.

  • @sdm9099
    @sdm9099 Před 3 lety +1433

    I worked and lived in US and have a US wife but we live in the UK - totally agree about what freedom is. Our friends and family in the US really dont understand that we feel truly safe and free. We were once, seriously asked how we defend ourselves without guns. Our reply was to ask "defend ourselves from what?"

    • @INeed333Quid
      @INeed333Quid Před 3 lety +194

      Seeing Americans having so much trouble trying to figure out how to solve all their gun related issues makes me facepalm.

    • @INeed333Quid
      @INeed333Quid Před 3 lety +10

      @Rita Roork Yeah, we want you to stay there don't worry

    • @INeed333Quid
      @INeed333Quid Před 3 lety +13

      @Rita Roork Still no free health service though

    • @EOTA564
      @EOTA564 Před 2 lety +39

      I lived in a major US city in a Red State with a high crime rate for 4 years and to be honest I never felt unsafe there. There were certainly ‘no go’ areas but they were easy to avoid. The one place I did feel unsafe was San Francisco with all the gangs of drunken homeless bums staggering around harassing tourists.
      You will never hear anyone in mainstream media tell you the truth about crime in the USA because it simply isn’t palatable to modern sensibilities.
      The UK and rest of Europe are hardly crime free paradises. UK cities are awash with drunken violence on Friday and Saturday evenings. There’s a lot of violent crime in large European cities albeit no guns. But most guns used in homicides in the US are illegal in any case.

    • @deason2365
      @deason2365 Před 2 lety +1

      Human nature

  • @sergarlantyrell7847
    @sergarlantyrell7847 Před 3 lety +548

    Freedom?
    Try having more than 2 choices come election time...

    • @roguesheep3083
      @roguesheep3083 Před 2 lety +31

      And there's barely a difference.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před 2 lety +28

      But surely that'd be the dreaded socialism?
      Oh wait. It'sd actually be avoiding "the greatest political evil under our constitution", according to John Adams. My bad.
      _"There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measuresin opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest evil under our constitution."_

    •  Před 2 lety +3

      We do have more than two, those are just the main ones. Also not sure how that somehow means there's no freedom as if that's an indicator.

    • @sergarlantyrell7847
      @sergarlantyrell7847 Před 2 lety +13

      @ You know how long it's been since the last time a state (and therefore seats in the electoral college) was won by people other than from the 2 main parties...?
      Over half a century (53 years). Given that the average age in the US is 38, that means that for all intents and purposes, most people have never seen an election with effectively more than 2 choices.

    • @jeanforest8060
      @jeanforest8060 Před 2 lety +24

      You don't have TWO choices, you only have ONE: between Republicans and Democrats. That sounds to me like a single choice, not two!

  • @JohnSmith-zv8km
    @JohnSmith-zv8km Před 2 lety +100

    I traveled to the USA a lot on business and pleasure and while I got on well with the people that I met I was always surprised by people believing in the points that you have raised. Even sophisticated people held that America was so much better than Europe and confused socialism with social care.

    • @janentomenkafka
      @janentomenkafka Před 2 lety +3

      Hi John, I guess it has to do with size. As a US citizen you don't have to leave your country to go on holiday, whether you look for the sun or want to go skiing. Europeans are confronted with differences all the time. I guess we also have more "foreign" news in our media.

    • @JohnSmith-zv8km
      @JohnSmith-zv8km Před 2 lety +2

      @@janentomenkafka Hi Jan I think that you may be right. It was surprising also that a number of people I met did not have a passport, most did for business reasons. I have to admit though it is one of life pleasures meeting people from other countries. I have been lucky in working for global organisations who moved lots of people around the globe.

    • @jamesbra4410
      @jamesbra4410 Před 2 lety

      Yeah well there really is no freedom of speech as they parrot because the society is extremely harsh to survive in so those that manage to do well are agreeable and often accept the narratives without questioning. That alternative well lets just say you can be homeless and removed from employment very fast. You don't even have to be arrested to be legally excluded from living you just need one blemish like an eviction, job termination, or missed monthly debt payment.

    • @npickard4218
      @npickard4218 Před 2 lety

      I've been to 9 European nations, some of them several times. I also have lived in two of them for extended periods of time. My conclusion: I like Europe but America is better.

    • @JohnSmith-zv8km
      @JohnSmith-zv8km Před 2 lety +5

      @@npickard4218 The USA is not America. I am sure there are things in the USA that are better such as >>>>> I cannot think of any. I can think of ways that they are different and that is fine. WHat you mean I think is that you prefer the USA which is also fine.

  • @tails18boy
    @tails18boy Před 2 lety +94

    Growing up in Europe I just assumed that the States had some sort of NHS, that everyone gets healthcare, I assumed that there was no homeless problem, I assumed there was paid parental leave and strong labor laws. Then I went to the states and I was shocked, no labor laws, massive homeless problem because apperantly homes are considered investment first a home second. And when I looked at the healthcare, things was so expensive and confusing with in and out networks, deductibles and copays. Even with the ACA that allows people to get health insurance regardless of employer (because this wasn't common sense already) when I looked into it I saw yes it is possible for an Americano to get near 0 monthly premiums through the ACA... But if that American gets sick the deductible and copay was astronomical high and services not guaranteed. And I was like how in the world does an American in the most common jobs, literally 50% of the labor market in fast food, retail, warehouse, teamster, how could they afford this? What do they just pay a high premium and live pay check to pay check? Do they pay a low premium and pray they don't get sick the next 5 or 10 years because in either case they just go into debt if something happens to them? How could anyone think this is normal? This is insanity!

    • @suspendedhatch
      @suspendedhatch Před 2 lety

      ACA and other social programs are In Name Only. The existence of these programs alleviates guilt for the priviledged, but in practice they are not available to those that need them. Impossible Means Testing, defunding etc ensure that no money is “wasted” on social programs and instead is chaneled to the wealthy and their corporations.

    • @s.stevens4520
      @s.stevens4520 Před rokem

      Yes! Most Americans live paycheck to paycheck and have a ton of debt. America is a house of cars waiting to fall.

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před rokem +1

      Insanity is when you take a trip to the US and assume that the entire country is the same throughout as where you traveled. I can understand how this could be true for your tiny country so I get it....but use your brain when thinking about a country like the US. You can't get a feel for it with a vacation trip to NY. Sorry.

    • @auggiet8380
      @auggiet8380 Před rokem +6

      @@jasondonovan1408 *sigh* I have lived all over the US. Would LOVE to leave and move somewhere with more common sense and solidarity amongst its people.
      The US is garbage, no matter where you live here. Some places are worse than others, yeah, but none of it is “good” compared to other developed nations.
      I don’t understand you. The US does not need you defending it all over this comment section.

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před rokem

      @@auggiet8380
      So you would love to leave yet you don't? I may be assuming but based on what you wrote:
      1. You can't afford travel.
      2. You have never traveled nor lived abroad (especially Europe).
      3. You have no concept of what "garbage" actually is (see #1.)
      With no actual knowledge to base any of your assumptions, your response is foolish.
      I have lived in Europe and traveled a lot. I've also lived in the US on both coasts and in the middle.
      I'm not poor but I can assure you that being poor sucks no matter what country you live in.
      If you have only lived in poor areas of the US (or any country), it sucks.
      Some parts of your post that stand out and lead me to my assumptions.....
      "more common sense and solidarity amongst its people". This is really ignorant. Europeans are definitely not in solidarity amongst themselves. If you spent any time with them you'd figure this out quite quickly.
      And this: "but none of it is “good” compared to other developed nations". Again, you have obviously not lived in a decent area of any country. All countries have their crappy areas but I can assure you (from experience) that there is nowhere in Europe or anywhere else where no comparable place exists in the US that either matches or surpasses it.
      So once you aquire some knowledge and first hand experience, maybe even some success economically.....then, and only then should you comment with authority. You aren't in a position to do that yet.
      The grass isn't always greener and if your idea of a great country is one that pays for you and does "for you".....with you contributing nothing, well.....read this:
      "Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country".
      That's it. Nothing is free and nobody wants you to go to their country if you just want free stuff.

  • @davidschaftenaar6530
    @davidschaftenaar6530 Před 3 lety +577

    I am currently 31 years old. When I was 29, I developed critical heart failure due to a birth defect I was unaware of. Had this happened to me in America, you would not be reading this right now. Universal healthcare saved my life.

    • @mariacheebandidos7183
      @mariacheebandidos7183 Před 3 lety +16

      far more people with far worse conditions get treated in the US everyday.
      don't believe the exaggerations. American health system maybe expensive if you don't have insurance, but it is still the best in the world.

    • @davidschaftenaar6530
      @davidschaftenaar6530 Před 3 lety +36

      ​@@mariacheebandidos7183 There's not a whole lot of other conditions with survival rates below 10% a year out from onset. I spent about three weeks in the hospital, three days of which in the ICU. You can't honestly tell me that wouldn't have bankrupted most Americans. I've also seen the insurance rates charged for the same level of healthcare guaranteed to all citizens of my nation, they can run into the low thousands. The quality of your healthcare is top notch, yes - but I struggle to see how that's all that relevant if only a small fraction of your population can actually access it fully. Don't get me wrong, I didn't say what I said to put your country down in the slightest... it's a fantastic country; I was commenting on a specific policy that I think is holding America back tremendously. What benefits do you see to the U.S. healthcare system as it is today?

    • @mariacheebandidos7183
      @mariacheebandidos7183 Před 3 lety +5

      @@davidschaftenaar6530 the American health system is designed for insurance, no one expects people to pay those bills out of pocket. employers are required to provide insurance to employees but you could also add to it for a better coverage, depending on your needs. low income and old folks have medicaid and Medicare (government)
      don't know what country you are from but America is more diverse and more complex than any other country, so systems that may seem good in smaller, homologous countries probably wouldn't work here. even so, hospitals are required by law to treat every patient and those hospitals bills are not a crime so people who can't afford to, just don't pay them (those bills are meant/designed for ins. companies NOT for individuals)
      money does motivate, probably why a lot of smart medical professionals, researcher... come to the US, which helps in innovations and even inventions in the sector. chances are, most of the medicines and procedure used to treat your situation came from the US health system. and every year thousands of people from around the world come to US for treatment they can't get anywhere else.
      not one bit worried about putting the US down, just annoying that there's increasing amount of these "americans" adding to this misinformation (just for attention and clicks/views). wouldn't mind a well researched take, based on facts and in context. even point out the pro and cons of the different systems. America is not where it is today in the world because everything it does is all bad.

    • @ratofvengence
      @ratofvengence Před 3 lety +59

      @@mariacheebandidos7183 "American health system maybe expensive if you don't have insurance, but it is still the best in the world."
      I guess that's why you have a sub-standard life expectancy...
      "the American health system is designed for insurance"
      The biggest cause of personal bankruptcy in the US is healthcare, over 44,000 die annually due to the cost of healthcare.
      "America is more diverse and more complex than any other country"
      Not even close lol. 13% of Americans were born overseas, that's over 26% in Australia for example. Several European nations have diverse cultural groups going back centuries.

    • @bernardthedisappointedowl6938
      @bernardthedisappointedowl6938 Před 3 lety +35

      @@mariacheebandidos7183 If the US system is so great, how come people from the UK live longer on average than people in the US? ^oo^

  • @thehallswayy
    @thehallswayy Před 2 lety +877

    Living in the USA I think a lot of young people are starting to realize that we have a bad deal living here compared to European countries.

    • @simplybookcovers4324
      @simplybookcovers4324 Před 2 lety +95

      I think you´re right. I moved to Europe when I saw no realistic life perspective for myself in the States. I asked myself questions and the answers to my questions were pretty shitty. I began to compare the rest of the world to the U.S. I spoke to friends overseas, informed myself, made a long list of pros and cons. And with each passing day I became more miserable knowing I was more likely going to fall under the poverty radar if I had approached my dreams. So, I moved over here at age 20. The sad part is: If America had only half of what Europe has to offer then I would´ve stayed. Now, I´m almost 40 and I don´t want to trade life here for a life in America- At least not in its current state.

    • @SheIsTristine
      @SheIsTristine Před 2 lety +7

      Then please leave!!

    • @mtsenskmtsensk5113
      @mtsenskmtsensk5113 Před 2 lety +72

      He has left America, is English your first language? What he has said is that he has a better deal where he is now and America is a poor choice compared to Europe. Well that is obvious to the rest of the world.

    • @simplybookcovers4324
      @simplybookcovers4324 Před 2 lety +15

      @@mtsenskmtsensk5113 Exactly.

    • @simplybookcovers4324
      @simplybookcovers4324 Před 2 lety +23

      @@SheIsTristine Why must anyone go when there´s an easier solution that doesn´t involve leaving the country.

  • @theeclecticlifewithsam
    @theeclecticlifewithsam Před rokem +13

    As an American still living in America, I agree with everything you said. Great video and thanks for your insights!

  • @suzannahmontreal1051
    @suzannahmontreal1051 Před 2 lety +186

    I'm a Canadian living in Montréal like 70 miles from the US border and there's a huge difference between the two countries. Everything you've mentioned about the Netherlands we have the same in Canada. The way America sees itself and the way the rest of the word sees America, it's a giant chasm. I feel bad for America bc they have been brainwashed and kept in ignorance for so long that they became blind about their own reality. American people could treat themselves way better 💜

    • @wendytruscott1609
      @wendytruscott1609 Před 2 lety +26

      And if you’re like us in Ontario, we are among thousands who have lost any desire to even visit the U.S. on a holiday. This could mean millions lost in tourism dollars, especially from “ Snowbirds”. For the last fifteen years or so, we would spend a month or two in Florida. The good weather was the only reason. Now, even that isn’t enough of an incentive. Fear of violence and insane attitudes to so many things make us too uncomfortable. We once saw a young woman on a bike get knocked down by a car. Despite her pain from a probably broken arm, she begged people not to call an ambulance, as she had no insurance. Then she phoned her boyfriend and apologized for her accident, which wasn’t even her fault. That’s tragic.

    • @isabelleblanchet3694
      @isabelleblanchet3694 Před 2 lety +10

      Why would any Canadian want to go to the US when Canada is ranked #1 country in the world for the quality of life?

    • @kontiuka
      @kontiuka Před 2 lety +2

      @@isabelleblanchet3694 According to one study for one year. I'm not American but the States is unbeatable in so many ways. And of course it has many problems. So, it's never cut and dry.

    • @andrecostermans7109
      @andrecostermans7109 Před 2 lety +4

      about brainwashing ; yep, sometimes I feel there is little to less difference when hearing a North-Korean and North-Americans about their achievements, ... great, amazing, unbeatable ...

    • @hassandavis
      @hassandavis Před 2 lety +5

      @@isabelleblanchet3694 Unless you are Native American, of course. But, otherwise, indeed.

  • @Dutch1961
    @Dutch1961 Před 3 lety +643

    Basically our society is based on solidarity. Everyone, no exeption, at one day can find themselves in a situation that they are unemployed, disabled or in need of an expensive medical treatment. Noone can bear these costs on it's own, but together we can bear these costs for all of us. Call it socialism, call it solidarity, I just call it human decency.

    • @anneliesS04
      @anneliesS04 Před 3 lety +36

      Well said!

    • @Marianneduetje
      @Marianneduetje Před 3 lety +78

      The whole concept of solidarity has to be ingrained from an early age. It is a difficult concept to grasp when living in a society that is focused in 'me, me, me'.

    • @dinas2369
      @dinas2369 Před 3 lety +17

      @@Marianneduetje so true and so sad

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 Před 3 lety +2

      You pay insurance for that, if your insurance isn't good enough, you still have to pay part of it in the end. Well not the welfare, just the rest of it. Like those people that need voedselbank

    • @Daniel-wn5ye
      @Daniel-wn5ye Před 3 lety +8

      Tell me about it. I'm not disable, but I'm very upset that not all public institutions at least in my eastern european country are not all wheelchair accessible.

  • @beek014
    @beek014 Před 3 lety +737

    in the US they have Civil rights, in Europe they have Human rights. that is a BIG difference!

    • @PAULLONDEN
      @PAULLONDEN Před 3 lety +31

      While they are hardly "civil" in the first place ........

    • @PAULLONDEN
      @PAULLONDEN Před 3 lety +25

      @@davidcullen6797 Ofcourse ....Western Europe is hardly Utopia. Ofcourse the U.S. one party state where prisons are big business, has human rights. Especially for those who can buy themselves out of state retribution ? god bless the usa .....

    • @sanSDI
      @sanSDI Před 3 lety +15

      @@davidcullen6797 like your ignorance, many european countries have it in their constitution and second, your constitution is not more safe than others if the politicians wanted to change it.

    • @carhac66
      @carhac66 Před 3 lety +15

      @@davidcullen6797 actually the "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were mentioned as divinely given (GOD), but have never been respected by the US. If this was the case, the Civil Rights laws would not have been necessary.

    • @carhac66
      @carhac66 Před 3 lety +13

      @@davidcullen6797 you failed to mention that many of those strom thurman democrats became republicans and used this racism to basically run the southern states, even today. you also failed to mention that the president that pushed the civil rights act thru was a Democrat! Byrd and some democrats spent the remainder of their years trying to correct their erroneous racist beliefs and changed. tell the whole story!
      Abraham Lincoln and the Republicans did not end slavery. You also failed to mention the 13th amendment which permanently cemented slavery as a truly american institution and it continues today (europe does not do this). you failed to tell them how the southern racist created laws to put black & brown people in jail (which makes them slaves forever in the usa). they have no right to vote, their homes and bodies can be searched at any time, and jailed without cause for a time period (in some states 48 hours or longer). tell the entire facts because the USA is not all that. this is not all the screwed up things in the USA.

  • @ChrisDragon531
    @ChrisDragon531 Před 2 lety +131

    I'm an American Expat living in Japan.
    I love having the freedom to not worry about getting shot walking out my door. The freedom to afford Healthcare and not worry about going into debt. The freedom to travel to different places (in Japan) without worrying about getting mugged at the airport. Also the freedom to travel without needing a car.
    And so much more.

    • @omi4470
      @omi4470 Před 2 lety +3

      How was the process moving there??

    • @williamhalejr.4289
      @williamhalejr.4289 Před rokem

      How is ex Prime Minister Abe feeling about YOUR freedom not to get shot today in Japan??

    • @TheRevDel
      @TheRevDel Před rokem

      @@williamhalejr.4289 Given this guy is not a politician, he's probably still feeling very safe. Because, you see, that was an assassination not some random wandering into a school and deciding the best way to protest his growing dissatisfaction is to shoot the kids.

    • @johnnymichael77
      @johnnymichael77 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @ChrisDragon531 your country America should've banned guns or fixed their country instead of running away

  • @lindze7116
    @lindze7116 Před 2 lety +44

    I am in the states, African American, and I know the world is messed up. But these videos i have been watching give me so much insight. I appreciate them and I understand why you do them. Makes me think more and more about living somewhere else.

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před 2 lety +4

      Try it for a while and see if you like it. Come to the UK where you'll never have to pay health insurance, or Europe, or just head north to Canada, but pack your thermals.

    • @georgefuters7411
      @georgefuters7411 Před 2 lety +4

      Best of luck, mate there are few countries in the world where you wouldn't feel safer, healthier or more home, outside the US.
      Be safe, be free🤗

    • @ibelieveinjesuschrist8911
    • @lindze7116
      @lindze7116 Před rokem

      @@ibelieveinjesuschrist8911 thank you 😊

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před rokem

      You are a fool if you somehow believe that Europe loves blacks. You have another thing coming.

  • @henrikduende
    @henrikduende Před 2 lety +70

    Saw an American veteran saying that the war in Afghanistan taught him that the american ”freedom” is the freedom to pretend. Nothing else.

    • @nickcox1408
      @nickcox1408 Před 2 lety +12

      American Iraq veteran stationed in Germany. Once you see the U.S from the other side of the fence. You'll never look at it the same ever again.

  • @MarcelGomesPan
    @MarcelGomesPan Před 3 lety +601

    ”Socialism and Social Democracy are two different things”. Thank you.
    I’ve heard Americans describe Sweden as a socialist country. It is’nt and never has been. 🇸🇪

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 Před 3 lety +53

      Same about here in Norway too, and denmark! 🇳🇴🇩🇰🇸🇪

    • @sorencyrano1413
      @sorencyrano1413 Před 3 lety +43

      🇩🇰🤝🇳🇴🤝🇸🇪🤝🇫🇮
      Same her in Denmark, obviously. And Finland too. We know this. I have heard the misconception about Denmark from a few Americans.

    • @DysmorphicP
      @DysmorphicP Před 3 lety +40

      We Costaricans have the same issue explaining that we are a social democracy and that has nothing to do with communism... It's really hard for them to understand the difference because of all the brainwashing they've had.

    • @Oumegi
      @Oumegi Před 3 lety +61

      Capitalism is like fire, a good servant, but a terrible master. Europe put chains on it. We are also not socialist in majority of European continent, but actually capitalist with strong social policies. Extremes of either sides are, and should be, frowned upon. We are weary of both, as we do have history of abuse by both. That's my take on Europe as a Czech guy.

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Oumegi have to agree there

  • @daveking3494
    @daveking3494 Před 10 měsíci +20

    All of your points are 100% correct. I’ve lived in Germany for 50 years and I’ll never go back to the US. What I love here as well is the fact that within an hour or two, I can go to 7 different countries, eat seven different cuisines and hear seven different languages. In the states, no matter where you go, you see the same fast food restaurants everywhere and the people are all basically pretty much the same.

    • @aprilgeneric8027
      @aprilgeneric8027 Před 3 měsíci +1

      hmphm... i've got somalians, russians, india, naitive americans, vietnamese, chinese, and koreans all in my little western minneapolis town of 80,000 i only have to go 5 minutes to hear non english. and i didn't even bring up the hispanics from south of the u.s. border that are every where since the 1990's. i grew up hearing german from my own family that came over during statehood.
      stay in germany, you won't be able to cope

  • @roguenerdd
    @roguenerdd Před rokem +13

    I appreciate you talking about poverty. I grew up very poor in the projects and what you said is true. I’d like to also mention that in school they also kept all the students in on group on one side of the cafeteria and the “richer” kids from the nicer parts of town on the other. (I’m from Staten Island NY) also, the “better” kids also got access to better classes that we were not allowed to take and it used to make me sad. Good video! 💕

    • @soundproofist
      @soundproofist Před rokem

      Same was true when I went to school in S.I., only the kids in the "poorer" group lived in orphanages (not housing projects). At that time, it was Mount Loretto and one other (St. Michael's?).

    • @jacel2019
      @jacel2019 Před rokem

      Wow, I keep hearing from Filipinos over there that America is free and great. I’m shocked by Americans sharing their cons of their own country.

  • @TheAlja
    @TheAlja Před 3 lety +917

    I think the Freedom of the US is easier to grasp as a concept, while the Freedom in Europe is something you have to experience to understand. The freedom to buy and have guns, thats easy to understand, while the freedom of not having to be afraid of people having guns is something one has to experience. Deciding for yourself what to do with your money, thats an easy to understand freedom. And it looks so unfree to have to pay high taxes, until you experience the benefits and how much weight it lifts off your shoulders having access to the stuff the government does with it.

    • @bunmi6295
      @bunmi6295 Před 3 lety +38

      Couldn't agree more!

    • @MyMerryMessyGermanLife
      @MyMerryMessyGermanLife Před 3 lety +9

      So well said. Love your comment!

    • @boldvankaalen3896
      @boldvankaalen3896 Před 3 lety +44

      @@_alex_407 Which main support is telling you it will all get better after you die.

    • @dreamingnight13
      @dreamingnight13 Před 3 lety +51

      Personally, even as a Dutch person, I get why gun ownership is a thing in the US, and I don't necessarily think guns should fully be banned. (I also think that would culturally be impossible) I know a lot of people who are weapon enthusiasts (swords, knifes, axes, etc) and I think guns fall in a similar category, so I feel like it would be okay to legally own them, even collect them. But what I can't wrap my head around is how you have to go through all this trouble to be allowed to drive a car, but you can just easily buy a gun in the US. I think in order to make gunowner ship a viable option for a functioning society it would require at least some screening, preferably obligated training/tests. Like you have for driving cars/working with dangerous machinery/etc 🤷‍♂️ Just makes more sense to me

    • @joshuamotyl3219
      @joshuamotyl3219 Před 3 lety +10

      @@dreamingnight13 that was a well thought post. As Americans we take our rights very seriously. With the right to bear arms (with the main reason to defend against tyranny), the overwhelmingly majority of legal gun owners in the US have a better track record of firearm responsibility than the police. Every single gun purchase, minus private owner to private owner transactions is screened through a federal database. We do have some states that require training and licensing. We also have some that don't. Me personally, think that basic training in firearms should be required.

  • @robertmahler8894
    @robertmahler8894 Před 3 lety +365

    American ex-pat here, the thought of going back to the US to live again, sends me into a very, very dark place.

    • @CallistaZM
      @CallistaZM Před 3 lety +5

      Where did you move to? I want to leave but it's so far out of my budget it feels like and I have no idea where I would want to go.

    • @lekholokoelekotsoanamoloi9593
      @lekholokoelekotsoanamoloi9593 Před 3 lety +3

      @@CallistaZM if you are white , you can move to Denmark , Portugal , Norway or South Korea .

    • @Rottnwoman
      @Rottnwoman Před 3 lety +6

      @@CallistaZM Here's a hint. Australia only takes Doctors, Engineers or "those in occupations that can't be filled by Australians" - like MacDonald's employees! No kidding, we had heaps of South Koreans working here because we as adults wouldn't. It's only $22 an hour but you can live on that. Just a thought. You have to be under 45 though.

    • @CallistaZM
      @CallistaZM Před 3 lety +7

      @@Rottnwoman yeah I've been in retail for 20 years. I hate customer service so much I cannot describe it.

    • @JW-gl4yp
      @JW-gl4yp Před 3 lety +6

      @@lekholokoelekotsoanamoloi9593 or any other European country

  • @MyIRISSS
    @MyIRISSS Před 2 lety +13

    Well said! I am from Slovenia, free education, almost free medical service. And we have plenty of holidays, paid of course. We love a healthy way of life, going to nature and sports. But there are some downsides, too. We are friendly people but not so self confident as you Americans are. Because of the lack of self confidence we have a lot of work to do. It was a pleasure to hear your thoughts and we should learn from each other. Good job!

  • @Bob_just_Bob
    @Bob_just_Bob Před 2 lety +16

    As an American who’s been living in Asia nearly a quarter century I thank you for this because it’s all very true and my feelings and experience has been very similar. Thanks,

    • @npickard4218
      @npickard4218 Před 2 lety

      I'm glad your happy in Asia, please stay there. I'm being sincere when I say that Americans want people to be happy. If you are not happy in your native country, live in a different one.

    • @Bob_just_Bob
      @Bob_just_Bob Před 2 lety

      @@npickard4218 Umm thanks, that is what I am doing.

  • @TheJohnDoe70
    @TheJohnDoe70 Před 2 lety +529

    I'm an expat from California living now 13 yrs in Amsterdam. It is only when you step out of America that you can see the differences. You have some great points here!!!

    • @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear
      @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear Před 2 lety +33

      Expat? Oh, you mean immigrant.

    • @zioqqr4262
      @zioqqr4262 Před 2 lety +2

      I tried to google but I didnt really understand,, whats an expat?

    • @Bambotb
      @Bambotb Před 2 lety +1

      America is full of amazing stuff man and you can make a lot of good money

    • @HatsuneM1ku01
      @HatsuneM1ku01 Před 2 lety +4

      Bruh Amsterdam is even more oppressive and tyrannical than Cali whatcha mean. You people are literally so blind. Just say you like saftey in the form of government over reach lol

    • @andreavoros-marky4203
      @andreavoros-marky4203 Před 2 lety +16

      @@zioqqr4262 it is the short form of expatriate. Meaning somebody who lives and works in a foreign country.

  • @knkrussell
    @knkrussell Před 3 lety +366

    I am an American in my 50s. I will never “not” be an American, I love my country so much. That said, I have lived 4 years in the Netherlands and 18 years in Canada. Everywhere I lived outside the United States, I enjoyed a *better quality of life.*. From health care, to comfortable living space, to work/life balance, the quality was just...better. It makes it difficult to want to live in the States again, despite how much I love it. Americans are stressed out about all these things (healthcare, jobs, work/life balance, even food on the table, safety) and it breaks my heart to go home and see friends and family worried and afraid. 😞

    • @BlacksmithTWD
      @BlacksmithTWD Před 3 lety +13

      There is a dutch saying which roughly translates as : "One doesn't move/replant old trees (as their roots are too deep)"

    • @BramLastname
      @BramLastname Před 3 lety +17

      So I watched a mini docu about North Korea,
      Then a year later I found out the same stuff was happening in the USA,
      With various cults and organizations.
      It's ridiculous that these things are a recurring theme in a large western country.

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Před 3 lety +41

      The stress is on purpose.
      Stress makes people more selfish and cruel, and thus more likely to support selfish and cruel and evil politicians.

    • @Flossie710
      @Flossie710 Před 3 lety +28

      @@rogerwilco2 bingo! " divide and conquer " , and how do you divide the People? By trapping them in the rat race. When theSupreme Court legalized bribing politicians, that was pretty much it. They had one candidate for President in 2020 who actually doesn't take corporate donations. Didn't rally behind him.

    • @maulwurf62
      @maulwurf62 Před 3 lety +6

      It's the old tribal mentality which has been dividing humans for thousands of years. It's instinctive to want to keep to "your" people and what you know. However, like many other instincts which we have to keep under control with logical thought and morality, staying within artificially conceived borders and making war, literally or economically, will not lead to a better world. Also, knowing that life is better elsewhere but still staying in America borders on masochism. ;-)

  • @PsychicSploob
    @PsychicSploob Před 2 lety +84

    It makes me really emotional watching this video. Having lived in the United States all my life, I've always had intuitions of the tyranny that exists as a byproduct of consumerism and overpowering work demands, but hearing it articulated in a way that makes it obvious that this isn't the case in the rest of the world feels like a slap to the face. I want out!

    • @Vernetti7
      @Vernetti7 Před 2 lety +9

      To be honest, for us on the other side (i´m Danish) seeing some of these video´s and the reaction from American´s can be emotional too. Especially when it comes to maternity leave and lack of support during the early months after having a child. Barely having the opportunity for time off is borderline barbaric to me. Also the idea of constantly beeing afraid to get sick, the risk of bankrupcy if its serious and not fully covered by whatever insurance you might have, it must be incredably stressful. Sure we pay more in taxes here (the benefits of our system is obviously not free of cost but it can feel that way when you´re use to a specific tax rate and like anybody simply build your life around what ends up in your bank account) but barely anybody lives on the street, everybody can get support from the government if you fall on hard times and by far most people still have a very comfortable lifestyle while never paying out-of-pocket for going to the hospital or education. When my wife had our two kids she had a full year off with pay and I had the three first weeks, which is our right by law. On top of that anybody has 5-6 weeks paid vacation a year, by law. No one can ever tell me that paying less tax and keeping the money for yourself at the expense of loosing all that is worth it in any shape or form. I hope you get out!

    • @PsychicSploob
      @PsychicSploob Před 2 lety +3

      @@Vernetti7 Thanks for the reply. It’s very illuminating to hear about what it’s like in more reasonable parts of the world. Currently learning German and plan on moving there in the foreseeable future. Thanks for the encouraging words!

    • @Vernetti7
      @Vernetti7 Před 2 lety +1

      @@PsychicSploob your learning German, thats great. I really hope you get there and find the life you want. Germany is just 60 miles from where I live and like here its a very safe place to be. If you have any questions you where wondering about I will be happy to help if I can.

    • @alwayslernin4400
      @alwayslernin4400 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Vernetti7 as an American, I'm not so sure we pay less taxes when you add up fed/state income tax, property tax, sales tax and who knows what else. The media nor the politicians accurately represent us.

    • @Vernetti7
      @Vernetti7 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alwayslernin4400 You could be right, in any case I am pretty sure the difference isn’t as enormous as they make it out to be.

  • @townview5322
    @townview5322 Před 2 lety +19

    I live in Sydney and have spent random periods of time in America. I think the unfortunate situation is that the vast majority of American people just don't have anything to compare with. Here is a statistic which reflects my opinion: 80% of Australians have a passport: 80% of Americans don't. Clare, Sydney

    • @victorsamsung2921
      @victorsamsung2921 Před 9 měsíci

      _"Here is a statistic which reflects my opinion: 80% of Australians have a passport: 80% of Americans don't."_
      This is *why* voter fraud is a fact and that it occurred on mass in the 2020 election. You know, like Trump's lead in Pennsylvania standing at almost 700.000+ when the decision was suddenly made to stop counting at midnight and continue the next day,and then, during the night and following morning there were all these massive ballot dumps of like 10k or 50k votes that all went to Sleepy Joe. It's so easy to fraud if you can use cheap drivers licenses as a voting tool.

    • @coreyv8150
      @coreyv8150 Před 5 měsíci +1

      So? you just go to Bali with it.

  • @homoerectus6953
    @homoerectus6953 Před 3 lety +261

    Damn, I get 32 paid holiday's a year, plus bank holidays. Get 12 months sick pay if I'm ill. Full heath care without having to worry that I would have to sell my house, my life or go bankrupt if I get a serious illness...... love being British.

    • @darylwilliams7883
      @darylwilliams7883 Před 3 lety +12

      Judging from your name, the Viagra must be free too! LOL!

    • @rubybuttons668
      @rubybuttons668 Před 3 lety +20

      @@darylwilliams7883 It is. 😂

    • @priscila632
      @priscila632 Před 3 lety +5

      @@darylwilliams7883 OMG! 🤣🤣

    • @minigrande1939
      @minigrande1939 Před 2 lety +6

      Yep im a proud Brit living in Spain .Health care welfare Education are all fantastic levels on a global platform yet many arrogant Brit somehow thought we have it bad and blamed europe.Try explaining housing benifit (The goverment will pay a certin percent of your home rent upto 90 percent if you have a landlord who acsept it .ye ls the government will pay your rent )

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 Před 2 lety +1

      32? That's good. I only get 26.

  • @DB-stuff
    @DB-stuff Před 3 lety +160

    I'm in Scotland but I love most things about America, but I'm stunned watching the recent election over there. You can judge a nation by how it treats it's most vulnerable citizens.

    • @TTTzzzz
      @TTTzzzz Před 3 lety +4

      @Three Brooklyn Cats It's terrible to be heartbroken and disgusted about your own country. You can fight or move to another country.
      Both are difficult. Choose what is best for you. The US will not change the coming years.
      Trump has left his mark.
      You can fight him or escape from him.

    • @e.458
      @e.458 Před 3 lety +26

      @Three Brooklyn Cats As a German, let me tell you: a nation can recover from the darkest of places.

    • @laurencekelly5081
      @laurencekelly5081 Před 3 lety +5

      @Three Brooklyn Cats I can never understand this American thing of I love my country. I am more than pleased and delighted that i born and grew up in mine but if it was like america I can honestly I would be ashamed to say it. I notice a lot of Americans can be delighted to be mistaken for Canadians in Europe.

    • @janisdeluca3028
      @janisdeluca3028 Před 3 lety +6

      The administration of Donald J. Trump was a case of giving a person a try which turned into a nightmare. Living in Scotland, you got a good dose of Trumpism. Besides being the worst president ever, he was/is heartless hurting so many people and heaping lies on top of it. To compound the problem, a percentage of about 30% believed the lies. We are hoping now our elected officials will keep our will in mind and we are noting those with adverse minds. They will be voted out soon enough! It's not a perfect country but we still love it and we still care about our neighbors (biblically speaking).

    • @debbiec7145
      @debbiec7145 Před 3 lety +4

      75 million of us are stunned too!

  • @leojansen2773
    @leojansen2773 Před 2 lety +8

    I'm an Dutch man living in Australia and your video is spot on about the Netherlands i loved it all i do miss the Netherlands a little bit but i love Australia more especially the weather i really don't miss the rain and keep up the good work can't wait for the next vlog 😀 ❤

  • @antonioferraro7972
    @antonioferraro7972 Před 2 lety +10

    Hi Jovie, a 54yo Italian who has lived in Ireland for two years and in Belgium now for 21 years. Your videos are interesting and informative also for us Europeans.

  • @frankteunissen6118
    @frankteunissen6118 Před 3 lety +383

    The argument about gun ownership was definitively closed for me when I read this comment on-line: “Your dead children don’t invalidate my Second Amendment rights.”
    Bang! Case closed. Over. Done. Any society that prizes its guns more than its children is doomed.

    • @timnewman1172
      @timnewman1172 Před 3 lety +37

      This is literally true. When I was growing up most people had a hunting rifle, a shotgun, and maybe a pistol. Today people have enough firearms and ammunition to go to war, literally!
      The obsession with guns here is crazy, it is almost like it's sexual...

    • @helidude3502
      @helidude3502 Před 3 lety +4

      That is a shitty thing to say, but there is truth to that comment.
      But, just because my neighbor has lost his leg in an accident, do I no longer have the right to walk?
      Driving under the influence kills more people than guns do world wide, yet it’s still legal to drink in most any country.
      If there were truly a concern for innocent lives, prohibition would be in effect and vehicles would be subject to the same laws proposed for gun control.
      Your only choice of a vehicle would be a Prius painted an easily visible color with a breathalyzer installed.
      Incidentally, prohibition didn’t work.

    • @a.westenholz4032
      @a.westenholz4032 Před 3 lety +39

      @@helidude3502 False equivalency, as a car is a basic form transport and for many the only means of transport from where they live (regardless of country) and unlike a gun therefore a necessity. And even so it is against the law to drive drunk in most countries. There are periodically police spot tests (especially now during the holiday season) to enforce those laws, with penalties, and even a temporary or perhaps permanent revoking of a license, despite the necessity a car can be, because of drunk driving.
      When you further add than in most countries the cost and testing to get a license to begin with is hardly easy, requires quite a few hours of certified instruction and a much more difficult examination than the one in the US. It in no way compares to the ease of acquiring a gun and license, especially not in the US.

    • @ivanheffner2587
      @ivanheffner2587 Před 3 lety +45

      @@helidude3502 I’d rather we apply the same standards we do to guns that we do for cars.
      1: Every gun must be registered with the state and county government.
      2: Annual fees for every gun you own.
      3. Mandatory licensing and insurance for gun owners.
      4. Civil and criminal citations, fines, and other penalties for mishandling/misusing guns.
      5. Mandatory safety equipment installed on all newly manufactured guns.
      That seems like a reasonable start.

    • @resi3794
      @resi3794 Před 3 lety +11

      @@helidude3502 you no why driving under the influence kilss more people than guns ? Because countrys with a bit good state of mind don't allow guns, so that worldwide is only apply to country's as the usa. I bet if you compare the statistics in the usa, dead by dronk driving and dead by guns that the guns are winning. What does that tell you ? If you go compare do it the right way.

  • @jamesmorris1658
    @jamesmorris1658 Před 3 lety +303

    THIS video was precise and to the point. When one is living in the states it's difficult to truly see the things you point out. When I became an expat and left the US these things became glaringly obvious. Thanks for the time you took to make this video.

    • @calise8783
      @calise8783 Před 3 lety +22

      Yes, this! My extended family in the US doesn’t get it, they have been inundated with propaganda and can’t hear what I tell them through personal experience. Only my parents ( originally from Europe actually wanted to move back) get it. No country is perfect. However, once living for a bit in Europe, you really see the difference and can not imagine moving back for many reasons even if it will always hold a special spot in my heart. How can it not, I grew up there.

    • @paulhamrick3943
      @paulhamrick3943 Před 3 lety

      @@calise8783 this is all true, but the vast majority of Americans who relocate to Europe are extremely privileged people.
      Additionally, after going through a period of my early adulthood where I self righteously spoke the same way as this CZcamsr and you commenters, once you start thinking more systemically and more historically, you start to view these *STATIC* comparisons of countries with VASTLY different histories as grossly simplistic, and these sort of testimonials like the one in this video start to thoroughly annoy you.
      This CZcamsr gives herself credit for living amongst lower class people in the Netherlands. Wow, huge accomplishment! Try doing the same in an American city.

    • @mikebegonia6134
      @mikebegonia6134 Před 3 lety +17

      @@paulhamrick3943 That's her point, Mr. Knowall.

    • @peterkoller3761
      @peterkoller3761 Před 3 lety +16

      @@paulhamrick3943 Your statement about living among poorer people in Europe vs the USA: separating out the poor and ghettoisation of classes is exactly what caused this problem in the USA. (and also leads to world views like calling someone "lower class" just because they have less money, btw.)

    • @dalstein3708
      @dalstein3708 Před 3 lety +16

      @@paulhamrick3943 Compared to the US as it is today, Eisenhower's America was commie-land: high income taxes for the rich, strict anti-trust laws, affordable college tuition, and jobs with decent pay (often unionized). In the 50s and 60s, both the US and Europe were building their welfare state. Europe has stuck with it, for the most part. It's the US that has changed track.

  • @liesascott5414
    @liesascott5414 Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent video!
    I am German living in the US for 36 years. I'm older now and think that my American adventure has ran it's course.

  • @eriedmann
    @eriedmann Před 2 lety +6

    American here - thank you for posting this!! we need more global perspective voices to be amplified if we're ever to fix our BS here in the states! Please keep posting your thoughts!

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Před 3 lety +295

    We are the Dutch. Resistance is futile, you will be assimilated. Your individualism will be added to ours.

    • @fransbuijs808
      @fransbuijs808 Před 3 lety +9

      If only that was true. Then we wouldn't have islamic schools and salafist preachers.

    • @gyqz
      @gyqz Před 3 lety +18

      Trekkie spotted!!!!

    • @martienvandenberg5181
      @martienvandenberg5181 Před 3 lety +13

      @@fransbuijs808 School met de bijbel, zwarte kousen kerken?
      Ze zijn geassimileerd.

    • @luguy8347
      @luguy8347 Před 3 lety +1

      Impressive.

    • @petertraudes106
      @petertraudes106 Před 3 lety +7

      Diversiteit en migratie zijn altijd onderdeel van Nederlandse cultuur geweest.

  • @travis1240
    @travis1240 Před 2 lety +372

    So true about money vs happiness. The trouble is that in the USA you need to have a huge pile of money to even have stability, otherwise losing your job and getting a treatable disease simultaneously could kill you.

    • @scrimshaw848
      @scrimshaw848 Před 2 lety +3

      black people take money, are given food and shelter and despite the propaganda..healthcare. and they dont give a shit about working.
      yeah, americans need to make a huge pile of money to be TAXED so as to ultimately pay for others before themselves.
      what do you think would happen to europe with not even a tenth the blacks the usa suffers from?

    • @rendomstranger8698
      @rendomstranger8698 Před 2 lety +35

      @@scrimshaw848 "black people"
      Do you honestly believe a single word that comes out of your mouth when you start with those 2 words? Because if you do, you truly are a lost cause.
      What makes you so different from the average black person? And how have you verified that your accusations and explanations are correct? Or are you just blindly spouting bullshit without even taking a single second to consider the possibility that you might be wrong?

    • @YeahNo
      @YeahNo Před 2 lety +21

      Let’s be really honest. Stubbing your toe and having a doctor glance at it can send you into bankruptcy in the USA.

    • @valeriemacphail9180
      @valeriemacphail9180 Před 2 lety +11

      @@scrimshaw848 Your post seems indignant and ignorant. It is a literally racist statement, based on hearsay and prejudice, not documented facts. Produce the statistics to back your claims for someone to listen to your argument, ie that "black people" tend to lean on welfare any more than any other human coming historically from the poorest social strata. My stats show, climbing just one notch up the social ladder is a difficult aim, achieved by a mere 5%.

    • @YeahNo
      @YeahNo Před 2 lety +9

      @@valeriemacphail9180 He misspelt “orange guy” as “black people”. It’s his great American education at work.

  • @1956paterson
    @1956paterson Před rokem +4

    Jovie you are so correct about the social economic stratification in the United States. Being poor or even working poor is considered a personal flaw. The United States is a social Darwinist society in which one competes for survival against everyone else. This explains why Americans are much more aggressive and even more inclined to violence as part of the competition for survival which means getting the better over someone else. Among Americans greed is not a vice but a virtue to be admired and emulated. Compassion for others is ridiculed and labeled as socialism. If there is no profit in it then it’s not worth doing unless one is giving to charity for a tax deduction. American greed and social Darwinism means that Medicare for all will never be allowed because profit is more important than people. American exceptionalism means Americans are not allowed to be critical of the United States because American exceptionalism is hubris that prevents Americans from learning from other countries. Thank you for having the courage to point out the many flaws in American thinking.

    • @flovv9357
      @flovv9357 Před rokem +1

      Very well said. Survival of the fittest.....just like in the jungle. I thought we were human beings not animals.

    • @olyacarell6434
      @olyacarell6434 Před rokem

      @@flovv9357 human beings are animals. You must have been asleep in biology class when they explained that

  • @Erintii
    @Erintii Před 2 lety +24

    I am European who moved to Canada and went back to Europe to live as ex-pat in Switzerland. I grew up in mentality of not taking sick days, learned to be over-archiever. I was told this is wrong and was told to take holidays. Switzerland is wealthy but people are money cautious so in general do not shop if not need, but on the other hand Dior and Chanel perfumes can be purchased in the drug store. Work and life balance is crucial for people. Working more annoy people. They will tell you to go hike if don't have plans for a free day.

  • @LunaJo67WDHTMJ
    @LunaJo67WDHTMJ Před 3 lety +131

    Talking to my American friend I can't make him understand there's more ways of living than working yourself to death so you can make more money for your house and cars, but barely having the time to enjoy them because you're always working....Sad.

    • @koioo2
      @koioo2 Před 3 lety

      are car shows and chapters and yes i remeber ICC int camaro club and yes people enjoy there camaros.depend on the work

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 3 lety +1

      That's a personal choice. Not and American choice. Then again....look at all the things that American "workaholics" created. Being lazy doesn't change the world.

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 3 lety +1

      @zhu hunk America created war??? I don't think you are really worth replying to.

    • @markjacobs1086
      @markjacobs1086 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jasondonovan1408 we created Flevoland... Literally reclaimed land from the sea. Definitely not something lazy people would do 🙃

    • @jasondonovan1408
      @jasondonovan1408 Před 3 lety

      @@markjacobs1086 And we created Disneyland. :D

  • @MsBabbi
    @MsBabbi Před 3 lety +74

    When I went to Los Angeles, I was so shocked by the poverty divide you describe. Homeless people living in tents by the railway line in plain sight, but completely ignored by everyone

    • @JesusChrist5000
      @JesusChrist5000 Před 3 lety +2

      Los Angeles is the socialist state of California. High taxes and overly regulated. It is a disaster and people are fleeing to Texas

    • @souljastation5463
      @souljastation5463 Před 3 lety +3

      @@JesusChrist5000 so in Texas people live like in Europe?( I mean without divide between rich and poor).

    • @JesusChrist5000
      @JesusChrist5000 Před 3 lety +4

      @@souljastation5463 No silly. There will always be rich and poor people. What i mean is that the taxes, regulations, and cost of living are relatively low in Texas compared to California. We here in indiana also have alot of California refugees. In Indiana it is possible to make a living, pay rent, and make a car payment etc on the same salary that would be considered impossible to do in the California socialist republic.

    • @beckywaytoomuch
      @beckywaytoomuch Před 3 lety +2

      It's the same in all major cities here. It's absolutely disgusting.

    • @beckywaytoomuch
      @beckywaytoomuch Před 3 lety +5

      @@JesusChrist5000 Who are you to say "there will always be the rich and the poor?" That kind of thinking is so defeatist and not useful amd not even possible to prove factually true...If women and Black people and people of color accepted that line of thinking, they wouldn't have been able to achieve the (although not nearly enough) gains in their standard of living.

  • @stevefoss8171
    @stevefoss8171 Před 2 lety +35

    My thing is that many Americans who say "America is the greatest country" have often never left America. I say just go get a passport and visit other countries. See for yourself how many other countries live day in and day out. I served in the military, I love my country, but I will retire in Japan. Social health care and all the freedoms that Americans have. Japan has 5 viable political parties, so they need to work together. And I wont even get started on public transportation.

    • @hassandavis
      @hassandavis Před 2 lety +1

      Many Americans do travel but then stay in the touristy areas - they head all across the world while staying in the States the whole time. It is crazy.

    • @treblesix8730
      @treblesix8730 Před 2 lety

      Prior to 1994 around 10% of US Citizens held a passport though before 2007 they could travel to Canada, Mexico and other nearby countries without one. There was then a huge rise due to cheap European vacation flights, expansion of business and commerce and the events of 9/11 and I think the figure is now around 42% but that also includes forces personnel. That compares to 76% of Brits in 2011!

  • @mikespike007
    @mikespike007 Před 2 lety +2

    the death panel thing is something i have been told many times and although untrue i usually answer, you have death panels in the US as well, only those death panels consist of your bank manager and insurance company.

  • @Charlatan-Parodyman
    @Charlatan-Parodyman Před 3 lety +273

    Too often in the states, if the truth doesn’t fit our narrative or agenda, we will create a fiction that will.

  • @DomingoDeSantaClara
    @DomingoDeSantaClara Před 3 lety +248

    There's so many videos of Americans that have gone to a foreign country and have had the same revelation as you.....welcome to freedom.

    • @markdemell3717
      @markdemell3717 Před 3 lety

      freedom is an illusion pal ,wake up and see the evil.

    • @ladybluelotus
      @ladybluelotus Před 3 lety +13

      There are Americans in the US that know and understand this, they're just ignored.

    • @markdemell3717
      @markdemell3717 Před 3 lety

      @L M If you can't see it then there is not much hope for you!

    • @NewBlueTrue
      @NewBlueTrue Před 3 lety +5

      I know this. That’s why I want to leave, but it isn’t easy

    • @tompiper9276
      @tompiper9276 Před 3 lety

      @@markdemell3717 C'mon..... An example... Something.. Anything..

  • @melodybaldwin5688
    @melodybaldwin5688 Před 2 lety +7

    I am a native Californian who agrees with you. I have lived in Spain, Greece, and Germany. Human life and all occupations are respected in Europe.

    • @britbazza3568
      @britbazza3568 Před rokem

      In UK and Europe we take our freedoms seriously the reason being we have had two major events that taught us that freedom is paramount those events were two major European wars that eventually involved the whole world..unlike the USA most nations have been bombed extensively during the wars
      So we made the continent of Europe and the UK better places to live freely

  • @glyngasson8450
    @glyngasson8450 Před 2 lety +2

    On the last day of working before a week off my boss told me if she saw me answering e mails during my holiday I would be in big trouble

  • @windsorSJ
    @windsorSJ Před 3 lety +367

    A few days ago I watched a youtube video of a Texan man. He stated "I'm not a gun nut, I've only got five". I think that says it all.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 3 lety +7

      Nah, five is not that many guns. He probably has a couple of hunting rifles and maybe one or two pistols.
      I think that gun lovers in other countries will have a similar amount of guns as a minimum (if they're also hunters).
      I mean, a real gun nut would have at least five pistols, five hunting rifles and five semi-auto 'assault rifles' (although a true assault rifle can fire full-auto, which is not allowed for most people in the US of A. To be allowed to have a fully automatic assault rifle you'd have to be in the military almost I guess.

    • @DominusRexDK
      @DominusRexDK Před 3 lety +7

      im Danish, and yeah my Dad has 5 if not more. he´s not a gun nut, he´s just a hunter.

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

      Probably has a few bows as well, and a knife collection.
      A civil war cannon
      Tank in the backyard
      And a search history of "can i legally own a missile"

    • @JesusChrist5000
      @JesusChrist5000 Před 3 lety +5

      Most of what you hear in the media about shootings is fake news, and I can prove it, or i have seen significant proof of it. it is domestic propaganda to get public opinion behind banning private ownership of guns, and this fake news has been going on for a long time. The reality is that governments are the biggest mass murderers in history, not private owners of guns The whole point of the second amendment right to bear arms is a last check and balance against government tyranny "When the people are afraid of the government, there is tyranny. When the government is afraid of the people, there is liberty" -Thomas Jefferson

    • @Elementalism.
      @Elementalism. Před 3 lety +15

      ​@@JesusChrist5000 The idea that your politicians are trying to take your guns away is ridiculous.
      there is a difference between taking away your guns and responsible gun ownership, like background checks.
      contrary to popular belief, most other nations do allow gun ownership, but they do require things like background checks, several years of gun club membership with regular attendance of the shooting range etc.
      here in the Netherlands there are just shy of half a million privately owned guns, which is not bad for a country of 17 million people, which has an army of about 80.000 troops.
      in theory the people could band together and overthrow the government, just like the US.
      ... at least if it wasn't for those dam tanks, aircraft and navy...
      because while sure, you could have overthrown the US government in 1776 through gun ownership, with only the navy uselessly being able to resist you...
      we live in 2021, and things have changed, armies are no longer on horseback, and no longer just fought by land and by sea.
      And so Jefferson's idea has become a suicide mission.

  • @kennydianabrown7359
    @kennydianabrown7359 Před 3 lety +534

    My husband and I literally moved to The Hague from Seattle Nov 2, 2020 because of all the things you talk about here!
    I could not bare to raise my interracial babies in the US. My husband could not walk the streets without people looking at him with disdain and they don't know anything about him except that he has darker skin. It broke my heart. I am originally from the Ukraine.
    Seeing the diversity here has made us feel more safe than we ever have before.
    Our personal rights don't mean anything when they hurt our neighbors.
    We will do everything we can to stay here, learn from the culture here and contribute to a better world. ❤️
    100% agree.
    🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌

    • @moniquetata2146
      @moniquetata2146 Před 3 lety +43

      Welcome to the Netherlands and my best wishes for a good and prosperous life here 🌞💞

    • @kennydianabrown7359
      @kennydianabrown7359 Před 3 lety +26

      @@moniquetata2146 thank you so much! We have loved it here so far! One month in The Hague today! 🎉

    • @ramonwilts
      @ramonwilts Před 3 lety +14

      Welcome. I hope you will be happy here. ✌🧡

    • @rolfvanas2397
      @rolfvanas2397 Před 3 lety +11

      Best small big city the Hague 😁

    • @mmsvisser
      @mmsvisser Před 3 lety +7

      You are welcome here!

  • @yunusemrearslan5211
    @yunusemrearslan5211 Před 2 lety +3

    I am from Turkey who will move to The Netherlands on December and I really like your objective videos. They are really helpful for me. Actually, most of the things are explained in almost same way by Turkish people in The Netherlands but hearing the same thing from an American is really perfect from my side. Thanks a lot for all.

  • @robertb.australia.8801
    @robertb.australia.8801 Před 2 lety +2

    I left Dallas in 1963 aged 11 , with 9 brothers and sisters , we now have 37 different
    nationalities in our family spread throughout the planet , and no family member
    has ever moved to the USA . We are not that stupid .

  • @vickifenlon2235
    @vickifenlon2235 Před 2 lety +202

    Nice to find you Jovie. I moved to Ireland 6 years ago at 62 years old. I have never felt freer. I have no car and after age 66 have a free travel pass for buses and trains. I live in a smallish town with a fishmonger and butcher. I buy fresh food every day instead of driving to the store and buying two weeks worth of food at a time. Although my entire family lives in the US, I could never live there again!

    • @gerardnolan2939
      @gerardnolan2939 Před 2 lety +6

      And you are welcome

    • @jas1049
      @jas1049 Před 2 lety +6

      Glad to hear you’re enjoying your time in Ireland Vicki.

    • @AlignmentCoaching
      @AlignmentCoaching Před 2 lety +3

      How can you successfully immigrate past 50? I’m trying to find a place in Europe...

    • @MFPRego
      @MFPRego Před 2 lety +4

      @@AlignmentCoaching depends on the country.
      Mind you that the UK is not part of EU anymore, wich will have diferent rules.
      In Portugal, you can aply citizenship if you proof that you had abportuguese ancestor, up to great grandfather. You can also get if you start a business that will employ portuguese citizens, and after 2 years, you can aply for citizenship. By marriage will also give you citizenship, after 2 years.
      Also, if you learn the language, it will speed up.

    • @pamelarangel7104
      @pamelarangel7104 Před 2 lety

      @@AlignmentCoaching Me too!

  • @michaausleipzig
    @michaausleipzig Před 3 lety +214

    Whenever an American claims that european countries were socialist I usually reply that if he really thinks that it would only proof that socialism works.
    They usually either shut up or reconsider after that... 😅
    And I fully agree with everything else you said. 😊

    • @JoviesHome
      @JoviesHome  Před 3 lety +36

      That is one of the best answers I have heard to that claim. Thank you!! 😂

    • @Daxboy16
      @Daxboy16 Před 3 lety +9

      Europe is not socialism though, it's a social democracy. Big difference.

    • @marcelkuhne8856
      @marcelkuhne8856 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Daxboy16 But it works ;-)

    • @Daxboy16
      @Daxboy16 Před 3 lety +4

      @@marcelkuhne8856 Yes the social democracy works, but it's not socialism.

    • @markdemell3717
      @markdemell3717 Před 3 lety

      No earthly system works ,period .

  • @bigskypioneer1898
    @bigskypioneer1898 Před rokem +4

    This video aged VERY WELL. Sadly.
    I am an American. I am a disabled Veteran as a result of my time participating "in country" during OEF. The number of Americans that feel the need to berate someone for choosing to live somewhere else when that choice has ZERO impact on their own lives stuns and saddens me. Just goes to show how effective American propaganda (and yes it is propaganda - but that doesn't mean being patriotic is a bad thing - only when you take it to an invasive and toxic level).
    How many of you berating an American for choosing to leave America (the same ones that probably say: "If you don't like it here - leave")... know that a large portion of your retired military ALSO settle in other countries? Every country that has American Ex-Pats has a large component of AMERICAN Military personnel? So get over your small mindedness.
    America is wonderful - there are so many things to be proud of - but reaching adulthood SHOULD mean having a nuanced view and comprehension that America has many problems as well. That we are NOT the shining city on the hill we like to think we are. America is one of THE most dangerous places to live. American education is one of the worst among developed countries. Our healthcare system is an embarrassment. Reality check my fellow Americans - we don't have THE best country on earth. We might have one of them, especially if your gross annual income is close to 7 figures or above.

  • @majpanik
    @majpanik Před 2 lety +7

    Every country has their issues, it's just in other countries we know our countries shortcomings but Americans seem blissfully unaware of theirs.

    • @npickard4218
      @npickard4218 Před 2 lety

      I'm an American who is very aware of our shortcomings. For whom are you speaking? I hope you're not speaking for all of us because you don't speak for me or my social network.

    • @majpanik
      @majpanik Před 2 lety +2

      @@npickard4218 "Americans SEEM" seem to be, appear to be, "in general, come across as". I didn't state it as "All Americans" or "farm&travel and their friends list", I didnt say hank and chuck and their families, in fact I didn't single out anyone or indeed state it as any kind of fact, it was an observation quite clearly stated by the simple use of the word "seem"

  • @shbhchwh
    @shbhchwh Před 3 lety +409

    I am a 65 year old, retiree from the Midwest, born and raised, and still living in US. Everything you said is 100% spot on. Many years ago I started cringing every time I would hear someone say "We are the greatest country in the world!" It is a common refrain. Presidents say it all the time. There are many Americans who are isolationists, xenophobic and ethnocentric, and (this is the culprit imho) uneducated. There are many of us who don't know what to do about this at this point.

    • @randrozguidroz6485
      @randrozguidroz6485 Před 3 lety +12

      I'm a mirror image of you from my age and the beliefs and opinions

    • @JDavidHopkins
      @JDavidHopkins Před 3 lety +36

      The worst is “American Exceptionalism”.

    • @tompiper9276
      @tompiper9276 Před 3 lety +8

      I get the patriotic thing but all too often it's thrown in as an automatic expectation that everyone will rally to the cause. Irrespective of how good bad or indifferent it might be. I've lived in a number of countries, none of them perfect but at a basic level the acid test is the people that live there. Wealth and happiness don't go hand in hand. The title of 'the best country' is, in many ways, subjective. Where do you feel most comfortable?

    • @daxbruce3491
      @daxbruce3491 Před 3 lety

      I just laugh at them

    • @patrickchilds2987
      @patrickchilds2987 Před 3 lety +8

      @Susan Hopkins
      There isn’t anything really to be done. American Exceptionalism is a construct used mainly by politicians to emphasise their patriotism. There is nothing wrong ibeing proud of your country, most people around the world also love their country. In order to construct a narrative that your the greatest country in the world then you have to establish clear parameters to demonstrate your exceptionalism over other countries.
      Freedom is often used as an example of American Exceptionalism, yet the majority of other nations could be referred to as free, certainly some that are have arguably more freedoms. Economies, military might ...are these measures of exceptionalism ?
      I think ultimately Americans can believe in their own exceptionalism if they want, there is nothing wrong with that, but perhaps they shouldn’t get so upset if others disagree.

  • @nagalosh
    @nagalosh Před 3 lety +48

    @ 8:00 we dont "take" a sick day. The term: "taking" a day sounds like a decision. You are either sick or your not. If your sick you stay home, if you feel wel, you work. Beeing sick is not a choice, it just happens.

    • @nagalosh
      @nagalosh Před 3 lety +4

      @chronicreader well, again that word :"take" a sick day. Wich implies it is a decision to TAKE one. You are not 'taking' anything. you are sick or you aren't . US: hello, i am taking a sick day. NL : hello, i am sick. im sorry, but the word "taking' is just so wrong, i wish Amercians would understand that beeing sick is not a choice. ( ye, there are those who abuse it, but most people actually care about their job, but prob in US a job is there to take adavantage of you, so you take adventage of them.. nice cycle.......)

    • @kirk5152
      @kirk5152 Před 3 lety

      @@nagalosh Companies "OFFER" a minimum amount of sick days to their employees. Where there is an offer, there an option to "take" what is offered. When you are sick you "take" one of the sick days they have "offered" you. Not that difficult.

    • @vigilantecornflakes5014
      @vigilantecornflakes5014 Před 3 lety +6

      @@kirk5152 Your explanation is clear but doesn't make the situation any better, 'being offered a number of days for you to be sick'....?! Don't you see the irony or do Americans all have the gift of knowing how sick they will be this year and why does an employer decide how sick you can get?

    • @kirk5152
      @kirk5152 Před 3 lety

      @@vigilantecornflakes5014 Your argument is very clear, but blurred by the fact that you are assuming that these sick days are given without pay.
      No...they are offered with full pay. That's why it is something you can either take or not. You can still have the day off if your sick, but it is your choice to take one of the sick days offered, and still get paid, Once all the sick days on offer have been taken, it is just regular old, calling in sick.

    • @ecenbt
      @ecenbt Před 3 lety +2

      @@kirk5152 in my opinion this argument is even weirder and doesn't make much more sense? Because in europe if you're sick and don't go to work, you still get paid? It's not like this is a blessing only provided by US companies?? Like in european social security system, you have a right to be sick and stay at home and rest and be paid! Your payment may be provided by your conpany or the state social security depending on the duration of your sickness and laws of your country, but you still get paid. So your companies are not doing you any favor by choosing to give you a couple of "sick days" where they decide how long you can be sick

  • @jblev736
    @jblev736 Před rokem +4

    1:56 Thank you! I hate the illogical narrative that critique = not being a patriot. That is the biggest obnoxious lie - and people eat up those lies. It's just like macarthyism

  • @supercommie
    @supercommie Před 2 lety +4

    Spending a year and a half in the rural Midwest, being surrounded by people who believed all this crap, I felt like I lived in another reality.

  • @sagittariusa9012
    @sagittariusa9012 Před 2 lety +161

    Best thing an american said: "I Love the US, but it seems like the US don't love me"

    • @cballgriz
      @cballgriz Před 2 lety

      I'm an ex-pat in europe and you are full of crap....

    • @marialindemann1847
      @marialindemann1847 Před 2 lety +1

      ты один не можешь за всю Америку ответить.

    • @sagittariusa9012
      @sagittariusa9012 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marialindemann1847 Google says that you comment mean "you alone cannot answer for the whole of America." When did i say that?

    • @crowwasabi3698
      @crowwasabi3698 Před 2 lety

      My warm greetings to you '''Colonizers'' ^^^^^ XOXOXOXO

    • @zeroxcqt2862
      @zeroxcqt2862 Před 2 lety

      @@crowwasabi3698 Well if you are in the US ,you came from a family of colonizer or slaves ...So id be you I'll just shut tf up

  • @Helliconia54
    @Helliconia54 Před 3 lety +503

    Living in Australia, My wife on a pension, NO private medical insurance has had TWO knee replacements over the last 5 years at NO cost. Try that in the states.

    • @JoseMendoza-rr4mp
      @JoseMendoza-rr4mp Před 3 lety +36

      Hey at least we got freedom. (Being sarcastic, had to say it cause people like this actually exists)

    • @Bertuzz84
      @Bertuzz84 Před 3 lety +16

      @@JoseMendoza-rr4mp Don't take ma freedom to have massive debt!

    • @flashrobbie
      @flashrobbie Před 3 lety +20

      @@JoseMendoza-rr4mp 15th freest nation in the world, according to the State of World Liberty so number one if one ignores New Zealand, Switzerland, Ireland, Finland, Canada, Australia, Luxembourg, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Estonia, Iceland and the United Kingdom and the lack of a decent education system makes that easy.

    • @DCUnderdog3000
      @DCUnderdog3000 Před 3 lety +1

      "Free", "No Cost". Lol sure man because the doctors all did that for her wothout pay.

    • @danilopapais1464
      @danilopapais1464 Před 3 lety +2

      @@flashrobbie What? Germany is lower than the US?

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you for this (im an american). You are just being honest.
    Many Americans do not travel anywhere & they lack perspective.
    Thanx for speaking the truth. ☮️💟

  • @davidhuett3579
    @davidhuett3579 Před 2 lety +20

    Imagine just how 'great' America could be, if they adopted systems used in Europe, Scandinavia, Australia & New Zealand, etc.
    Where the American people had a 'Universal Healthcare' system that didn't bankrupt people, Workers had standardised working hours, 'paid' medical leave and 'paid' holidays and annual leave of, as in Australia's case, 4 weeks!!
    The American people should SERIOUSLY be asking of their governments AND employers .. if most of the world can afford to do this ... why can't the 'wealthiest' country in the world do it?

    • @SuperBigblue19
      @SuperBigblue19 Před 2 lety +2

      I live in America I have 80hrs of sick time all paid, I'm currently on 3weeks vacation from work all paid. I have 8 paid holidays I work 4 days 40hrs per week & 10hrs OT if i want. I do pay $59 per mo for medical dental & vison & $20 to see a doctor & as a diabetic around $60 per mo for my medication. But considering how much my home & property $240k more in EU my 3 vehicles $30k more in EU & the fuel & tax rate in Europe? Why the hell would I want Socialism here for me? Screw that.

    • @JoviesHome
      @JoviesHome  Před 2 lety +13

      “Why the hell would I want socialism here for me”

    • @davidhuett3579
      @davidhuett3579 Před 2 lety +11

      @@JoviesHome He doesn't want his neighbours to have those types of benefits too, because that would make them as 'privileged' as he is .. then he would lose his status and feeling of 'superiority' over them.

    • @bradleybrown8428
      @bradleybrown8428 Před 2 lety +3

      @@davidhuett3579 I've wrote to americans like this and it's really sad, these types of people enjoy having one up on the other man/woman. They don't care if others are suffering just as long as they're fine.

    • @Danielhalvorsen1993
      @Danielhalvorsen1993 Před 2 lety +9

      @@SuperBigblue19 Now how long did you have to work for that? How much did your education cost? How much do you pay per month for healthcare?
      Here in Norway we got unlimited sick days, 5 weeks fully paid vacation, 56 weeks fully paid parental leave (maternity and paternity), free health care, free education, 1-2% interest on student loans, low crime rates, livable minimum wage etc etc. It includes EVERYONE.
      And it's not just us. It's basically all of the industrialized world except for the US... You guys call it "benefits".. The rest of the world call it rights.
      It's funny that your taxes + insurance and other stuff ends up being more costly than our taxes which covers these things. You wanna insure everything you own and yourself for a year? OK, 100-150 dollars a year...Basically americans pay more to take care of just themselves, than pay less and take care of everyone. How insane is that??
      In all of Europe your kids can play outside and be safe, you can walk anywhere without the fear of getting shot, people support and help one another, you can focus on living life as you want instead of working round the clock, you got the freedom to do what you want to do and not because you have to cause you need the "benefits", food is healthier, basically no gun violence/accidents...
      I could go on and on and on.
      Things are not perfect. Nothing can ever be. But we continuously try to improve.
      It just makes me feel sad cause I've met alot of amazing people from the US. I really wish the US treated its people fairly. You have the money to do so. Just not the laws and priorities for it. It does however feel like alot of young people in the US aren't as brainwashed as the older generation. Perhaps thanks to the internet. Hopefully, some rights for the people will be inserted in the decades to come.
      The scary thing is that US nationalism and propaganda is scary close to what Hitler did in Germany...Let that sink in for a second..I mean you salute the flag and say some nationalist lines in primary school no? Wtf is that O.o

  • @wohlhabendermanager
    @wohlhabendermanager Před 3 lety +243

    I've actually had US Americans describe to me how they thought that "having more holidays by law is a modern form of slavery". Like, how do you even respond to that while keeping a straight face?
    And there are sooooo many misconceptions of how public health care works, you could write a whole book about it.
    I think it has a lot to do with the general mindset that most US Americans have, like how the USA is "God's own country" and "the greatest nation on earth" and so on. If you grow up with such a mindset, of course you have to think that a person is lying if they say "Hey, there are countries that really are better in how they do things".

    • @AJ-yw7hf
      @AJ-yw7hf Před 3 lety +18

      The Republican party funnels a lot of corporate baloney ideas to a lot of Americans for the sake of selling capitalism to them.

    • @harrycooper5231
      @harrycooper5231 Před 2 lety +21

      It actually works the same way when explaining why American healthcare is better. Having universal healthcare is "communism." Communism is always bad. Therefore having no healthcare is better than having healthcare.

    • @travis1240
      @travis1240 Před 2 lety +11

      Yeah the indoctrination of the public by the political right wing in order to benefit the plutocracy is quite disgusting.

    • @peterdubois65
      @peterdubois65 Před 2 lety +6

      @@harrycooper5231 a life saving course of aids drugs on average will cost $8 TO SAVE A LIFE. In the US the exact same thing costs $2000

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Před 2 lety +4

      It's like the plutocrats have completely removed the brains out of large sloth of the population in our country.
      The sheer amount of illogical dumb that they have propounded upon the people, and how effective it has, it's like a creep cult; the more dumb and illogical and against your own interest, the more this segment of brainwashed people ask for more.
      Was talking to another coworker, that if some of these parties (particularly the republican party, but even the democratic party has become one in the same in many regards particularly economics) if they told their supporters to take a sledge hammer to their groin and hammer home 10 times as hard as they can, they all would do it. All 10 times... and the 10 more times to show how free they were! OR some other idiocy non logical stupidity on an open fire... bloody mess of crush crotch, and this wouldn't deter them.
      My coworker lamented, should direct them instead to take the sledge hammer to their heads; and we wouldn't have to deal with them.

  • @realdigitalthangka
    @realdigitalthangka Před 3 lety +584

    Knowing how adamant some of your fellow Americans can be about the greatness of their country, I find this a very brave video. I salute you.

    • @garryhennessee7538
      @garryhennessee7538 Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah she's so brave that she crossed an ocean just to complain. She's the ultimate Karen.

    • @JoviesHome
      @JoviesHome  Před 3 lety +158

      I think you need to look up the definition of a Karen. Because giving constructive criticism about a genuine problem is not it.

    • @realdigitalthangka
      @realdigitalthangka Před 3 lety +96

      @@garryhennessee7538 Thank you for proving my point.

    • @garryhennessee7538
      @garryhennessee7538 Před 3 lety +1

      @@realdigitalthangka There is nothing brave about running to another country and then crying about your former country.

    • @Redactedlllllllllllll
      @Redactedlllllllllllll Před 3 lety +58

      @@garryhennessee7538 don't you tell people who complain when they are here to go somewhere else? Lol

  • @Species6079
    @Species6079 Před 2 lety +3

    In the Netherlands we say: "We work to live, we don't live to work!". It's also mandatory in the Netherlands for employers to give their employees a minimal 14 consecutive days (10 workdays and two weekends) payed vacation once every year.

  • @tomastoth4018
    @tomastoth4018 Před 2 lety +3

    I am from Slovakia, currently living in the UK which has a rich mixture of nationalities from literally everywhere you can think of: Polish, Pakistani, Indian, Moroccan, Bangladeshi, Filippino, Nepalese, Hungarian, Romanian, Bulgarian etc. I like to watch and study different cultures and before I started to search videos like yours, very few Americans openly admitted how terrible living conditions became out there, especially in the last 15 years. I can't stop feeling shocked after seeing hundreads of news reports about poverty, food insecurity, lack of affordable housing, race inequality and similar stuff. I didn't think it's actually possible in one of the world's wealthiest countries. Nowadays, I realize that even Americans are intelligent and rational people after experiencing a completely different world on the other side of the globe. US is nowhere close to be considered "free" anymore. Good for you to be in Europe, all the best! 🙂

  • @brianwalley2131
    @brianwalley2131 Před 3 lety +140

    As an Australian I have always been aware that my country has been good at some things but not so good at other things. I know that in some matters other countries are doing better than us.
    So it amazes me that when I hear an American say they live in the 'greatest country in the world' I know they are stating it as an article of faith, like religious dogma and these people usually know little or nothing about life in other countries, so they have no basis in fact for making such a comparison.

    • @aperaruapeeta4309
      @aperaruapeeta4309 Před 2 lety +10

      As a kiwi 🥝 I know we got it good 👍

    • @Pfirtzer
      @Pfirtzer Před 2 lety +1

      You do great now, I love it, it's a living concentration camp, you are the experiment that's going to be rolled out all over the world. If I am not mistaken Australia was a penal colony , Britain sent all the outcasts and mistfits there.Sadly there is a war against humanity waging most are asleep, too blind to see it.

    • @YeahNo
      @YeahNo Před 2 lety +11

      @@Pfirtzer You know MORE convicts were sent to the US right? Probably why guns and prisons are so popular there. America had plenty of penal colonies too, for example - Maryland, Virginia and Georgia. France had Louisiana as a penal colony.

    • @chunglu
      @chunglu Před 2 lety +4

      @@Pfirtzer goodness, the amount of pearl-clutching in this comment is both sad and comical

    • @colinbrown7305
      @colinbrown7305 Před 2 lety +6

      The "freedoms" and workers rights that the citizens of many European countries enjoy were hard faugt. Particularly by those who lived and worked between the two world wars and for a period directly after the Second World War.
      In Britain, where I'm from, things like social housing, the 5 day working week and the NHS came about mainly due to the rise in left wing socialist parties like the Labour Party.
      The devistation and heart ache that Two World Wars brought to the working people of Europe meant that they were no longer going to stand for poor living and working conditions. The working class people began to demand more. With communism on the door step of Western Europe, the upper classes and the political elite had no option but to introduce better social conditions. This wasn't the case in the USA, the American people have been subjected to decades of anti socialist propaganda that has made them blind to the fact that they are treated worse than any other country in the western world.
      Maybe now young Americans are beginning to see what a bad deal they have and they'll be able to force through change.

  • @37Raffaella
    @37Raffaella Před 3 lety +51

    Jovie....I am an American , living 26+ years in Spain (Heathcare #7) never going back to the USA....

    • @37Raffaella
      @37Raffaella Před 3 lety

      @Rita Roork no problem.....I am living the most amazing life!!!

  • @manna6871
    @manna6871 Před rokem +2

    I am so so so grateful to be living in the NL. My colleague's can't believe I integrated here from the US. They think how the Kardashians live is reality for everyone.
    I'm currently on maternity leave and I HAVE to check my work mailbox. I have out of office off, but I'm scared I will be look down on by not working on my time off when I return.
    I have gotten alot better with putting up boundaries but I worked 19 years working like a dog, I can't immediately change that mentality.

    • @Kevin15047
      @Kevin15047 Před rokem

      Oh that explains it!
      I saw a Dutch person say he was under the impression the US was a paradise. And I had no idea why he would think that.

  • @rdm38
    @rdm38 Před 2 lety +5

    Actually I had the opposite experience working in the US for European companies from 1994. I was astonished to see that the American dream is for really few people and how well we live in Europe, Italy in my case. Basically, you're very true. It is fascinating listening to you

  • @emmastarry2886
    @emmastarry2886 Před 3 lety +321

    If any Americans think we have death panels in Europe, they should look up the average age expectancy of countries. America comes 40th place, many European countries including the Netherlands and the UK (my country) live longer. If our health providers are supposedly killing us off, how come we live so long.

    • @XxJay71xX
      @XxJay71xX Před 2 lety +2

      @Rita Roork wrong on 90% of what you said, but please, show me your sources.

    • @TimvanderWeyden
      @TimvanderWeyden Před 2 lety +23

      @@XxJay71xX I am seeing so many @Rita Roork stuff, that I am sad that all those comments are gone now. Probably could have a laugh (and then cry about the level of stupidity). XD

    • @joshuademoraes
      @joshuademoraes Před 2 lety +4

      @@XxJay71xX
      sources: voices from my head

    • @XxJay71xX
      @XxJay71xX Před 2 lety +11

      @@joshuademoraes miss Rita Rook was saying à lot of non-sense, apparently she didn't like looking stupid so she deleted her comments

    • @trevormillar2755
      @trevormillar2755 Před 2 lety +12

      You have death panels in the US, only you call them HMOs

  • @Jacob_._Roberts
    @Jacob_._Roberts Před 3 lety +157

    I live in the United States, and I agree with you completely. I wish I was lucky enough to be born and live in The Netherlands.

    • @Zentiu
      @Zentiu Před 3 lety +31

      Immigration is a thing. I say welcome! :)
      You cant control where you were born. But you can control where you wish to live.
      Coming from a dutch person who lived 3 yrs in portugal. :P

    • @Jacob_._Roberts
      @Jacob_._Roberts Před 3 lety +5

      @@Zentiu Thank you.

    • @thiloreichelt4199
      @thiloreichelt4199 Před 3 lety +6

      You can at least partly change the way you look at life even without moving somewhere else. Freeing yourself from the shopping craze and stopping to max out the credit card does contribute to a less stressful live.
      Ok, explaining to your neighbours that more guns decrease savety instead of increasing may be a savety risk in itself in some places in the US :-(

    • @resi3794
      @resi3794 Před 3 lety +10

      You can move here, youre welcome in the Netherlands

    • @Jacob_._Roberts
      @Jacob_._Roberts Před 3 lety +1

      @@resi3794 Thank you.

  • @Raezuvlite
    @Raezuvlite Před 2 lety +4

    Putting off going to the dr because you have to choose between paying a house note (or rent) or buying food just isn't it. That's the reality here in the states and it's sad.

  • @camkentner3753
    @camkentner3753 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m an American who has lived both in America and outside of it and realized along time ago that massive generalizations about any group, people, country, region or on anything else is usually detrimental to creating a world where different and diverse groups of people are far better off not generalizing any people’s, cultures or countries or making blanket assumptions about them; to do so helps no one while accepting that differences exist and accepting that the reasons why some things are the way they are, why some believe in what they believe and why certain aspects or trends seem to predominate maybe be nothing more then me seeing what I want to see in order to further prove using examples that may or may not be common either myself or others a perspective I have already assumed to be true. A person walking on a hiking path to bird watch may easily fail to notice the web and spider until they walk into the web. Or maybe generalizations are true, maybe a person can say they know what it’s like in the majority of cities, towns, countries and states across one of the largest countries by area and third largest by population. I wouldn’t be able to say that regardless of how often ive traveled over such a large and diverse place like America. I wouldn’t want to do that though with even a relatively small country like one of the Baltics, Pacific island countries, Caribbean or any other; it’d be insulting to those countries and their people and would show a true lack of understand of the diversity which can be found in every place even if only comparing two cities in the same country 10 miles apart. Hopefully anyone who does make such massively ignorant (being ignorant isn’t a negative trait, everyone is with regards to a multitude of topics ,it’s why specialist in one field aren’t also specialist in every other field) assumptions and generalizations is able to live and be whoever they want to while also understanding that it’s just as easy to focus on the positives. Also, any place a person feels is lacking something that other places have and choosing to move rather than to work snd fight towards changing the society or system you find filled with negative aspects or views is one way to do things. Doing that is either a person being lazy or one who is openly admitting they lack the ability to create positive change, lack the ability to use reason to show others that change needs to occur and is pretty defeatist; at worst it makes it makes it seem as though that person was ever intelligent enough or caring enough to help uplift others out of the fog of ignorance and hate. But if you’re happy abandoning the hard work that needs to be done in one place so you can live off the hard work that was done in another, then go for it if it makes you happy and hopefully more will feel less inclined to be so unwilling to put in the hard work for positive changes in a place you didn’t want to waste time working to make better.

    • @MrNetnic
      @MrNetnic Před 2 lety

      wow ! can you condense that by 90%? It seems from your last five or six inches of text, if I’m not mistaken, that you believe that people who live in social democracies, and pay their taxes, and expect the governments to provide free healthcare and education, amongst many other things in return for the taxes, are all ‘freeloaders’. I have to say that I personally am happy to pay my 17%, in return for the treatment of my lung cancer and three metastasized brain tumours for the grand total of zero dollars!

  • @Majse0812
    @Majse0812 Před 3 lety +87

    Hi. I'm from Denmark and have lived in the US. I agree with everything you say and I'm SO glad you've made this video. Maybe you can change some minds in the states. 😃

    • @gunillahartgers1746
      @gunillahartgers1746 Před 3 lety +3

      When I have started to talk with people in the USA about how comfortable life is in Sweden they want the same, especially after they realize they pay more for everything than we do all costs added up. That's when they learn what social democracy is.

    • @jjakjjak5231
      @jjakjjak5231 Před 3 lety +1

      @Peter Newhouse it's semantics, terminology. In Europe there are democratic parties that started from a strand of socialism and evolved from there. They're not socialist anymore, but as they were social Democrats to start with, most Europeans will have those parties in mind when they refer to social Democrats. Now you can be a stickler about the original or official definition, but then you will discuss a lot about semantics rather than contents. If that is what you want to do, no problem. Just don't be surprised if others don't care to much about doing the same.

  • @jaysontraver3354
    @jaysontraver3354 Před 2 lety +430

    I've been all over Europe touring with my band. I absolutely agree with all of this. Unfortunately it's rather difficult to get citizenship in European countries. Anybody have any suggestions on the best way to up my chances? George Carlin is so right when he says "It's called the American Dream, because you have to be asleep to believe it"

    • @jennifermenth-pavel1260
      @jennifermenth-pavel1260 Před 2 lety +33

      I traced my family tree to locate some blood relatives. So far I have found family in Germany, France, Bulgaria, Holland and the Netherlands. My hope is that they can reveal a loophole for me to use. If that doesn't pan out it's not a big deal because it will be so interesting to talk to them. After living in Europe for 3 years it was a mistake coming back to the states. Covoid pushed regret to action and consequently I'm trying to move back to Europe.

    • @Micha-qv5uf
      @Micha-qv5uf Před 2 lety +26

      Marriage is the easiest way :D

    • @costinhalaicu2746
      @costinhalaicu2746 Před 2 lety +26

      Hey Jayson, easiest way is to get married to an EU citizen. Leaving that aside, landing a job in the country where you want to live and then applying for a residency permit is the path to citizenship. After a few years (variable from country to country), you will be able to apply for citizenship. It will have certain requirements, also different from country to country, but generally relating to learning about the social and political system, the history of that country, as well as a language test. For example, in my country, you need to have been a resident for 8 years before you can apply for citizenship. This waiting period is reduced to 5 years if you are married to someone that has the citizenship of the country, and any time period can be reduced to half if you have investments in the country of over 1 million euro. Another thing to consider is that most (but not all) EU countries base their citizenship on the principle of "jus sanguinis", which means the right of blood, as opposed to "jus soli", or the right of land. This means that if your ancestors held the citizenship of that country and you can prove that, you have an easier path to citizenship. I'd assume many Americans would have European ancestry, though I'm not entirely sure how it could be proven if it wasn't relatively recent.

    • @rosemaryfeeney4625
      @rosemaryfeeney4625 Před 2 lety +22

      If you have an Irish grandparent you can automatically claim Irish citizenship and thereby have access to the EU.

    • @tuanoini
      @tuanoini Před 2 lety +12

      Learning the country's language is very helpful! At least where I live, the "citizenship exam" is heavily based on cultural knowledge and language skills - basically just testing your motivation to integrate in here. If your first language is English, Sweden, Germany or Spain could be easy options. Pro tip is also pick a country with only one official language :D

  • @WolfkingSybren
    @WolfkingSybren Před 2 lety +3

    Your video's start to grow on me, Jovie, ever since I watched your "Why Dutch kids are SO spoiled" video, I wanted to see some other ideas you have about the Netherlands...and I like your video's. As a Dutch guy I enjoy seeing our country through ( American) different eyes. It makes me appreciate our way of life here in the Netherlands, Thanks!

  • @T0MT0Mmmmy
    @T0MT0Mmmmy Před rokem +1

    Psychological studies says: buying something makes you a few seconds, maybe some minutes happy, but social interactions with friends and family makes you happy for days!