Americans React To "When Americans Realise The Entire World DOESN'T Revolve Around Them"
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- čas přidán 29. 05. 2024
- In this video, we react to moments shared on Tiktok when Americans realize the whole world doesn't revolve around them. These are hilarious but also somewhat eye-opening.
00:00 - Intro
00:59 - Reaction
11:03 - Outro
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#Americanreacts #tiktoks #Americansabroad
The biggest lie they teach Americans is that everyone from the entire world wants to live there. When in reality, at least from a perspective of a European, the older you get the more you realize how blessed you are to *not* live there.
fax
Some places in the US sound like the hunger games.
I'm an African, and I don't wanna live in America. WAY too much fascism. Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, maybe.
@@unclescipio3136 In a strange way, you are correct. However, just remember that 99.9% of what you call Fascism is found only on the Political left. The rest of us are ''normal'', love the freedom and rights we have, and want nothing to do with Fascism or Communism.
@@unclescipio3136
Canada is in America 🤔
I'm British and my favourite question from an American, someone asked me why we don't celebrate independence day. I had to explain that they're celebrating independence from us and we don't want to be independent lol. She then said yes, but other countries have independence day and again I had to explain how the British had invaded many of those countries and now they celebrate independence from us 🤣
You had a chance to totally screw with them and say yes we do celebrate our independence from the aliens.
I think you should celebrate they went independent ... XD
@@pm1660 too right 👍🏻 ☺️
@@pm1660 she would celebrate a whole year long then. in case you don't realize UK used to colonized half of the world back then, she'll need a whole year to celebrate all of them went independent 😂
Oh British...I hope you can have your independence day from idiocy. It will came, have patience.
I’m Japanese, living in Japan, and I met an American guy who’s been living in Japan as an expat from his company for 8 years but doesn’t speak Japanese.
Turned out we both love movies so we talked about MCU or Star Wars and such. Then I also talked about some Japanese movies and Korean movies.
He asked me, why I dare to watch ‘foreign movies’. He asked me what made me want to watch those ‘foreign’ movies while there are so many movies in English. He continued that it’s not fun to listen to a language he doesn’t understand, and ‘be forced to read the subtitles’. ‘I don’t do to theaters to read. I just wanna see movies’.
I answered, ‘you know that for me, movies in English ARE foreign movies right?’ and he seemed shocked.😮
How does someone not learn the language of the country they are living in for 8 years? Even by accident! It's amazing the effort needed to avoid any kind of integration.
He's dense. As a bangladeshi I really want to visit japan and live there for a while. I even started learning japanese. It's hard, but i find the language beautiful, and it's an etiquette to learn the language if you want to visit or live there. The Americans make me cringe.
@@inigogarcia4336 he’s living in Japan but he works at a company where English is the common language, and he only hangs out with English speakers on weekends. in such cases, it is possible to live in Japan for eight years without learning a bit of the language…overall, he’s not interested in the society he’s in.
@@inigogarcia4336not only didn’t he learn japanese after 8 year in the country, he wasn’t fast enough in reading his own language to read subtitles. Thats something people in my country do around 8-9 old.
They tend to forget, that outside the US, they are the foreigners/tourist/non native people.
Ps: how can you be living for 8 years in Japan and not learn the language?
I saw the Bruce Willis film “Armageddon” at a cinema in Australia. When Willis delivered the line “I guess America has to save the world again”, the entire audience loudly moaned, then we all laughed at our spontaneous reaction.
Haha. Nice one :D
Sounds like a shit movie...
@@sinekonata What 3rd world sh_t hole are you in? Asking for a friend.
Wahaha best thing I've read today! I wish I was there too
@@sinekonata What 3rd world sh_t pit are you in?
Sounds like you have a giant chip on your shoulder.
I lived and worked in London for years, and met a lot of U.S visitors, on a trip on the tube I got chatting to a couple from Florida. He said, " I find it so weird being here and surrounded by foreigners ". I replied, " but as a visitor technically you are the foreigners " To say he was speechless is an understatement.
I kind of got a little opposite story. I was in London in the early 80’s with my sister. We went to a club one night and met these 2 guys who loved our US accents. Come to find out that they thought we were easy and basically asked us if we had lingerie under our clothes and could we show it to them and go someplace to have sex. I asked in what universe do think that is going to happen. And they said aren’t all American women like that. As we were leaving I told them to not watch so many movies about hookers and easy women.
I particularly enjoy the term "expat". Nah mate! You're an immigrant! You are not an English "expat" in Spain etc. You are an English immigrant in Spain etc.
@@DeborahWalkerXOXO You are partly correct, if the person has moved to another country on a permanent basis they are an immigrant however if they are living there on a temporary basis they are an expatriate (expat) not an immigrant.
@Claudie no, that is a migrant. Based on dictionary terms. A migrant moves from country to country for work or pleasure. An immigrant moves for work or pleasure and stays. So they are migrants.
@@DeborahWalkerXOXO the difference is Expats pay for themsleves they dont have their host countries tax payers do it. give your head a shake.
Every time an American says to me: "We saved you in WW2. You should be grateful.", I say: "Thanks, Canada!" Because in The Netherlands it were mostly Canadians that helped us against the Germans. They do not like my answer. lol
Many in the US, do not like to acknowledge Canada. It's like the presence of Canada confuses many in the US. US people are really strange that way.
Thank you for your comment. My father served in WW2🇨🇦
America was LATE TWICE in world wars, made films and ran home
@@teagarden874 We honor the Canadian soldiers every year. Vets from Canada were here every year on that day, until most past away or were too old to travel. But we will never forget!
In Norway it’s the Russians that helped us🇷🇺🇳🇴
I’m from England and I studied medieval history. The things I overheard from Americans at some historical sites are just mind boggling. From complaining that they were asked to keep their voices down in a cathedral that began construction in 1079 to complaining that there weren’t other attractions or facilities at the 2500BC Neolithic site of Stonehenge. The best one being that they loudly complain that U.K. tourist attractions are full of too many foreign tourists, like they aren’t also foreign tourists themselves.
Not quite as bad as the English old lady about 3 years back who took to face book after her 1st Spanish holiday to complain there were too many Spaniards here. 😅
I worked for an organised travel agency in Belgium that made full packages accross Europe for themed tours (medieval military architecture, arts, etc). During one trip to France, with quite a couple americans in the group, I ended up having to leave a nutjob to her own fate to prevent the rest of the group being expelled from Le Louvre. She was taken by security after laying on the "Hermaphrodite on Bed" to take a selfie. She screamed about how she "had the right" because she "bought a ticket", and how this was an attack against her and the United Sates, and how the museum personel would be "destroyed" by the US embassy. I was called by security as she gave me as contact (I give my work phone number to all clients in case they get lost during freeroam time), and I either had to take the full group out, or wash my hands of the situation; Called my boss, and the latter it was... The day before she already made problems on the bus to France. After a brief rest on a highway stop to have a drink, grab a bite, use the bathroom, she insisted we stop again 15 minutes after resuming the ride because she needed the bathroom. Now, I'm used to more elderly folk having trouble with that, and am well aware that younger people aren't always spared those issues. But we have a bathroom on the bus for such emergencies (we prefer to not see them used, because they're a bitch to clean, but hey, necessity makes law). So I suggets she just use the emergency bathroom. Full tantrum because it wasn't fair the others got to use a clean bathroom earlier (note that highway restrooms are... mostly covered in invisible fluids at best. The bus restroom is deepcleaned with bleach by myself or the driver every time we stop) She was told off by some of her fellow americans, but I should have been worried from that point on...
Note that I also met some of the nicest people on that trip. Notably and elderly couple from Ohio. She wanted to see where her mom and dad met in the UK during the War (US father, UK mom), and he wanted to visit his grandpa's grave in Belgium. They decied to make a 3 months long tour out of it.
@helenamcginty4920 lmao omg I remember this. Laughed so hard! Also, Spaniards are such lovely, sweet people so her loss she couldn't appreciate them.
Even these 2 making this video think non americans in their home country are 'foreigners'.
They think costa ricans in costa rica are foreigners.
They might be trying to criticize americans but they are still americans
That's nothing compared to the USAmerican old lady that complained to her travel agency that there were too many people speaking mexican in spain :)
'I don't think you should be surprised to find spanish people speaking mexican in spain' 'I'm from Texas, I know mexican when I hear it!'@@helenamcginty4920
The thing about the girl being irritated on the states question is because we, as non-americans, are expected to know very specific information about the US when most Americans can't even locate other countries in a map. It's the double standard
Would be confusing if the answer was “I m from Georgia” 🤣
And then, we probably do much more about the US than them
@@ulli5328really?
@@yoshiking6027yeah, def
Tbh I don't know much about US geography. I know the names of the states but I couldn't point to most of them on a map or tell you most of their capitals. It's just this vast land of assorted polygons to me, and if someone tells me they're from West Dakota or Pennsyldelphia or something I don't have a clue where that is in the grid.
Some years ago an American colleague of mine stated the following:
"We Americans only make two mistakes about the rest of the world: we think that everyone loves us and that everyone wants to be like us."
I think he nailed it! 🙂
We want your constitution.
@@JezaLoki Whose constitution?
If you want to know how dumb Americans are, you have just said like ,4 times ,in once sentance ,and didn't know
If the US opened its doors and welcomed anybody in the world to come to its shores there might be about at least 2 to 3 billion people who would take that deal. That's the reality even with the troubles.
@@oleggoldberg5206
No they would not take that deal. They are quite happy where they are.
Why would they want to move to a country with very costly healthcare, an awful work/life balance and virtually no gun control?
They wouldn't.
I (as a Dutch person) had Americans next me on the beach in Italy and they were talking how they disliked the sound of my language. They really didn't realize that in Europe most of us understand English haha. So then I suddenly started talking in English and then they went very quiet hahahaha
Oh wow! Only problem is.................your story sounds kind of suspect. Like maybe it is fiction. You should visit Canada. They love to sh*t on Americans. Their major network the CBC teaches them to hate America and Americans from cradle to grave. Good immigration option for you if they keep stealing all your farms there and you can't put food on your table. You'll be with like minds.
@@joxar9285 Yes it is, but if a Brit comes to Australia and you tell them you like their accent that is an even bigger affront. How dare you!!! (Greta Thunburg voice)
Well, to be fair, you were speaking Dutch.
Don't take it personally. Some languages are just phonetically unappealing because of rhythm or intonation. I have an aversion to the sound of certain languages, accents and dialects as well-which might partly be explained by my misophonia. I dislike the sound of nearly all Asian languages apart from Indo-European and Arabic languages (though I am strongly averse to Indian accents while speaking English). It's just preference. I also find certain dialects, like ebonics, incredibly irritating if not impossible to tolerate because it sounds intentionally lazy, disrespectful and uneducated. It's linguistic genocide.
@@joxar9285 actually its stupid if you talk about when the people are literally sitting next to you... its offensive but maybe I should talk about dumb americans are in my opinion when Americans are sitting next to me then.
Im from Sweden and we have an amusement park inside city limits and i got asked once by an American family why we don't make the amusement park as big as they do in the states. All i could do after being stunned in confusion were to answer with a somewhat sarcastic voice that the buildings surrounding the whole park had people living in them and that the buildings are about 200 years older than their whole country. We're not so keen on destroying history just to make room for an amusement park when the one we have is enough.
Americans think that history is stupid while people who actually have cool and interesting history can see the value of the past
I'm an American immigrant married to a British citizen and have been living in England for the last 15 years. Living outside America is a massive eye-opener! When my now husband and I were first together and he was visiting me in the US, I had a co-worker (albeit still in high school at the time) say, "You might move to England? Really? But then you have to learn their language!"
I smiled, thought "bless your heart" and prayed she stayed in school. 😳
Staying in school will keep her dumb, that's why the schools are there, thought that would be obvious to you by now.
Wow he actually married an american woman? It's gonna sound sexist but I genuinely doubt if it's worth getting married in US to an american born and raised woman
@BobcatPoop Are you origin from Texas? Because of "bless your heart"?
Then you visited Liverpool and understood what she meant 😂😂
😂😂😂
Black British born here. The first time I visited the US (Virginia), a lady was so fascinated by me because she'd "never met a British African American before ".
In turn, I was also fascinated....to the point of speechlessness. Was literally dumbfounded 😳.
🧐Utterly delighted to make your acquaintance, Miss Sierra. 🤠Fishizzle!
It's funny and I'd guess she's close minded but keep in mind for a while in the 80s or 90s the idea was being pushed that it was racist to say anything other than African American in the USA.
That reminds me of a US journalist interviewing Nelson Mandela who asked him how did it feel to be the first African American president of South Africa. I roared laughing watching it.
Actually, lots of Americans are stunned to find lots of Black people in Ireland.
@@SB4F funny thing about that is that it is and always has been white people who decide what blacks and other ethnic groups should be called. Then other white people feel the need to go to bat to defend them. When realistically all anyone of any color wants to be called is by their fucking name their parents gave them.
Funny old world we live in in this backward ass country.
Better to be dumbfounded than just plain dumb as was she.
My husband and I went to Europe a few years ago and, at Frankfurt airport, there was some kind of incident at passport control so they were only letting EU passport-holders through (seeing as they have their own gate) and everyone else had to wait. A man and a woman walked past the line and approached the security guard, who explained the above, to which the man replied, "oh, it's ok: we're Americans." The guard looked perplexed and explained again that only EU passports can come through and *all* other passports have to wait, to which the man replied, "but...we're *Americans*". This exchange took place a couple more times, with the guard having no idea how to make himself more clear and the AmErIcAnS getting increasingly obstinant at the fact that the seas weren't parting for them, so hubby stepped in and gave them a piece of his mind, after which they quietly waddled off to the back of the queue, clearly mortified at his suggestion that "no one cares that you're American, you're not special".
For the rest of the trip, any time we had to wait in a queue or were in any way inconvenienced, hubby would look at me in mock outrage and say, "but...but...we're AMERICANS, goddamn it!" 🤣🤣
haha thats hilarious thanks for sharing.
Totally understandable. Americans are not the ones causing all your problems. Let us in and shut up.
lol
Curious fact: Only EU passports were allowed because between countries of the European Union we don't need passports to travel, only the ID, which make this things, this incidents, be resolved instantly for us, hehehe.
I hope you had a good time in Europe!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
The funniest thing I heard from an American was in my home city (Glasgow in Scotland) I was sitting on a bench near the cathedral eating lunch and struck up a conversation with an American guy who had been taking photos of the amazing architecture.
he said to me "wow that church is beautiful it must be at least a couple of hundred years old". I was like dude that cathedral was built about 550 years before the USA was founded , I had to pull up the info on my phone before he would believe me
(the cathedral was finished 791 years ago in 1232, construction started in 1197 )
the thing that really blew his noodle was when I told him that there are neolithic ruins of houses on the Orkney isles that predate the pyramids of Giza by more than 1000 years :)
I remember, when I went to study in America, a girl refused to believe I was from France and basically called me a liar because, and I quote, “you don’t have the accent”…
When I spoke to her in french she just looked entirely unconvinced. I didn’t bother any more of course, but wow…
I can force the accent, and if you listen closely you’ll hear it on certain words sometimes, but apparently that’s speaking decent english means I can’t be french lmao
Wow I just don't get why a person wouldn't believe someone saying where they are from.
@@midwestamericans3806 Me neither, that's why I just moved on. Didn't want to bother with them much after their.... display
I met two college gents in the US at a business where I use to work. The guy with the Norwegian accent was actually the son of American diplomats who grew up in Norway. His classmate that spoke English with a "DC Accent" was actually Norwegian who was the son of Norwegian diplomats and he grew up in the US. They had to show their IDs (they used their passports) to get in so I knew what they were saying was legit. Had my brain spinning...lol.
I'm English, and speak with a 'classic' RP cut glass accent, as I come from an 'Old' family. However, my Grandmother was from Normandy, from my birth, pretty much only spoke French to me, and during my childhood, would frequently take me to visit relations in France.
On more than one occasion, most memorably some old boy in Rennes, who insisted on seeing my British Passport, people would refuse to believe I was English, as I didn't speak French with an English accent !
To be fair, I actually took this as a compliment, my Grandmother was so pleased........
I’ve had genuine arguments with foreigners and people from the south of England because I’m northern and that means I sound somewhat Scottish but of course they all think I’m from Ireland and are very keen on telling ME that
Singaporean here. went to uni in Michigan back in 2006. I'll never forget an american girl asked me how come Singaporean can understand english? i told her our national language is English, our school curiculum is in English and while we are diverse with many ethnicities and a lot of language are spoken in singapore such as english, mandarin, other chinese dialect (hakka,teochew,etc), melayu (malay), indonesian, tamil, the official language is still English plus we have to submit TOEFL/IELTS/SAT test to be admitted to the university. She called me a liar. She said and i quote "it's impossible!! english only used in europe and america, you see African speaks english in America that's why they called African American same as Asian American" and at that moment i realize going to the states for a "better" education may not be better at all. 😵😵😵
You could have just said that u were colonized by UK same as India and Philippines
Is the UK near Utah?
Australia ain't real, I suppose
And it's getting worse. If De Santis gets his wish, Americans will be applying to college in a state of relative ignorance. His government buddies want Americans ignorant because it will help them get elected.
@@cocaineminor4420 Ah, Philippines colonised by the UK? 😲Did you just rewrite history? 🙄
My Uncle lived in Spain about 15 years ago and has a story of an American lady he met in first class on a train. When the conductor came to check the tickets he told her she only had a standard ticket and couldn't sit in first class to which she replied "But I'm American" 🤦♀
That's just classic!
Daaaaaaaaaaaaaaam! 🤣
What did the conductor reply?
That says it all 😶
That's hilarious. And her point is? LoL
I overheard an old American couple in a UK hotel asking the staff “Why would you build a fortress on top of a hill? It’s so inconvenient to get to.”
LMAO
damn, they would have associated one more braincell to the thought and they might actually have found out why
Honestly I came here for the comments and I'll admit it I wasn't disappointed. Here's my most recent "American experience". I'm from Bulgaria and like 3 years ago I was waiting for my flight at Schiphol airport in Amsterdam. Next to me was this middle aged couple from NY state. When they saw me writing an email in English on my laptop they asked me if I was from The US. When I told them where I was from, they replied "Oh it's so nice that you finally gained your independence from the Soviet Union." I was like WTF fellas my county exists since 681 and turned my ear buds on. 😂😂
It's ironic that they were talking like this to a Bulgarian. Your country is the oldest of entire Europe. Also, the country of roses :) Greetings from Italy.
😂😂😂😂
Non è il Portogallo, lo Stato più antico d'Europa?@@Liaros_
@@gabrielesolletico6542 No, la Bulgaria è nata nel 600. Non 1600, proprio 600 (da una rapida ricerca, il 681) dopo Cristo.
Secondo google in realtà il più antico è la Repubblica di San Marino, però, seguito dalla Bulgaria. Dipende se vuoi considerare i microstati oppure no.
I'm portuguese my country has the same borders since 1136.
We are the oldest country in europe with the same borders
I'm an Aussie and I was in the UK and some americans were in front of us at Westminster Abbey. I grabbed a book about the Abbey to buy from the stand. The top right corners had the flags representing which language they were in. Mine had the Union Jack on it. The americans scanned the book stand and declared "they dont have any in english". I looked at the book in my hand and back at the stand to the 3 other books just sitting there. The americans then asked the shop assistant "if they had any books in english?" The assistant said "hang on a box just arrived." She went behind the desk and pulled out a book with the US flag on the top right hand corner and says 'here you go". They bought the book and moved on. I asked the assistant if that happens often, to which she replied yes, so often that's why they print one with a US flag on it. I said "I'll buy this one, (the one with the Union Jack on it), at least this one doesnt have any spelling mistakes in it.
That’s brilliant, made me actually laugh out loud! Greetings from the Bush Capital.
😂😂😂
I'm mexican and I can't stop laughing😂
Oh yes, I know that so well. After a career in teaching (from industry) in England mainly IT which required me teaching a lot of English. I went to Thailand as a TESOL English teacher and stupidly thought I would get a job quite easily, but found on visiting the agencies, which mainly were American, was told they could not use me as I could 'not' speak English.
Absolutely stunned on hearing this and could tell the young American female manager interviewing me, when I said "Excuse me, I was borne in England, English is my mother tongue, I taught for 14 years, reached DH status, I worked for City & Guilds writing learning materials in English for worldwide distribution" that she had no concept at all, the point I was making.
Being quite good with accents, I went to another TESOL agency, but this time spoke with an American accent, even though showing the same CV giving all the same details the last manager had read and seen, and 'guess what' I was hired and giving a great deal of work. Only problem, I had to remember to use the American accent on the phone when talking about work they sent me and the typical 'try-ons' in getting my pay from them. I was with them for six months,
On deciding to return to England, I went to the agency and asked to see the manager again, she was sad to see me go and that I had been very popular with Thai students in the offices they sent me to. Having begun with the conversation in the American accent, I dropped it and on purpose did three accents, a very posh one, my standard one and my old Cockney accent while telling her how 'stupid', arrogant and rude Americans were in regard to 'my' English language which she spoke. The look on her face, I will never forget, and was an absolute joy to tell her as well.
@@wakeupuk3860 Awesome 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻💛🏴💐☺️
I'm English and was visiting New York... at breakfast an American lady stated doing the rounds table by table introducing herself (she was a guest like everyone else) she came to our table and asked us where we were from... we said England...she said is that in Europe? I asked where she was from? She said Texas! I replied is that in Mexico....she didn't like that lol 😉😉👍🏼
but England is in europe (geographically at least)
Tell her it's pronounced "Tehas" (it is!) and she'll hate you till she dies.
@Lorraine Moynehan only just seen this reply ... she didn't mean it like that, she thought the uk was a land locked country in part of Europe
That is actually very funny. Sadly, these last 3 generations of Americans are graduating from our ''High Schools'' being less and less educated. On the other hand, I've heard some whoppers of stupidity from Foreigners who were here on vacation.......
Considering Texas was part of Mexico makes it more funny
As a university student I have worked as a guide with American tourists for 2 months. Various groups. It was like a patience training - I had to suppress anger & annoyance non-stop as they were offending everyone everywhere and I had to deal with the consequences (stealing, destroying stuff, breaking laws, being rude... and this was in EU country, I cant even imagine these people traveling to less tolerant places). The worst part-time job ever. I would rather clean toilets than go through it again. I mean it.
Give us some specific examples. Just for giggles
I am an American. I've lived in Europe off and on over the years. I was in Paris in 2016 for a few days on vacation and notice a man and woman looking at one of those public maps they have in popular locations. They were looking very lost and confused. They looked like they were Americans. I asked them in English if I could help. The woman looked so relieved. She said, "Oh, thank goodness you speak English. Ever since we arrived here all anyone speaks is French."
The ironic thing is, had they tried to learn just one or two sentences in French, those parisians would have agreed to help and probably would've busted out passable english
😂 I didn’t know French people could speak French 😂😂😂
French speakers, especially in Paris, tend to not want to speak foreign languages. Even when they can.
@@Vincrand As a British visitor to Paris, my experience is that a little French goes a long way. If you speak to the Parisians in French, however badly, they will often reply in English (or in whatever language they think is your native tongue). However, if you speak English they will reply in French!
And they're the fuck right about that.@@Vincrand
I'm English. I was in a McDonald's in Stockton California and the server said "I love your accent." I replied "I love your accent, too." She looked confused, responded "But I don't have an accent?" and froze, standing motionless and confounded as I turned and left.
*:)))*
Anyone from Madrid would say the same thing to whoever is not from Madrid 😂
They think they have no accent at all since they believe their Spanish is standard.
@@Lyrielonwind When I was a youngster, (I'm Australian) I never considered myself or anyone else from Australia, to be speaking with an accent. I didn't realise at the time that we Australians have an accent too. One that apparently is almost impossible to get right if you're not born here. When I see actors trying to speak with an Australian accent, it's just cringingly bad (see Robert Downey Jr in "Natural Born Killers").
The closest I've seen is Meryl Streep in "Evil Angels" aka "A Cry in the Dark" which was very good but it wasn't perfect. And Kenneth Branagh, during an interview with an Australian reporter, was asked to attempt the Aussie accent as he was well known for being able to nail any accent. He did it and it was flawless. If I hadn't known who he was, I would have thought he'd lived here his whole life.
😂
the truth is , we don't hear our own accent, I don't know why that is.
I love to see, when US people realize that "most houses in Europe are older" than their whole country is always fun.
I once told an American the village I grew up in is 1000 years old and I think their mind broke for a second 😂
saying MOST houses is pushing it, though.
@@emileduvernois6680 yes, thats true of course. But it also depends on where you are.
Are you living in a house built in 1610? That's when my first European ancestor arrived in Jamestown Colony. Since the colonists didn't have the ability to build permanent structures immediately, there are no original houses from that time. It's just something for you to think about.
@@reindeer7752 No, I dont live in a house from 1610, but if I would like to, I could do that in and around my town. And the first non permanent structures would be another 800 years older than 1610. I know when the Americas where discovered, but Columbus and even the Vikings started their journeys from europe so it has to be older. No reason to be proud of, just a fact. And also, of course there where natives ling in America, Asia, Africa and Australia long long before any house where built.
I'm South African living in Bali, Indonesia. An American couple that stayed at our resort asked me where I was from and I told them.
Their response: "But you're white and you speak perfect English."
I just laughed.
“That’s right ma’am, but I’ve been practicing my English for [insert age] years now and am starting to get the hang of it”
Had you been older you could have told them you were born in the USA*
*The Union of South Africa.
No further comments. LOL
A tourist guide in Edinburgh, the Scottish capital, told me that he had a coach load of American tourists and was showing them the sites of the city. As they were travelling along the coach stoped at traffic lights, which happened to have adio sound for the blind. The lights said "traffic going to Princes Street has been signalled to stop." A lady sitting at the front asked "what was that?" and the tourist guide said that it was the talking traffic lights. "talking traffic lights! why have you got talking traffic lights?" the American asked. The guide explained that they spoke to let the blind know that the lights had turned to red and the traffic was to stop. Her jaw dropped, and she exclaimed, "oh gee, in America, we wouldn't let the blind drive."
I AM English. No single little thing annoys me more that seeing an America Flag next to the language option for English.
- especially when it's actually the flag of Liberia. That one makes me so embarrassed to be human.
As an Australian, I will always pick anything, but the American flag for the language option, if there is no Australian, give me the Brit flag.
Americanese
@@shabtifoxx7991 I’d even prefer Canadian English. At least they say zed!
Same with "Brazilian" Portuguese getting more emphasis from Google or Wikipedia than the original European Portuguese. The 220 vs 10million factor.
I was traveling in Italy with a friend a few years ago. On the second day of the trip she wanted to know why they weren't speaking English. I reminded her that we were in Italy and they were speaking Italian. Her response: "Everyone learns English in every country. It's disrespectful to ignore your visitors." I wanted to smack her but was too stunned to respond.
I think your story is fiction. You hate American people because you have an inferiority complex because Americans gave the world the radio, the television, the telephone, the automobile, the airplane, the computer, the internet, and many other things. Your country likely gave the world next to nothing. You feel inferior, so you have to make up tall tales to make yourself feel superior. I'm an Italian-American who has been to Italy 4 times. I don't believe your story for a second.
😅😅
wow 😂😂 Was she serious or just joking??
You should have smacked her
@@yuribatista7268 I'm Italian, I've heard that kind of statement many time...
Being French myself and while living in England some 10 years ago, the worst thing i’ve heard an American couple say to me while serving them at the restaurant i worked at was ´We love travelling to Europe but if it wasn’t for us, you’d all be speaking German today’………..
The soviets did most of the work lol
I see only one viable answer
"If it wasn't for you, we wouldn't have such a debt, the soviets had already won."
I (German, living in Switzerland) was on vacation in Portugal once. At breakfast, there was a couple from Canada. The wife was shocked when she realized that the chair, on which she was sitting, was older than Canada itself.
Tbf I would be shocked too if a chair was over 150 years old
Awesome. At least in Mexico we have an ancient culture long before the Spanish arrived.
I'm European. My company sent us to the US one time for training. In Atlanta I went to a bar, got to talk to this local guy. He said that the US were the greatest country in the world. Turns out he had never once in his life been outside the state of Georgia 😂
That figures.
The only problem is that he is mostly correct but it becoming less correct as our leftward drift lowers us to world norms.
@@frankgriffin6293 lol, 'murica is degrading fast into a fascist dictatorship
we are all looking down on you, don't you realize?
next D-Day will be in your country....
@@frankgriffin6293 the us is only great in a select few categories eg. Most prisoners in the world and highest incarceration rate, worst healthcare efficiency and healthcare system highest taxes of pay check just to mention a few
@@frankgriffin6293 like I had to say it but you are the exact type of person this video is making fun of for having to a centralised world view
12:11 I remember being in Granada and there were two Americans sitting on a table near me in a restaurant and they were having language difficulties with the waiter, they didn't speak Spanish and the waiter didn't speak English. I helped them out a little (I speak Spanish) and afterwards and one the Americans asked me where I was from, I said I'm from the UK, he said, wow! Your English is so good! I said, Thanks man! Your English isn't bad either! He genuinely looked very very confused and carried on eating...
hahaha oh my good. This has to be hilarious.
LOL.
Thas was hilarious.
Americans don't call it "The You-Kay". We call it England or Britain. Both of which have a dignity to them. "The UK" sounds like a fast food burger joint.
So, did he think that he spoke "American" rather than "English"?
@@Anonymoose66G Must be a generational thing; at 65 I've never thought of myself as anything other than British, but I do say I'm from the UK.
I once had to explain to a group of American colleagues while on expatriation to the US that my wife and I had flown expressly to my home country for her to deliver our baby so my son _wouldn’t_ be a US citizen. As you cannot relinquish your citizenship in the US and he’d be liable to pay taxes to the US the rest of his life while we would likely leave the country before he’d even reach the age where he’d have active memories of it.
They were baffled. Couldn’t fathom someone _not_ wanting their kid to be american
If someone gave me a green card and a ticket to the US I would sell them. I live in Aaaafrica, and have met far too many Americans to want to have anything further to do with them.
You CAN reliquish your US citizenship.
@@tomhaskett5161 in theory )))
@@tomhaskett5161 It's a hassle. They make it VERY hard to do so.
Thanks for doing us a favor.
I remember an American asking me with great concern "what happens to the people in the North of England?" I asked him to explain further, and he said "well, London and the South is well developed, but the rest of England is still kinda medieval right? I heard they don't have running water or anything."
should have told them we are OK as the UN sends aircraft to drop aid packages
“Indeed Sir! It’s a most concerning affair! We toss books over the wall but the natives just don’t seem to know how to read them!
Luckily we have Saint Pompous day on which we all cross over to give them their annual bath”
I was once in a chatroom (many Americans) and they knew I was an Aussie. They asked the same questions about electricity etc. I told them I had a machine I had to pedal to make electricity to run my computer. Also told them my daily chore was to go down to the creek and get water for the house. Then I shouted (IN CAPS) BLOODY HELL KANGAROOS ARE BOUNCING ALL OVER MY BACK YARD. Some of the questions I was asked almost made me fall off my chair, but I couldn't let that happen because the electricity would have stopped... *lol*
Americans think Canadians have snow year round, we use dog sleds, live in igloos & polar bears are everywhere😂.
Hope warned them about drop bears and hoop snakes
@@waynebernitt2806 This was some years before the drop bears and hoop snakes came into existence im'm afraid... *lol*
@@Xerame506 the polar bears must have found a nice rural zoo to visit then, if they are chasing penguins
German here, when I visited Texas for a few weeks I also went some time to school there (9th grade) I was asked whether we already had electricity everywhere and I told them - no, we assemble the Porsche in candlelight 😁
I'm from Europe and I was traveling in the USA. A US-American woman asked me if we have shops and cinemas in Europe. I was shocked by her ignorance.
It's even funnier if you know that cinema was invented in France
So do you? ☺
It's shocking because google Street view is right there.
My British boss asked me if we had books in Chinese in China
Supermarkets, in my case, but, yeah, been there
American privilege is so real… I decided to help my American friend (who constantly complained about wanting to get out of America), move to Australia to begin a new life and feel a bit more secure… Before he even arrived in Australia he was complaining about how when he showed his American passport at a check in counter they didn’t even react. And how when he was job hunting, he blamed me for not getting a job sooner by saying “In America, if I’d applied for these jobs I would’ve gotten them by now”. He also then continued to blame me for not getting the exact job he wanted in his first two months. I only have one regret in life, and that was going out of my way to help him. I should’ve left him there!
I have had this as well. As A New Zealander
Not as extreme as another country. But I helped someone move to another American city and he behaved in this way. Aggressive but really smiley.
I would say in response "why don't we all try to calm down, and co-operate"
And he would often say "I am trying to help you learn not to let people walk all over you.
When I was in New Zealand no one learned to stick up for themselves. They didn't want to be special.
In Minnesota people grow up fighting and talking behind each other's backs because it forces people to be more strong and worldly and socially aware"
...
By socially 'aware' he meant aware of threats.
I have lived outside the US since 1987. My biggest rant with tourists, etc., is not their lack of knowledge of different cultures and ways of doing things, but their insistence that their way is better, their arrogance and unwillingness to experience the different.
By the way, in geography class in schools in Colombia, North and South American continents are taught as one, all the American Continent.
It is a cultural shock. They have assumed something their whole life and finding out they were wrong, or they don´t know almost anything they were suppossed to know is not easy to digest.
I’m Irish, met an American at a house party here on St Patricks Day, I put Thin Lizzy on and she said “You have great music taste for a foreigner”. Irish guy, in Ireland, on an Irish holiday, playing an Irish band. Whole room was calling her an idiot for that one.
serious question I'm into bands like thin Lizzy and I'd like to know if there's any other Irish classic rockers I should know about that might not have been as popular over here in the states.
@@thephoenixhasflown Thin Lizzy’s about as heavy as I go so I don’t listen to the rest of these much but the classics are U2, the Cranberries and the Boomtown rats. If you want just good Irish bands I’m a big fan of the Snow Patrol, the Academic and the Blizzards, Hoziers very good too although he’s more of a solo guy. The Pogues, the Dubliners, the Waterboys and the Saw Doctors would be pretty well regarded too although they’re all a bit more trad music inspired than traditional rock. Then there’s the Strypes who were a really good modern rock band and the Commitments which was a bit like an Irish version of the Blues Brothers. Irelands got a load of really good bands with a pretty wide range of sounds so I dunno what to suggest specifically but Thin Lizzy are my favourite we ever produced, Snow Patrols probably my 2nd favourite but they’d have a very different sound to Thin Lizzy. Hope that helped man
@@guyincognito7518 I've heard of Snow patrol they were on the radio over here but I may have heard of the boomtown rats left to check them out and see if I remember anything I haven't heard them in a while at least
@@guyincognito7518 One of my favourites is Lunasa. Saw them when they played in a little town/scout hall at Possum Creek in Byron Bay. That place was jumping so hard sweat was dripping off the ceiling!!
@@davespanksalot8413 I’ll check them out, great username btw
I remember seeing a vid of an American living in Germany who had been speaking with a friend back in America. The friend was shocked when she found out that German time was 6hrs ahead of where she was in America and then horrified that Germany had not warned America about the Twin Towers tragedy seeing as Germany knew about it 6hrs before America did. I kid you not😆
Stop it 😆😆
😂😂😂😂 this is gold
Wow, I watched 9/11 live as it happened at about 3.00am in the morning but the next day. Australia is a lot ahead. I was talking to a friend in Texas. I could have warned them so much sooner. That still haunts me just being awake to see it. I once told my American friends that Tuesday was a really bad day. So just stay in bed. Some of them did.
My head hurts just trying to fit that level of stupidity into my world view.
Aah, we call such people “special “, as you are not allowed to say what you actually mean!
Meeting people like you two, helps me realise that not all Americans are dummies. Thanks guys.
I can't even imagine that everyone wants to live here. I love my country, but other people love their countries too. And nothing revolves around me, I just live my life & hope I get it right.
And many people loves and admire the USA. (I do) but off course most of them loves their country the most. (Unless they have left due to persecution or any other odd aspect) Most people specially from latinoamerica, goes there out of necesity, escaping from poverty or insecurity in their countries. And they are hard workers, maybe professionists that make more money doing dishes in a restaurant in NY then having a med consultory in their countries. The critisism comes from the lack of empathy and understanding, prejudices some us citizens have about other countries or nationalities, languages or when traveling abroad.
Great answer. I have visited the USA and loved it and came away with a really positive impression of the people. I would not move there though for a few reasons but mainly just because England is my home and it's where my children and grandchildren are. I read a funny quote by an American once warning foreigners visiting the USA that if anyone ever asks you if you'd like to come and live there never just say a straight NO. They would take it as a terrible insult. Just say 'well, I love it here but east or west home is best'.
America, a great place to visit, but sure as hell don't want to live there. And yes, I've been there many times, always glad to get home again.
Years ago I lived in the city of York, in England. Shortly after arriving there I went on one of the lovely guided tours of the old city, which included the York Minster cathedral. One of two older USian women asked the guide "Is that pre-war?". The guide replied "lady, that's pre-America".
Also a former York resident. I was once walking High Petergate, going past the church that's just off to the side of the Minster and a couple of US Americans were in discussion, looking at the church wall, seemed a little troubled, and they randomly grabbed me as I was passing and were like 'Excuse me, I know everything in the UK is a lot smaller than the US, but is this really the great York Minster we've heard so much about?'... I was like... No honey... come with me. We walked like the ten meters further up the street and I just sort of gestured up and they were like '... Oh... Okay.' I am still to this day not sure how they managed to get to that point in the city without having seen the Minster from further away but... it made for a funny moment at least xD.
I was in York a few years ago, and an American asked me the way to London Bridge. I directed her to the A1 and said, "Just keep going. You can't miss it" 🤪🤣
I love that guide! 👏🏻😁🏴
If they had been travelling around Europe they may have just been asking if it was the original building or rebuilt after the war. Don't always assume the worst.
@@reindeer7752 Even if Europe was that rebuilt (which is not) we have to assume they're not able to make smart enough questions -> "Is this the original one?". But yes, in this case we should assume they know that pre-war stuff is definitely usual in Europe.
Do you remember the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy? Turin is my city, and one of those days a small U.S. family stopped me on the street in the center of town... they wanted directions to one of the city's stadiums where some competitions would be held in one hour.
I'll make it short for you: they were rude and arrogant and among themselves made jokes about how people who don't know English are dumb because everyone should know english because it's the language of U.S.A. and about how bothering was asking to me in a mix of Italian and English, etc... not knowing that I understood english enough to get that they were making fun of me.
Leeeet's say that I MAY have given them directions to the OTHER Olympic stadium of the city... on the precise opposite side of the city and two hours away, by public transportation, from where they were actually supposed to go. Whoops. 🤭😏
Oh no! How could you do that? 😱
Well, I do that with (very) rude german tourists. Either I choose our oldest dialect that no one understands to give directions, or I send them on a 100km+ sightseeing tour. 😁
😂😂😂😂😂
Oh my, you met rude American people. Do you know how many rude Italian people I met when I visited Italy? Scores. At least the Americans didn''t try to pick your pocket or rob you. That is what I experienced in your lovely country.
@@TheAstilesus are you American? Why are you so offended?
@@TheAstilesus like America doesn't have pick pockets and robbers????
I have a secret hobby.
Taunting American viewers on Bluey FB fanpages (the Australian kids cartoon) when they complain about the character Bandit's accent. 😂 So many comments along the lines of: "Why doesn't he talk properly" and "I watch it with subtitles".
So I then take joy in replying and correcting their bad spelling (eg all the missing U's and even the occasional 'i' (Aluminium was mentionedin 1 post)) and they get so twitchy.
Sorry, we Australians have very bad sense of humour (note the U! 😜)❤
Aussies have a great sense of humour, and like Brits, do a superb line of put downs.😊
When people tell me they're American, i always respond with
'Really? Me too!' And when they ask where from I say 'Brazil!'
Always get confused looks 😮
I've heard a story where when an American asked an Englishman what nationality he was and he replied 'English' she, apparently, turned around and told him that was not possible because English was a language not a nationality!
There is a massive difference between ignorance and stupidity. Incredibly intelligent people simply don't know stuff. That doesn't make them stupid, it makes them ignorant. My mother, who used to be a teacher, once said "Stupidity is permanent, ignorance can be cured with a judicious dose of education."
Similar things have been said to lots of people from the UK on CZcams lol
I'm English. I am here to tell you, we definitely do exist
@@LordEriolTolkien sure about that 😁😁😁
I love your mum's quote
She was right. English, Scottish, Welsh, and Northern Irish are not nationalities. We're all British Citizens.
British guy here who lived in Nashville for 4 years. My ex's father (Chattanooga, TN), who once visited the UK in the 70's, told me that Brits didn't have fridges till the 80's or 90's, because he had seen British homes store their milk outside! I had to explain to him, that it was the milkman delivery, leaving the milk by the door and we've had fridges and freezers for the exact amount of time that Americans had. He didn't believe me.
This I found such a charming answer. I don't use enough milk to warrant the use of a milkman. They are a disappearing service.
I always have a milkman even though I don’t need one. I just have a couple of days. Simply to use the service so it keeps it available for those vulnerable who do need it. My mums milkman delivers produce as well.
Hilarious! 🤣🤣 most of Europe used to get milk delivered like that; some places still do 😉
Funny thing because it was the British that invented the freezer
Yeah my mum gets her milk delivered twice a week and sometimes butter and cream lol.
One I have heard several times here in the Netherlands by American tourists (mostly in the week after July 4th) "Why we don't do fireworks on the 4th of July".... Ma'am, why would we do fireworks on a random weekday.
Another one I heard online "Dutch must be racist because they keep posting Dutch flags on Cinco de Mayo" ... "Sir, May 5th is our liberation day celebration"
The stone wall in my garden is older than the American constitution
We had an American guest a while back and showed him my German hometown and other cities because we thought he would find the architecture interesting. He kept saying how much everything looked "fake" because it reminded him of Disney World...
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Oh well Neuschwanstein was the inspiration for the Disney Cinderella Castle, wasn't it?
Lol😂
Well to be fair most of your best architecture was blown up because you kept trying to kill everyone... lmao. Just saying.
@@paulsmith8510 what a simplified concept of war. That's like saying most of your cities are on fire because you chose to enslave black people and kept bullying them to this day lmao
I remember seeing a while back the UK flag for "English" and the US flag for "Simplified English".
Not sure if it was a joke but it gave me a bit of a laugh.
Conb
Gratulations on so openly addressing the truth in the old saying "stupidity is forgivable, ignorance is not."
Where there is a gap in your knowledge you two actively set out to remedy the situation and are open to accurate information, no matter if it clashes with or undermines long held beliefs.
This compares so positively with a quote I saw on another stream a while back where a countryman of yours said that he would rather be lied to and receive false information than
(continued from above) have his conservative views undermined or be shown that socialism is not simply evil.
I'm not taking a political position here, but as a New Zealander we grow up with an awareness of the wider world and what seems to be an innate curiosity of what is out there
Keep it up, you are doing well and can only be the better world citizens for your efforts
Close to truth. The real English language has so many more words that just do not get used the US of A
@@paulcrowley8587 US has invented lots of non words like "bested", "medalled" and "burglarized" not to mention insufferable grammatical crimes such as "my bad"
nope it wasn't a joke, American English is classed as Simplified English
In Spanish-speaking countries we just call the US its name: "Estados Unidos" (United States). Even more, there are latinos who get really annoyed if you call the US "America", because America is the whole continent
Tienes todo la razon,estoy completamente en acuerdo con todo 💯🎯👍
Una vez hablando con una compañera argentina, dije "los americanos" refiriéndome a los estadounidenses, y me apresuré a disculparme (soy española). Ella me dijo "Tranquila, nosotros hacemos lo mismo". Ocurrió en los 90 y, desde entonces, luché contra esa mala costumbre hasta dejar de hacerlo.
While I was studying at university in Turkey, I was working in the tourism sector during summer holidays. One day, we picked up a group of tourists from USA from the airport to take them to the hotel.
They all came with their safari clothes.
I joked that I liked the way they dressed, and they told me they thought it would suit the geography.
When we got on the tour bus to hotel, they were looking out with astonished eyes when they saw that one side of the road was the forest and the other side was the sea.
So I said to them, "I'm sorry we can't offer you a desert or zebras and giraffes where you can go on safari, I hope you're not disappointed." But I don't think they understood the irony. 😅
“But you’re Turkey! I came here to eat pizza!”
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I was an English teacher in a foreign country. One day, I had a young boy student whose accent, when he spoke English, was perfectly British. I was so surprised to hear him speak with a British accent, it really sounded nice. He still needed to learn expressions and certain vocabulary. A few days after his class with me he had an American teacher ( the school sometimes switched us around). The American teacher found the boy's accent horrible and started to teach him from scratch by getting him to pronounce everthing in American English. The child was confused and started to lose confidence in himself. After a few lessons with the American teacher the mother took her son out of the school.
TEFL teacher here. That is so wrong. I taught English in the UK and many Korean and Japanese students would come with American accents. It´s an english accent. I never tried to change their accents
So messed up. Sad it was an actual certified English teacher to do that. In Brazil I've seem plenty of American expat youtubers who either become online English teacher just because they are American because why not, or make one or two videos about the language. Most of their adverts and such are about things that people learn in regular English courses that they should stop using because Americans don't use them. Most are not exactly related to another English speaking country either, but they refer to them as flaws despite being tecnically correct.
Edit: one of them that I remembered later is actually a certified English teacher. I never bought her course, but on her channel she made a video about things Americans don't say. It was just for sake of curiosity, she didn't tell people to stop using them, exept those that have a different meaning than intended.
When I first learned english in school it was supposed to be "Oxford English". After an appreticeship I startet school again and we had an ( attractive ) english teacher from near London. She said: forget about Oxfard english, its the english of the aristocrats - and tose are dying out. She wanted to teach us the english the news-speaker of BBC spoke. Next year she went back home and we got a teacher from Boston, USA. She said: You're pronouncing it all wrong - and the tried to switch us to her funny accent. As a result we learned a very mixed up accent.
So would I!
@@shapeshifter1211 BBC English is basically Standard English. It is how kids in former British colonies in Asia learn also. My grandpa can speak perfect English and his accent is similar to the BBC Radio newsreaders.
This doesn't surprise me. My ex was American he would complain about everything being different in Australia where I am from. He quoted so many times on how America is better in everything and basically everywhere else just copied America but they didn't copy them well... He didn't last long in Australia because he annoyed everyone he met. My daughter and I moved to America for 2 and a half years. She was born in Australia and my ex was her step Dad. She was asked to write an essay on why America was the best country in the world. She was dismayed and asked me what to do because she liked America but she still thought of Australia as being the best country to her. She didn't want to lie. So I told her to do what they asked, but write how she thinks Australia is better and why so she was being true to herself and her own opinions. She was failed for that essay, because she "didn't do what she was asked". Also a year after being there friends of my ex told us we should stop calling ourselves Australian and start saying we're American because we'd been there "long enough". Like being an American is the dream of everyone in the world. I love Australia, I love our medical system, I love our culture, I love our land, why would I want to forget who I am and where I came from? We obviously ended up moving back home to Australia and that marriage failed.
As a proud Australian resident, I find it absolutely insulting that your daughter was virtually blackmailed into saying “America is the best country in the world.” just to “ pass “ an essay test. She was being honest in her opinion of Australia and was denied her right to freedom of speech, which they boast so much about in the states. Now we know where that biased opinion eventuates from. Students are brainwashed into thinking it. Credit to your daughter for standing up for herself and expressing her true feelings.♥️
@@arnolddavies6734 Dude, you know nothing about America or Americans.
@@georgecooksey8216No, they're right. I'm an American, and we can be so entitled. Hell, I even apologize to op and their daughter for how they were treated on behalf of my country. I mean, it's the truth. More than half of us still think Africa is a country with a bunch of people living in huts among the animals and lacking technology. 🤦🏿♀️ I've literally googled images of Lagos, Nigeria, and it looks bigger than fucking New York! 🤯 I know barely anything about other countries, because I'm not into that, but I still know that the stereotypes aren't all true. I'm not going to assume a random person from Asia is automatically a genius or that someone from Germany worships Hitler. Hell, many Germans probably hated him. I'm sure they don't all look down on Americans as fat, low IQ gun people who worship the flag, either.
That was awful of the school, but also you for suggesting she write about how Australia was superior. If left to her own devices she would have written a beautiful, perfectly accurate essay on how Northern Ireland is the best country in the world.
@@georgecooksey8216 Sure we do. We know very well about you guys. It's also pretty amusing to see you and another handful of rednecks scouting the comments and showing your utter desperation when people of the entire world show you how they REALLY think about you guys. For sure that's not what you learned on Fox News. 🤣
I asked for a bottle of water in a cafe in Manhattan and got asked: "do you know how to speak English?" My response was "I am English, do you?"
Late to the party on this but I'll tell my short story. I was in the US for work reasons. I was being shown around an office building and introduced to people by my American host. My host introduced me to one man and said, "this is Joel, he's from Australia". His reply was "oh you're from Australia? Your English is excellent! I was not taken aback at all and just paused amused while my embarrassed host dived in lol. I'll finish with this however: I've spent a lot of time in the States and I have to say that I have been treated with just courtesy and respect by most in all the states I've been to, east coast, west coast and in between.
One of my friends living in Germany overheard these Americans exclaiming about the Cologne Cathedral stating "Wow, this must be at least 50 years old!".
No way 😂 omg 😢
😂😂😂😂😂
there is a ranch house in Arizona near Vegas that is open to the public as the first house in the valley before vegas was built up, the guide said it was built in 1920 somthing, (this was 1991)I said OH the house I was born in in the uk was around 150 years old, he went a bit quiet then. My son got in trouble in Germany when he was about 4 ,we were visiting Neuschwanstein , he got a bit tired walking about and went off and sat in a chair, the guide asked him to stand up as the chair was 900 years old.
That's kind of cute. Ignorance without the arrogance is fine by me.
My friends live in Torgau, Sachsen (Germany) and their house is from 1452. That's 50 years before Columbus found America ;)
I was in the Australian Navy. We were part of exercises with the US Navy and Canada out of Hawaii. Excitedly 😂My friends and I sat with some American Sailors, we said we are from Australia “you know Down Under” one of the Americans, looking puzzled, asked his companions “ which state is that. We spent the rest of our time with the Canadians. 😢
Omg… 🤣 My friend told me about his military training with the US as well and boy…. It was winter, lots of snow, -30/-40 C. Once outside in the field, my friend and his troop told the US soldiers to be very cautious as there are venomous snow snakes in Canada. They answered « no one told us!! » and freakeeeeed out!!
They even got mad to their superior for not warning them and putting lives at risk!! …. 🤣🤣🤣
Here's a newsflash for you @darrelsharrock3859 -- much like in Australia, the armed forces don't exactly attract the sharpest knives in the drawer. That being said, I think your story is fiction. You're just like a Canadian with an inferiority complex because we gave the world the automobile, the airplane, the radio, the television, the computer, the internet, and so many other things. Canada gave us maple syrup and you gave us vegemite. Oh............and Crocodile Dundee. G'day mate!
😂😂😂😂
Your encountered one naive sailor - probably some kid fresh out of high school - and you stereotype an entire country. Who['s the ignorant one?
@@georgecooksey8216 OP never "stereotyped an entire country" , that's either your poor reading comprehension or your own self projection.
You mentioned "one naive sailor - probably some kid fresh out of high school". What would being naive have to do with geography? You obviously don't know its definition or once again, poor reading comprehension.
On the contrary, if that sailor was fresh out of high school, all the more reason he should have known about Australia's location and that in the English language, commonly referred as down under.
During my tour in the US navy I did extensive traveling in USA and Southern Europe/Mediterranean Sea. I met our fellow personnel from every region,subculture and socioeconomic class. That's when my eyes were opened. The rampant level of ignorance of common sense as well as common geopolitical knowledge of foreign cultures was absolutely shocking. So yes, many of our sailors/ citizens are missing the meat, cheese and lettuce in their sandwiches.
On the positive side,I also did meet many people with substance between their 2 slices of bread.
Now I'm no longer shocked when an empty sandwich types "your encountered " and "who['s the ignorant one?"
Well George, you yourself made that quite clear.
I went to the states in the 90's, and some one said to me, "I don't care what happens in the rest of the world, as LONG as we are alright" I was devastated. HELLO FROM GREECE ,
Hello to you in Greece! I'm not of that mindset but it is something I've heard over here too.
The US did NOT save Europe during WWII. The Soviet Union did! The famous "D-day" contained as many Brittish and Canadian troops as American ones.
Considering what the Soviets did to the population in the European countries they occupied after defeating the Germans, and how they invaded Poland in '39 alongside the Germans, using the term "saved" is as inaccurate as it can get.
I'm from Australia, I visited America when I was a teen in the late 90s. When people asked me if I had kangaroos in my back yard, I would respond "Do you have buffalo roaming in yours?" 🙂
I had a boss who was originally from Germany, who lived in the outskirts of a suburb on the outskirts of Melbourne, so she actually did get roos in her backyard (well, more often her front yard). People would jokingly ask her that question when she went back for a visit and she would take great pleasure in showing them photos and watching their heads explode.
They don't, because they shot them all, to deprive the Indians of their food source.
My old boss visited his son in Winnipeg (Canada); he was up early one morning, making a cup if tea in the kitchen, and heard something rattling the trash can; he thought," Dog? Cat? Fox? Skunk? Beaver? (Opened the blinds) Bear? BEAR!"
Son found him hiding under the bed.
"You met the friendly neighbourhood bear then Dad?"
I remember going to Chicago in the early 2000s and we’d headed out looking for a particular restaurant. Saw a fella waiting at some traffic lights all rugged up coz it was colder than a witch’s tit and we said “mate, we’ve just arrived from Australia and are looking for restaurant X”.
He said “sorry fellas, just got here from Melbourne yesterday” 😂
You just made me feel old. I remember having Kangaroos on my Primary School Football Field in the '80's in Perth. This place has grown so fast.
In 1994 I drove across American with my 17 year old son and generally I found Americans even in Harlem very polite and welcoming, especially when they realized we were British. But what amazed on us flying to Denver from NY and driving to LA staying in many motels that even with many TV stations and listening to the news on many different state stations, the news was ONLY about America. Even the newspapers had only American news. After three weeks it felt quite spooky and weird because having travelled a great deal as working and on my own holidaying, I never came across it again, even in China and Russia such self-obsession with themselves and really total ignorance that there were other very relevant news events going on in the world that were not to do with America only
Maybe you should ask yourself who controls the media instead of casting stones at those people who were so friendly to you.
I wish that there were more international stories on BBC news as well though.
@@ascendant95 Well, those who control the media obviously believe you can't possibly be interested in anything other than God's Own Country. I lived in California for 20 years and noticed that the American media was either ignorant or not interested in what happened elsewhere. German former legal alien here, 1980 - 2000.
Look, I'm European (and I you too) - the thing is, as you properly noticed, that the US is so big. Europe fits twice on the US American continent....soo, I think it's one explanation for this behavior. But yeah, I also believe that if they would like to know more about the rest of the world - they could but they don't sooo it's still an ignorant behavior😅
*I think you too
🙈
In Germany, we start learning basic geography in the 1st to 4th grades of elementary school, like neighboring countries aso. And I had a world map above the desk in my room. I think every kid I knew had one of these. And you get a world atlas in school that you can take home, my parents had to pay 20 Deutsche Mark for it back in the days.
I was very obsessed with maps, all kids loved maps... how is it possible that US kids dont love maps? Didn't you have access to maps? I mean, they are not rare and very affordable.
I recently travelled on a tour to Ireland and Scotland. I’m not an American, but I do live here. I went with an American friend, plus there were several other Americans on the same tour. There were way too many instances of American ignorance to list here, but I was shocked every day. Even my dear friend horrified me on more than one occasion. I don’t know what it is. American education perhaps focuses solely on America? American media definitely focuses 99% on America. Other countries’ news channels are very liberal with world news. The news channels I listened to in Australia even divided their time slots into world news, national news, and state news. Americans would benefit greatly from watching world news on a regular basis.
My uncle and aunt moved to America when I was a child 50 plus years ago. They came home to the U. K. For a visit and drove me crazy telling us all how much bigger and better everything was in America. I was chopping a cabbage in preparation for dinner and when my aunt asked what I was doing I said chopping a Brussel sprout. Mum gave me a head swipe. 😂🤣😂
A joke in NZ: An American bragging about how everything is big in America...."we have a building that is so big takes a day to go through it". Kiwi replies, "We have a building in NZ that my brother went into two years ago, and hasn't come out yet. Mt Eden". (Mt Eden is a local prison)
@@timrussell9869 😂🤣😂 Good one
@@timrussell9869 Well said. 😂🤣
:-DDDDDDDD
😂😂
In Britain our school history lessons tend to focus on British history, but since that history necessarily involves us fighting with just about everyone we get World history by default.
Good one
😂😂😂😂
Almost same here .. only vice versa ..
We'v been attacked, crusaded, invaded, annexed, occupied etc. buy most of nearby countries for last 1000 years ;)
Greetings from Estonia!
That just shows how you have become a victim to the British view of history. Just to name one example of a cataclysmic event in world history: what were you taught about the Thirty Years War? Who were the main protagonists? What was the big casus belli? What was the outcome? How did it shape history from that time forward? In fact: when was the Thirty Years War actually?
No, I thought you wouldn’t know. 🙄🙄🙄
@@frankteunissen6118 I'm not British but in history we were taught about the 30 years war. We covered a lot of European history but not very in depth. Our country's history was covered in much greater detail and, in looking back, from one perspective only.
I had no real interest in history and so I studied to pass more than to gain and retain knowledge and understanding. I'm sure I'm not the only one who did that.
"I want to go to another country but I don't want to be around foreigners..."
Ma'am, you ARE the foreigner in another country.
What is it with Texans not knowing that English is from England? My British father was been the victim of the“You speak very good English!” line despite being from Britain, the birthplace of English, and that was a Texan, too. They said it in such a condescending way, too. But my dad got revenge by immediately saying, “Thank you. I only wish I say the same of your English.”
I worked at a border crossing between Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario. I had an American woman come through my line and said she was going shopping. It was Christmas Day and I told her all the stores were closed. She looked at me with a puzzled look and asked, “do you celebrate Christmas in Canada too?” I replied, “ no ma’am they only celebrate Christmas in the United States and the little town of Bethlehem.”
😂😂😂
Having traveled to the US several times it always surprises me how insular they are.
The news is mostly locally based with small amounts of national news and very little if any international news
Also I think that many US travellers perceive the UK and Europe to be one giant Disneyland that’s been made for their entertainment
American here. I agree with you on all three points. I have often said that there are people who think the Colosseum was built for tourists. Fortunately, they are in the minority but stand out for their ignorance.
I'm from the US and a large part of the problem stems from the fact that our home country is large. So many places to visit with varied terrains and elevations. Lots of cultural diversity too but the same language is spoken and the same economic hierarchy is in place. I think a lot of my fellow citizens aren't willing to be inconvenienced by stepping outside of their comfort zone. Their mistake!
To live in Paris feels like living in a giant human zoo sometimes. So many tourists think that the inhabitants are employees whose duty is to serve and entertain them... it's no surprise the Parisians became rude. Mass tourism is a nightmare.
I lived in North America 30 years ago and also noticed how insular they were.
But what is shocking me as of 2023 is that still today, with all the "internets", where the information is right there in front of you, North Americans are still ignorant.
Yes, I included Canada in the "North American"
But let's be honest here, the French are rude & aloof and not just Parisians.
Canadian here! used to work at a museum in Scotland for a semester in college, and one day one of the front desk ladies came running to find me and was like "There's some Americans here and no one can understand them! can you come translate?" I go out to see a woman standing in front of a group, dressed in head to toe denim and a cowboy hat. I go up and smile and ask how can we help today? and she throws up her hands and says in a voice identical to Reba McEntire "Thank the lord! all y'all Scotch folk is so hard to understand!" she had a few more choice phrases amongst a request to find the next nearest tourist stop. but honestly I couldn't even translate half of what she said! I found the Scottish accent easier!!
Haha wow yea the deep south is hard to understand. I like the northern accents alot too.
I'm English living in England, working in retail. I was serving a American gentleman who say to me, " you people are nice, but all of you need to learn how to speak English properly." My brain pretty much blue screened at that.
I'm from the Caribbean and they don't know we are U.S. citizens by birth. 😂😂😂😂 We are part of the U.S. since 1898 . My American friends you don't need a passport and you still are in U.S. soil. 😂😂😂😂😂Love them😂
I was born and raised in USA. I am very Latina minus any Latin accent. I was working at an MD office, with an older male patient that declared he was Italian. He then asked me where was I from. I answered the city I was born in. He said no where are your people from, I told him the carribean. He asked me when I was going back. He had an Italian sir name so I said well how much longer before you go back to Italy? He said why would I do that? I said, exactly. My dad surrounded us with history books and atlases (he was a cartographer) so I knew from a very young age that colonization was part of history, not the beginning of history.
Well.......................99% of the Italians came to the United States legally. 99% of the Hispanics snuck in and just stayed. Excluding Puerto Ricans and wet foot dry foot Cubans I guess. Italians were an integral part of the building of this country into what it was in the years that followed the civil war up until after WW2. Prior to 1966 there were no Hispanics in the country. None. So you're basically a carpet bagger in his country. 2 sides to every coin chica.
Bingo!!💯🎯👍😅 .....
Reminds me of my mother telling me the recurring situations she still encounters here in USA even though she's been here over 60 years.
So, what do you think of America?
Mom:(with shocked,incredulous looks): America?? I've never left America!
So, do you miss the palm trees and the jungle?
Mom: jungle?! What jungle?! I've never even seen a jungle! Did you even go to school?!? Look at my country on the map! Where do you see a jungle?!?😂
Yep. I understand you perfectly. I´m mexican and although when I lived in the US I never had a problem but is annoying they link your race or fenotype to your nationality and even if you born there you are not really an american, you are caribean. In Mexico you can born in Guadalajara and have green skin big black almond shaped eyes, four fingers in each hand, but if you born here you are not an alien, you are mexican. (By the way mexicans can born wherever they are pleased to born. 🤣
I was in Florida and was asked where I learnt such great English, I replied in England where I live and where the language came from, the person didn’t believe me saying that English came from America. I was speechless.
This made me laugh. I live in Canada and I remember being asked during one of my visits to Florida if Canadians lived in Igloos. I said yes. Then they proceeded to ask me about how we stayed warm to which I replied that we all had bears as pets and would cuddle up with at night for warmth. The look on their faces priceless. 🤣😂
@@dreamiden I bet those igloos were guarded by Canada gooses too. Lions is lucky Canada Gooses don’t migrate to Africa. Then they’d be’s extinct!
Wow! That level of ignorance and arrogance is staggering.
Really entertaining...I just found you. I'm in Scotland. I travelled with colleagues from Denmark and Sweden to the USA many times. This one time, we were in Boston for a conference about dental implants and surgery. Reaching the high point of Saturday's presentation, the US team glowingly introduced us to their "new system" with its technological advances. It was a classic case of the world not revolving around the USA and some presumed exceptionalism. We'd been using the system for almost ten years at the time. But we enjoyed a few laughs afterwards.
Reading through the comments I find them so funny, but it think it shouid be noticed that there are many Americans that travel to Europe with open minds, a genuine desire to visit historical places and learn about the culture, and are even eager to say whatever words they know in that language. I have seen American women wearing flamenco dresses in the fair of Seville, wanting to do as the Sevillians do. The only other people I have seen doing it as well are Asians. The problem is that the ones that are arrogant and ignorant, even if fewer, are more visible. I also appreciate the fact that many of them acklowledge their country fellow's ignorance. Not everybody from every country does that.
Yes off course there are tons of americans that are very good people and very aware of other cultures and eager to learn and to really have a travel experience. In that caser, all the English I have known expect other countries specially exotic ones to be and have the commodities that are in UK. And they are very rude. Still not generalizing.
I'm British but have 'American' cousins - I remember one of them once asking me why British people speak Engliah and not a European language. Bless him.
Their lack of education really shows, once they speak to people outside of america.
Wow
When in the States:
"Your English is very good, where are you from?"
England
"Gee!, and what language do you speak in your country?
@@simonpowell2559 something English-ish ...
How old was he?
So many, but these are my favourites from my time working in student services in Scotland.
Girl from california stormed out and refused to fill in her overseas/foreign student funding application because she wasnt foreign, she was American. I never saw her again.
One student from New York had brought stamps with her in case we didn't have a post office and she wanted to write home.
Guy from Texas said 'Wow! Your moon here looks just like ours back home'
One student was baffled because we had a language department with people from Italy teaching French and German. He thought they all spoke European.
BTW the half moon looks different depending on the latitude of the country (standing or lying).
Got asked once (in the uK) why we don't celebrate 4th of July.
"Because you aren't our problem anymore thank god."
She did not like that answer.
That's the ignorance in them. A young dentist in Washington who was my aunt's (also a full-fledged dentist in the Philippines) boss asked her if Filipinos live in trees. He was a dentist, for crying out loud!
Sorry guys, but our University of Santo Tomas is older than Yale and Harvard.
In Ireland, we have Americans from the US visiting who ask us how come we have cars and motorways? They thought we go everywhere in a donkey and cart. Another once phoned up to ask if we had electricity as he thought only America had electricity!!! Yet another asked "how can Ireland be in Europe? Isn't Europe, like, a country?" I was also congratulated once on speaking "good American!!!" I had to explain that American isn't a language, and that Americans speak English (or a version of it), and that we have been speaking English in Ireland for hundreds of years.
I used to be a tour guide, and when I showed an American couple around an 800 year old building. They looked puzzled, then said "how can it be 800 years old? We are only 200 years old!!" I had to politely explain that there is more to the world than America, and world history didn't start in 1776. Even American history didn't start in 1776. They couldn't get their heads around it, saying "there are places older than America?" I had to explain Irish history goes back over 3000 years.
Oh, I forgot. I encountered one American once who was amazed that Ireland had television, and even made its own programmes.
I did wreck one American's head once. He wanted to know if I had ever heard of Bill Clinton. I had the fun of telling him that not just had I heard of Bill and Hillary but I met them both in my job. His jaw dropped. LOL
By the way, I started being taught international history when I was I think seven.
Those are all good points ! I'm in the UK and had American visitors who wanted to visit our ancestral village. When we were in the Protestant Church, they said the building looked like a Catholic church. I told them as it is 700 years old, it was Catholic when it was built. They had no knowledge of Henry VIII and his brood.
When I worked at Heathrow American's would sometimes tell me they were also visiting Ireland. One woman then said in a low voice, " Oh, That will be a dirty word to you British". I just suggested she should drop her preconceptions and see for herself. I didn't tell her that along with many British people, I have Irish, Welsh and Scottish ancestors as well as English.
I'm Irish too, our history goes far further back than 3000 years ago, not sure what counts as the start of our history, but Ireland has been continuously populated since about 9000 years ago. Newgrange is estimated to be 5200 years old. Anyway minor correction over 😜
I've had my own experiments of American visitors in France and in Belgium, who realized that we live on the same planet and in the same century as the U.S.
Im so sorry for this. . .my country notoriously homes stupid people and we get shite education. . .
@@harshbutfair8993 There’s always one..🙄🇬🇧
My sister-in-law's brother who's British/English was working on an American base in Qatar. One of his American colleagues asked him, "Where did you learn English?" to which he replied, "In England where it was invented". I think he really wanted to add an expletive or two, but decided to be polite in the face of this abject display of ignorance.
Is the word "English" too far from the sound of the word "England" for some people?
I can't even think of a foreign language where the two words are not clearly linked. O betcha even Chinese uses similar characters for the English language and Eng-Land.
So why is it so difficult to connect the dots?
@@LMB222 Just here to confirm your theory about Chinese: to put it very simply, the Chinese term for England is a direct transliteration ('Eng-ge-lan'), the UK is 'Eng-country' and the English language is, well, 'Eng-language'
@@sneezeey Chinese would often abbreviate using the first character of the country's name so it's eng ge lan and the eng-yu (eng-language) so it isn't really causing much issues. But the us on the other hand has a different problem. I don't think it was "failed to connect the dots" it's more of a "didn't know there are dots in the first place" kind of situation😅
I once made a similar reply like this in a comment section where an American then told me I was ignorant😂
I just pointed out that I'm English and I'm writing in English. Not American English.
In Poland we study ancient Roman and Greek history (overall history of Europe and the World) as well as we study English and chosen language lessons, often German, French, sometimes but rarely Spanish or Russian. We learn American history mostly due to American heroes who were Polish like Tadeusz Kościuszko or Kazimierz Pułaski who has been called the "father of the American cavalry."
I've once encountered Americans in the UK that were booking plane tickets in the library and had some problems due to their age so I helped them out. They were actually very kind and even gave me few quid even though I refused money as I was only trying to be helpful.
Traveling the world currently for about a year and I expected a lot of negativity about being from the US! I’ve been blown away honestly people actually get really excited when I say I’m from the US! They want to know as much as you’ll give and say one day they want to visit! Not once have I had a negative response. Seriously!
People would only react negatively if you came up as rude, ignorant and arrogant, which you visibly are not.
My wife works for a large US hotel chain in VIP customer service. We are in Canada and although she has a mild accent (Filipino), she has been here decades and speaks perfect English. She regularly gets Americans hanging up on her as soon as she says hello because they say they don't want to talk to a foreigner because they can't understand them, without even giving her a chance to talk and show she can speak perfectly. That doesn't even compare to how totally rude all the US servicemen are that call to make reservations. They are virtually all rude, ignorant and arrogant and think they are drill instructors talking to recruits. And Canadians are not like Americans, we are extremely polite in comparison. Ask anyone from overseas.
@SlotRacer Guy 🇨🇦 = ❤
I spent a month on the east coast of Canada, and absolutely loved every second of it.
Did run into a few Yanks (they don’t like being called that apparently, that’s why I kept saying it), and most of them were rather taken aback by the fact that an Australian was in Canada.
One couple asked if I was working in Canada, and was shocked to find out that I was there on a month long holiday.
They were even more shocked to know that Australia like most countries give their citizens 4 weeks off every year.
And yes, they asked what it was like living in a socialist country, and when I said that the current government was a very Conservative government, and a Conservative government introduced some of the toughest gun laws in the world, I saw the “we should evaluate our knowledge” face appear.
Very funny.
Never been to Canada but grew up with a surprising number of Canadian TV shows here in Oz! Degrassi High, you can’t do that on television, due South, the littlest hobo. Always wanted to visit though. Definitely on the bucket list.
Don't you order me to ask anyone from overseas you rude b*stard! I'll ask who I want what I damn well want.
Unless you talk badly about hockey then Canadian's stop being polite.
My friend lived in the US for about 14 years. She went into a shop to buy some cigarettes and also picked up a newspaper. When she went to the cashier the woman said wow you read English as well as speaking it. My friend said yes I'm English from Leeds, Yorkshire. Then the cashier said is that the capital of Paris. Can't make this stuff up, hilarious...
why am I not surprised? younger Americans are getting dumber than you think. The education system failed them.
😂😢😂😢😂😢
Is that like Paris in whatever, North Africa or something dude ? And isn't Yorkshire something to do with Wales which is in Northern Ireland right ? God bless the USA.
“Yes it is actually! 😊 It’s where Bratwursts are from!”
A Brit born in Germany. Lived in 3 countries. The only people who i have had negitive encounters with are people from the USA. Their arrogance, ignorance and xenophobia are something to behold.
On the education issue. Brazilian-American here, basically grew up in the US and went to school there from 2nd all the way up to 11th grade. In Florida to be more exact, not gonna judge the whole US on this one particular state either. My first year back in school in Brazil (Curitiba, PR, again to be more exact) I felt like I learned more about US history then my whole life going to school there. This left me baffled but on the other hand it did make a lasting impression, enough to get me interested in studying history.
I am Australian. Visited Canada in 2013, stayed at a B&B which also had an American guest. Over breakfast, we were talking about the economic recession of recent years, which I knew as, and called, the Global Financial Crisis. He said, Oh did you know about that (I think he called it the 2008 Recession)? I said yes, it's in the title, GLOBAL financial crisis. He couldn't fathom that the rest of the world went into recession as well because of US chicanery.
😅😅😅
I'm a kiwi I like American people but honestly would not live there if you paid me, because of population, politics, health care and work culture. So grateful and proud to be a kiwi. ❤
@@maidenthe80slaif you leave and end up in New Zealand at least you're in another 5 eyes country but more open in their history , spelling etc etc 😂
We're quite happy to have you visit the USA and then go home. I've visited your beautiful country but I wouldn't stay there either.
@@reindeer7752and it's better like that 👍
@@reindeer7752 That's excellent. Last thing NZ needs is Americans moving there and fvcking things up with their half arsed ideas and rampant stupidity.
Me too bro
The third video I can understand that guy completely and don’t judge him as he’s talking about the thoughts of a kid. I’m Dutch and I remember being absolutely stunned as a kid when I found out Dutch wasn’t the world language… how could this possibly be?!?
Though if you look up what the Dutch empire used to be they did give it a damn good try!
Canada, USA and Mexico are all North American countries. Even though Mexico is part of Latin America (not a geographical region), it is located north of Central America (a geographical region) and is in North America.
When I got offered an ex pat job starting up a pan European job in Belgium, I was pretty proud and happy but my grandmother asked me, "couldn't you find a job in America"? Btw, I left the US and haven't come back because the quality of life in Europe is so much better than in the US. Better health care, more holiday time and almost no gun violence.
Yet sadly most Americans would rather stick their fingers in their ears and tell you they can't hear you, then believe that fact...
On a side note, you're not a UCC engineer are you?
@@BrianC1664 No, I'm not that intelligent.
@Brian Fallon I'm also in Belgium, as a German. It's interesting to see someone in the comments who lives here. :)
Yeah.....all of those reasons are why I'm planning on moving to Europe, haven't decided where yet, probably Ireland, but it's just continually getting worse and worse in the US by the day!!!
@@DieBlutigeLynn After living / working in Belgium for 3+ years, my employer offered me the chance to move to London. I decided to do so and was very happy...until the UK left the EU. Now I really miss being part of the European family. I do think, though, that the UK will return on some level. Possibly as a member of the Single Market.
An American was visiting Canada and thought she'd buy a nice li'l ol' souvenir Canadian flag, but she asked the sales clerk if it came in any other colours. True story.
Well with the way US citizens treat their flag I´m surprised they haven´t change their colors to their personal liking.
Dutchie here, I actually had a conversation with a couple of Americans who were absolutely confounded by the idea of a constitutional monarchy, how we have rights and freedoms whilst also being "ruled" by a monarch.They could not fathom the idea that we have a parliament and that our monarch does not have absolute power.
Lol it’s also very american to ignore that they’ve made a mistake and talk it down, basically this whole video 😂😂