THIS IS JUST SAD... 6 LIES AMERICA TOLD ME ABOUT EUROPE! (AMERICAN REACTS)

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • ORIGINAL VIDEO: • 6 LIES America Told Me... v
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @lexthulu6219
    @lexthulu6219 Před rokem +8238

    Here in Europe we don't hate your freedom, we're just laughing at the idea that you think you're free...

    • @bonito34
      @bonito34 Před rokem +778

      Drug problems, weapons, death penalty, social insurance, working rights etc. Not the way I would want to raise my kids.

    • @sidlerm1
      @sidlerm1 Před rokem +73

      True

    • @Weise1001
      @Weise1001 Před rokem

      its not that its a laugh, its just.., so whats the special thing about US freedom ? point.. theres absolutely no freedoms you have, we dont.. expect, youre free to fear the rest of the society

    • @heikos4264
      @heikos4264 Před rokem +158

      It's the 'small' things which many americans seem to have zero clue about when they trhink they have more freedom than the rest of the world.
      You build a fence around your house in germany, depending on where it is, different regulations about how high it can be, if it can be directly on top of the property border or if it has to be up to 1 meter away from it and so on. Guess what, it is exactly the same in america... I had that fence height problem 2 years ago and not long after that i stumbled over an american here on youtube that had the exact same problem in america.

    • @lionheart5078
      @lionheart5078 Před rokem

      @@bonito34 lol you think you dont have that in Europe? In Europe you can be thrown in jail for saying what is deemed as hate speech lol. Brigitte Bardot came out saying she doesnt think France should take on more muslims and she was fined 40k by the french government. If she didnt pay it she wouldve been thrown in Jail. In many European countries murderes literally get charged with 10 years in prison. Ive seen many cases where pre-meditated murder gets 10 years and the guy comes out 10 years later still young, and enjoys the rest of his life while the guy he murdered is rotting in a grave.

  • @israeldepedro7522
    @israeldepedro7522 Před 2 lety +10059

    From a Western European standpoint, kids pledging to a flag is an image that reminds us of fascist dictatorships. And yes, it is creepy as hell.

    • @marseldagistani1989
      @marseldagistani1989 Před 2 lety

      I wouldn't be surprised if the US is a state with secretly being run by Fascists with an elected dictatorship

    • @Kari.F.
      @Kari.F. Před 2 lety +779

      Not only fascist dictatorships, but also communist. I believe they do that in North Korea. It's usually a tradition in countries where individual freedoms are very restricted.

    • @israeldepedro7522
      @israeldepedro7522 Před 2 lety +398

      @@Kari.F. I told fascist because that was the political flavor of the most well-known dictatorships in Europe. But yes, on these kinds of regimes extremes meet and are very alike no matter the political sign.

    • @jpbaley2016
      @jpbaley2016 Před 2 lety +51

      That’s exactly what it is.

    • @jpbaley2016
      @jpbaley2016 Před 2 lety +325

      @@Kari.F. There are no communist countries. Communism is equally sharing in your country’s resources. Everyone is equal. There isn’t a country in the world that practices that. What you think is communist, because hard-core capitalist doesn’t want you to know what communism is, isa totalitarian dictatorship. It is not communist.

  • @janjordal9451
    @janjordal9451 Před 7 měsíci +404

    I had an American employee who was a shameless chauvinist. On all occasions she would point out that it was the best country in the world. I used to buy my staff pizza when working late. She immediately told us in a loud voice that pizza is an American invention. We were sick of her and told her to knock it off and told her all of America is a European invention

    • @francescoinseriscicognome4444
      @francescoinseriscicognome4444 Před 6 měsíci

      as an Italian, thank you for what you did, how dare that b*tch tell that bullshit

    • @meijsmark
      @meijsmark Před 5 měsíci +80

      I went to the USA as an exchange student back in 2001. The American history book actually said the windmill was an American invention. Off course as a Dutch person I threw the book across the room and yelled them to f off 😂😂

    • @TheRealDr.Mabuse
      @TheRealDr.Mabuse Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@meijsmark Where did you study? Based on your childish tantrum, accomplish nothing i would guess kindergarten?

    • @andynieuwenhuis7833
      @andynieuwenhuis7833 Před 5 měsíci +26

      ​@@TheRealDr.Mabuse Most of European Countries HAVE A MUCH BETTER, EDUCATION System, than ANYTHING DONE IN United States School System. EVEN HERE IN CANADA, Grade 4--5 students Would be in a HIGHER Grade going to schools in the States.

    • @TheRealDr.Mabuse
      @TheRealDr.Mabuse Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@andynieuwenhuis7833 I responded to the throwing tatrum and book in class.

  • @murmelinee
    @murmelinee Před 8 měsíci +955

    I was talking to some Americans online and they all had this weird idea that everyone wants to move to the USA. Like thats the ultimate end goal for everyone given the choice. They were baffeled when i said that i like to visit but id never actually want to live there full time and that i preferred my own country over America 😂 like bro... when im sick i go to the doctor, without a second thought. I got a college degree for free. I got school lunch for free. I get 6weeks PTO a year. Less than 10 shootings a year. We pay high taxes but i KNOW theyre put in good use. I actually like paying taxes. Very few homeless cause we have good safety nets. Scandinavia isnt perfect, but its hell of a lot better than the states IMHO.

    • @infiniterik2402
      @infiniterik2402 Před 8 měsíci

      Fairplay

    • @philiprowney
      @philiprowney Před 8 měsíci

      Many Americans don't understand the media of their over-active, armed children they call police puts off thousands every year.
      I have retired cop cousins and will NEVER go back to NYC to visit them!!!

    • @ETHEREAL_MONARCH
      @ETHEREAL_MONARCH Před 8 měsíci +3

      maplestory players always got the best takes

    • @edithfrench3346
      @edithfrench3346 Před 8 měsíci +21

      WE in Germany get 30 to 32 day a year vacation and WE are sick WE get 6weeks payed by your company, after 6 weeks WE get pay by the insure so that we call ourer freedom

    • @theukyankee
      @theukyankee Před 8 měsíci +33

      I grew up in the US and have lived in England for almost 20 years. I'm always amazed at people saying they wish they could live in the US. People ask me if I wish I could move back. HELL NO. While England is a bit of a shit show right now, it's still better here.

  • @siggilinde5623
    @siggilinde5623 Před 2 lety +7720

    3 years without any holiday?! This is slavery. In Germany (and any other European country) this is not possible. Our employers even have to make sure that all employees use all their vacation days.

    • @timothymartin5538
      @timothymartin5538 Před 2 lety +381

      Make sure they use, or compensate them for the time they were eligible for.

    • @loveitftw
      @loveitftw Před 2 lety +231

      @@timothymartin5538 It's the law to do so. We take care of our citizens.

    • @timothymartin5538
      @timothymartin5538 Před 2 lety +102

      @@loveitftw it was a statement, not a question or insinuation, I'm from Europe

    • @drivehard2395
      @drivehard2395 Před 2 lety +158

      Many people express that in the US, they are made to feel guilty for asking for their time off.

    • @ivylasangrienta6093
      @ivylasangrienta6093 Před 2 lety +62

      I couldn't function without my July off.

  • @loveitftw
    @loveitftw Před 2 lety +2212

    Fun fact, freedom of expression and freedom of the press has been in Sweden's constitution longer than the US has been a country.

    • @bmorg5190
      @bmorg5190 Před 2 lety +21

      I’d hope so..

    • @robertnett9793
      @robertnett9793 Před 2 lety +14

      But to be fair those points came in the US constitution immediatly.

    • @ATart6
      @ATart6 Před 2 lety +170

      Me an American citizen:You lie!!
      Also me:looks up Sweden’s constitutional history. Goddamit you speak the truth!!
      Seriously though that’s a neat fact!

    • @jarpa153
      @jarpa153 Před 2 lety +41

      yup, since 1765

    • @dsludge8217
      @dsludge8217 Před 2 lety +21

      @@ATart6 look up the date Sweden banned slavery :)

  • @JamesDaniel-hz7mr
    @JamesDaniel-hz7mr Před 8 měsíci +458

    I was born and raised in Atlanta Georgia, joined the military and eventually came to Germany in 1988.
    I’ve never left !
    I have a life here with my family I could only dream of back home. My children are safe, well educated, and protected. I have 30 days paid vacation a year, health insurance, unemployment insurance, I’ve had 2 apprenticeships, both lasting over 2 1/2 years, and a guaranteed retirement.
    America is destroying itself from within and the world is watching and asking why !!
    Don’t believe the brainwashing, see for yourself.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 7 měsíci

      America was designed so that the government could never stand in the way of the wealthy. The separation of power is so that the government can't serve as a balancing force towards the private sector.

    • @Freiya2011
      @Freiya2011 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Hast du auch Deutsch gelernt?

    • @nicholasmartin297
      @nicholasmartin297 Před 7 měsíci

      I think greedy people are destroying the United States. The sociopaths have taken over. Sadly that disease is spreading around the world.
      Please remember GREED IS NOT GOOD! Let’s all look after each other. Otherwise it’s the law of the jungle and you won’t want to be eaten by the lions.

    • @wanderschlosser1857
      @wanderschlosser1857 Před 7 měsíci +9

      ​@@Freiya2011Bei 2 Ausbildungen kannst Du davon ausgehen. Blöde Frage!

    • @Freiya2011
      @Freiya2011 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@wanderschlosser1857 Woher soll ich das wissen? Du könntest sonstwo gelernt haben. Abef dann: Prima!

  • @Lord7sins13
    @Lord7sins13 Před 8 měsíci +166

    I've been living in Spain for almost 20 years now, and i was originally born in the US California. and I just wanted to say what this guy says about working in Europe is so true, it is one of the reasons I never went back to the States we live to work, not work to live! that alone is just a wonderful feeling!

  • @Mrmattetoast
    @Mrmattetoast Před 2 lety +4344

    Imagine us Germans/Austrians would do that. Standing up everyday and pledging allegiance to the Flag. Getting some flashback’s at that thought.

    • @DaphneMyst
      @DaphneMyst Před 2 lety +286

      As a spaniard I feel your pain.

    • @sopcannon
      @sopcannon Před 2 lety +428

      As long as you don't fail art class too!

    • @vendora8238
      @vendora8238 Před 2 lety +298

      @@sopcannon Wien Art Academy making sure that nobody fails.

    • @ravenouself4181
      @ravenouself4181 Před 2 lety +137

      @@vendora8238 They be like: Not again! Not on our watch!

    • @admerin6961
      @admerin6961 Před 2 lety +108

      I once did not stand for the pledge at an assembly because my foot was broken, and a teacher who saw me literally grabbed my arm and tried to drag me too my feet. Also, I was a teenage girl at the time and he was a male teacher.

  • @johnnydinnissen
    @johnnydinnissen Před 2 lety +555

    The biggest lie they tell in America is that they are the greatest country in the world

    • @blackletter2591
      @blackletter2591 Před 2 lety +118

      Great countries are ones that don't have to keep telling people they are great.

    • @Khalif-AllahEntertainment
      @Khalif-AllahEntertainment Před 2 lety +23

      @@blackletter2591 When I think about it, you're right.

    • @semiramisubw4864
      @semiramisubw4864 Před 2 lety +24

      but they are. The greates in incarceration, bringin democracy to civillians in the middle east and beeing tribalists for their weird political partys

    • @thomasleschke2213
      @thomasleschke2213 Před 2 lety +21

      they talk it everyone all over the world. That seems a little bit arrogant for people from other countries. "Self praise stinks"

    • @Todes21
      @Todes21 Před 2 lety

      @@semiramisubw4864 their also the best in bombing Covilians for no reason and overthrow Goverments to "Liberate" a Country. And why do the do it? Money and Oil

  • @alexiaivan7708
    @alexiaivan7708 Před 8 měsíci +84

    I’m from Eastern Europe, and I must say that I was somewhat disappointed when I travelled to the US. When waiting to get on a bus with my parents, one dude started screaming at my mom, who was like 2 feet shorter than him, only because her troller accidentally bumped into his. And she apologized, yet he kept being hysterical. Both my father and the bus driver had to intervene.

    • @whatmeworry7184
      @whatmeworry7184 Před 7 měsíci +15

      Bad mental health is epidemic in the US. I'm sorry your mum had to go through that.

    • @alexiaivan7708
      @alexiaivan7708 Před 7 měsíci +7

      @@whatmeworry7184 thank you.

    • @angelachouinard4581
      @angelachouinard4581 Před 7 měsíci +17

      Americans have been brainwashed on a number of levels and a psychotherapist I know says 80% of the population has some mental health issue. Too much toxic food, high stress and poor social values. I don't know where in Eastern Europe you are from but it's a part of the world I always wanted to visit.

    • @alexiaivan7708
      @alexiaivan7708 Před 7 měsíci

      @@angelachouinard4581 Romania. And I recommend you visit us. We have many beautiful attractions.

    • @lindawick455
      @lindawick455 Před měsícem +1

      So sorry for that experience..it is definitely not unique to America.

  • @Admiralofthedeeps
    @Admiralofthedeeps Před 8 měsíci +134

    Honestly dude, im so glad to see your reaction to all this. As an irish person, who has met loads of americans coming here on holidays, i have always thought their perceptions of the rest of the world vs their own country was so warped.

    • @Artemis_Oficina
      @Artemis_Oficina Před 8 měsíci +3

      Imagine then what Europeans think of Africa if it’s true !!

    • @heathenannblackcloud737
      @heathenannblackcloud737 Před 7 měsíci +6

      I am a canadian, was married to an american, a Vietnam Vet (RIP Love) and what he told me of the education system, it was propaganda. He only REALLY learned about the US. He was from Wisconsin and did not know where Manitoba was. Super glad he figured it out.

    • @Admiralofthedeeps
      @Admiralofthedeeps Před 7 měsíci +3

      @Artemis_Oficina I don't think Europeans have a skewed view of Africa. There are many African immigrants here. I've met Americans, though, that think Africa is a country. Europeans probably have a skewed view of the United States, if anywhere.

    • @agnidas5816
      @agnidas5816 Před 7 měsíci +1

      In Canadian History (mandatory) class I got a mark off for saying propaganda is bad. I had the highest grade in that class.
      We really don't learn fuck all.
      I only found out about Voltaire from English Lit (not madatory class) and how even back then people thought high interest rates were a problem. Voltaire wrote all kinds of things about society and government and business.... revolutionary things.
      They were of much greater importance than his plays.
      We were also taught totally fake facts about the standoff with the natives and the army.
      I came back to properly investigate it as an adult ... neither side of the story we were told were right.
      Some natives stole land that other natives were living on by claiming ownership rights while not living there.
      They sold the land to government. Then ran off with the money and hid in the place they actually live.
      When developers came the people living there started to fight the invaders.
      Misunderstanding on both sides.
      The issue of treating Natives like noble savages who can do no wrong instead of actual humans is not helping. Government uses this to segregate them entirely - especially with the way the benefits work on ethnicity means they cannot marry outside their ethnicity causing bigotry as it is found upon racist ideology. Now their communities are suffering more than ever. They don't know how to live off the land - but they are also not allowed to be Canadian and mix+integrate with the rest of society.
      Take natives seriously... instead of trying to eradicate them through policy. The Canadian propaganda goes hard. Look Canadas budget . Where do most taxes go every year ? Military industrial complex.
      @@heathenannblackcloud737

    • @shyviking
      @shyviking Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Artemis_Oficina
      "Imagine then what Europeans think of Africa if it’s true !!"
      yes; that is a good comparison.
      Or, might I add, many peoples' perception of China. I have seen and heard many, MANY people on the net, who thinks it is some kind of North Korea II.

  • @imbarmstrong
    @imbarmstrong Před 2 lety +2052

    I'm British and have a friend who spent some time in US school and was sent to the Principals office as a kid for refusing to pledge to the flag. Her argument: I'm a British citizen, play God Save the Queen and raise my flag and I might consider it. The teachers and principal backed down on trying to get her to take part.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před 2 lety +328

      Oh my goodness. I mean, I'm glad that the principal backed down on that, but to even have the mind set where you expect a non-citizen to do that weird, creepy pledge just because she's in the room? Like, if you're in England, you'll really join in with the "Rule Britannia" chorus?
      I love that your friend dug her heels in about that.

    • @matwatson7947
      @matwatson7947 Před 2 lety +154

      The Union Jack would lose my respect quickly if we had to raise our hand and sing Rule Britannia. The flag should earn our respect and we shouldn't be expected to remind ourselves of it.
      We should be aware of it based on the actions it takes, not the ones we are required to...
      If any of that makes sense

    • @paulqueripel3493
      @paulqueripel3493 Před 2 lety

      Even American children don't have to, the 1st amendment (free speech) covers it. That was decided by the supreme court about 80 years ago.

    • @machendave
      @machendave Před 2 lety +92

      @@Julia-lk8jn I am Welsh and would never bow down to the "butchers apron"

    • @vulcanhumor
      @vulcanhumor Před 2 lety +90

      Holy shit, that shouldn't have happened even with an American kid. Part of the right to freedom of speech is the right to not pledge allegiance. We were always told in school that if you weren't going to participate, to just sit quietly and wait for it to be over. And there were kids that did that. But, I grew up in a major metropolitan area with more left-leaning politics...I could imagine in other parts of the country not pledging allegiance would be extremely frowned upon. But disciplining a student for not pledging allegiance is not only stupid, it's unconstitutional.

  • @YvaJStoryTime
    @YvaJStoryTime Před 2 lety +1679

    I grew up in the US and moved to Germany 26 years ago. I have spent so much time educating people over there about how the healthcare system works here. They have called it 'communism' and that people can't get to a doctor quickly. I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2017 and my doctor had me ready for surgery two weeks after the diagnosis came down. They would have gotten me in earlier, but I was getting ready to go on vacation for five days. So, there was no waiting for them to get that tumor out. I went through chemo and radiation after that, only paid 1% of the entire cost (about 600 US$ max.) I was also able to go through rehab for thee weeks after all was completed. All of this was covered. There's no such thing as a copay here, and most Germans have no clue what a copay or a deductible actually is. Healthcare is the main reason I will never move back.

    • @Steeler-wg5zo
      @Steeler-wg5zo Před 2 lety

      Regrettably nothing, nill, nada, niente will change in US with the 2 party system over there. The current politicians all have brown collars from kissing ass with the pharmaceutical companies. They are financed and bribed by them, so that for God's sake nothing changes. The '3rd world conditions will be able to change at the earliest when the existing, outdated 2-party system falls. This in turn will not happen, because every American thinks through decades of state propaganda that they really have the best system in the world. (the 30% bankruptcies exactly therefore p.a. once excluded) About such a great stupidity I could get annoyed every day anew.

    • @nolaserv
      @nolaserv Před 2 lety +19

      Sorry about your cancer spreading. I hope you have been in remission for a good while and no signs of it returning. I wanted to ask a German if they have heard the news about Russia being bombed in the city of Bryansk last night causing major pipeline damage to an oil or gas reserve plant . At least that was assumed because of a major fire there. I was trying to find out if it will affect any NATO alli's that get most of their gas from Russia. I did a search and didn't find anything on that issue. czcams.com/video/wWX49izodmM/video.html

    • @fireephoenix4963
      @fireephoenix4963 Před 2 lety +18

      @@nolaserv i heard nothing from it. Im a russian Born in germany btw

    • @davidg6395
      @davidg6395 Před 2 lety

      @@noobdernoobder6707 It's Russia itself for
      A. Propaganda
      B. Justify some atrocity they're about to commit
      Russia has fallen into an absolute terrorist state. And it seems the population has been brainwashed to oblivion by propaganda.

    • @MistedMind
      @MistedMind Před 2 lety +15

      @@nolaserv Well, I just Googled the City name and there were like more than 10 articles from different "western sources" reporting this fire.
      Seems likely to have been an attack by Ukrainian forces. After all Russia attacks such sites in Ukraine too, right?!?
      The gas / oil supply to Europe is not affected by that. Too remote a location.
      Russia itself has no closed it's valves to Poland and Bulgaria, because Russia suddenly demands being payed in Rubels, despite the contract saying Dollar / Euro.
      That has a much larger effect, but more psychological. Because Poland has a large reserve build up, and rest of Europe pays the Gazprom Bank in $ / € and they convert the money from to Rubels...
      So Russia is in effect pretty much "cheating it's own system" to look good in front of the Russian people. But that's it.

  • @pholliez
    @pholliez Před 8 měsíci +129

    I’m American who lives in Australia (very similar to Europe in many ways) I will never go back to 10 days holiday and my healthcare provider being tied to my employer. Not to mention I don’t fear being shot when I go to the movies or shopping. NEVER!!

    • @orcishhorde
      @orcishhorde Před 7 měsíci +7

      You risk being punched in the face by a kangaroo though :P

    • @Shimmering_rain
      @Shimmering_rain Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@orcishhordeor jumped by a drop bear.

    • @SparkShadow212
      @SparkShadow212 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@orcishhordeWhere's your sense of adventure?

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před 6 měsíci +1

      It depends on which city and state you live in -
      Where I live ... there's nothing but an infinitesimally small chance of experiencing what you suggest, and the reason for that is because I'm not infested by
      idiot Democrats who royally f*ck up everything in sight. I live among Republicans. You know, the only SANE variety of citizen.

    • @azzajames7661
      @azzajames7661 Před 6 měsíci +4

      It is similar in Australia as it is formerly a British colony, like America was, too,...ect
      We live under the English Common Law, and so we have our freedoms😜

  • @Fuzz82
    @Fuzz82 Před 8 měsíci +167

    The funniest thing I ever heard about my country (The Netherlands) was on FOX NEWS. It was about elderly people having to wear bracelets saying 'Do not euthanize me'. Becausse elderly people in the Netherlands were said to be euthanised as a standard when they come to the hospital.
    The funny thing is that it is more like the other way around. Some elderly people have made a contract that they don't want any CPR when something happens. Not becausse they are depressed. They probably wouldn't even be able to make a form like that if they are depressed. It is just becausse they think they are old enough, and just want to go without anyone messing with them. Which I think is actually quite fair.

    • @karspostema2762
      @karspostema2762 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Wauw hier heb ik niks van gehoord wtf

    • @Fuzz82
      @Fuzz82 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@karspostema2762 Ik vond het wel een grappig verslag. :D

    • @md_studios9819
      @md_studios9819 Před 7 měsíci +12

      Fox News is Fox News dus wees niet verbaasd

    • @bronzecobra8556
      @bronzecobra8556 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yeah it’s good to be comfortable when it’s time to move on.

    • @mackwiz1
      @mackwiz1 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Canada has euthanisa. But America has not yet realised it.

  • @nicholasmartin297
    @nicholasmartin297 Před 2 lety +1673

    I’m a retired O.R. nurse in the U.K. I will never forget the time we had an American medical student at our state-of-the-art central London hospital. She was over here to see how WE do do things.
    There was a woman on the operating table having MAJOR gynaecological surgery. She had our world-class surgeons operating on her with all the latest technology etc. She was to be transferred to the Intensive Care Unit post-operatively.
    I was discussing the differences between U.K. healthcare and U.S. healthcare with the student and how U.K. healthcare is funded out of general taxation. She seemed a bit sceptical and confused by what I was saying.
    I will never forget the look on her face when I pointed to the patient and said “This won’t cost her a penny”. The student’s mouth dropped open with incredulity. Then I think she got it.
    And no, we do not have “death panels”. We also don’t have profiteering insurers who take our money and refuse to fund the care we need.
    And we are NOT communists!! (Although we DO get 6 weeks PAID annual leave each year, plus PAID public holidays, generous sick pay, maternity pay, paternity pay and an excellent pension scheme. I retired aged 56 (although I could have retired at 55) and I will have an occupational pension with annual increases linked to the cost of living for the rest of my life. AND, when I get to 67, I will get our state pension on top!
    You guys over the pond really have been brainwashed and exploited from day one. Still, at least you can go buy an assault rifle and kill a bunch of school kids if you want to. Also, over here, we are really jealous of the American prison population - the highest in the world per-capita. Home of the brave, land of the free🤣.
    God bless Murica!

    • @frankmaxwell5193
      @frankmaxwell5193 Před 2 lety

      Nigel farage will sort you out, read his thoughts on American insurance buying up the NHS. Brexit is a slow walk to the American way 🐢🙈

    • @nicholasmartin297
      @nicholasmartin297 Před 2 lety

      @@frankmaxwell5193 Hi Frank. I know all about American healthcare companies buying up our NHS, particularly in London. They are also behind a lot of our “private” hospitals (where you can choose to pay for your healthcare).
      It’s being done slowly and subtly, but it’s being done.
      If a U.K. government took away the NHS overnight there would be an uprising and revolution.
      Re. Brexit, I believe it was a move against federalism. We were not happy with the idea that a bunch of foreigners decided they wanted to run our country for us and tell us what to do.
      There are very greedy and evil people on this planet. We need to be aware of them and expose them. As the saying goes…
      “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”

    • @psycholaw4394
      @psycholaw4394 Před 2 lety +14

      Remind me.. how many people live in the Uk?
      How are things going politically, socially and economically?
      Remind me what would happen if you were invaded?
      Yeah I though so
      Im canadian btw

    • @nicholasmartin297
      @nicholasmartin297 Před 2 lety +268

      @@psycholaw4394 Rather than asking spurious questions and imagining what my answers would be, just make your point. Then I’ll get back to you.
      Yeah. I thought so too.

    • @Angelopithecus
      @Angelopithecus Před 2 lety +169

      @@psycholaw4394 Long time without seeing meaningless questions coming from people that think they're smarter than everyone else... Hahaha...Priceless

  • @encahill
    @encahill Před rokem +858

    Few weeks back we flew to Budapest, rented a car, drove through Slovakia to Krakow in Poland stayed there a few nights and then drove to Prague for a few more days, met up with friends camping in south Czechia for two nights, drove to Vienna for another couple of nights and then drove back to Budapest.
    5 countries, no border checks, no police checks, zero restriction of freedom.

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 Před rokem

      It's almost like "we're the only country that has freedom" is a lie😐 The bad thing is that your politicians who say this... they know it's a lie. But they tell it to keep the public compliant and make them accept their crappy living standards.

    • @encahill
      @encahill Před rokem +6

      @@annnee6818 I'm not American.. they're not my politicians.

    • @ZeBackWoodz
      @ZeBackWoodz Před rokem +5

      Damn no wonder there is so much sex trafficking and kidnapping happening over there I mean not like it's any better here in the states I'm sure as methods are different but yeah that's crazy you can just wildly go around like that and not get checked at least once lol

    • @thejoker2214
      @thejoker2214 Před rokem +35

      That`s EUROPEAN UNION ! a land of free !

    • @dr.christianmetje7092
      @dr.christianmetje7092 Před rokem +120

      @@ZeBackWoodz kidnappings?
      script of a bad Hollywood film?

  • @bamfyfe
    @bamfyfe Před 8 měsíci +66

    We have the same horror stories here in europe about america. But they are so outlandish and crazy that we don´t believe them anyway. Like way too crazy to be true. For example, in america you HAVE to tipp to pay for the waiters wage. Because the restaurant is trying to save money so they dont pay them a proper wage. Too crazy to believe!

    • @karspostema2762
      @karspostema2762 Před 7 měsíci +22

      But that one is actually true xD

    • @vaska1999
      @vaska1999 Před 6 měsíci +15

      It's 100% true.

    • @soulangela7154
      @soulangela7154 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@karspostema2762 r/woosh

    • @Piet-ps3jm
      @Piet-ps3jm Před 6 měsíci

      They have wooden walls, potholes, poverty, crime and school shootings. Not to mention the education and healthcare

    • @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13
      @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 Před 5 měsíci

      I got told that Americans have to pay for an AMBULANCE which must be fake because no country in there right mind would be that cruel ??

  • @jatava00
    @jatava00 Před 8 měsíci +43

    Here in Finland for example in my town Fingersoft (a gaming company) has an option to work for 80% of the normal time for 90% salary. Which means 6 hour work days for only 10% paycut. And what they found out was that people are more productive and hard working with flexible hours. Less work means that people get more work done. And I think not a single employer in the USA could never understand that

  • @80sbaby64
    @80sbaby64 Před rokem +1066

    German here. I lived in the US for almost 6 years. Germans do feel pride, too - but entirely differently. During soccer tournaments e.g., the German Flag is everywhere. Pride is somewhat involved, yes. But in my experience, the flag is just a way of showing the players that we support them and the team. My experiences with American pride during my time in the US were astonishing to me. „USA, the best damn country in the world!“ is something I heard regularly, oftentimes kind of yelled at me, as if that person was trying to prove a point. What I found funny is that the people who said this to me had never even left their home state. The best as compared to what? You have no comparison. That puzzled me quite a bit and sometimes I asked them: „How do you know that when you‘ve never been anywhere else?“ Some people got pissed 😂🤷🏻‍♀️ ya, that‘s what I thought. I find that insanely ignorant. The majority of the US population is brainwashed as f***!

    • @Nina.In.Narnia
      @Nina.In.Narnia Před rokem +51

      Exactly. Like a modern version of NK. They work till they drop, cannot see the outside world because there is no time for that and then they are told their country is the greatest.
      There maybe used to be an American dream, now it is a nightmare.
      I see people still thinking there a dream there, but they are the people that also never left their county until moving there, so of course they are fascinated. But once you start traveling to any other place that is not touristy you get another view.
      Personally I would not be able to live there due to the guns, shootings, patriotism and racism. I might be white but they hate everyone that is not American.

    • @TREVASLARK
      @TREVASLARK Před rokem +44

      You got it !
      Brainwashed ? -Yes
      But the bottom, tragic line is your other point : they are insanely ignorant.

    • @ThoR64
      @ThoR64 Před rokem +1

      Yes Sire 👍🏻

    • @eddyvos2628
      @eddyvos2628 Před rokem +13

      ​@@Nina.In.Narnia" they" do NOT hate everyone that is not American. What you do is generalising. I am European and had an American friend and she was one of the most welcoming persons I ever met ❤

    • @FINNSTIGAT0R
      @FINNSTIGAT0R Před 11 měsíci +41

      Nobody seems to understand, that the US actually need this worship of itself, because there's no natural cohesion between it's citizens, it being the country of immigrants. There's no common roots to the people, no common deep history, no common ethnicity, no common anything. So what is left is the country itself, the idea of the USA and it's recognisable symbols and rites like the pledge of allegiance. Now, when all of that has been fading for awhile the cohesion in the US is also deteriorating. The less people believe in the myth of the US, the more and more hardships the US will face.

  • @markfieten9558
    @markfieten9558 Před 2 lety +1220

    Swearing allegiance to a flag. especially with the right arm raised, raises the hairs on my back and I thinko for many Europeans

    • @georgejob2156
      @georgejob2156 Před 2 lety +97

      Yes, my father spent six years in the UK army, I dread to see this evil return. I wouldn't swear anything on our UK Union flag ,it's only a piece of material, I would swear to uphold the human rights of all.

    • @loveitftw
      @loveitftw Před 2 lety +68

      Indeed,. very unsettling. Creepy as hell

    • @micheledix2616
      @micheledix2616 Před 2 lety +32

      Agreed very creepy

    • @simonmonk7266
      @simonmonk7266 Před 2 lety +24

      Scary as feck

    • @richardwani2803
      @richardwani2803 Před 2 lety +23

      Yes creepy as hell 😳

  • @kaitomikusmom3900
    @kaitomikusmom3900 Před 7 měsíci +18

    „As I grew older and I grew the rest of my brain“ …had me bursting out in tears lol 😂 …Not everyone can say that about themselves. Good for you!

  • @diegomartinez7180
    @diegomartinez7180 Před 8 měsíci +92

    I have an anecdote from some 20 years ago. My mom and a close friend broke their arms roughly at the same time (about a year apart). My friend had gone to live to the US one year before this happened, my mom lived here.
    My mom broke her arm outside a restaurant, it was around 7:00 PM. I called an ambulance which carried her to the nearest hospital where she received all the help she needed, she was diagnosed, treated (x-rays, exams, procedures, hospitalization for 3 days), her arm was placed into a special cast due to the severeness of the fracture, and all of this was paid by the healthcare system without any hassles. She had to pay for some perks that ended up costing an equivalent of around $300 USD. She had to stop working for three months because she broke her right arm and, being right-handed, she couldn't do much. Her employer kept paying her during all this ordeal and when she was cleared to go back to work, she was given time off to go to physical therapy to regain full mobility. Her employer didn't even flinch.
    My friend broke his arm at his workplace. It was his fault, he did something stupid. His employer called an ambulance that came really fast and took him to the nearest hospital where he was diagnosed and treated. He had to undergo surgery and had to wear a cast for a few months, and, likewise, he wasn't able to work because he could not use his right arm. He had a basic insurance that covered part of his ordeal, but, he was laid off his work for "failing to show up", so he had no income for a while. The ambulance and some portions of the medical care that were not covered by the insurance costed him more than $20.000 USD, so he had to ask his family and friends to help cover his bills. He had to live from his parent's money until he recovered (his parents lived here so they sent him money for food, but not much more). No therapy was given to him because he had lost his insurance as he was not working any more. He had other expenses like the rent and other stuff that doubled his whole debt while he was able to go back to work.
    Some time later he said he did everything wrong. He was new in the US so he didn't know better. He should have gone by himself to the hospital (he "only" had a broken arm so he could have gone there on his own), he should have gone to a less fancy hospital which would have given him a similar attention for, maybe, half the price. He should have showed up at work immediately after, just to make it look like he was still present. He should have blamed his employer for the accident because he would've had access to his employer's insurance which would've covered a lot more (even if it was his fault, it still happened while he was working).
    When we talked about this many years later, I just couldn't believe he was justifying it all, thinking he could have "done better". No man, you got injured, all you needed to do at the time was to get treated and start healing. But no, he was already "part of the system" and thinking the only one to blame was himself. It took him almost a decade to fulfill all his debts, especially with family and friends.

    • @xiii0722
      @xiii0722 Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for sharing

    • @vericacvetkovic9093
      @vericacvetkovic9093 Před 5 měsíci +1

      OMG!!!!!

    • @andynieuwenhuis7833
      @andynieuwenhuis7833 Před 5 měsíci +2

      NOW IF that accident had Happen in ANY PROVINCE in Canada, The Ambulance ride MAY have cost $ 20.00 Canadian. However The Hospital bill Would've been $00,000.HE Would've been covered by WORKER COMPENSATION to get money, and got the Therapy to keep his job and Apparent.

  • @windsorSJ
    @windsorSJ Před 2 lety +617

    I see a lot of videos about the American experience in Europe and I often think that it's such a shame that only a very small fraction of the American population will learn about how they are being oppressed. Because it is oppression.

    • @MazzaEliLi7406
      @MazzaEliLi7406 Před 2 lety +19

      Yup & the UK is following suit. S.O.S.

    • @Leucoandro
      @Leucoandro Před 2 lety +2

      Not just Americans. Celebrate Boxing Day? Look up the history of it, and the master/servant dynamic.

    • @MazzaEliLi7406
      @MazzaEliLi7406 Před 2 lety

      @ChaosWhite 'Neglect' is the result of specific 'oppressive' government policies. This has been happening stealthily since the seventies. The restrictions on 'unionisation' is another example that began then. The generations have become acclimatised to these hidden forms of oppression. As an ex-teacher I know that the education system has been skewed in favour of Right Wing Propaganda as has the main stream media. Covid & Brexit have accelerated the process so more people are becoming aware that people of my age (72 years & counting) remember a less oppressive & more hopeful time. The Tory agenda has been evident in all of the major Parties but has become so Far Right Wing in the C & U Party that those of us that have been taking notice are truly terrified that the UK is lurching toward full on dictatorship. So many have died prematurely because of C & U Party policies. When the UK PM said 'let the bodies pile high' & 'f*** business' he meant what he said. I will not live to see the UK recover from these draconian policies. I fear less for myself & more for future generations. People before politics. S.O.S.

    • @ColdieHU
      @ColdieHU Před 2 lety +2

      Well thank to the internet that number is going, specially in the younger generation.

    • @samuelpinder1215
      @samuelpinder1215 Před 2 lety

      @@MazzaEliLi7406 stop the cap

  • @johnkingsize
    @johnkingsize Před rokem +603

    "My country is never perfect but I think it can get better" is the definition of patriotism.
    Not worshiping one's flag as if it's some sort of idol.

    • @louisedurell9612
      @louisedurell9612 Před rokem +9

      What is also funny is they are mainly a Christian country- but they worship their flag as an idol as you say- kind of reminds me of when Noah came down from the mountains with the Ten Commandments- idols are not suppose to be too things right???

    • @johnkingsize
      @johnkingsize Před rokem +13

      @@louisedurell9612 That's Moses, Noah is the guy that builds the raft for the animals during the flood, but yes, very good comparison.
      In the story, Moses go up the mountain to have a meeting with God and receive his rules on stone tablets. But by the time he's comes back, his people have lost their ways and are now worshipping a golden calf.
      In the case of the US, though, it was done on purpose and was a very foreseenable consequence.
      The US were a very diverse country, between the liberal merchants of the north, the devoted Christians with a strong incentive for education on the east coast, the rich and slave-owner aaristocrats in the south and the poor and tight communities dependant on mining corporation in the Appalachians, with the southward and westward expansion only making it more complicate. It was very hard to see a country made of all and, taking note of the concept of nation appearing in Europe, they relied on national symbols from the get go to help in that.
      However, the main weakness of that plan was that although symbols do help in building nations, they can't do it on their own. And given how much division there was to bridge, they went even harder on these symbols to have it work. That's why, even today, there isn't very much in common between people from various parts of the US except for these symbols. Even their own collective memory divides them still to this day.
      If many people revere and worship these symbols, it is because they have been indoctrinated to do so. When you can't see what that flag is supposed to represent, you only see the flag.
      Sometimes, I find that looking at the US as dozens of little countries having to work together makes it simpler to analyze situations.

    • @louisedurell9612
      @louisedurell9612 Před rokem +2

      @@johnkingsize thank you- got wrong name- mind went a blank lol 😂

    • @lincolnsixecho51
      @lincolnsixecho51 Před rokem +1

      Hi, Loïc! - "Patriotism is the last refuge for villains!" ( Samuel Johnson)
      Greetz,
      Lincoln

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +9

      I like that kind of patriotism. The idea that you can be proud for all the good things your society has archived. But not keeping a blind eye on the bad things, both in the past and present.

  • @sheireland3737
    @sheireland3737 Před 8 měsíci +14

    The US is grappling with issues dealt with in Europe 200 years ago. Superannuated man by Charles Lamb was part of my school curriculum in English where we debated work life balance. It seems insane the US still hasn’t dealt with this. Archaic. Greetings from Ireland 🇮🇪

  • @TheEvertw
    @TheEvertw Před 6 měsíci +5

    In Europe, we used to have our social housing concentrated in specific neighbourhoods. But we discovered quickly that these become ghettos. So we pulled most of that down, and now intersperse social housing with privately owned housing.

  • @haidouk872
    @haidouk872 Před 2 lety +1562

    As an European (French), whenever I look at how things work in USA, I am actually shocked that American citizens are not shocked themselves. A lot of us in Europe (not all tho) tend to see USA as a nice country to visit, maybe somewhere to live for a year or two, but for sure not somewhere to settle for good.
    I mean, sure, in USA, you'll probably make more money. But in exchange for that, you'll have to sacrifice so many things that you take for granted in Europe: social protection, Healthcare, food regulation, holidays, non-binary political system, security, mostly fair justice system, better protection against Lobbies,...
    Going to USA as an European is the same as experiencing democratic downgrade, in exchange for money.
    But the worst is that we know that you guys are being drilled into your head since young age that USA is the beacon of Democracy, defender of Freedom, the best country to live in, the American dream,...
    So most of you guys grow up being convinced that what you have is the best that democracy can offer. And we just find it very sad.

    • @amaterachu1
      @amaterachu1 Před 2 lety

      It's really all over the place in schools. Some teachers will want you to "pledge to the flag" and others are totally fine with you not participating (because freedom). This really only happens during the primary/elementary school years and then after the flag pledge thing kinda just stops. Mission completed, get them at a young age.
      Some teachers do drill in the "America is the best thing in the entire world and we can blow everyone up if they challenge us yadda yadda yadda superiority complex." Others do point out the flaws that happen and that simply all countries have their own strengths and weaknesses. And then some say that we should move to Canada and abandon ship.
      Basically, everything just feels so all over the place that I've adopted the typical "don't care, doesn't effect me" attitude that so many Americans have. Whatever it is, it works and it's miserable.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 2 lety

      Ah, but many European nations have mandatory voting. We don't do that here, so we get a noisy minority to elect a Trump for President.
      We also very narrowly define treason in our Constitution. So, we've averaged about the same number of people tried for treason in the 21st century so far, zero.
      And we get a special thing no civilized nation gets, medical bankruptcy and rampant homelessness.
      So, we're much, much, much better - at mediocrity.

    • @buttkicker7172
      @buttkicker7172 Před 2 lety +23

      well on the bright side there are a good amount of people who no longer have that perspective of their country in america, sure it isnt the cheapest country in the world to live in but it has some nice perks

    • @okairo
      @okairo Před 2 lety +11

      True, and it's a bit hard for a US citizen to migrate to another country, be assured he can get a job which i can understand a business preferring local people than a random foreigner... and the ungodly price for a passport and a work visa.
      Being 31, if i could save the money to get those and go to another country where i can get a job without thinking I'll be homeless a week later, i would and imagine alot of others would too but it's that 'will i just end up homeless' part that probably holds some people back.

    • @reasonablefacsimile
      @reasonablefacsimile Před 2 lety +68

      I'm an American who realizes how backwards a lot of our policies and practices are, and it's incredibly frustrating that so many of my fellow citizens prefer to keep their heads in the sand. We're absolutely indoctrinated to believe that America is the best at everything, and that it's unpatriotic to insinuate that there's any room for improvement. It's nothing but blind, self-righteous hubris. I'd been hopeful that people growing up in the internet age would begin to see through the smokescreen, but given the way misinformation is spreading like a cancer via online echo chambers, I've begun to have serious doubts.

  • @raffaelpichler5864
    @raffaelpichler5864 Před 2 lety +717

    as an austrian, especially the picture you showed of the children when talking about the pledge of allegience, send chills down my spine since they literally did the nazi salute........

    • @jamiebrooks457
      @jamiebrooks457 Před rokem +23

      For what it's worth, we put our right hands on our hearts now.

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Před rokem +10

      Read the pledge. We are not pledging to a leader or a political party.
      Republic: a state in which supreme power is held by the people....
      Many in the US find it difficult to identify with the national leaders.
      We can still identify with our republic and the flag which symbolizes it.

    • @rrows5803
      @rrows5803 Před rokem

      @@danharold3087 Ah yes "supreme power is held by the people" Hence why your people have to litteraly live with serious injuries and sickness to avoid getting a debt for life to have the "Right" to live

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Před rokem +3

      @@rrows5803 The health care system in the US could be a LOT better in terms of cost. But the problems with it are exaggerated. Cases like you point out do exist. But you should not find people living with serious injuries. If you go into the emergency room they fix you up and nobody askd about payment till after surgery or whatever is over. Yeah the bill still sucks but there are other agencies that MAY make up the differance. And if you can't pay and have no money the can't collect.
      Yeah it stinks but not like people love to make it out to be.
      Personally I would like to see the US pull out of NATO that use that boatload of money to fund free health care and medicine. But that is not what we are talking about here.

    • @delanovanraalte3646
      @delanovanraalte3646 Před rokem

      @@danharold3087 it would mean we probably are saver from Russia in the west of Europe

  • @Benwut
    @Benwut Před 8 měsíci +20

    Meanwhile: Here in australia where it's a mix of both america and europe in terms of culture, when I want time off from work, I literally just text my boss and he's just like "cool, i'll cancel ur shifts for like 2 weeks', without any hassle or reason needed.
    Also, the most patriotic shit we have to do here in school is like sing the anthem on a monday assembly, but ours is like half the length of the US anthem lmao (cos we rarely sing the second stanza of ours)

    • @Neyjina
      @Neyjina Před 6 měsíci

      My boss gets mad at me if I miss my break. Thing is, I don’t like taking a break because I get bored easily.
      So yeah, very different from the hard worker mindset.

    • @antiglobalist8229
      @antiglobalist8229 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Patriotism is not shit. And it's also okay to try to educate children about patriotism at school. Be emotionally attached to your country. That's all right. The trouble is that in America pariotism is mistaken for chauvinism.

    • @Benwut
      @Benwut Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@antiglobalist8229 Oh, uh, u seem to not understand. Here in Australia, saying "patriotic shit" means "Patriotic stuff" cos we use Shit as a substitute for the word Stuff a lot

    • @antiglobalist8229
      @antiglobalist8229 Před 5 měsíci

      Oh, okay! Just a misunderstanding.@@Benwut

  • @nhugh23
    @nhugh23 Před měsícem +4

    My boss is stressed so got a whole paid month off work to deal with her mental health. That's it. You're scared you're not okay, take time to go be okay.
    You want a gun, sure, but you have to go to the police station, fill out a tonne of paperwork, get multiple background checks, prove you can store and care for it properly etc, then you can have one.
    I am freer than any American. I am not scared of getting sick, I'm not scared that getting sick will bankrupt me. I am not scared that my employer doesn't like me so can fire me tomorrow. They're protections in place for them and for me.
    I can buy my house bit by bit. All I needed was 5k in my account. It was 200 a month cheaper that my rent and I can build how much of the home I own over time or I can sell my percentage back to the company and go buy elsewhere if I see fit to.

  • @TeddyboyRnR13
    @TeddyboyRnR13 Před 2 lety +1132

    As a European , I lived and worked in America for a year, it was so surreal man . Half the shit that happened in my time there and the people I met made me very sceptical about the world in general , was kind of like living in a cartoon . People in US live in a very distorted bubble of reality , needless to say it was not for me.

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před 2 lety +1

      Until fairly recently, the USA has generally been protected from the world-wide nonsense until Joe Biden and his merry band of idiots made it very obvious that citizens need to do everything possible to defend themselves against them. Biden has brought the average American nothing but heartache and anger. Thanks to Biden, we now have the worst economy and the highest inflation in half a century. Crime is out of control, and the cost of fuel is now a relatively huge portion of the average pay check.
      Trump brought us Americans the very BEST of times, and Biden has brought us Americans the very WORST of times.
      No question of it, because it's undeniable.

    • @luk4s56
      @luk4s56 Před 2 lety +117

      A good friend of mine lives in us now, he comes back to europe to get health checks and medcal care, then goes back to us after spending few months here, its kinda hilarius when its cheeper/ quicker to travel half across the world to get medical help. than get it in same town dosen km/miles away

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před 2 lety

      Hey Tech, which city did you visit? Which state? The shittiest places are always ruled and reigned by only idiot Democrats.
      They're the ones whose world view has very little to do with reality. Let me guess, you visited a place which is fully dedicated to de-funding the police, and disregarding law and order. RIGHT? Yes -

    • @oliveranan4881
      @oliveranan4881 Před rokem +22

      I feel the US Had a very old school look on freedom and gouverment and judged everything by those standards.
      Freedom is the gouverment staying out of peoples stuff ad much ad possible.
      In Europe it is more about balancing different partys powers with in laws decides in by ellected officials.
      So when Europe enacts laws protecting workers rights to protect freedeoms they See just see gouverment getting involved and See this aß less freedom No Matter the intent.
      Sadly this leaves a Power cacuum that companies with resources and powers the founding fathers could Not have imagined glady fill. And voters do not have a say in those.

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před rokem +7

      @@oliveranan4881 - The problem is in assuming that our governments always have our best interests in mind.
      It surely never takes much time to get oneself indoctrinated in pure political bullshit, and then we suffer the consequences, most often without realizing it until several years pass by. YES indeed, freedom is the government staying out of the peoples' lives as much as possible. No question of it - In the USA, the government is always our fellow citizens. So it is, in fact, our most evil of fellow citizens who refuse to stay out of our lives. But they'd prefer to be goddamn control freaks and tell us what to do, how to do it, and how long to do it. Let me make it clear that in the USA, it is "we the people" who are the government. We govern ourselves through our chosen representatives. This system was created by design for that very purpose. But at some point along the way, particular citizens start believing that rather than representing us, they can tell us all what to do. But this is NOT how things work. We sure as hell do not elect leaders in order for them to control us. Hell no - they do our bidding. Or at least they should, because THAT is what a representative government is. The only time our system is in danger is when a majority of citizens elect leaders who serve their own interests rather than ours, and we have very nearly already reached such a dangerous precipice.

  • @chiphowell4063
    @chiphowell4063 Před rokem +285

    As a US-American who lived in Europe (Czech Republic and Germany) and who will be returning to live permanently in Central Europe, I can definitely say that upon my return to the USA, I was struck by how much of a plantation this country actually is. In many cases, we're not US Citizens, we're just human resources.

    • @easternlights3155
      @easternlights3155 Před rokem +22

      Czech person here, we'll be happy to have you when you return!

    • @williansouza8724
      @williansouza8724 Před rokem +34

      “the US isn’t a country, it’s a business.” -erm someone, probably

    • @SH-gr6pg
      @SH-gr6pg Před rokem +19

      I've been living in Germany since 97', originally from New Jersey and ain't going back!

    • @trueSconox
      @trueSconox Před rokem +14

      There is a reason, why I strongly dislike the term "human resource department".

    • @eddyvos2628
      @eddyvos2628 Před rokem

      ​@@trueSconox😂😂😂

  • @pwaegemans
    @pwaegemans Před 7 měsíci +9

    As a Belgian I look at the pledge to the flag with mixed feelings. I see the same with my Dominican wife's family. That flag does give a sense of pride and national community. Western Europe abandoned all forms of flag waving and such due to the obvious reasons already discussed in above video, but I see that it gives an excuse to a lot of people to frown upon people who do care. It also seems to confuse immigrants who just go wave their flag instead.

  • @caiquecardoso8513
    @caiquecardoso8513 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I love hearing educated Americans, it is so refreshing because I LOOOVE the US, but sometimes I do not feel the same level of acknowledgement from the other side. Thank you for showing appreciation for multiculturalism!!!!

  • @Genex2259
    @Genex2259 Před rokem +970

    "They don't have guns in Europe". Actually, Switzerland has more guns per person than the US, and near 0 gun violence. The difference? They acknowledge the need to have a properly educated and trained population, the need for gun safety, regulation, etc.

    • @BunnyHopLEET
      @BunnyHopLEET Před rokem +50

      @@g0d638 it actually is

    • @hellboy7424
      @hellboy7424 Před rokem +47

      Switzerland is a tiny and very elitist country where the majority of the population has a lot of money. It's normal that people speak four languages ​​and an educational system, accessibility to the health and social system that the USA will never know. NEVER. It is stupid to compare two countries like this and put it as a justification for violence with firearms in the USA.

    • @brewen_lmrch
      @brewen_lmrch Před rokem +16

      @@hellboy7424 Well said. People from Switzerland don't understand that they live in a rich country and it's not because they are that rich and educated that other countries can be like that as well. I'm saying that as an European. I saw many swiss being arrogant and thinking their country is good because of them. No, they are rich because of their country. You can't compare the swiss people to the Americans, french or Germans ones. Switzerland wasn't a colonialist country nor an old colony with former slaves. It's not facing an immigration and so on

    • @BunnyHopLEET
      @BunnyHopLEET Před rokem +48

      @@brewen_lmrch Switzerland is rich because there are no Germans, Italians and French, they call them swiss, don't separate themselves by color, religion or nationality, they work together for better tomorrow. And also they been lucky trough history. Meanwhile rest of the world is looking for things that are dividing us, rather then connecting

    • @brewen_lmrch
      @brewen_lmrch Před rokem +17

      @@BunnyHopLEET I met some German speaking swiss and this is not true, it's even an utopia ! German speakers weren't working with french speakers at all and where not even trying to learn french or Italian. Half and the italian speakers are just Italians looking for money and other swiss advantages. You know I come from a country where "egality" and "fraternity" is in the motto. (France obviously)
      And as you maybe know it France is made of a serial of different cultures. I come from a place which was a country centuries ago and had it own Celtic language. You can find basque, Celtic, African, occitan, Corsican people here yet we also call them french. So I doubt your arguments really does or just mean anything.
      I don't care about religions but you would maybe not say that if a quarter of your country was from the middle east. It's not the case in France and it's not a problem for me anyway but look at Sweden : they were happy to see new workers and immigrants but after some years people started to realize that Islam was becoming the main religion is some cities and towns. When the swedish People realized it they suddenly woke up like "Wait what ???" So of course religion is not a problem in countries like Switzerland or France where there is no official religion nor a religious border that divide the country in two or three like in Bosnia, but think about it now, we are lucky to live in those kind of countries. And tbh if the situation is what it is, it's just luck.

  • @dan_kay
    @dan_kay Před 2 lety +253

    Dude, the German sentence was dope and perfectly pronounced.
    Other than that: It is literally illegal in Germany to NOT take my vacation time of miniminum 20 work days per year. In other words: You HAVE TO take time off. By law.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před 2 lety +9

      ... and he got the dative right! Respect!

    • @gregpettis1113
      @gregpettis1113 Před 2 lety

      So you're proud of being lazy

    • @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit
      @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit Před rokem

      you should mention that the words of the law mean SHIT if authorities want to.
      if your opinion differs from brainwash-gov.truth, you get labled as "nazi", millions of "nazis" at the moment in germany. it is nothing else then reign of totalitarian, and yes, communist, surpression!
      we "rescue" big money with bio.s of taxmoney by laws they make to feed their buddys and prices rise to heaven with 10% inflation. surpression, incoming social credit system , "vaxx"terror without ANY evidence (remind you about why the nurnberg codex was made). these fascists SH.T on that. right at the moment, we are bein surpressed by fascists and it wont stop. could talk hours about that insane crime going on!

    • @Anonymous-sb9rr
      @Anonymous-sb9rr Před rokem +2

      Illegal to not take vacation? Seems like a lack of freedom.

    • @dan_kay
      @dan_kay Před rokem +15

      @@Anonymous-sb9rr
      Only in your limited mind.

  • @petemulhearn7787
    @petemulhearn7787 Před 6 měsíci +3

    In the UK everyone in full time employment is legally entitled to 4 weeks holiday every year plus bank holidays.

  • @DasTamii
    @DasTamii Před 7 měsíci +6

    I can just tell my experience. I started to normally work 40 hours after I finished school. After 2,5 years of parental leave with my first child, I reduced on 20 hours a week and worked only 3 days per week and it was so much more life quality. Even with a little child at home, I have much more energy, I am much more motivated and creative and I get much more work done in the same period of time.
    But I also can imagine, that there are people whose work wouldn’t improve, because they are lazy anyway 😂

  • @AntiCranium
    @AntiCranium Před 2 lety +46

    i see america as the worlds largest comedy show and every 4 years a new season comes out

  • @kimberleyjackson
    @kimberleyjackson Před 10 měsíci +895

    The whole health insurance debate never fails to baffle me. I remember one specific thing from my personal experience. At the time, I was in a relationship with an American when I got seriously sick (cancer). I had to go to the hospital, needed surgery and aftercare treatments and so I was sick from work for a couple of months. My partner at the time told me, she would give me money so I could pay for the bills and everything. And I told her, no need, the health insurance is covering it all. I don't have to pay anything. She then proceeded top worry about how I would be able to cover my rent and food for the next couple of months since I couldn't work. Again, I told her, no worries, because my employer will continue to pay my salary as though I was working for 6 weeks, and after that the health insurance will pay me an amount that more or less amounts to 90% of my monthly salary. I am completely fine financially.
    She was baffled and couldn't believe what I was telling her. She just informed me that if I were in America, I would be broke by now and amass piles of debt that I would probably never be able to pay off in my life. I think this was the first time she heard about how the German healthcare system works and started to doubt the American healthcare system and how the European systems were always demonized by politicians.
    I am so happy I wasn't born in the United States. Especially illness are nothing which you can control. So in the United States, whether you end up broke from medical bills is entirely up to luck or fate if you wish. You have no control over that. And that is horrible. In Germany, I can say with certainty, that getting seriously sick will never ever result in me amassing hundreds of thousands of euros in debt. And that comes with a relaxation that's indescribable.

    • @lollo7417
      @lollo7417 Před 8 měsíci +12

      To be fair Germany has one of the best healthcare in Europe. There are other state in Europe who have worse healthcare than United States, like Italy. So you are lucky to be born in Germany, not in Europe

    • @kasimy9619
      @kasimy9619 Před 8 měsíci

      ???? wtf are you talking about italy health care system is ranked better than the us where did you find this information ?? every single article and ranking list says that they are better than the us @@lollo7417

    • @nicolanobili2113
      @nicolanobili2113 Před 8 měsíci +86

      @@lollo7417 Sorry, I happen to be Italian and I feel offended by your lack of information. It is true that IN SOME AREAS OF SOUTHERN ITALY there are problems (in all fields, due to the Mafia and the Camorra, mostly), but on the whole, the Italian healthcare system is one of the best in the world. Where I live, in the northern town of Bologna, I rarely have to wait for more than 2 weeks to have a totally free specialized medical consultation, we have one of the most renowned orthopedic institutes in Europe and since I am a medical translator and translate reports every day, I can assure you that throngs of foreigners appreciate how things work.

    • @lollo7417
      @lollo7417 Před 8 měsíci

      @@nicolanobili2113 really? I’m Italian I don’t come from the south and I lived in Italy for more than 30 years. I trust what I see and what I experienced and not what other people say. Hospitals do not work at all, and the private consultations are very expensive that many people prefer to stay sick rather than pay to be in debt. And the medical treatments are very old and not efficient. That is the only reason on why I decided to left Italy: to have better healthcare and better doctors. The situation in Italy will not change until there will be Italian people who prefer to hide all the problems for a nationalism: I happen to hear Italian people on CZcams saying that in Italy the salary is 80k-90k and there are many jobs position. 😅. Btw I never experienced mafia or Camorra: it’s the mentality of normal Italian people who must change, they don’t work and if they do, they make bad job just to get the salary . The worst situations in my life I experienced in the Italian hospitals. Never again!

    • @massimovolpe1343
      @massimovolpe1343 Před 8 měsíci +41

      ​@@lollo7417dislocated a shoulder in August. Stayed overnight in the hospital, x-ray on arrival, in the morning a visit with the orthopedic, did 2 x-rays in the following month and a half and 2 visits by an orthopedic. Had to pay a grand total of less than 60€, try and do the same in the US then come back with a multiple thousand dollar bill and keep complaining about Italian healthcare. I do live in the north though

  • @rexochroy2
    @rexochroy2 Před 19 dny +2

    The basics that I took away from this, slavery did not disappear it just changed shape.

  • @__-tp4tm
    @__-tp4tm Před 8 měsíci +3

    Strange, I'm German and when I was a little kid, my father used to tell me how likely it would be to loose my kidneys to some organ traffickers in America xD

  • @shakawhenthewallsfell8570
    @shakawhenthewallsfell8570 Před 2 lety +254

    It's a bit embarrassing when you see people in America going "we're number 1" or "this is the best country on earth", when a lot of them have barely left their own state, let alone actually see outside of America. All they know is "we got Canadian pansies to the north, and drug cartels to the south" and "Europe is just a bunch of socialist commies", because that's what they get from political figures of authority, which s then passed down and reinforced through generations.
    I tried explaining to someone once that Europe is not some socialist commie hellscape. That they are democracies and republics. That their people actually benefit from taxes they pay in through healthcare and education, and that they have the same, if sometimes not more rights; like having mandated vacation time or paid maternity leave. The response I got was that I was brainwashed by the liberal media. Even though I'm originally from Europe, have traveled back to it many times, and have a lot of family members that still live there.
    In US, I had to work for 5 years at my current employer to get 3 weeks of paid vacation (starting with 2). My European relatives get 26 days on day one, up to 32.

    • @gregpettis1113
      @gregpettis1113 Před 2 lety

      You could always go back to your cramped little cities

    • @JK-br1mu
      @JK-br1mu Před rokem +6

      Hardly any Americans have never left their own state..........Americans travel farther than Europeans do, but since Euro countries are so small and packed together, they get credit for traveling to other countries, when Americans don't. Traveling to another state here is like going from France to Germany or France to Italy or Belgium or The Netherlands. Yay, you traveled 200 miles, congratulations, Americans travel much farther all the time.

    • @jessicaely2521
      @jessicaely2521 Před rokem +1

      It all depends on the employer. I got 4 weeks vacation after 2 weeks of working there. This is a good thing about an employee owned business. My brother immediately got 4 weeks vacation when he started. This is the good thing about working in a job that has a union. My manager is harassing me to take a vacation before November.. I'm like no thanks. I'll take 4 days at Thankgiving, 2 weeks at Christmas, and the rest close to Easter.

    • @Spacemongerr
      @Spacemongerr Před rokem +37

      @@JK-br1mu The geographial distance travelled does not matter much, that is not the point. A Russian that has travelled 5.000 km (3.100 miles) across half of Russia from Nizhny Novgorod to Irkutsk, has not really gotten the experience of different societies. While travelling 2.800 km from Paris to Istanbul, you visit many different societies.

    • @JK-br1mu
      @JK-br1mu Před rokem

      @@Spacemongerr Yes, it does. Euros get credit for visiting a bunch of countries, but they can visit 6 or 7 countries by driving a couple hundred miles or less. Completely bogus, they're not more well-traveled than Americans---they're just packed in tight next to dozens of other countries. Your Russia special case strawman only applies to Russians, next.

  • @tardismole
    @tardismole Před 2 lety +283

    I can't imagine how the population of an entire country could work without a break. That's not work. That's slavery. Also, the one thing not covered in this video is taxes. I know from my relatives in the US that they are lied to about taxes and what they are used for. In Britain, we get an itemised bill telling us exactly how much goes to what service (ie education, health care, fire service, police, ambulance, benefits, pensions etc). We do not spend six days locked in a room to work out how much tax we should pay. It's already calculated by the tax office and deducted from our income. And food is not taxed at the checkout. It's already included in the price, and some food is not tax at all. Another thing not covered in hte video is the cost of healthcare. The lie told to US citizens is that you have to pay for your hospital/doctor's treatment, even when you have insurance. I find this, having worked as a doctor in the US, so pitiful and cruel. I've had to leave a five-year-old boy untreated for internal bleeding because there was no adult to pay for his treatment. In Europe, if a medical professional ever did that, they would be struck off. Over here, it's not about money. Your only thought is your duty to your patients.

    • @NAUM1
      @NAUM1 Před 2 lety +5

      The itemized list is a good idea and having the government figure out the taxes and send you a bill is certainly better. The reason consumer goods are taxed at the checkout is because it is purely a state/local tax and not a national one. That isn't the best reason but that is why. The VAT for the UK is also at least double the highest sales tax rate in the US, which is 9.55% in Louisiana. These taxes on consumer goods are also viewed as a regressive tax since those with lower incomes are spending a bigger portion of their incomes on goods. Also, it depends on the state whether food is taxed. For instance, my state of Iowa doesn't tax all food but really only candy, certain beverages like soda and alcohol, and prepared foods. I can go into the store and buy eggs, milk, beef, pork, peppers, vegetables, fruits, bread, and others and not pay sales tax on it. Lastly, it is illegal to not treat a patient with life-threatening injuries just because they don't have insurance. It would still be great if the US had a better healthcare system, maybe like Switzerland, but just had to share a few misconceptions in your comment.

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole Před 2 lety +18

      @@NAUM1 Thank you for your opinion, but there are no misconceptions in my comment. I was a doctor in the USA during the late 1980s to early 1990s, specifically LA. The rule was "no insurance, no treatment". The boy was brought in by ambulance. He was the victim of a hit-and-run, reported by another vehicle driver. We had no name, no address and no way to contact his family. The boy died and it was reported in the news. You may look it up if you wish.

    • @NAUM1
      @NAUM1 Před 2 lety

      @@tardismole And now they have to treat. www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/EMTALA It does have the flaw of not being funded properly but it is nonetheless a law. Just an example of how things CAN change.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 2 lety +6

      @@NAUM1 actually, the law stipulates life saving stabilization only, then they can discharge the patient regardless of likely outcome.

    • @NAUM1
      @NAUM1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@spvillano Ok, that is good to know and should be changed.

  • @KH75013
    @KH75013 Před 7 měsíci +3

    In the late 80s and 90s I was a tourist guide in Europe for American schoolchildren who were "doing Europe". I was so alarmed at the incorrect assumptions (you say "lies") these kids came out with. At the beginning I would try to correct their misconceptions but I realized that there was a deeper message in what they were saying which was "America is better and everyone wants to go there". As a result I have never been to America and I never want to go... That and guns.

  • @FlipjevanTiel
    @FlipjevanTiel Před 8 měsíci +6

    The culture about vacation time in The Netherlands is so different. Outside of the national holidays, I can take as much time off as I have left, on a week notice, if needed.
    I start each year with at least 6 weeks of paid vacation. Around the summer holidays and Christmas, we have to coordinate with colleagues, to make sure there is someone doing the work,
    but it's no problem for my department and level, to have 50% of the workforce off for a week and as little as 25% for a day or two. And that's for an American company.
    If there is someone who's not taking enough time off, to recover, their supervisor will get worried about their health and start discuss and investigate why that person is working too hard.
    When people get stressed, their effectiveness goes down and they will start making mistakes. A smart company keeps their employees healthy, to keep them effective.

  • @LupusZockt
    @LupusZockt Před 2 lety +302

    As I was about 14 years old, I traveled for a few to america with my parents. Because we missed the end of summer holidays by a week, my school wanted me to go to an american school for one week. Over all, it was a really interesting experience. But honestly, from a german perspective, seeing these other kids in my temporary class, pledging to a flag... I feld very uncomfortable.
    As a 14 years old german kid, you know exactly how it looked like at a certain time in germany. And that scene in the classroom, with the kids pledging to the flag, looked familiar in a quite disturbing way.

    • @Ronald98
      @Ronald98 Před 2 lety +1

      Join in.. join in.. JOIN IN TO THE PL....[REDACTED]

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 2 lety

      There are old newsreels from the US, in the pre-war years, when Republicans were suggesting bringing fascism to the US to support national unity and a bunch of other forgotten blather. They were making some inroads, when the apple cart got overturned on them by a war.
      They're back at it again, retreading it and calling it anything but what it is.
      When I've called a few on that, they resorted to denunciation, claiming that I hate the US.
      My reply turned their day into a train wreck, "Oh? I must've really messed up, what with serving in two wars, for 28 years in the US Army, retiring from it!". Yep, total uncontrolled derailment.

    • @definitelynotatroll246
      @definitelynotatroll246 Před 2 lety +3

      No way you went to school in another country for one week, stop the cap bro😂

    • @LupusZockt
      @LupusZockt Před 2 lety +12

      @@definitelynotatroll246 I don't understand what you mean. This is nothing unusual o.O

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 2 lety +5

      @@LupusZockt dud knows everything, from the vast experience acquired upon his Twinkie encrusted couch in his mom's basement.

  • @Yendor1224
    @Yendor1224 Před 2 lety +490

    As an European child I loved the USA. I always wanted to visit the country. The moment I realized how easy a lot a Americans can be manipulate to believe lies I lost all interest in this country and was very sad.
    Nowadays I just feel sorry. It is not a bad country at all. I think the problem is the USA can't accept it isn't perfect. Guys, you can love your country and want to change it at the same time! You don't have to put others down to feel better about yourself and the influence your lobbies have is veeeery out of control! A lie doesn't become the truth if you at "because of our freedom" to it.

    • @BennyDV9
      @BennyDV9 Před rokem +48

      I live in the USA and totally agree. I grew up believing we were the best country out there, but now that I’m at the stage of life where I question a lot of things, I’m starting to realize how brainwashed we are. Also I fear for my generation (genZ, mainly Americans) I watched a video of people asking the most basic questions to American teens and I swear our education system isn’t even trying. Some of the questions were:
      How many moons does the earth have?
      Name 3 continents
      If you travel at 60mph (I guess you guys use Kilometer tho so…) if you travel at 60km/h how far do you travel in one hour?
      And what is 1/4 of a US Dollar.
      No lie, they didn’t know the answer to any of them.

    • @janaegal9746
      @janaegal9746 Před rokem +1

      @@BennyDV9 there's one thing about Americans that other countries lack.
      If you're fed up, you get on them streets and take the whole world with you.
      I hope someone does that before WW3

    • @BrgArt
      @BrgArt Před rokem +6

      @@BennyDV9 "km/h" is our equivalent :)

    • @BennyDV9
      @BennyDV9 Před rokem +1

      @@BrgArt thx

    • @darkcognitive
      @darkcognitive Před rokem +4

      @@BennyDV9 We still use MPH and Miles in the UK.

  • @mcnetchaiev
    @mcnetchaiev Před 5 měsíci +1

    As a non American 10 year old in New Jersey, I got sent to the principal's office and threatened because I wouldn't pledge allegiance to the flag. Coming from Europe, I felt like this was a totalitarian practice. Added to that, as a non American why should I pledge allegiance to a flag that isn't even mine?

  • @TheAdambright
    @TheAdambright Před 5 měsíci +1

    You can’t have a handgun.
    They are banned, unless it’s an air pistol.
    We Brits watch with amazement at your “freedom” to go bankrupt for a heart attack!

  • @lilithiaabendstern6303
    @lilithiaabendstern6303 Před 2 lety +568

    and the sad thing is, in regard to what your grandma described - the chance that something happens to tourists in the US is far higher than in european countries because they are used to a certain degree of security that the United States can't provide - when even the people of the US don't feel safe themselves

    • @coldheartedtruth1374
      @coldheartedtruth1374 Před 2 lety +8

      You do realize that by America having more freedoms & laws... Crime rates will be higher. There's several things you could get away with in other countries that wouldn't even be considered a crime or rarely documented. You also have to remind yourself of the population in each country... Some have wayyy less than others. I'd hope the crime rate in those areas would be lower.

    • @rendomstranger8698
      @rendomstranger8698 Před 2 lety +160

      @@coldheartedtruth1374 Congratulations. You just spouted complete bullshit. Most places in Europe tend to have far less restrictive laws than the US. Not only that but a lot of minor crimes are simple ignored in Europe as long as they are victimless crimes. Meanwhile, thanks to the for profit prison industry law enforcement in the US is actively looking for anyone they can arrest. And thanks to the lack of training, law enforcement is one of the dangers for tourists from Europe.

    • @UnderTheMillkyWay
      @UnderTheMillkyWay Před 2 lety

      @@rendomstranger8698 you do realize that all countries are corrupt liars. If everyone hasn't figured that out then that's on you. If you think your country is any better than America you're still lost. Not one freaking person that is typical has any freaking freedom's. I don't care how you feel about the people because from my travels it's not the people it's their freaking government.

    • @bastiaan4129
      @bastiaan4129 Před 2 lety +70

      You do realize crime rate is usually per capita, so the size of the country doesn't mean jack shit?

    • @blackenthesheep
      @blackenthesheep Před 2 lety +46

      @@coldheartedtruth1374 Lilithia gave the perfect example, your statment is absolute BS... even if it would be true that we have "less laws" in the EU and THAT is the reason why we have less offenses. She was talking about "something happening to you" and that discribes more or less the same things everywhere.
      Crimerates obviously dont just compare "number of offenses" but how serious they are and obviously compared to the number of ppl living in a country...
      And guess what! The US has a wayyyyy higher crimerate especially regarding violent crimes and gun deaths. So you know someone not just "legally stealing your wallet" like it is totally normal outside of the US....
      Also regarding your "hope"... you do realize that while the US has more then double the landmass of the EU (NOT Europe as a continent!) there are way more ppl living here... or in numbers: US: 3,797,000 mi² and 330 billion citizens compared to the EU: 1.634.000 mi² with 447 billion citizens...

  • @Amberle38
    @Amberle38 Před 2 lety +560

    As a former NHS nurse, that advert about Grandma and these "death panels" made me feel like crying. I thought our politicians in the UK weren't great but that is just straight up evil. I guarantee those politicians in the US know the truth of it, but they lie to their people like that...
    It just shows so much contempt and lack of empathy - knowing that so many people die because they can't afford a doctor. Healthcare should be a right not a privilege.

    • @ShayPatrickCormacTHEHUNTER
      @ShayPatrickCormacTHEHUNTER Před 2 lety +13

      You give modern politicians too much credit assuming they're not simply wilfully ignorant. Leader politicians are a rare find these days.

    • @junglecat_rant
      @junglecat_rant Před 2 lety +1

      @Amberle73 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

    • @THE-BUNKEN-DRUM
      @THE-BUNKEN-DRUM Před 2 lety +1

      Aww, what a gorgeous lil cat 😻

    • @chipsthedog1
      @chipsthedog1 Před 2 lety +1

      Thankyou for the work you do ❤️

    • @jamdaddy4181
      @jamdaddy4181 Před 2 lety

      I think... well I'm convinced big pharma got way to much power in the world, yes in the WORLD !
      Nowadays politicians are slaves to the big company's all around the world, filling their pockets.
      Company's like Microsoft etc too.
      But that's my opinion.

  • @ryanmatheson5137
    @ryanmatheson5137 Před 5 měsíci +2

    As someone who worked in healthcare for his entire working life, one of the most disturbing things ive heard is when taking an American friend to the emergency room was "would you like to leave a deposit?"
    Yeah no ill stick to a country with free at the point of use healthcare thanks.

  • @OliveHugh2
    @OliveHugh2 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Being a good worker just makes your boss richer and they laugh at us. Being disabled in Europe is hard, Being disabled in the US is deadly

    • @OliveHugh2
      @OliveHugh2 Před 8 měsíci

      Also a fun thing is, with US taxes you already pay billions to health insurance companies, but they decide to cash big twice. And then even decide to that your health is not profitable

  • @Lightning_Lance
    @Lightning_Lance Před 2 lety +86

    the German exchange students seeing you pledge allegiance must have felt like they were in the fourth reich 🤣

  • @conqc20
    @conqc20 Před 2 lety +199

    Used to work in a London nightclub and we had 3 american woman that worked there. When i told them they had 3 weeks paid holiday to take by the end of the year they thought i was lying. They didnt believe me. I had to literally get the paperwork to show them that they had these holidays. Was so funny.

    • @mamabear71234
      @mamabear71234 Před 2 lety +4

      wow. it must have been there first job. Most jobs in America give paid vacation and sick pay every year.

    • @jgreijin
      @jgreijin Před 2 lety +19

      @@mamabear71234 The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that 76% of American workers have access to PTO, many between 5 and 10 days a year.
      Thinking you have 5 days vs being said that you have 21. Wonder why they thought they were being lied to...

    • @mamabear71234
      @mamabear71234 Před 2 lety

      @@jgreijin it depends on where you work. And I just can't stand racist afrocentrics. They are toxic. Every country has its pros and cons.

    • @gregpettis1113
      @gregpettis1113 Před 2 lety

      I'm American and I get 5 weeks vacation a year. Why are the British so hard on their workers

    • @MrMajsterixx
      @MrMajsterixx Před 2 lety +8

      @@gregpettis1113 how much of it is paid ?

  • @holdtightbrizzle
    @holdtightbrizzle Před 8 měsíci +1

    Something I've noticed about US work culture. It's not about working hard, it's about appearing as if you are. People will come into the office at 7am and then proceed to chat to co-workers for 45 minutes at the coffee machine. Bro, why did you come into the office if you ain't doing anything...

  • @debstrozier
    @debstrozier Před 8 měsíci +2

    I was born in 1954 (69 years old). I stopped pledging alliance at 13, during the Vietnam war. Never gone back. It was the right thing to do!

    • @MONEYCOUKENGLAND
      @MONEYCOUKENGLAND Před 4 měsíci +1

      Really?? Did you get called a COMMUNIST or WEIRDO for refusing to do it??

    • @debstrozier
      @debstrozier Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@MONEYCOUKENGLAND

  • @NeoOnyx
    @NeoOnyx Před 2 lety +534

    A person has less (let me repeat: LESS) freedom in America than they would have in Europe. Americans are basically being held captive by their employers, having to work a lot of hours and hardly ever getting any benefits, while in Europe the work-life balance is respected and maintained. As a European the pledging allegiance to the flag seems like something from North-Korea. Americans know almost nothing about the world outside their borders and are being lied to by politicians, so much so, that they firmly believe it. The political spectrum (which isn’t a spectrum when there are just 2 parties), is made to set up people against eachother and to divide the country. Americans are kinda like the proverbial frog that is being cooked to death in slowly boiling water without ever realizing what is happening. Imo America is like a badly run corporation where the rich are getting super rich and the poor are kept poor. When getting sick and a trip to the hospital can get a person to be bankrupt, when people are afraid to call an ambulance because of the costs, when a mother who just gave birth to her baby, gets to pay 39 bucks to hold her own baby… that’s terrible and not normal. Anyway, sorry for ranting/rambling 😊

    • @andrew348
      @andrew348 Před 2 lety +27

      Yes, but what you don't understand sir is the pride of America. In fact, Elon Musk just said that the Chinese not only burn the midnight oil but the 3 a.m. oil. As an American (who lived in England and several other countries for years) all I can say is Americans actually believe the rest of the world is North Korea.

    • @MazzaEliLi7406
      @MazzaEliLi7406 Před 2 lety +13

      No apologies necessary. The whole world needs a wakeup call. The UK needs a wakeup call. Power to your elbow.

    • @kristerophaphleck3883
      @kristerophaphleck3883 Před 2 lety

      Apparently you'd have to be a supervisor or an incompetent boss to get such glories lmao

    • @katb.5859
      @katb.5859 Před 2 lety +15

      You have to pay to hold your own baby? Wtf???

    • @kristerophaphleck3883
      @kristerophaphleck3883 Před 2 lety +5

      @@katb.5859 You're missing the point. He's saying that employers like to take advantage of their employees. Under paying them and handing down hard task without promotion nor reward. It's sad really

  • @PabloskyS84
    @PabloskyS84 Před 2 lety +339

    "America specialized in brainwashing..." I'm from South America and yes! I agree with you! 100% !!

    • @kristerophaphleck3883
      @kristerophaphleck3883 Před 2 lety +1

      They say anything that's not America is satanic

    • @milansnewaccount2781
      @milansnewaccount2781 Před 2 lety

      they say they are trying to kill terrorists in iraq
      but are just killing civilians and raping people and damaging everything that is iraqi

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 2 lety +1

      With all of that brainwashing, you'd think we'd have clean minds!
      Nope, that just ain't happening...

    • @jellyrun1
      @jellyrun1 Před 2 lety +4

      Every Country does that ,..USA is just most powerful now ,so they do it most.

    • @kristerophaphleck3883
      @kristerophaphleck3883 Před 2 lety +14

      @@jellyrun1 so much poor ppl for a 1st world country don't you think?

  • @br4tb4by
    @br4tb4by Před 8 měsíci +3

    The vacation thing is crazy. Here in Hungary I work for Wise, an Estonian FinTech. I get minimum 33 days off, 3 Me Days where I can take a day off for no reason. Also, the first 14 days of sick leave we get paid 100% as if we worked. We also get some days of compassionate leave if we lose a loved one or something. We can also work remotely for 90 days in a year.

  • @tnetroP
    @tnetroP Před 8 měsíci +1

    2011 I had cancer. All treatment and time off work was paid for. It didn't cost me anything. 2021 I was knocked off my motorbike and seriously injured with several broken bones. Again all treatment was free and I had three months off work at full salary. My wife and I have had two children; all labour costs were covered and it didn't cost us anything. My wife had several months off work aat full pay to look after the children. I was made redundant from my job last year and they had to pay me a lot of money to go. I love America. I really do. But I'm glad I was born in Europe.

  • @michinwaygook3684
    @michinwaygook3684 Před rokem +314

    Yes as Canadians we have always found the pledge of allegiance downright creepy. My son's U.S. uncle asked how he can show respect to Canada when they are playing our national anthem at a hockey game and I said it was a nice sentiment but not at all necessary. In Canada if you want to stand for the national anthem you can, but if you don't want to you don't have to. To me that is the essence of freedom - choice.

    • @cameleonfleuri
      @cameleonfleuri Před 11 měsíci +4

      I couldn't agree more! 👍

    • @luisacantzler5314
      @luisacantzler5314 Před 11 měsíci +1

      In my Canadian Highschool I had to stand up and look at the flag every morning while the anthem played

    • @cameleonfleuri
      @cameleonfleuri Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@luisacantzler5314 Ooooh! Well not in Quebec province.

    • @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131
      @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Canadians and Europeans are much the same.
      Respect your country.
      Enjoy your freedom.
      Equality is king.
      Love from Norway 🇳🇴

    • @inigoacha1166
      @inigoacha1166 Před 11 měsíci

      In Canada you found a massive native child tomb and you hide it from the rest of the world and nothing happened here.
      In Canada if you go on strike they block your bank accounts.
      Acá Nada de nada.
      Canada similar to Europe ? Jajajajjaja
      Share the drugs.

  • @Tyron95
    @Tyron95 Před rokem +199

    Proud of being european and to share the same values with my european brothers from different countryes. (And i don't need to pledge on a flag for that). Greetings from Italy

    • @findsch1123
      @findsch1123 Před rokem +4

      💙💛💙

    • @palmarolavlklingholm9684
      @palmarolavlklingholm9684 Před rokem

      A flag itself is nothing more than a piece of cloth. It only represents the country, and should as such not be worshipped. Excessive use of symbolism is not of the good. Nazi Germany was a prime example o that being done. Symbols were effectively used to brainwash the masses. An any kind of brainwash is of the negative.

    • @sakuriyinn
      @sakuriyinn Před 11 měsíci +11

      Europeans supporting other Europeans, I imagine ! We do sometimes have different standpoints but I think we all have the same opinion about the US lol. Greeting from France

    • @DrJimBoston
      @DrJimBoston Před 11 měsíci +4

      Greetings from Poland!

    • @Nike_from_Italy
      @Nike_from_Italy Před 11 měsíci +3

      Anche io saluto i miei fratelli e sorelle europei☺☺
      Greetings from Italy as well❤❤❤❤

  • @timritthanondh9614
    @timritthanondh9614 Před měsícem +1

    Thank you so much for this Mr. Bray! Not only for putting things clear about some strange myths circulating in America but first and foremost for showing us (germans in my case) that not all Americans are some kind of brainwashed capitols-storming zombies we see in our television. I think this is a very important thing .

  • @aronlukacs6911
    @aronlukacs6911 Před 8 měsíci +1

    My company can sue me, if I don't take my mandatory vacation.

  • @bernardomacara6284
    @bernardomacara6284 Před rokem +163

    DAMM, the phrase '' your freedom ends where someone else begins'' its something i heard so long in my family (portuguese) and its feels really good hearing it from other people so far away from me.

    • @axanarahyanda628
      @axanarahyanda628 Před rokem +7

      It's from the 4th article of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789.

    • @ianklinkhamer9720
      @ianklinkhamer9720 Před rokem +20

      My father used to tell me: " you're free to go wherever you please as long as you don't step on someone's toes."
      Same principle.

    • @yannicksittinieri-kz1kj
      @yannicksittinieri-kz1kj Před rokem +1

      Its basically the Point of Anarchy😂

    • @MrJerichoPumpkin
      @MrJerichoPumpkin Před rokem +2

      that is something most US citizen seem to forget

    • @fabioluisguerraferreira1682
      @fabioluisguerraferreira1682 Před rokem +10

      I'm portuguese too, and my mom used to tell me your freedom ends when someone's else's begins. To us, we calculate freedom as a sircle. We have an imaginary circle around us. Your freedom ends when you enter my circle.

  • @beatz04
    @beatz04 Před rokem +340

    As a german, how universal healthcare can even be pitched as something bad, let alone "socialist", is beyond me. It makes a day&night difference in terms of overall quality of life, since you don't have to worry about the financial consequences, should something ever happen to you. People don't pile up medical bills here at all.

    • @claudiafernandes1150
      @claudiafernandes1150 Před 10 měsíci +10

      I mean you can always go to a private hospital if the public one is full, but you won't be indebt for it, like sure it is expensive as fuck in my opinion but not nearly as much in the US. Right now I am being followed by a private psychiatrist (just a couple of sessions until I can go back to the university one that is free) I felt curious after watching this video how much would I be paying in the US and my wallet cried in portuguese when I saw that the evaluation was about 500 $ and thereafter it would be between 100 and 300$. Like wtf in Portugal I paid 80 euros in the evaluation and it already felt like too much, then I was like "ohhhh here it says this is without insurance. Ok I guess if insurance covers it it is not that bad" then I googled how much was the average health insurance and ... IM SORRY WTF GOOGLE HAS TO BE LYING 560$ PER MONTH!? That is almost twice what you would pay here FOR A WHOLE YEAR!

    • @martinponc8021
      @martinponc8021 Před 10 měsíci +9

      You're absolutely right. Even though i personally not incline to left or socialist ideas, accessible healthcare like we have in most European countries (I'm Czech) is the spine of functional modern society.

    • @axell964
      @axell964 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Yes, noone really worries here about medical bills. A couple of years back I spent two weeks in a hospital, and sure, I got a bill for that I had to pay out of my own pocket. It was 140€, 10 bucks for every day. And that was only to compensate what I normally would have at least spent on food, so that being in a hospital is no net profit for you :)

    • @RIZFERD
      @RIZFERD Před 10 měsíci

      Europe is special for Americans BUT !
      Europe is no longer a safe place with so many immigrants especially with problems from Africa and Middle East
      The longer I am back in Indonesia to me, western world and middle east are the real third world.
      Even most of you don't know that world map is inaccurate since Mercator projection 1569.
      Real Indonesia is Huge as Russia but much richer.
      All you know is your mediocre tiny world and boxes your entire life, that's the meaning of black box including what Abrahamic religions wanting to have, including toga square hat/cap during graduation ceremony.
      My comment is intimidating for thus not prepared for the truth thus not a complete multiracial not multilingual never been living around the world all alone since childhood are just the same never evolved dumb apes stuck inside your tiny boxes your entire life and not learning from the past to evolve better.

    • @Kycilak
      @Kycilak Před 10 měsíci +20

      As a Czech I would say universal healthcare is socialist. I just don't think that everything socialist is necessarily wrong.

  • @merjakotisaari9046
    @merjakotisaari9046 Před měsícem +1

    In Finland, the working day is 8 hours, 5 days a week, there are 6 weeks of paid vacation, of which 4 in summer and 2 in winter. sick days are paid. Paid maternity leave is one month before the birth of the child and 3 months after the birth, then you can take care of the child at home, with half pay, until the child is 2 years old, and this applies to both the father and the mother, that is, they can take turns in taking care of the child.

  • @Dererumnatura99
    @Dererumnatura99 Před 5 dny +1

    As a Frenchman I use to live in canada and remember feeling afraid when I visited the USA.
    Perhaps mainly because of the news and massshooting, but also thinking that anyone could have a gun on him.
    Also find it really weird to see rows of houses with perfect loawns and the big flag on the pole. i acknowledge it was only on some specific neighbourhood but it felt so fascist and "your not welcome here"
    Also at that time a mentally hill homeless man was shot like 20times by policemens in newyork.
    Also a big muscular man just yell at me because I hurt his elbow passing by.
    I was stocked, and couldnt say anaything because i was afraid and my english was not good. I think he implied that I was racist.
    I know there are lot of great people in this country but I felt unsafe during my trip.
    Canada is a similar country : culture, building, cars, appliaances, but it felt so much cooler.

  • @therealikitclaw8124
    @therealikitclaw8124 Před 2 lety +602

    I live in Germany. In my school, we had an American exchange student a few years ago and in the first weeks he tried to tell us how we have now freedom and should see America (the glorious greatest country in the world).
    In the first weeks.
    After a while we came to chat about his home and his grandparents and... oh boy. I don't know what you guys are telling your people over there but they seemed to think that we barely even invented the wheel here.

    • @ianfinney7820
      @ianfinney7820 Před 2 lety +115

      Let's not forget the world didn't exist before America became America. America invented everything and everyone else stole it from them. Let's also not forget America single handedly won ww1 and ww2.......alone.

    • @haileyt857
      @haileyt857 Před 2 lety +1

      They don't allow us to be exposed to other countries and cultures until you are curious enough to go looking yourself! Everything was always about US this and US that in school- they indoctrine you from primary school age onward into *just* thinking about the USA. Any place outside to the USA when portrayed in movies, is normally super underdeveloped and framed as undesirable as the country and it's people are strange and different and 'not American' so it's bad.

    • @cj16423
      @cj16423 Před 2 lety

      @@ianfinney7820 you are brainwashed

    • @bullet6140
      @bullet6140 Před 2 lety +90

      @@ianfinney7820 America also invented Agriculture, and humans.

    • @ianfinney7820
      @ianfinney7820 Před 2 lety +48

      @@bullet6140 damn I forgot about those. But, as I said mericans invented everything and nothing existed before merica became merica

  • @crilleman7186
    @crilleman7186 Před 2 lety +67

    I am from Sweden. My first real vacation was after I had worked 2 months at that company. The CEO came out to me and asked if I wanted a 4-week vacation, and I replied that I could not afford to take unpaid vacation (in Sweden you usually have to work a year at a company to get a 5-week paid vacation. ) The CEO laughed and said "we will pay the 4 weeks if you work here for at least five years. You have to be tired after starting a new job". SO I ended up having a nice vacation after only 2 months, and guess what I still work at the same company 7 years later.

  • @LeoLady3966
    @LeoLady3966 Před měsícem +1

    This popped up on suggested as I’m looking to move abroad. Laughing about the pledge as I saw European’s response to us having flag in all our classrooms. “Why, do American school children forget what country they’re in?”

  • @sarahcunniffe4678
    @sarahcunniffe4678 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The reason paid holiday came to legislation in UK was to stop employers taking advantage of vulnerable people.

  • @Korschtal
    @Korschtal Před rokem +406

    I'm a first generation German immigrant, and when I became a citizen I had to pledge to follow the values of the constitution, not a flag. For fairly obvious reasons the idea of allegiance to a flag is seen as very creepy here.
    By the way, if you come to Germany I'll happily show you my beautiful city of Freiburg im Breisgau. I promise I won't take any of your organs.

    • @adamnewman6846
      @adamnewman6846 Před rokem +11

      I would be paying you to take my organs away they are that f**ked up after years of abuse 😂

    • @slaughterinthespotlight1669
      @slaughterinthespotlight1669 Před rokem

      Only in Belgium am i right

    • @xeraphyx7903
      @xeraphyx7903 Před rokem +6

      @@slaughterinthespotlight1669 Honestly I don't even get why Belgium exists. One day we should just partition it between the Netherlands, Germany, and France according the language areas. That way, we can finally call French fries French fries since the French speaking part of Belgium is actually part of France.

    • @slaughterinthespotlight1669
      @slaughterinthespotlight1669 Před rokem

      @@xeraphyx7903 i mean i ain't really European but kinda am but yeah i know the geography Abit especially at my age and know the meme culture so yeah screw Belgium YEAH

    • @delanovanraalte3646
      @delanovanraalte3646 Před rokem +1

      @@xeraphyx7903 why give french and Germany anything we should unite the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and Germany should be part of it

  • @SniperKing5
    @SniperKing5 Před 2 lety +183

    As a European who's never been to the US but has interacted with Americans a lot online and on my travels, i was familiar with a lot of these issues without ever even having visited the country. I suppose that says something about how ingrained these things are in your society :/ Oh and for the record, don't downplay yourself for not having a college degree man. This video was insightful and showed that you have a stellar ability to practice critical thinking, thanks for an interesting watch!

  • @unnamed1613
    @unnamed1613 Před 8 měsíci +2

    As a fellow german I totally understand the exchange students, when you pledged allegiance to the flag.
    In germany we get tought all details about WW2 and especially the Third Reich. That they would indoctrinate the youth to die for their country by basicly raising them to whorship their country by the exact same means as the US does today. Even after WW2 it was common practice in eastern germany to start the work-/schoolday with a gathering to great everyone, speak about current affairs and to pledge allegiance to the nation/the flag.

  • @ianmontgomery7534
    @ianmontgomery7534 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Congratulations to both your reaction and the the guy you are reacting to. Both were well presented and reasoned. I am Australian by the way (and I subscribed)

  • @sugarwoofle6067
    @sugarwoofle6067 Před rokem +155

    First, I am American and I also grew up believing Europe was evil and people hated us because we are so free.... I now live in Belgium for awhile now and I've had more freedom here than America lol.
    I never understood how someone could be proud of their country. Until I came to a country where I felt that I mattered. To me, Belgium is my heart and my home. Even if I wasn't born here.
    All in all I agree with all these statements 💯% and having experienced more cultures since leaving America has truly given me a vast group of amazing, culturally different friends. I love and cherish them all.

    • @trueSconox
      @trueSconox Před rokem

      the US citzens are some the most enslaved people on this planet. As they made them self's slaves of capitalism.

    • @findsch1123
      @findsch1123 Před rokem +10

      who told you Europeans hated us Americans because of the freedom? Hearing this for the first time :(

    • @fabien2430
      @fabien2430 Před rokem +14

      I never understood, how someone can think "people hate us because we are so free". At worst people just don't care at all of you, how can someone be so egocentric to believe that the rest of the world hate you. This is the brain washing effect that make me fear.

    • @nabsnemri770
      @nabsnemri770 Před rokem +2

      Welcome to Belgium 🙂

    • @jlessien3826
      @jlessien3826 Před rokem +1

      Welcome to Belgium

  • @sallyomahony7440
    @sallyomahony7440 Před rokem +197

    The death panel one infuriates me. My dad died at the age of 96 and his treatment over the last 20 years of his life must have cost hundreds of thousands of pounds. We’re talking enlarged prostate, skin cancer (several times), several hospital admissions for falls, kidney disease, heart disease... As someone who only had his pension and a few thousand in savings, how long do you think he would have lasted in the USA?

    • @MartialGlobe
      @MartialGlobe Před rokem +7

      The debt would have probably been life altering aswell

    • @teros7146
      @teros7146 Před rokem +14

      its a one night stand in the hospital, just for the bed you already pay all youre savings.

    • @PolarBear4
      @PolarBear4 Před rokem +20

      My Grandpop is 96 and somehow still alive despite having a bunch of medical problems (I say somehow as he' been struggling so much since my Nana died at the start of covid - not covid related).
      The closest he's ever come to a "death panel" was when he was 89. He was rushed into hospital unwell and they found he had bowel cancer. The doctor came to speak to him and gave him the option of palliative care and living for (most likely) a few weeks, or having surgery to remove it and because he was very high risk, potentially dying on the table that afternoon. After talking as a family he opted for the surgery on the grounds of he has little to lose and at least if he was going to die it would be with no pain rather than it dragging on. The anaesthetist wasn't necessarily thrilled because of how high risk he was, but they did the surgery and he survived. If death panels existed here then there's no way he'd have been allowed that surgery.

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Yes we pay for our health services through taxes. But its pooled money so people who are lucky to be healthy pay the same as people who are unlucky and have cancer or diabetes etc . I would rather live in such a society than one where sick people live in fear of poverty.

  • @Michel02160
    @Michel02160 Před 4 dny +1

    American, here in Europe it is hell, stay there please. Thanks so much!!! 😘🤣😅

  • @kimberlyrose1812
    @kimberlyrose1812 Před 8 měsíci +14

    I'm living in Switzerland and thinking about Moving to the USA is frightening to me. Yes you are free but more in a "after the apocalypse" kind of way. Switzerland just feels so much more secure. I'm not afraid of gun violence, gang violence, my health or for my job if I get sick. One of my coworkers is sick since over 1 year. But once she'll recover she can just come back to work with us. And up until then we are sending her cards and care boxes with gifts from all of us.

    • @mabeddows
      @mabeddows Před 8 měsíci

      TBH how you feel about moving to the USA is how I feel about Sweden, over 100 bombings a year Sweden might be one of the most dangerous countries in the EU to live in.

    • @chrystalfrost1775
      @chrystalfrost1775 Před 8 měsíci

      Don't go!!!!!!!!!

    • @kimberlyrose1812
      @kimberlyrose1812 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@chrystalfrost1775 I would never! I was sooo nervous when my brother went there only for one and a half months. But I don't understand how people think there is nothing wrong with their country when it's soooo scary. So many US citizens think their country is the best. They think moving to Europe is crazy. And it's not like in north Korea where it's impossible to know the truth about other countries...

  • @saihsbaxton5979
    @saihsbaxton5979 Před 2 lety +60

    "someone would yeet out my organs"
    That's why we smoke and drink, so no one can use our organs. Just kidneying :D

  • @SciDOCMBC
    @SciDOCMBC Před 2 lety +106

    Due to our past, we Germans feel very uncomfortable when someone fanatically swears by a national flag. The Nazis in particular showed what hatred can build up towards other people if you only believe in your own nationality. Under no circumstances must this period be repeated. Another great war this time will certainly not end with a peace treaty. If we continue to allow hatred towards others, we will certainly not get a second chance this time, and by that I don't just mean only us Germans. Great video👍

    • @Vickzq
      @Vickzq Před 2 lety

      Germany now is the opposite... with certain leftwing clowns that tried to ban german flag in public.

    • @bastik.3011
      @bastik.3011 Před 2 lety +3

      To bad some Germans forgot that message

    • @Vickzq
      @Vickzq Před 2 lety

      @@bastik.3011
      The thing germans forgot is that all kind of extremism is bad... and leftwing extremism is not compensating ANYTHING.

    • @bastik.3011
      @bastik.3011 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Vickzq that too

    • @SciDOCMBC
      @SciDOCMBC Před 2 lety

      @@bastik.3011 als Deutscher solltest Du wissen, dass es solche Ausnahme-Idioten in jeden Land gibt. Das ist aber nicht meine Schuld.

  • @TomE-sq2lq
    @TomE-sq2lq Před 6 dny

    We also get whats called ;"the right to buy" which is where after 7years living in a council house you can buy it for about 40% of the market value

  • @ahzrukal4603
    @ahzrukal4603 Před 8 měsíci +1

    As a German, swearing allegiance to any flag is Nazi shit for me. I wouldn't want to live in any country, where that stuff is done at all. I think it's disgusting

  • @niels9203
    @niels9203 Před 2 lety +176

    I'm Dutch, I lived in the U.S. for a year, doing a Master's. I had a great time there, but I regularly watched the news when I just got there and it's just so different to 'European' news. Watching the news (CNN, Fox, doesn't matter) made me so anxious, I just had to stop, there's so much fearmongering. I kind of understood better why Americans (on the whole, not picking on individuals) are more scared of things outside of their country. If you get such a lethal daily dose of fear fed, no wonder you don't want to leave (and thus don't get to see how the media misrepresent matters)

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Před rokem +1

      @@niels9203 What would you say is better in the US?
      I was there for a year, and I loved all the stuff to see, but nonexistent public transport = being completely isolated without a car was tough.

    • @janaegal9746
      @janaegal9746 Před rokem

      Don't wanna be an American Idi***
      Don't want a nation controlled by the media :D
      And can you hear the sound of hysteria?
      The subliminal mindf*** America
      😂 Best song by greenday

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Před rokem

      @@Julia-lk8jn I agree on the car thing. Living in the US without one is difficult outside of a few large cities I would not care to live in.

    • @darkwarriors...
      @darkwarriors... Před rokem

      In the UK ths BBC news is scary as crap, it's always war and roadmen stabbings and child killing and weather causing storms and fires, it's always like they're telling us the world is going to end. Now with Russia attacking Ukraine and China attacking Taiwan it's now a horror film

    • @alalalus7692
      @alalalus7692 Před rokem

      @goblo023 To be fair you don't need high grade public transport, just better and more busses should be enough for inner city or town transit (which is normally not affected by county size). But I heard that plenty of Americans have to travel distances beyond just city roads for their needs like work and shopping, so perhaps the problem is not even about public transport

  • @JustinPratt1
    @JustinPratt1 Před 8 měsíci +426

    Some feelings I had after traveling out of the US for a year. I noticed the media and the vibe outside the US was very global. You heard of things happening in all these countries and news from everywhere. Also borders were much less armed and strict, basically more friendly. Also a lot less of a police culture of cops hiding on the highways waiting to bust you for any move you make on the road. Then I came back to the US and felt like I was entering a north korea lite police state. Getting back into my own country was a three step process and militarized, police everywhere watching what you are doing, news is mainly US slanted. Felt like I was being cut off from everything else in the world. I felt far less 'free' as I came back. I now live out of the US and feel more free than ever.

    • @xXYannuschXx
      @xXYannuschXx Před 8 měsíci +26

      " I noticed the media and the vibe outside the US was very global. You heard of things happening in all these countries and news from everywhere. Also borders were much less armed and strict, basically more friendly." - I think thats one of the biggest problems in the US. To the average US citizen, the US is all there is in the "world" due to how the media works. The US also doesnt border a ton of other countries with different cultures you can just travel to in the matter of a single day.
      If you dont have a comparison to your country, its hard to find its faults.

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Still traveling, Justin Pratt? Maybe you've permanently re-located to Europe?
      After all, why wouldn't you? Because Europe is SO much better, yes?

    • @JustinPratt1
      @JustinPratt1 Před 8 měsíci +21

      @@scotthullinger4684 oh, yeah. I don't live in the US any longer. I also still travel a lot.

    • @scotthullinger4684
      @scotthullinger4684 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@xXYannuschXx - The USA has at least 30 million illegal aliens. This alone is one hell of a good reason to limit easy access into our nation. And in your spare time ... tell me about media I can access in order to "learn all about the world." Where can I read it? Give me a sample of what you believe I don't know about the world. What am I uneducated about? For example ... ? And WHY should I know it?

    • @MR-xo1bh
      @MR-xo1bh Před 8 měsíci +11

      ​@@scotthullinger4684correct, it most definitely is

  • @peterbreis5407
    @peterbreis5407 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The more time you spend outside the USA, especially as a black person, the longer you will live.

    • @JamesBray3
      @JamesBray3  Před 8 měsíci

      Big facts! I’m living in Korea right now and couldn’t be happier tbh!

    • @peterbreis5407
      @peterbreis5407 Před 8 měsíci

      @@JamesBray3 Live long and prosper! 😀

  • @danganbeg7225
    @danganbeg7225 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Pledging allegiance to a flag only happens in countries that don't have democracy.

  • @mortenrl1946
    @mortenrl1946 Před 2 lety +477

    I remember being on foreign exchange in Ohio and that whole flag pledging thing. They allowed me to stay seated, although it felt super weird to be the only one. It *definitely* has some ultranationalist vibes to most of us Eurotards, and it just seems strange and incongruent with the rest of American culture.
    The other thing that struck me was medical ads on TV for prescription meds - "ASK YOUR DOCTOR ABOUT THIS PILL NOW!" - From my perspective, if I am seriously ill, wouldn't my doctor be the one to diagnose and determine the correct treatment? Like wtf?

    • @ianpodmore9666
      @ianpodmore9666 Před 2 lety

      That's why they have thousands of deaths from Fentanyl overdoses every year. They dish em out like smarties. I watched a documentary on the company that makes Fentanyl, where they paid/bribed doctors to get Fentanyl patients onto the maximum dose. It is disgusting and immoral.

    • @ginkamikaze2
      @ginkamikaze2 Před 2 lety +7

      they have like 3-4 versions of the same exact pill depending on the pharmaceutical company that's making it and selling it, that's why they say to ask your doctor about that specific pill, so you don't buy the competition's pill XD
      pledging allegiance to a flag sure sounds better to me than learning about being trans from your teacher and "inclusion"... if u have kids would you want them to pledge allegiance to a flag or learn to be "inclusive"?

    • @mortenrl1946
      @mortenrl1946 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ginkamikaze2 the crt stuff is way worse but that wasn't around 15yrs ago when i visited

    • @KristianLyubenovYT
      @KristianLyubenovYT Před 2 lety

      @@ginkamikaze2 realistically neither should be a thing but the US is fucking weird so what do I know

    • @marcomobson
      @marcomobson Před 2 lety +29

      @@ginkamikaze2 How's living in your cave? 😂

  • @RoastChestnut
    @RoastChestnut Před 2 lety +292

    Good video. I moved to Germany from the UK in 1981, using our freedom to travel and work. I just love it and cannot for the life of me think why anyone would be against it. I am willing to pay into my health insurance all my life, helping people who are sick while I am healthy, it's just the right thing to do. Who knows when I will need help. I am now 68 years old and you know what. I still have my own kidneys. 🤣

    • @HaurakiVet
      @HaurakiVet Před 2 lety +50

      I have heard Americans (more affluent) say that the thing they have against socialized (free) healthcare is that they don't see why they should pay for other people's health costs. Ummm.. do they understand how insurance works? If you pay into an insurance scheme and due to being fortunate to have good health make no claim on it you are paying for other people's health care. Like all insurance profit comes from lack of claims against policy payments.
      Where our socialised system works more efficiently is that by size it is able to better negotiate cost for medicines and money that would otherwise go in profit or administration is instead used in providing services.

    • @josiavantroyen4215
      @josiavantroyen4215 Před 2 lety +3

      I've never noticed a 68 year old using CZcams and commenting below a video. Respect to you🙏

    • @RoastChestnut
      @RoastChestnut Před 2 lety +8

      @@josiavantroyen4215 CZcams is great. I engage in the comments, on subjects that interest me quite often, as do many of my friends and acquaintances. I also have a PS 5, which I’m on quite a bit. 🤣

    • @HaurakiVet
      @HaurakiVet Před 2 lety +8

      @@josiavantroyen4215 actually 76. I ain't dead!

    • @KT-pv3kl
      @KT-pv3kl Před 2 lety +4

      Wait till your kidneys fail and you need a new one and instead of having funds to expedite the process you are put on a waiting list and the 15 economic migrants infront of you that never payed a single cent into the healthcare system get one before you and there is nothing you can do about it because the system is oh so "fair"...

  • @xXYannuschXx
    @xXYannuschXx Před 8 měsíci +1

    Especially the "freedom of speech" argument is always funny: The first amendment doesnt protect your free speech, it only protects you from censorship from the government; it does not protect your free speech from consequences (especially private sector) and there are clauses that DO allow the government to make "sensible limitations" on free speech (way to go to circumvent the word "censorship"). Thats why I always find it funny when people complain on social media, that they limit their "free speech".
    Meanwhile in Germany, while we do not have "free speech", we have freedom of expression; which is also PROTECTED. For an example: a few years ago a student wanted to present an essay on the chinese government in his university; the university tried to censor him and didnt allow him to present it (out of fear of worsening relations to China); the student went to the BGH and they ruled clearly, that the university is not allowed to stop him from presenting his essay.

  • @izaakfewton7536
    @izaakfewton7536 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for the interesting content. Keep it up Mate! Greetings from Poland❤

  • @lycos94
    @lycos94 Před 8 měsíci +36

    It's so insane to me that there are Americans out there that say we don't have things like freedom of speech here in Europe, and it's even more insane that other Americans actually believe that

    • @bronzecobra8556
      @bronzecobra8556 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Yeah it’s weird, I feel like Europe is pretty progressive and that that should be common knowledge in the U.S. Especially considering the level of socialist policies that tend to help their societies function better in terms of community care.

    • @SIPEROTH
      @SIPEROTH Před 6 měsíci

      Unfortunately they are right. We don't. We think we do until we realize we don't when the police shows at our door over offensive Facebook post or hate speech or supposed fake news etc.
      In the Eu we have hate speech laws and fake news laws etc that give the governments power to oppress our free speech. The supreme court in the US though has rejected the idea of hate speech.

  • @mffmoniz2948
    @mffmoniz2948 Před 2 lety +70

    Simple boring lesson at school. We got told: your rights end where another person's rights begin.
    I find it insane that for an american that's something new.
    Swearing allegiance to the flag. PTSD vibes with that one.
    Health in America? Paid vacation? Maternity leave? Almost all the countries in the world pity you.

  • @Sapherzz
    @Sapherzz Před 8 měsíci

    Here in the UK, regarding #2, that housing system is called "Shared Ownership". The idea is that instead of purchasing a property outright, you purchase anywhere between 50-75% of the property (this isn't a concrete range, it's dependant on who's selling the house, the type of home it is and what percentage plan is being sold with the house) and then you pay rent on the share you don't own, on top of the mortgage that you have for the share you bought. It's a popular system these days, and helps people (especially young people) get their feet onto the property market. The amount of maortgage/rent you pay is also lower than it sounds because the percentages for each are lower than either owning a property/renting a property at 100%.

  • @AmberHarshfield5397
    @AmberHarshfield5397 Před 8 měsíci +1

    For the europeans that see this, dont think of america as one single thing. Think of america as a modern Austria-Hungary full of diverse people who hate each other. I hope this helps 🙂