Things AMERICANS Who’ve Never Traveled Don’t Know About the World...

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
  • Polling shows 50% of Americans have never, ever been abroad. And while that’s easily done in a yuuuge country like the United States, it also means half of all Americans are missing out on some important, firsthand experience of the rest of world. That means a lot of stuff about humanity Americans know only comes through TV, books and UA-cam. While you might think that’s enough to get a clear picture, other countries respectfully disagree. Here are the top 10 things Americans who don’t travel probably don’t get about the rest of our big, beautiful world.
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    Text version: www.toptenz.net/10-things-amer...
    Coming up:
    10. Even the Most Gun-Friendly Nations Have Far Fewer Guns
    9. Freedom of Speech Isn’t a Thing in Most Democracies
    8. Trial by Jury Also Isn’t a Thing in Most Democracies
    7. Brits Barely Remember the Revolutionary War
    6. Literally Everyone Else Thinks in Grams, Celsius and Meters
    5. Not Everyone Thinks You Saved Their Ass in WWII
    4. Other Continents are Bigger and More Varied Than You Think
    3. It’s Far More Routine to Visit Other Countries
    2. Multiculturalism Looks Very Different Abroad
    1. The Rest of the World Has Some Poor Opinion about Americans
    Source/Further reading:
    www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/map...
    www.gunsandammo.com/network-to...
    www.bloomberg.com/view/articl...
    www.britannica.com/topic/jury
    qz.com/462264/how-the-rest-of...
    www.indy100.com/article/syste...
    www.eisenhowerinstitute.org/ab...
    www.freemaptools.com/measure-...
    ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statisti...
    ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statisti...
    www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/...
    www.pewglobal.org/2016/06/28/a...
    cdn.pixabay.com/photo/2016/11...
    cdn.pixabay.com/photo/2016/02...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    res.freestockphotos.biz/pictur...
    c1.staticflickr.com/4/3314/32...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    • Die Hard with a Vengeance
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    c1.staticflickr.com/2/1323/47...
    georgewbush-whitehouse.archiv...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
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  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12 тис.

  • @mvl71
    @mvl71 6 років тому +2327

    The whole "traveling abroad" thing is a bit unfair.
    I live in the Netherlands, a tiny country. If I brake too late when driving home I come to a full stop in Belgium.
    If you live in Luxembourg and you get distracted you might miss your country altogether.

    • @DallasMike424
      @DallasMike424 6 років тому +93

      Funny. I’m stealing what you wrote.

    • @Victor-mk5pp
      @Victor-mk5pp 6 років тому +22

      Hahah goeie comment, groeten uit België maat.

    • @nickinportland
      @nickinportland 5 років тому +10

      Hahah love that

    • @duma0238
      @duma0238 5 років тому +6

      Lol.

    • @HedelTorres
      @HedelTorres 5 років тому +87

      haha... true.. i'm in Canada... you can drive a week and still be in Canada... sadly, it's cheaper for me to fly to England than to Vancouver... so most Canadian travel outside the country than inside... no competition in our airlines... :(

  • @aceofspades9503
    @aceofspades9503 3 роки тому +86

    Some things I realized while traveling abroad and just talking to people:
    1) Americans are loud, which is part of why they are seen as obnoxious. The American indoor speaking voice is, in certain parts of the world, way louder than what the locals consider appropriate.
    2) People in a lot of other countries know who the current US president is and have opinions about them. I was surprised by this, because I personally couldn't tell you who was in charge of most countries. But in 2016 while traveling, everyone I talked to had to ask my opinion about Trump and the election.
    3) People from the EU and Australia are absolutely incredulous about how little vacation time Americans get.
    4) People from countries that have free healthcare are astonished by how much Americans pay for theirs, and the comparatively poor service we get. Like, open blank faced astonishment.
    5) A lot of people don't realize how homogenous the US really is and how difficult it is for us to travel abroad. If I were to fly from New York to Los Angeles, I would see a slight difference in lifestyle and culture, but not a massive one. For someone in the EU though, they could drive for a couple of hours and wind up in a place that speaks a different language, has different architecture, and has a completely different culture. The US just doesn't have that perspective. Traveling overseas is expensive, and is beyond the means of many Americans. Even if they can afford it, our limited vacation time away from work means that we can't spend much time anywhere. This is a big part of why the US has such a limited world view.

    • @boxsterman77
      @boxsterman77 3 роки тому +4

      Yeah. We are loud. I lived in Europe for 3 years and I could always spot (or hear) a fellow American. We walk through the world with confidence. On one level, it's commendable. But it's dark side is that it can become arrogance. I think your points are spot on. The closest things American come to experiencing the diverse cultures and architecture styles is by going to Epcot Center. LOL. Believe it or not, some Americans think that qualifies for being wordly.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 роки тому +8

      @@boxsterman77 but whats to be arrogant about? You are by far the least advanced first world country !!

    • @earllaboissonniere1543
      @earllaboissonniere1543 2 роки тому

      Well done!!!

    • @earllaboissonniere1543
      @earllaboissonniere1543 2 роки тому

      Well done.

    • @donvielenio8956
      @donvielenio8956 2 роки тому

      @@johnsaunders2109 Let him think about it in his "vacations"

  • @markust2749
    @markust2749 3 роки тому +47

    Travelling abroad in the US is a bit different than in the Europe. Living in Finland I can take a 10€ ferry to Tallinn and be there in 3 hours. Within a day I can get to Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Poland, Sweden and maybe even Norway and all of these trips are going to cost less than 50€ if travelling with a group

    • @grimp53
      @grimp53 2 роки тому

      I can travel to 4 different countries in one afternoon on my bicycle.

    • @MrMilkman02
      @MrMilkman02 2 роки тому

      @Aussie Pom Quebec is closer than France, but still almost 4,400km from where I live.

    • @randycarter7841
      @randycarter7841 Рік тому

      In 3 hours I can't even leave my state of Texas

  • @amilo0001
    @amilo0001 4 роки тому +35

    As a British person who has visited the US several times, I'd just like say how much I enjoy the differences between our two countries - that's what makes travelling there so much fun. Hopefully next year some American friends will be visiting the UK for the first time and we will have the pleasure of showing them around. I'm sure that they will enjoy discovering the differences too.

    • @coopersheridan73
      @coopersheridan73 3 роки тому

      Hey, only if there’s a chick fillet nearby

    • @hesky10
      @hesky10 3 роки тому +3

      @@coopersheridan73 don't pronounce it the French way or you'll get funny looks, we pronounce the last t in fillet, we speak English not French after all

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 роки тому +1

      Americans can't afford to travel despite being ' the richest nation on Earth' Its the difference between Corporate and personal wealth !

    • @austinhernandez2716
      @austinhernandez2716 3 роки тому +1

      @@johnsaunders2109 also, some Americans don't even get a vacation. I know a lot of people that work at a local sawmill. I know the owners of it because my uncle works on their 5000 acre property and I go to his house there a lot. Well the employees there have to work 60 hours/week, and only get 1 week of vacation and it's the same week every year. The pay there is low too. My brother only got paid $9/hr. The family owners meanwhile are rich.

  • @Ome99
    @Ome99 6 років тому +1611

    *>Mentions Africa*
    *>Shows a picture of an elephant from India*
    Well done

    • @lordkiwi355
      @lordkiwi355 6 років тому +28

      MrMigraine but you get the point

    • @IgorRockt
      @IgorRockt 6 років тому +168

      Well, he WAS talking about the image the US-Americans have from Africa - and honestly, how many of them do you think would be able to distinguish an African elephant from an Asian one? (Hint: look at the ears, that's the biggest giveaway - and yes, I actually learned that at school back in Germany as a kid already. ;-) ).
      As such, it was a PERFECT picture to prove his point! :-P

    • @WKRP187
      @WKRP187 6 років тому +15

      What did you want them to show??? Some slaughtered poached elephant family with the ivory tusks missing???Some pictures of African children(slave)labor in the factories they're forced to work in... Maybe some pics of forced labor in the blood diamond mines with missing limbs??? I thought pic of elephant was way to nice

    • @briancurtis888
      @briancurtis888 6 років тому +30

      I think that was the point. To illustrate that Americans had the wrong idea of what africa looks like.

    • @ilyapopov460
      @ilyapopov460 6 років тому +9

      >Talking about Jews in France and Britain.
      >Shows picture of Putin, meeting Jews leaders in Russia.

  • @Krawurxus
    @Krawurxus 5 років тому +555

    So everyone thinks they're the real heroes of WW2? Well as a German, let me tell you... oh. oooooooooh...

    • @mayonnaise1271
      @mayonnaise1271 5 років тому +8

      So Germany was a hero in WW2?

    • @Krawurxus
      @Krawurxus 5 років тому +187

      So you caught the meaning, but not the self-depreciating humor behind it I see.

    • @Tastatur13
      @Tastatur13 5 років тому +70

      Are we the baddies?

    • @lindylou4378
      @lindylou4378 5 років тому +55

      Now that one DID make me laugh, People were getting a little serious,

    • @PortooCalia
      @PortooCalia 5 років тому +4

      aaaaaaw! :)

  • @zucicciu58
    @zucicciu58 3 роки тому +148

    I've had the opportunity to travel widely over the course of 50 years and I have never encountered any problem whatsoever, despite being an American. The key is that I try to learn as much as I can about the country I'll be visiting (suggestion: "Kiss, Bow, or Shake Hands" by Morrison/Conway) and once I arrive at the destination I treat everyone with respect. I remind myself that it's their country, their way of life and I have no business telling them what to do or criticizing their politics or religious practices. And, they are under no obligation to know how to speak English, even if they are fluent with it. I try to learn a few phrases, at the very least, try to use them and look ... vulnerable, and without exception, people have stepped in to 'rescue' me from my self-inflicted embarrassment by engaging in conversation in English!
    Funny experience ... 2019, Sydney, Australia, [notable establishment], souvenir store ... the cashier asked us what part of Canada we came from. We looked at him a bit confused and clarified we are Americans. He was stunned, apologized and added that we did not behave like typical Americans (loud, rude, arrogant, insensitive ... a-holes (his words)), and thanked us and wished us well.

    • @bernhardwidmer886
      @bernhardwidmer886 3 роки тому +30

      You have my respect Sir, it is so rare to see your understanding of respect and behaviour from a US Citizen.

    • @bushmanPMRR
      @bushmanPMRR 3 роки тому +12

      You sound like you have a respectful attitude and try to learn about where your'e going. I'm an Englishman, now living in Ireland but whenever we have traveled abroad we've made the effort to at least learn Please, Thank You, Yes , No oh yes and also 'beer' ;-)
      We always found that doing this and being respectful of the locals feels to have helped us quite a bit, which in turn gives us a better holiday experience. It also leaves the locals hopefully thinking that not all 'Brits' are drunken football hooligans! ;-)

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om 3 роки тому +11

      @@bushmanPMRR You are to be complimented. It is indeed very rare to find citizens of USA with your attitude. I'm an Australian, and (until covid19) I worked in all manner of different countries, from Japan to Nigeria, from New Zealand to the USA, from South Africa to Iceland. Not only have I worked in many different countries, but I also worked with the people of many of those countries. Your attitude is the right one, and I also do as you, treat the people with respect, and always be aware, this is THEIR country, and never complain because 'it's not like home', embrace being somewhere different.

    • @kaka1981kokuson
      @kaka1981kokuson 3 роки тому +1

      @@Chris-hx3om hello from iceland 🇮🇸

    • @colinmayes5892
      @colinmayes5892 3 роки тому +10

      Could you please become an instructor and teach other visiting Americans how to behave. Thank you

  • @charlessands6933
    @charlessands6933 3 роки тому +58

    I Love the metric system, and it isn't confusing.

    • @Swissswoosher
      @Swissswoosher 3 роки тому +3

      Farenheit on the other hand...

    • @Rottnwoman
      @Rottnwoman 3 роки тому +2

      My job in 1974 was converting Australian Government contracts from imperial to metric. NOT the best job I ever had but I loved metric from day 1.
      I will never forget that there are 4.54609 litres to an imperial gallon! EVERYTHING was done to 5 decimal places. No computers then.

    • @Rottnwoman
      @Rottnwoman 3 роки тому +5

      @@Swissswoosher Imperial in general is NUTS!

    • @spiderman4x
      @spiderman4x 3 роки тому +2

      I remember being taught both systems in school. I use metric when brewing beer.

    • @Rottnwoman
      @Rottnwoman 2 роки тому +5

      @@Swissswoosher Just really RANDOM. Who would decide that freezing is 32° and boiling is 212? Irrational 😂

  • @RaghnaidAnnaNicGaraidh
    @RaghnaidAnnaNicGaraidh 6 років тому +81

    I was educated in Australia, and pretty much we heard about the American revolution was "Yeah, so, the Americans had a hissy fit and that's why the English were forced to come here a few decades later..." (I'm paraphrasing, of course).

    • @CanadianMonarchist
      @CanadianMonarchist 5 років тому +14

      Well that's basically what happened.

    • @kristofferheby4573
      @kristofferheby4573 5 років тому +5

      Im Danish and my Teatcher didn't even know what happend

    • @AR-ws1gr
      @AR-ws1gr 5 років тому +1

      Stay subjects vs be free men?

    • @AR-ws1gr
      @AR-ws1gr 5 років тому

      Like other revolutions they had high hopes. Many did not come to fruition. Still it was an interesting experiment. Interesting to compare with other revolutions.

    • @unknowndane4754
      @unknowndane4754 5 років тому +4

      I can relate to what Kristoffer said, in the Danish context the American war for independence really changed nothing about our situation, it didn't really weaken our rival Britain and we had no part in it. If you hear about it it's mostly during English lectures where the history materials is from an English speaking country's perspective (i.e. UK or US)

  • @natalieholeman146
    @natalieholeman146 6 років тому +77

    As prior military that was stationed in Germany for 6 years, I can certainly agree with most of the comments. What I considered really appalling was that most of the young military would almost never leave the American military areas except to travel to another American military area. They also considered their was nothing the people had to offer except beer and beer festivals. They considered their was no reason to learn the language as EVERY German could speak English fluently and only talked in German to annoy them.
    I personally loved my time in Germany. I only wish I had more money so I could have traveled more. I also wish the 1st Gulf War had not occurred when it did because I really wanted to see the Passion Play in Oberammergau. The food, the Christmas Markets, the free concerts, the museums, the walks in the woods and volksmarsch (what is the plural?), just talking with people and find out different views and ideas. I actually pitied those military that did not join in on the culture.

    • @vickikendricks
      @vickikendricks 5 років тому +5

      Natalie Holeman Former military here you are so right... I was stationed in Korea and lived off base my supervisor was so afraid of leaving base just to come to my house for fear of being lost. She could've just used her GPS but she said she didn't speak Korean... too funny!

    • @RagingGoblin
      @RagingGoblin 5 років тому +8

      @Ksch Koff Wow, someone's irrationally angry and self-centred. Bad day, mate?

    • @RagingGoblin
      @RagingGoblin 5 років тому +3

      I don't know. Sadly, you deleted your other two comments. What do you mean by aired 'this stuff on the radio', and what does being a southern American have to do with living in Germany?

    • @RagingGoblin
      @RagingGoblin 5 років тому +16

      You may tell whatever you wish to whomever you like if it pleases you, friend.
      But I think you're a bit mistaken about something. While most Europeans belittle Americans a fair bit, mostly because Europeans tend to be a bit more open-minded due to easier travelling opportunities, the only real problem most have is with the US's government. I don't want to make this thread about politics, but it's a fact that both Bush Jr and Trump are people I personally wouldn't have trusted to clean my cars -- much less running for the presidency.
      It doesn't help that they verifiably lied on dozens and dozens of occasions, especially concerning everything related foreign policy -- and these kinds of things get around. A tendency to meddle (Mideast), as well as dubious moral standards, make for a poor mix and a poorer impression. Many European countries feel alienated that these kinds of presidents keep getting elected, and -- personally and only speaking for myself -- I think it's rather scary how resilient these people are to minor and major scandals.
      Like this video explained, there are some very glaring differences between Europe and the US (weapons, freedom of speech, security, work, social environment), and I'm not saying one is strictly better. Morals and ethics are often a matter of weighing up and thus come down to philosophical and/or historic traditions. But despite how queer or weird some American customs or circumstances may seem to us over here, there is no hatred for the American people -- why would there be?!
      Sure, Americans aren't universally beloved, but nobody is. Look at Europe: the Austrians make fun of the Germans, the Germans make fun of the Dutch and vice versa, the Dutch and the Belgians love to tease each other, and occasionally we all like to mock our favourite frog eaters.
      I don't know what you listened to exactly so I can't possibly be sure but maybe you're a bit thin-skinned or testy when it comes to people having negative and/or strong opinions about the US?

    • @LeilaDRalph
      @LeilaDRalph 5 років тому +3

      Plural von Volksmarsch = Volksmärsche. Even thow I´m German and have no idea what that is XD

  • @jeffreybarker357
    @jeffreybarker357 3 роки тому +26

    Happy to be among the 50% of Americans who HAVE traveled abroad. I love my country but traveling is a must. Seeing how other people live is eye-opening.

    • @theramblinmahoney2316
      @theramblinmahoney2316 3 роки тому +1

      Some people simply don’t have the means, I’ve traveled a few times and loved it but I’ll never hold it against someone who hasn’t experienced it. These two US vids I watched are actually pretty biased.

    • @markfoster1520
      @markfoster1520 3 роки тому +1

      I feel I'm 'traveling abroad' here!......& I don't appreciate it!

    • @Jinkypigs
      @Jinkypigs 3 роки тому

      Yeah. And might prevent the blossoming of so many idiotic supporter for another crybaby trump lookalike.

    • @boxsterman77
      @boxsterman77 3 роки тому

      YEP! It does do very different things all at once. 1. It reveals that many of the things you believed were either common place and customary or rare are just the opposite in another country. And while doing that it 2) reveals that through all the different approaches, styles and customs there is a discernible thread of shared experience.

    • @Riayz0
      @Riayz0 3 роки тому +1

      I am an American and I been to the Mexican and Canadian borders and I am going to see the Bahamas from the tallest building in Miami and I have trips to uk France Belgium Italy San Marino and the Vatican planned so I’ve dodged that bullet

  • @nickyfield137
    @nickyfield137 3 роки тому +35

    Makes me think of 'In Bruges'
    "Are you from the States ?"
    "Yep, don't hold it against me"
    "I'll try not to...just try not to say anything too loud or crass"

    • @coopersheridan73
      @coopersheridan73 3 роки тому

      Funny, because it makes me think about WWI and WWII, and how the allies only won because we decided to join in for fun🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @ntalikerman1
      @ntalikerman1 2 роки тому

      @@coopersheridan73 In WW1 German submarines sunk “Lusitania” and “Vigilantia” in the Atlantic killing a lot of Americans.
      And actually in WW2 Germany declared war on the US after Pearl Harbor.

  • @sunpowerguru3993
    @sunpowerguru3993 6 років тому +1412

    America's young people are OK with the metric system. Our kids all carry 9mm handguns and deal their drugs in grams!

    • @Magrat_Knoblauch
      @Magrat_Knoblauch 6 років тому +105

      xD That's the kind of humour I live for :D

    • @paganphil100
      @paganphil100 6 років тому +14

      It's the same here in the UK (except that they all speak with "Asian" accents).

    • @vickikendricks
      @vickikendricks 5 років тому +17

      I'm an American and that's hilarious Lol!

    • @deeas6518
      @deeas6518 5 років тому +13

      After spending much time in British pubs, I was shocked to learn a pint wasn't 500ml

    • @benghazi3754
      @benghazi3754 5 років тому +64

      There is a joke that goes:
      "The imperial measurement system is so inefficient that even American drug dealers are switching to metric"

  • @Funkestech
    @Funkestech 6 років тому +998

    When they say the US doesn't use metric, they are referring to the general public. Scientists and engineers use the metric system.

    • @StreakyBaconMan
      @StreakyBaconMan 6 років тому +33

      I don't think ANY scientist or engineer would use imperial nor have they for a very long time, even since before metric was officially adopted in many places. Officially the US uses imperial measurement - the government says our units of measurement are imperial and is only one of three countries to have governments that officially use imperial. There are plenty of countries where the general public use imperial measurements for most things, while officially the government says they are metric - the UK for example will still measure their speed limit in MPH rather than kilometers per hour even though officially they're under the metric system.

    • @TheJazzoide
      @TheJazzoide 6 років тому +7

      One theory claims that high ranked Romans used the Greek number, but teached the roman numbers to the simple citizen to make math more difficult for them and therfor less capable of counting...
      Try XXIX + VII x XI or 1'9''9/16 + 5''1/4 x 4 1/8... it will take a bit more time than 38 + 63 x 7,5

    • @briancrawford8751
      @briancrawford8751 6 років тому +74

      +Funke Motor You'll find that American drug addicts have a surprisingly intuitive understanding of the Metric system.

    • @bethumswarship1055
      @bethumswarship1055 6 років тому +27

      I’m a middle school Math teacher. One of the units I teach involves converting between Metric and US Customary. It’s likely only a matter of time before the USA finally switches over.

    • @straymutt2504
      @straymutt2504 6 років тому +7

      Our medical field uses both

  • @trevormillar2755
    @trevormillar2755 3 роки тому +50

    "I know all about Africa, I've seen every Tarzan movie they ever made"
    - Dan Quayle

    • @unseasonedsalad
      @unseasonedsalad 3 роки тому

      As a South African, who has to drive for HOURS to find an area with no buildings or just one race (we are called the rainbow country for a reason!)

    • @GeoFry3
      @GeoFry3 3 роки тому

      Sound legit. Saw Indian Jones (Egypt) the last Samuri (Japan) Escape from LA (Kalifornia)

  • @SethinBerlin
    @SethinBerlin 3 роки тому +18

    I'm a traveler. I live overseas. To be fair, most of these things aren't things you discover just going on vacation

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah, I get the premise of the video/title but I agree that understanding of these concepts is largely not reliant on travel experience. I know plenty of well-traveled people who are shockingly ignorant about a lot of these things, and I've never had the privilege of international travel but still found all of these facts to be at least cursorily familiar. 🤷‍♂️ (Still love the video, though, because 1. It's nice to know this is a source of reality checks for many other Americans, and 2. I 💚 our Fact Boi lol.)

  • @ottomattick3711
    @ottomattick3711 5 років тому +64

    The Revolutionary War is "barely a footnote" for Brits because the imperialist British waged so damn many wars between the fall of the Roman Empire and the mid-20th Century that it really is hard to keep track of them all.

    • @DavePotts
      @DavePotts 5 років тому +14

      Trust me the only ones that matter are the ones that were fought against the French :-)

    • @Mlork972
      @Mlork972 5 років тому +8

      As a French i agree ^^

    • @pshuckle7488
      @pshuckle7488 5 років тому +9

      We're pretty tsundere with the French. They stole our holy grail, we give them wooden rabbits and "forget" to use it to infiltrate... Wait wrong reality.

    • @snowcrest7863
      @snowcrest7863 5 років тому

      Dave Potts...…….No We don't "trust" you.

    • @davidgreen5099
      @davidgreen5099 5 років тому +4

      In all fairness, everyone needs a hobby.

  • @frederick4367
    @frederick4367 5 років тому +297

    When you can fly from the UK to Paris for $20 on a budget airline, then why not.
    Cheaper than a taxi in NYC.

    • @Celisar1
      @Celisar1 5 років тому +10

      Fred Erick
      Highly exaggerated.

    • @frederick4367
      @frederick4367 5 років тому +24

      I flew both ways round trip for under $40 total. No exaggeration at all.

    • @Celisar1
      @Celisar1 5 років тому

      Fred Erick
      I have to take your word for it.

    • @tubelev
      @tubelev 5 років тому +8

      @@Celisar1 i flew Hamburg London last year for 9,99 € one way via Ryan Air

    • @paulmakinson1965
      @paulmakinson1965 5 років тому +12

      20€ for the Ryanair ticket, then 100€ for the luggage and the extras. Hahaha!

  • @IamthNight
    @IamthNight 3 роки тому +66

    I can barely afford to drive to work everyday let alone travel to another continent.

    • @prant8998
      @prant8998 3 роки тому +6

      Yes, and you have to ask yourself why the, powers that be, want most people to live life on the edge that way.

    • @Akkalia
      @Akkalia 3 роки тому +9

      Assuming you live in the USA, you can visit two countries without leaving your continent. Signed an island nation

    • @larsmonsen88
      @larsmonsen88 3 роки тому +1

      @@Akkalia Alot more than that:P

    • @MagnumCreed
      @MagnumCreed 3 роки тому +2

      @@Akkalia Yes but that distance is far grander than visiting different countries in U.S. to be honest, each of our states is like another country.

    • @ibfreely8952
      @ibfreely8952 3 роки тому

      Enjoy car dependent slavery

  • @Luke-pk9fe
    @Luke-pk9fe 2 роки тому +4

    As a American who has traveled extensively I can tell you whenever I travel within the United States I'm always surprised at how much all Americans have in common with each other. And I can tell you that anytime I travel abroad when I return home I am always a little more grateful for the exceptionalism of the United States

  • @jayr6637
    @jayr6637 6 років тому +1298

    You forgot to include that most of the rest of the world considers the American format of writing dates as MM/DD/YYYY to be idiotic!

    • @tubomi8
      @tubomi8 6 років тому +109

      yeah that gets really confusing for me. For example when a website says 01/04/2017, I think: do you mean the 1st of april or january the first?

    • @tirpitz19
      @tirpitz19 6 років тому +66

      It's not idiotic,it's just different.On the other hand,when you are the last one on earth to make the change,than yes,i admit is idiotic.

    • @nekroneko
      @nekroneko 6 років тому +201

      It's infuriating is what it is. If Americans like MM/DD so much, then they should adopt YYYY/MM/DD format and not MM/DD/YYYY. It has no flow to it at all, it's completely illogical. Then again, they love confusing ways to measure things so it should come of no surprise.

    • @jayr6637
      @jayr6637 6 років тому +42

      +nekroneko
      "they should adopt YYYY/MM/DD format"
      That's ISO date format, except they use dashes instead of slashes. I deal with Americans in my work, so I use ISO format. It annoys some people, but no-one ever misunderstands :)

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 6 років тому +48

      I completely agreee on YYYY/MM/DD, it makes sense and goes from big to small. Helps sorting stuff.
      And that comes from someone who is used to DD/MM/YYYY

  • @link2442
    @link2442 5 років тому +167

    In the US you only get a few days vacation for the year, and even then some of the employers would make you feel guilty in taking them.
    They under hire people and at the same time make one person do the work of 3

    • @MrLudvig01
      @MrLudvig01 5 років тому +18

      That is why other peoples have labor unions.

    • @charliealexander5603
      @charliealexander5603 5 років тому +11

      @@MrLudvig01 Labor unions are a dirty word here.

    • @mirpurijournal8451
      @mirpurijournal8451 5 років тому

      Nice body

    • @AK-vr8el
      @AK-vr8el 5 років тому +6

      It's a big cultural difference because most Americans view countries that have longer vacations or limited work hours as lazy. No offense but most Americans just have the "time is money" motto ingrained in their DNA, myself included. We're an "Atlas Shrugged" people.

    • @sega_kid4288
      @sega_kid4288 5 років тому +12

      @@AK-vr8el yeah time is money here because we are overworked and underpaid.

  • @carolynmayo9991
    @carolynmayo9991 3 роки тому +15

    I have been to 6 continents in my life, and I came away from each country with a new respect for those different countries.
    I read about the countries before I left to prepare myself. I learned how to say “please and thank you” to the best of my ability. These small gestures were appreciated by citizens I met.
    My life became much richer because of my travels. I realize the trips can be and are pricey. But I saved up to go to a specific location, and I was never disappointed. I cannot travel any more and there are several places on my Bucket List I will only see on /in documentaries. Go People! Go!

    • @benjaminmarker
      @benjaminmarker 3 роки тому +1

      To quote my fellow countryman Hans Christian Andersen "At rejse er at leve" meaning; To travel is to live. Greetings from Copenhagen.

  • @sm5574
    @sm5574 3 роки тому +7

    To be fair, most Americans have visited other states in the union, which is not the same as visiting another country, but in terms of distance travelled it is very comparable.

  • @gnm20090725
    @gnm20090725 5 років тому +300

    Well when you live in Europe and can cross 5 borders in 5 hours it's pretty easy to travel "abroad"

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 5 років тому +11

      Someone took their time going through Leichtenstein!

    • @xUdieToox
      @xUdieToox 4 роки тому +20

      Gabe Carreon if i drive for 5 hours, i would still be within the borders of my home state of Florida, so yeah agreed.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 4 роки тому +4

      It can also be VERY difficult to cross borders in 5 hours in Europe. Mostly thanks to the bottlenecks at Dover and M25 which you will be doing well to get through in just 5 hours!

    • @landonh4295
      @landonh4295 4 роки тому +28

      Ask a truck driver about waking up in Texas and driving 11 hours in the same direction then going to sleep that night still in Texas

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 4 роки тому

      @@landonh4295 Needs to put more effort in ;-)

  • @TofranBohk
    @TofranBohk 5 років тому +53

    It's a heck of a lot easier for a British person to travel to three or four different countries than it is for an American or a Canadian. European countries are a lot smaller and closer together.

    • @leebee5361
      @leebee5361 4 роки тому +6

      Oh, well done!!.. so you've actually at least LOOKED at map, then???

    • @limpnjen
      @limpnjen 4 роки тому +2

      This is false.

    • @psk1w1
      @psk1w1 4 роки тому +4

      If you are British, you can travel between four different countries without leaving Britain - England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland. And, just for some extra fun, the semi-independent Channel islands and the Isle of Man. Of course, the Brexit mania currently rampaging across the UK might make it a little less 'united' and more 'untied' some time soon

    • @--enyo--
      @--enyo-- 4 роки тому +9

      Probably still easier than it is for an Australian. But still around 60-70% have been overseas.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 3 роки тому +1

      John Saunders that’s because the isn’t anything IN Australia!

  • @koskey06
    @koskey06 3 роки тому +27

    If Americans could drive 24hrs and visit like 5 diff country's.... we would. Instead we would just go through 3 states...

    • @VikingBoi88
      @VikingBoi88 3 роки тому +5

      Depending on which state, you probably wouldn't even drive through half a state in 24 hours in Australia. And even given our distance from the rest of the world, I'd hazard a guess that Australians are (if only slightly) more well travelled than Americans.

    • @FrarmerFrank
      @FrarmerFrank 3 роки тому

      Well, the States of the U.S. Federation and even the city,counties,tons and municipalities within are technically independent of other and can be radically different from what you expect

    • @jonjon1452
      @jonjon1452 3 роки тому

      Bet not travel through Texas that’ll take half of your time away lol

  • @bruced6543
    @bruced6543 3 роки тому +8

    You just said that because Europe is so small that it's common for people to travel over the borders all the time; that would be like me driving to Massachusetts or New Hampshire in terms of distance

    • @godlovesyou1995
      @godlovesyou1995 3 роки тому

      But the chinese, japanese, australians and canadians travel overseas. Its just arrogance and ignorance really

    • @KeithGadget
      @KeithGadget 3 роки тому

      What makes you think Europe is small? It meets Asia at the doors of the Middle East and also North Africa.

    • @bruced6543
      @bruced6543 3 роки тому

      @@KeithGadget I meant the countries in the continent not the continent itself, sorry that wasn't clear

    • @KeithGadget
      @KeithGadget 3 роки тому

      @@bruced6543 you realise the countries make the continents? Cyprus, Russia, Iceland, Greece, Portugal are all Europe. Yes there are countries so small you can drive through them to another country in a hour, but there are countries it would take 24hrs to drive across. Many many island nations that the realistic option to get there is flying. Be mindful that not all US states are large.
      Bottom line, as an example I’ve only known 2 people to drive from the UK to south Spain/Portugal, everyone would really fly. Personally I’d fly if the distance were greater than 300 miles 🤣😂

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 роки тому

      @@godlovesyou1995 and lack of money! America is Number One in Corporate Wealth but well down in personal wealth !

  • @jaredgillenwater4221
    @jaredgillenwater4221 6 років тому +337

    Well of course the British don't often think of the American Revolution, or really learn about it as more than a footnote! And no, this is not a, "Because they lost," thing. It's because for the U.S. that was a major point in history. For Britain, it was just one of many revolts against them to leave their rule. It happened a lot in Europe. So why would one stand out when it was a common occurrence?

    • @janesmith7243
      @janesmith7243 6 років тому +20

      I know, right? I didn't expect many other people to care!

    • @pablorey9203
      @pablorey9203 6 років тому +2

      American revolution was really important. May be their greatest gift to the world.(and may be the last one) Just like the -british- industrial revolution, or the french revolution. Three revolutions to begin a new era. And I am not pro american at all, just the opposite.
      But I am just the opposite of a pro american, because the influence of america is just the opposite of what it was with their revolution.
      Please forgive my poor english.

    • @pludoxp9
      @pludoxp9 6 років тому +8

      I completely agree with you, we learn about the prohibition and colonisation surprisingly enough due to the fact they were one of a kind situations but as you said the American Revolution was just another revolt in the empire

    • @AtarahDerek
      @AtarahDerek 6 років тому +2

      I would think it would stand out as the only *successful* revolt. But mostly they blame us for causing the French Revolution. Even though almost all of us opposed it, including Lafayette. Jefferson was the only one in favor of it, and that was only because he intentionally limited his understanding of what was happening to the same level of understanding that a Berkeley student has about life in general.

    • @pablorey9203
      @pablorey9203 6 років тому +2

      blame ??

  • @heidishmidi
    @heidishmidi 5 років тому +138

    These America videos always leave me feeling a bit triggered 😅
    I’ve been into Canada but otherwise have never left the country. In a few weeks we are going on a road trip totaling 34 hours of driving that will get us through 5 of these 50 states. We will cover 3,450 km for $275. If we fly instead, it will take 14 hours of flying time plus the time to commute from the airport to the city of our actual destination (neither our hometown or our destination have airports) so that adds an additional 3.5 hours. The cost for this is $1,352 (not including paying for checked bags and airport food or renting a car for the commute). So for five times the expense, i can cut my travel time in half.
    For this reason, many Americans do road trips instead of flying. Since road trips require more time to get to/from and vacation time is limited, it’s the really fortunate ones who get to leave the country with any regularity.
    I would love to travel abroad. Its not American superiority and ignorance that keeps me from traveling, it’s finances.

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi 4 роки тому +17

      lol at least you have a neighbour you can drive to. i live in australia. (i could drive the same distance and still be in the same state) and literally need to get on a boat or plane to get to another country. interestingly (or i think so at least) we never use the term "abroad" in australia its always 'overseas"

    • @--enyo--
      @--enyo-- 4 роки тому +15

      You realise that there’s other countries out there that are relatively isolated but people still travel, yeah? Australia basically isn’t close to anywhere. But still 60-70% of people have been overseas.

    • @spaceman081447
      @spaceman081447 4 роки тому +7

      TO: heidishmidi
      RE: "I would love to travel abroad. Its not American superiority and ignorance that keeps me from traveling, it’s finances."
      My sentiments exactly! If a ever hit the lottery for, say, six-figure money, I would take several long and detailed around-the-world trips.

    • @matthewhowes2978
      @matthewhowes2978 4 роки тому +1

      heidishmidi
      In America the price of petrol is fantastically low.
      Check prices in Europe.
      14 hours for that flight seems ridiculously long, are you sure?

    • @heidishmidi
      @heidishmidi 4 роки тому +1

      matthew howes the 14 hours wasn’t for a single flight. The tickets i looked at all included multiple layovers, so I just took the time from departure to final arrival plus two hours needed to get through security, etc. Where I live the closest (small) airport is an hour away so that one sends people via puddle jumper to another bigger airport 4 hrs away and from there you can connect to bigger flights, also going to bigger cities, where you can then catch your last flight to your smallish final destination. In the case of the trip I referenced above, you’d also need to add on 3.5 hrs of driving time to get to/from the airports. All in all a monstrous and expensive hassle with comparatively little time savings.

  • @merrittmarcus13
    @merrittmarcus13 3 роки тому +12

    I forgot about King George III until one of these videos this year. He isn't even mentioned in a lot of history about the war.
    To be fair, a huge number of Americans think of Americans the same way the rest of the world does.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 роки тому

      King George was not an Absolute Ruler, he was subject to Parliament! He had more power than a modern monarch, but he was not personally responsible for policy like Americans seem to think !

    • @sophierobinson2738
      @sophierobinson2738 3 роки тому

      john saunders Most of us don't think of him at all after history class is over.

    • @johnsaunders2109
      @johnsaunders2109 3 роки тому

      @@sophierobinson2738 No. You Americans have a weird view of History, so perhaps that's just as well !!

  • @vixendoe2545
    @vixendoe2545 4 роки тому +9

    I have been fortunate enough to have been able to travel. Most of Canad, Israel and Palestine. I have learned that people are people no matter where you go.

  • @cataderian
    @cataderian 5 років тому +205

    You kind of imply that Americans don't travel abroad because they don't want to. Truth is they can't afford it. Most would love to see and experience this great big multi-cultural world we live on, but we are living paycheck to paycheck. Most people seem to think that Americans are all rich, but all the wealth is in the hands of very few.

    • @agnieszkachodkiewicz7795
      @agnieszkachodkiewicz7795 5 років тому +21

      Well, someone made a fair point in comments above, that for Americans to travel abroad means travelling thousands of kilometers, probably by plane, but if I, as a European, want to travel abroad I can for example get in the car and drive for about an hour.

    • @CrazyMazapan
      @CrazyMazapan 5 років тому +31

      Daaaaarling, that's just an excuse people from the U.S. tell themselves. I'm from Argentina. We keep jumping from economic crisis to economic crisis and even I, a lowly teacher, have managed to save and travel abroad AND to Europe. And we're far from everywhere. So there.

    • @mykull666
      @mykull666 5 років тому +21

      There is a very large portion of U.S. citizens that live in fear of other races, religions, and cultures. Those same people won't even go to certain cities or neighborhoods in the U.S., so they definitely aren't gonna pay a bunch of money to travel abroad to places that terrify them even more. About the only time those people leave the country is if their church is footing the bill for them to ram their religion down people throats or they're in the military.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 5 років тому +6

      +cataderian This video, like all videos which just spout the creator's personal opinions & biases, is worthless.

    • @niawithredlips3785
      @niawithredlips3785 5 років тому +13

      As an American I will help explain why we are in fact so poor. It's not that we dont make money, it's that we are expected to spend on certain very expensive things. Very expensive degrees, cars, rent, bills, cost of living and taxes. Which usually leaves the average citizen with basically nothing left over.

  • @imallearsru
    @imallearsru 4 роки тому +13

    The Canadian army was set to enter and liberate Rome but were ordered to wait for the Americans, so they sat and waited till the Americans arrived with the press and watched as they filmed the American forces entering and liberating Rome.

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 2 роки тому +1

      During the peace conferences after WWI.
      Several diplomats referred to US as the "traveling salesman!
      One doesn't need to be a genius to understand why? LOL 😂

    • @chuckscott4661
      @chuckscott4661 Рік тому

      Canadians, always doing as they’re ordered. 😆

  • @walttrotter535
    @walttrotter535 2 роки тому +5

    I've travelled a great deal and the best advice I can give is to NOT put it off 'til you retire. I did most of my travelling before I was 40. Im 62 now and have health issues that make it very difficult. I have friends who had grand plans to travel once the kids were up and out but health issues hit.

  • @kenfrank3782
    @kenfrank3782 4 роки тому +12

    My wife and I traveled for 2 yrs in the USA plus parts of Canada, side trips to Mexico and Europe.
    One thing to remember and to put this in perspective is - the British Isles consisting of England, N. Ireland, Scotland and Wales - is just a bit smaller than our state of Alabama.
    California- north to south- covers, if superimposed on the east coast , the state of Georgia all the ways up to Massachusetts.
    All of Europe would fit very comfortably between the Mississippi River and the Rockies.
    Is it a shame that Americans don’t travel outside of America more -- Absolutely!!! But you can’t really fault us that much cause the USA is massive
    My major beef with the USA is that we have gotten to the point that with our 2d & 3rd tier cities and smaller that they are starting to look/ feel alike with all the same fast food chains and other franchises.

    • @Lleanlleawrg
      @Lleanlleawrg 3 роки тому +1

      Makes sense until you remember a lot of people outside the US visit it.

    • @zucicciu58
      @zucicciu58 3 роки тому +1

      @John Saunders America's minimum wage is poverty level, with just a few exceptions. Most employees, if lucky, get only 2 weeks of vacation/yr. The education system fails to account for most other countries and cultures, let alone basic skills (e.g., notice the 'eloquence and elegance' of the comments), etc. Worst of all, Americans cannot relate to the events in Italy of the 20s-30s or Germany of the 30s; therefore, we are months away from repeating history.

    • @jamesguitar7384
      @jamesguitar7384 3 роки тому +3

      Point of information M'Lud , Europe is actually bigger than the United States of America . No need to debate this , just look it up . Actually , as an addendum , Siberia is bigger than the USA. I suppose people confuse Western Europe with Europe.

    • @ocelblack9823
      @ocelblack9823 3 роки тому +1

      @@jamesguitar7384 Geographic size vs population. All of Siberia has less people than many counties in the US. And that is meaningless. There are no 3 countries in 5 days tours that will make you more familiar with anything but sleep deprivation. As long as your interaction with the local people is controlled by a tour guide you will get a false impression. Regardless of where you go people are people and the majority feel like the way they live is the "proper" way and expect the rest of the world to be just the same. I was lucky enough to spend 50+ years working with normal people in 35 different countries, one thing we could all agree on was that the problem with the world was all political posturing by politicians looking for power. The "Ugly American" just like the "ugly Brit" or "ugly Dutch" is not welcome anywhere. Don't be an "ugly American".

  • @shinetilly
    @shinetilly 5 років тому +169

    I know this video was posted a year ago but I had to add my perspective.
    I’m an American who has not traveled outside the country (can barely afford to visit another state let alone another continent) but I knew these facts. Just because I’m not privileged enough to travel doesn’t mean I am ignorant of the world.

    • @gregorythoman8281
      @gregorythoman8281 5 років тому +31

      But many many Americans are completely ignorant of the world.

    • @saulgoodman7221
      @saulgoodman7221 5 років тому +12

      Gregory Thoman
      Now take the ratio of knowledgeable to ignorant of the USA vs the knowledgeable to ignorant of the world. Who do you think would win? There are billions of world travelers. We only have two adjacent countries. One of which I can not visit, or wish to right now anyway. Seems like the world is hating on us anyway. We are not all ignorant hicks.

    • @ritwikreddy5670
      @ritwikreddy5670 5 років тому +3

      @@saulgoodman7221 you don't need to travel to get knowledge.
      But can't be blamed, media is the culprit for showing only some sides of the dice.

    • @EvilTwin123
      @EvilTwin123 5 років тому +6

      Get a van.
      Planet fitness membership.
      There.
      Housing + showers.
      Now go see the U.S.

    • @Snyde70
      @Snyde70 5 років тому +4

      Same as the rest of the world Sarah. Ignorance has little to do with poverty and privilege. Your education and media are largely to blame.

  • @SuperLn1991
    @SuperLn1991 6 років тому +84

    "Even the french prefer to talk about their near-mythical resistance" well, never say that to my grand mother: a huge part of her family (included her 17y old brother) where resistant and were killed. French people are very thankful for american, brithish and canadian' s help, and we will always remember that. But being always called coward (we won so many battles and war in the past), hearing them forget about our help for their independance, forget that many french women were raped by american soldier who though they should thanks them with sexe, tha
    t a part of France was libarated by the french resistant before american arrived, that the D day was a success also because the french resistance prepared it by destroying german's camp, bridges, cleaning somes cities and provided them information, seriously it can be a little bit annoying for us to hear that.

    • @cjheaford
      @cjheaford 5 років тому +8

      GeorgianaDarcy
      I am American, and I know full well that there would have been no Independence without French intervention and support.

    • @kikiv1993
      @kikiv1993 5 років тому +2

      If you helped Poland in 1939, there probably would not be a war.

    • @Chrysobubulle
      @Chrysobubulle 5 років тому +3

      France and United Kingdom had been traumatized by the Great War. Lets not forget that all the battles from the western front took place in France, defiling the country, villages and fields being utterly destroyed and contaminated by weapons and chemicals. French people didnt want another war, they were still recuperating from the previous one.

    • @kikiv1993
      @kikiv1993 5 років тому

      The eastern front is largely the area of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, where Poles stood on both sides and had to shoot only because they were under different annexation.

    • @chucku00
      @chucku00 5 років тому +1

      Chrysobubulle * recovering
      Méfie-toi des faux amis, mon ami.

  • @kevynekicklighter7960
    @kevynekicklighter7960 4 роки тому +14

    The USA is so huge that it swallows 2 Europes whole. Just visiting relatives across the country you can travel further than from London to Rome. The USA is one federal run country, but we are a nation of 50 states (think of the UK and England/Scotland/Wales/Ireland). Each region of the country is also like a nation in itself, with it's own dialect and cultures.
    It's why Americans don't need to travel outside the USA, it's a pain getting ACROSS the country! Nearest large city to me is 158 miles away. It's just 70% the width of my state. Now think about the distance between London and Rome. It's ONLY a 19hr 1,100mi drive. Where I live to LA? It's a 34hr 2,300mi drive in comparison (it actually takes 3 days to get there by car, because humans have to fight traffic/eat/sleep/goto the bathroom).
    The UK proper? It's the size of Alabama only.
    When I visit relatives up North, it IS like visiting another country. They prefer different drinks (they prefer coffee; I'm a Southerner I drink tea by the gallon. Even Brits don't drink as much tea as Southerners do!!!). Their restaurants don't understand "Coke" means Coca-Cola OR Pepsi, it's a generic term in the South, not a specific brand (unless asked specifically as Coca-Cola). We speak English but dialects are different. My grandma called a couch a davenport, and I was like "huh?". If you want grits you learn to take it with you, as you'll only find Cream of Wheat, instead (YUCK! Baby food!). The grocery store doesn't have things you take for granted (ham hocks for green beans, for example). They'll have Lutefisk, though (Soapy fish!).
    You get homesick even in your own country (country music has enough songs about cities, to ensure you WILL be homesick!!!). That's how different our regions can be. Just going to SC a state away? I learn to bring my own favorite tomato based BBQ sauce, as parts of South Carolina use mustard for their BBQ (bring sugar too, as they tend not to sweeten their tea, either. Or better make your own, as they put baking soda [to preserve it] in their tea religiously, too).
    These videos don't seem to understand that the USA isn't one big England or Germany. Each region (and even some states) are nations in itself.

    • @Sweetbrightness
      @Sweetbrightness 3 роки тому

      Very well put!!

    • @galoglaich3281
      @galoglaich3281 3 роки тому

      Uk consists of scotland wales england and a small corner of the island of ireland known as northern ireland,the rest of the island is the republic of ireland which is a sovereign independent state.

    • @tomwithey711
      @tomwithey711 3 роки тому

      Wrong. And a dialect is nowhere close to a different language, of which you'll find several within that distance between London and Rome or any other place in Europe.
      Also the US is 200 years old. We have churches and other buildings that were 1000 years old before Benjamin Franklin started breast feeding.

    • @ken61175
      @ken61175 3 роки тому +2

      USA swallows 2 Europes whole? Typical ignorance. Europe (as a whole) compared to USA is about the same size, with Europe (as a whole) being slightly larger than the US. If you however you were thinking that UK = Europe or using a flat map and failed to realise that what you see is a willy nilly result of just applying a curved landmass on a flat surface then yeah it's understandable why you'd think they way you do. That being said, if you really want to compare US to Europe then you should look to the EU, where it is made up of independent countries with a federal type central govt, but with less central authority than the US federal govt.
      BTW across the rest of the world? Coke = Coca Cola. Nothing else. The closest to a generic term that covers both would be cola. You may call it Pepsi these days, but it was originally sold as Pepsi Cola in the rest of the world.

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 4 роки тому +21

    Hey...In our area, "going abroad" means leaving the county.

  • @benzeneau1
    @benzeneau1 6 років тому +101

    you fail to mention, that the high rate of gun ownership in Switzerland might be due to the fact that they do have conscription there and, that everybody is required to take their gun home and participate in (i don't know how many) exercise sessions per year.

    • @camper1749
      @camper1749 6 років тому +2

      Also in more rural parts they are forced to own weapons due to bear attacks.

    • @maurobobo6923
      @maurobobo6923 6 років тому +14

      @Campers
      I don't know from where you come from, but... I think there are by far more bears in the US than Swiss... :-)
      Most probably you meant BEER (drinkers) attacks... :-D

    • @camper1749
      @camper1749 6 років тому +7

      Uhh no, in rural swiss villages, they are forced by law to own guns. I didn't say there were more bears in the US, I am from Romania.

    • @shi01
      @shi01 6 років тому +14

      There is no such law in Switzerland, i can tell you. Nowhere in switzerland you are obliged to have a gun and there are hardly any bears in switzerland anyway. Actually if there is ever a bear sighted in switzerland it's all over in the swiss newspapers because it's that rare.

    • @camper1749
      @camper1749 6 років тому +1

      I didn't say it was a law. Ok then my friend must have lied to me or made a joke I didn't catch on to.

  • @OMGUKILLKENNY2
    @OMGUKILLKENNY2 5 років тому +131

    As far as WW2 is concerned, the USSR were the main force for defeating the Germans while the Americans were the main force beating the Japaneses.

    • @buggsy5
      @buggsy5 5 років тому +19

      The US kept the UK free from Germany due to all the food/supplies/munitions supplied throughout WWII. Without the massive convoys, using ships mostly built in the US, the UK would have been starved into submission. The US troops were also instrumental in freeing most of the occupied/conquered countries.
      Whether Russia would have been able to defeat the Germans on their own is unknown. By the time Russia entered the conflict, both Germany's sea and air powers were mostly wiped out - mostly by the US and Great Britain.

    • @blopblept9360
      @blopblept9360 5 років тому +6

      @@buggsy5Russia was strongly supported by the United States. So no, or with much greater losses.

    • @chocolatestick2340
      @chocolatestick2340 5 років тому +9

      @@buggsy5 Wait, Russia fought against Germany till 1941, the USA startet their ground offense in 1944...

    • @buggsy5
      @buggsy5 5 років тому +9

      @@chocolatestick2340 Wrong. The Soviet Union and Germany were partners (compact of Molontov-Ribbentrop) until Germany invades Russia in 1941.
      By the fall of 1942, the US had troupes in North Africa, as well as making air attacks. Long before this time, the US had favored a full scale assault on Germany, but the UK convinced them that it was not feasible. So prior to 1942, the US's involvement in Europe was mainly supplying armaments, munitions and food to the Allies. The Soviets did not make any inroads into Eastern Germany until well after D-Day. If I recall correctly, it was in January 1945, about the same time the Allies invaded Western Germany.

    • @bron9674
      @bron9674 5 років тому +14

      Don't forget the Australians in Asia and Pacific!

  • @larrydixon8117
    @larrydixon8117 4 роки тому +4

    I'm from Switzerland and 40 years old and I have traveled to over 40 countries. All my friends have already traveled outside of europe. I was already in south- central- and north america. All over western and eastern europe, africa and asia. These days you can fly to the usa or to asia for 700 us dollars so not expensive. Seeing the world and speaking more than 1 language is the best education that you can get. I understand that some people are broke but I really hope that one day you will be able to see the rest of the world. Different architecture, language and cuisine and culture. My next trip will be to south africa.

  • @mikeskelly2356
    @mikeskelly2356 3 роки тому +12

    So, basically, Europe's version of history is very Euro-centric, while America's is America-centric. No surprise, I've traveled in Europe and the locals had some really odd notions about the US...

    • @RetroFuseable
      @RetroFuseable 3 роки тому

      For example?

    • @mikeskelly2356
      @mikeskelly2356 3 роки тому

      @@RetroFuseable Mind you, in both countries it's the uneducated few who hold stereo-typical notions about other countries. But I've been asked if everyone in the Southern US lived like the 'Beverly Hillbillys', or if all the residents of New York were rich stock brokers. Schools don't teach Social History of foreign countries, so, if you can't afford to travel and don't watch foreign programming, you grow up with a warped view of 'others'...

    • @podiceps
      @podiceps 2 роки тому +3

      "...in both countries.."
      Oh dear...

    • @learningtosmile6698
      @learningtosmile6698 2 роки тому

      @@mikeskelly2356 It seems to be the problem with stereotypes and labels that some people tend to place on an entire population. Its easier for them to group people, not realizing that what they claim to be true is not, for everyone.

    • @PVMe1967
      @PVMe1967 2 роки тому

      @@mikeskelly2356 Europe isn't a country but a continent.

  • @Gourgandise
    @Gourgandise 5 років тому +282

    I remember a day in 2000 or so (when online chat rooms were a thing) I got laughed at by Americans dudes for not knowing who Oprah Winfrey was. I didn't dare telling them I had no clue who that Jerry Seinfield was either.
    I guess they thought American TV was watched by the entire world.
    20 years later that memory still makes me smile.

    • @drkronaizl
      @drkronaizl 5 років тому +4

      You didn't dare bringing up someone you didn't know, to talk about how you didn't know them? Seems like you know them.

    • @Gourgandise
      @Gourgandise 5 років тому +12

      I knew his name and face because I saw him in an article of the richer actors in Hollywood (at the time, his salary was crazy big bucks compared to others), but I had never seen Seinfeld. I don't even think it ever aired in France to be honest...

    • @PapiVodka
      @PapiVodka 5 років тому +2

      What a boring childhood you had

    • @Gourgandise
      @Gourgandise 5 років тому +54

      As an adult, I find that Oprah is just an average TV host and an actress and Seinfeld bores me to death. So... I don't think I missed much actually.

    • @stevemorrill1524
      @stevemorrill1524 5 років тому +7

      Gourgandise: "I got laughed at by Americans dudes for not knowing who Oprah Winfrey was. I didn't dare telling them I had no clue who that Jerry Seinfield was either." Well, I'm American. Never saw Oprah or Seinfield, though I knew who they were, sort of. Then again, not owning a television sort of limits me in that regard.

  • @alexbenkowilliams
    @alexbenkowilliams 5 років тому +265

    My typical day:
    1. Go to Austria for shopping
    2. Go to Czech Republic for a swim
    3. Go to Hungary for a dinner
    4. Come back to Slovakia
    (All these countries are about 20- 30 mins away.)
    This is can be done in ONE day...

    • @INdiverCT
      @INdiverCT 5 років тому +7

      WOW!! cool!

    • @PowerSpirit50
      @PowerSpirit50 5 років тому +3

      Maybe I should work in Norway and get paid more.

    • @dickvarga6908
      @dickvarga6908 5 років тому +3

      Concert in Poland?

    • @tjallingappelhof2055
      @tjallingappelhof2055 5 років тому +1

      Yes lol

    • @lmaoroflcopter
      @lmaoroflcopter 5 років тому +16

      As someone who's going to be excluded from freedom of movement with bloody brexit. I'm so jealous.
      I sometimes commute to France or Germany for a few hours just to go to a meeting, head to Eire for a week to do some work there. The fact it's even possible to do so is incredible. I'm absolutely gutted we're leaving the EU.

  • @markreeter6227
    @markreeter6227 4 роки тому +20

    The World: It's a nice place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there.

    • @donaldgoodinson7550
      @donaldgoodinson7550 3 роки тому +5

      I feel the same but opposite.I would rather live in Bangladesh that the US (and I lived there for a year)

    • @jarnol2264
      @jarnol2264 3 роки тому

      @@donaldgoodinson7550 Ok, that did't make sense

    • @donaldgoodinson7550
      @donaldgoodinson7550 3 роки тому +3

      @@jarnol2264 What didn't make sense? Don't you know where Bangladesh is?

  • @allencallahan1478
    @allencallahan1478 Рік тому

    Superb content, brilliantly delivered. Kudos and thanks!

  • @Dsdcain
    @Dsdcain 6 років тому +1263

    I paused the video to comment. Yes I am an American. I have traveled outside the US. I think the biggest reason 50% haven't gone abroad is down to cost. In Europe and the UK you can drive to other countries, or fly very inexpensively to many places in Europe. I wonder how many regular UK citizens (read not rich) have travelled to the US. A transatlantic flight costs quite a bit of money relative to say a holiday flight from UK to, oh say Greece. In the US what a lot of Europeans pay for foreign flights (in continental Europe) is comparable what an American would pay to fly across the country. As for why they don't go to Canada or Mexico I don't know. Though the times I went to Canada, outside Quebec, it felt American, polite, but not much different than the US. Oh well that's my thought. If it's mentioned in your video, well I should have waited. *:-)*

    • @Trevor_Leach
      @Trevor_Leach 6 років тому +104

      Dsdcain exactly true. I’ve been to Canada and Mexico. Canada just feels like America, and Mexico is not a place you want to go to very often. Even in the tourist areas it felt sketchy

    • @freelanceopportunist559
      @freelanceopportunist559 6 років тому +244

      Dsdcain Im from Australia, and we're a very well travelled country, so.....its got more to do with Americans living in their own bubble , than the cost.

    • @michaelg8593
      @michaelg8593 6 років тому +153

      It is costs, it boils down to "why take a flight to Europe when I can just drive or fly to somewhere in the U.S I have not been to"

    • @lordoftheunderpants6075
      @lordoftheunderpants6075 6 років тому +71

      Freelance opportunist ya I agree it has more to do with your priorities. If you want to travel you will. If you don't you won't.

    • @Dsdcain
      @Dsdcain 6 років тому +44

      Freelance opportunist Oh yes of course the bubble how could I forget. By the way how many times have you flown to the US from Australia?

  • @LordBitememan
    @LordBitememan 6 років тому +476

    It's a pity Americans and folks from abroad can't get together more often. They have a lot to bond about. One tried and true passtime your typical American engages in is to complain about the things the American government does. And one tried and true passtime your typical European engages in is to complain about the things the American government does.

    • @BozHogan
      @BozHogan 6 років тому +7

      LordBitememan ;D

    • @johnlord4557
      @johnlord4557 6 років тому +7

      I don't complain about the U.S. government or what it does. Doing so would be a waste of time and effort, as well as pretty pointless. There are plenty of other people doing that anyway, as well as complaining about anything else they can think of. Life is too short. Local news? Foreign news? Any TV programs? Also pretty pointless. Local weather forecasts being about the only exception. They're actually relevant.

    • @blondwiththewind
      @blondwiththewind 6 років тому +7

      Mr. BiteMeMan ... Haha!! Well....I've got to agree with you on that one. Perhaps the folks in the USA and Europeans should do more video phone calls :D

    • @tonyflamingo3444
      @tonyflamingo3444 6 років тому +12

      i mean we have a fruit as our president or at least a president with an intellegence of one but that might be pushing it

    • @rolandz3485
      @rolandz3485 6 років тому

      Ha

  • @jochenstacker7448
    @jochenstacker7448 3 роки тому +4

    I don't quite understand trial by jury.
    "Should we leave the trial to qualified professionals with decades of experience?"
    "Nah, just gather some random people of the street and have them decide".

    • @sm5574
      @sm5574 3 роки тому

      There has been a push (though not a strong one) to move to a system of professional jurors. These would be people with no special status (i.e., lay people), but they would at least understand the law well enough to not fall for lawyer tricks, and they wouldn't be tempted to vote guilty just to get back to work.

    • @catatonicbug7522
      @catatonicbug7522 3 роки тому +2

      The point of a jury is to avoid the judgements of those in power, and otherwise potentially corrupt. Getting 12 semi-random people to listen to both side tell their stories before making a decision means that the people making the judgements are from similar life circumstances as the defendant, and not some private-schooled, pompous blow-hard with a personal agenda.

    • @sm5574
      @sm5574 3 роки тому +1

      @@catatonicbug7522, I understand the point of a jury system. I'm saying that there are problems with its implementation. Also, I am not saying that having professional jurors would be perfect, but you seem to be under the impression that they would be law school students, which is not true. It would just be another government job, like the lady at the DMV who takes your picture for your driver's license. The difference is that they would have rudimentary training in law procedure (along the lines of watching legal-based UA-cam channels and such). Thus, we're talking about typical working-class people.

    • @jochenstacker7448
      @jochenstacker7448 3 роки тому

      @@catatonicbug7522 the whole problem I see with that, is that these people might not understand a very complex case and can be persuaded by a professional waffler who doesn't try the case on evidence but emotional flimflam.
      Would you have scientific papers reviewed by housewives and dentists?

    • @carllarsen
      @carllarsen 3 роки тому +1

      they're not supposed to be random. they are supposed to be your peers. sadly, that seldom happens.

  • @xelnagavoid8195
    @xelnagavoid8195 11 місяців тому +2

    I find that one of the main reasons Americans don’t travel outside the country that much is because there’s not really a reason to. The east coast and west coast are essentially two different countries in their own right. Plus, we have what’s called states that kind of act like their own individual countries anyway. America is not the same everywhere in the country lol

  • @jimfindley1004
    @jimfindley1004 5 років тому +159

    I don't speak for all Americans but i don't plan to travel to other countries because it's extremely expensive and i really can't afford it

    • @shinnam
      @shinnam 5 років тому +24

      I'm sorry you can't afford it, wish I could afford a ticket for you. I learned so much about myself and the world when I left the US. One of the main things is that the US isn't "#1" at everything, and US policies towards other countries can be awfully brutal. Before the Iraq invasion, there was a lot o fnews information to show that there were no WMD's and it was really about oil,but that didn't make it into the US media. Maybe Venezula is the next Iraq.

    • @rodneysmart9774
      @rodneysmart9774 5 років тому +2

      It all depends.

    • @Tim_Shu
      @Tim_Shu 4 роки тому +4

      @Jeri Brown speak for yourself 😂🇳🇿

    • @andyc8508
      @andyc8508 4 роки тому +4

      If you really want to travel abroad volunteering for some charity or foreign aid organisations is a legitimate option (if you don't have a criminal record involving theft, fraud or violence)

    • @jaredfontaine2002
      @jaredfontaine2002 4 роки тому +2

      $200 to $300 one way flight to Paris...

  • @bfree2read
    @bfree2read 5 років тому +143

    On a cruise trip in Europe I was seated at dinner with a small group of older Australians and they asked why Americans travel so rarely outside the USA. I explained that vacation/holiday time is not required by employers and even if paid it is generally only for 2 weeks. So much of their vacation time is reserved for visiting family who are often scattered across the country. Cost is also a factor. If you don't live on one of the coasts it is generally quite expensive to travel overseas. The third reason I have heard by coworkers, friends and family is that America is so large and diverse that they would quite like to explore in country first with additional trips to Canada and Mexico. So trips outside America are generally lower in priority which is really very sad. Americans would be much better if we did travel more - and would hopefully be kinder and more humble.

    • @mischellyann
      @mischellyann 5 років тому +13

      No, it's not sad. People have the right to be interested in what they want. Also, travel costs really aren't that bad. People just want to spend their money on other things, which is again their right.

    • @newbris
      @newbris 5 років тому +14

      I think the suggestion is that people don't always know what they are missing.

    • @ChiaraBells
      @ChiaraBells 5 років тому +7

      I also feel like most people from Europe don't know that plane tickets from the US to Europe are WAY more expensive than the other way round; not sure what it's like if you want to go to other places.

    • @quabledistocficklepo3597
      @quabledistocficklepo3597 5 років тому +5

      Elizabeth S,
      "Americans would be much better if we did travel more - and would hopefully be kinder and more humble."
      You mean like Germans?

    • @archaic9525
      @archaic9525 5 років тому +7

      'America is so large and diverse that they would quite like to explore in country first'. And from that kind of misconception curiosity shuts itself down. You can travel 5000 miles in the US and yet you will find the same squared-street city, happening to have skyscrapers in its center, the same stores implemented at the same place entering the area, suburbs and projects altogether organized the same way, the same language is spoken, the same tv programs and the same currency run the air, etc. In Europe you have a new culture, architecture, language, art, history every few hundreds of kilometers, the same in Asia; this is what these non-travelers dont get: things can be very different to what they are capable to imagine. What you describe are curiosity-lazy people, usually these are arrogant and assertion-provider characters. I by this do not mean that EVERY non-traveller is to store in this drawer, only those who give your argument.

  • @clickbaitcabaret8208
    @clickbaitcabaret8208 3 роки тому +42

    As an American who's traveled abroad, I approve of this video.

    • @rabbit0877
      @rabbit0877 3 роки тому +2

      Agreed.

    • @cister30328
      @cister30328 3 роки тому +2

      With a major exception: he's comparing the US as if we were all alike, and he's combining 50 states as varied as all the states in Europe vs. each individual country. A more reasonable comparison would be to compare, say, Tennessee with Switzerland.

    • @mauricedavis8261
      @mauricedavis8261 3 роки тому

      Me too!!!👍👌😷

  • @atheistmom3591
    @atheistmom3591 2 роки тому

    This was a great video. 👍🏽

  • @cqtaylor
    @cqtaylor 5 років тому +93

    Most Americans don't travel abroad because most Americans can't afford it. It's not like Europe, where there are almost five countries boarding a country, and going abroad is just a train ride away. So chill.

    • @jasontuley284
      @jasontuley284 5 років тому +10

      cqtaylor *cough *cough Canada *cough *cough

    • @cqtaylor
      @cqtaylor 5 років тому +6

      @@jasontuley284 I visited Canada once - nice country! Been to Mexico too. :-)

    • @hogosbazvarakh9220
      @hogosbazvarakh9220 5 років тому +6

      Jason Tuley the US is big, man. Would probably take as long for me to go to Canada as it would for somebody in Spain to go to Russia.

    • @cqtaylor
      @cqtaylor 5 років тому +13

      @Wisewoe Tiswell This is the Internet in a nutshell. I (being an American) said Americans don't travel because most of us can't afford it, then you (someone living in Iceland) proceed to tell me I'm wrong and then your final paragraph states, "The problem is more your labor system doesn't allow people to take time off." What does my "labor system" provide? Income. What does income provide? The purchase of goods and services. If Americans don't have the disposable income (earned from a "labor system") for travel, then we aren't gonna be able to take flights to Japan, Iceland, or Morocco. With limited funds, you have to prioritize your life. If higher education isn't subsidized by a government, if healthcare isn't subsidized by a government, and unemployment rates are relatively higher than that of Iceland, then your average American won't be able to afford trips to go snorkeling along the Great Barrier Reef or eat couscous in Morocco. That's not even taking into account the loss of travel money from exchange rates: presently, its $1 US to .88 on the Euro! We're basically saying the same thing, yet you still manage to warp our similar statements into discord. I've visited 12 countries in my life, speak two languages, and am well aware that those who talk about "valuing the experiences that come from traveling" tend to almost aways be educated. And their education comes from access to money to grant them their education, and - let's be realistic - their jobs. "Global enlightenment" comes from money: being able to afford the plane ticket, and the education that teaches you to drink red wine with beef, white wine with fish, and sparkling water for your expensive salads. The vast majority of Americans would love to travel, if given the chance, but they can't afford it.

    • @hogosbazvarakh9220
      @hogosbazvarakh9220 5 років тому +7

      Wisewoe that's not to say that some Americans don't want to travel outside of their comfort zone. I mean I've travelled a lot, but many don't even consider it because they are in financial insecurity. The US government isn't very wise with its spending and when most people worry about their 20 thousand in school debt or getting an infected cut to have to spend millions at a hospital then travel's pretty low down there.

  • @calangoamorfo1729
    @calangoamorfo1729 6 років тому +108

    ok but why did they used a image of an asian elephant while talking about africa? XD

    • @banon9573
      @banon9573 6 років тому +3

      I was wondering that as well.

    • @freeinformation9869
      @freeinformation9869 6 років тому +1

      LOL

    • @diceman199
      @diceman199 6 років тому +9

      Because somebody just said get me stock footage of an elephant?

    • @stephencheramie3169
      @stephencheramie3169 6 років тому

      calango amorfo because the Asian elephant can carry more coconuts over a longer distance . Monty Python

    • @whocareswho
      @whocareswho 6 років тому +1

      +stephen cheramie What is the airspeed of an unladen elephant?

  • @karenwadwell6007
    @karenwadwell6007 3 роки тому +3

    Here in Australia we use meters, litres and grams but our newborn babies weights are still done in pounds and ounces.

    • @paulineh4019
      @paulineh4019 3 роки тому

      Don't forget 4 by 2s

    • @kimbargwanna5778
      @kimbargwanna5778 3 роки тому

      I work in an Australian hospital and no, the babies in the hospital are weighed using metric and have been in the 25 years I’ve worked there

    • @jurgentreue1200
      @jurgentreue1200 2 роки тому

      @@kimbargwanna5778 ,,, Australian here. Our grand daughter was 2.80 kilos at birth. I don't have a clue what that is in imperial.

  • @koharumi1
    @koharumi1 2 роки тому +2

    Can relate. As a foreigner, America can be so weird.
    Especially about those guns and healthcare.

  • @iamTheSnark
    @iamTheSnark 5 років тому +493

    More guns than people. Hmm. I like the Netherlands better. We have more bicycles than people.

    • @dfuher968
      @dfuher968 5 років тому +7

      The Snark, u also got to slap down the moronic new US Ambassador for his lies and Fake News claims, that was so awesome! And I was soooo jealous. We got a brainless golddigging bimbo, who has only shown her face once since getting here for 1 brief interview, and she was only capable of repeating a handful of Trump lines regardless of the question. Even if we got the chance, theres no fun slapping down some1 so monumentally stupid for lies, when she would probably not even notice it, she was that vacant.

    • @sweatt4237
      @sweatt4237 5 років тому +10

      Which is why you will come crying to us if anyone decides to invade you(which would be easy)

    • @waynecarversr6375
      @waynecarversr6375 5 років тому +2

      I'm glad 23andMe estimates 14% of my DNA comes from Netherlands.

    • @aisuru01
      @aisuru01 5 років тому +11

      You say "us" but are you personally going to help out any country? Even if you're in the military that doesn't mean you're going. You don't get the option of deciding where you're going. If you do, you're not doing the fighting... sooooooo... shaddup.

    • @sweatt4237
      @sweatt4237 5 років тому +10

      The Netherlands will undoubtedly call the US for help in times of war. You are being willfully ignorant while attempting to be clever.

  • @thatswhatshesays
    @thatswhatshesays 6 років тому +196

    I'm an American who's visited 65+ countries. I am also a teacher who gets 11 weeks off per year, which gives me TIME to travel. And I don't have kids, which gives me MONEY to travel. The typical American gets about 2 weeks off per year, with many companies frowning if they take the two weeks all together. Travel to other countries is also quite expensive--not like a typical Brit who can get a cheapy beans on toast trip to Greece for a couple of hundred quid. Not to make excuses for my compatriots, but that does explain a lot of it. I think most people love to travel, but you've got to have the time and money to do it.

    • @SysterYster
      @SysterYster 6 років тому +26

      Holy crap... you Americans only get 2 weeks off a YEAR!!! Shite... we get 4-5 weeks off, 12 if you're a teacher (plus some days here and there). That's so unfair!

    • @SysterYster
      @SysterYster 6 років тому +11

      kira6947
      That's ridiculous! :O

    • @firstnamelastname6016
      @firstnamelastname6016 6 років тому +4

      And mothers hardly get any maternity leave

    • @firstnamelastname6016
      @firstnamelastname6016 6 років тому +5

      Syster Yster 😳
      I'm leaving America if I have a child

    • @SysterYster
      @SysterYster 6 років тому +2

      First name Last name
      You're welcome here. :)

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle7219 3 роки тому +2

    You are correct that most Americans magnify our contribution to the European theater in WW2. We are taught that way in school. We are taught that invasion Normandy was the decisive turning point in the war, which just isn't so. It shortened the war significantly by opening a second front against Germany. No tales are told here of the epic defiance of the U.K. when they stood alone against tyranny. Or the horrendous sacrifice and triumph of the Red Army. Or the crippling resistance of the peoples of occupied Europe.
    You did, however, fail to mention that it was the USA, "with a little help from my friends", who overcame the expansionist predation of the Empire of Japan.

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm 3 роки тому

      Yes, all of that is taught. Weird that you would mention things you don't know.

  • @mihran79
    @mihran79 3 роки тому +9

    Just the moment when I realised an American called 'Mexico' the whole land from Mexico to south America (yes including Chile, Argentina, Brazil, etc) was quite shocking!

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito 2 роки тому

      That would be through South America not to South America.

    • @Luke-pk9fe
      @Luke-pk9fe 2 роки тому

      That never happened

  • @Vikkin1218
    @Vikkin1218 5 років тому +179

    I have no clue why would metric be confusing
    You only divide and multiply by 10 on the x power (so 10, 100, 1000 and so on) while in imperial 12 inch is a feet, and 3 feet is a yard and other useless unites

    • @johnv6781
      @johnv6781 5 років тому +5

      The big problem for us (and in reverse you changing to imperial) is the fact that anything even for us becomes such an odd number in metric or it's such a HUGE leap. Like 77°F is 25°C. I watched a youtube video on why America doesn't change to metric and the simple point is that all original British colonies (which are SOOOOOO many) started out using the imperial (which the name makes sense instead of what we call it (standard) and eventually you just wanted to do things the lazy way and not have to think about anything and just go with a base 10 measurement. Of course that last bit about lazy was a joke and not meant as an insult to anyone. But as is stated (i don't know if in this video or the other) most still think of height in feet and other things like distance and temperature in meters and celsius.

    • @johnv6781
      @johnv6781 5 років тому +6

      @@freddyy5672 be fair, he pointed out in the video that it's not the "whole" world. There are 2 other holdouts.

    • @FlibbidyFleu
      @FlibbidyFleu 5 років тому +3

      Metric is not confusing at all, the guy said it in the video because he was speaking on behalf of U.S. citizens that he has never met and considers dumb. We actually do use and manufacture using the metric system in the U.S. but we still have plenty of old equipment that uses the imperial system, that's why you need two sets of tools in the U.S. In my opinion the imperial system is a better system (actually both are flawed) but everyone wants metric because 10's are "easy" and fractions are "hard". It honestly isn't the issue in the U.S. that it's made out to be. It's not like we are asking foreign manufacturers to make their products in the imperial system. My car for example uses 100% metric parts.

    • @johnv6781
      @johnv6781 5 років тому +3

      @@FlibbidyFleu actually i wasn't talking about metric itself being confusing. If you aren't raised or work somewhere that you're constantly using the conversion from standard to metric, it is very confusing. When someone talks about how far something is in meters or kilometers it means nothing to me as i have no frame of reference. Same goes when someone talks about it being soo hot when it's 35°, to me that's just above freezing. Once again i have no common knowledge of what that is. So that's where my point is, that majority of the common American citizen most likely will have a hard time converting at this point.

    • @FlibbidyFleu
      @FlibbidyFleu 5 років тому +2

      John v I agree that it's confusing to keep track of the different conversion formulas although each one individually is pretty simple. Celsius always throws me but the system makes sense: water freezes at 0 and boils at 100, in fact I really like the idea that metric base units in general are based on real world dimensions of actual things. The bigger issue for me has to do with the division of metric measurements by three which leads to an irrational (infinite) number, in most cases 3.3333 works, but things can get out of wack when dividing measurements in a incremental system.

  • @vladutcornel
    @vladutcornel 6 років тому +124

    We are so used to vacation abroad that when I told my family I was going to vacation in another city that is not on the seaside or the mountains, the only question was "WHY?".
    It turned out to be one of the best vacations I ever had.

    • @numberpirate
      @numberpirate 5 років тому +4

      Yay for using the word vacation vs holiday.

    • @user-fr4cg2xj2w
      @user-fr4cg2xj2w 5 років тому +1

      Adrian-Cornel Borină ya because it’s like an hour away

    • @modisp
      @modisp 5 років тому +2

      Hahahah I can understand you. Lithuania is very small. Unless its vacation at parents in countryside its usually abroad :D

    • @Dunny2k
      @Dunny2k 5 років тому +2

      Holiday*

    • @frostyblade8842
      @frostyblade8842 5 років тому

      thank you

  • @mitzy123
    @mitzy123 3 роки тому +5

    I get 28 paid vacation days in UK plus national holidays but my colleagues who work for the same company in the US get 10 days so that is a major factor. There are no such minimum paid vacation day laws in America that give you more incentives to travel and broaden your horizon

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm 3 роки тому +1

      @@Tolpuddle581 America actually suffers from workaholics, not anti-work...which, doesn't make any sense. If you were anti-worker you would run out of employees pretty quickly. Even when we have vacation, we don't often take it and prefer to work.

  • @michaeloswald1192
    @michaeloswald1192 2 роки тому

    Enjoyed that video.... 😂😂🎈

  • @jipster2020
    @jipster2020 5 років тому +178

    I'm English and live in the USA, and though many of these points are true, they aren't really put in to context.
    The USA is big - not Africa big, but still really, really big. It might not look like it on a map when you drag your finger from Chicago to Detroit because it's an inch on paper, but that's a 5 hour drive without traffic. If you think of what else the rest of the world REALLY knows about the USA that isn't some crap in a movie, it's on a par with what most people here know about Europe.
    Americans (and I mean Americans from the USA - I know it's a continent, but it's easier to say than keep repeating "US citizens") constantly ask me about England, and many can recite their family lineage and are very proud of it. This is at least from my experience in the Midwest, and as stated, the USA is BIG, so I have no idea what it's like in other areas. Most tell me they'd love to travel, and especially to Europe, but as other people have stated in other comments, the USA has no legal requirement for an employer to give anyone a single paid day off, and they also live on a different continent. 4000 miles isn't a cheap travel trip. They may be missing out on a lot of things, but the USA is a truly beautiful and diverse place, and from my experience, the people themselves are still the best thing about it. If anything, I'd recommend people come here and see what the USA also has to offer - just MAKE SURE YOU GET TRAVEL INSURANCE !!!

    • @3506Dodge
      @3506Dodge 5 років тому +1

      What is travel insurance?

    • @jipster2020
      @jipster2020 5 років тому +8

      It's insurance specific to travelling to another country, kind of like car insurance but it will cover any any unexpected mishaps or unforseen circumstances depending on the level of cover you get. Basic level coverage, for example, can cover you for medical bills should you have an accident, up to a certain cost. Higher levels of coverage can cover theft of your possessions, loss of luggage, flight cancellations & possible hotel costs if there are cancellations, legal fees if you get in trouble, and higher medical costs (if you have an accident).
      As always with a "just in case" insurance, read the small print to make sure you know what you're paying for and what's covered, but remember that every country has their own laws and it doesn't mean that if you break your leg that a hospital will fix it for free just because you're on vacation. You could end up with a massive invoice without insurance, especially in the USA. Even requiring an ambulance will cost you money.

    • @3506Dodge
      @3506Dodge 5 років тому +2

      Why is that especially important for non-Americans visiting america?

    • @Joolsiejool
      @Joolsiejool 5 років тому +18

      Thank you! I rarely see nice comments about Americans and travel! I want people from all over the world to come and experience America for what it is and not just what they see in media and movies. Europe in particular seems to look down upon the U.S and think they know everything there is to know about us and what it's like being an American. In turn I think this affects how most Americans feel about foreign travel and are afraid of going to other countries and being publicly labeled as "American" (especially in Europe), as "terrible Americans" we're supposed to be ashamed of our country when we travel abroad. I've experienced this myself in Europe no matter how hard I tried to blend in and speak the language.

    • @cliftonfameree4436
      @cliftonfameree4436 5 років тому +5

      Thank you for this! I'm glad you're able to experience this beautiful place!

  • @PrivateDncr86
    @PrivateDncr86 5 років тому +25

    I am an American, and I would like to travel, but I'm struggling to stay financially solvent as it is...there are so many costs to consider...ALL THE TIME :(

    • @MrLudvig01
      @MrLudvig01 5 років тому +1

      As it is in most other countries. - 'I think it is life.....

    • @Li.Siyuan
      @Li.Siyuan 5 років тому +5

      As a Brit, I do feel sorry for you. Genuinely. You (the USA) need to do two things:
      a. Get rid of the Electoral College system that keeps the real winner of presidential elections out, and
      b. Reform the employment laws to give people the right in statute to at least four weeks paid holiday a year to catch up with the rest of the civilised world.
      I wish you luck but don't hold out much hope of this happening any time soon because of the extreme views of your two main parties.

    • @tchrisou812
      @tchrisou812 5 років тому

      Where are you from TJ?

    • @pr0xZen
      @pr0xZen 5 років тому +1

      Being able to travel is great. But making ends meet should always come first. Don't use credit for extracurricular activities unless your economy can truly, actually handle it.

    • @qdllc
      @qdllc 5 років тому +2

      CDO - The real winner did win. Candidates don’t win based on popular vote. They must get at least 270 electoral votes to win. They know this going in and accept it as it’s mandated in the Constitution. The Electoral College forces a candidate to appeal to a broad variety of voters. Without it, a candidate could focus entirely on the needs of densely populated areas and win every time...no consideration for rural citizens.

  • @kellym3610
    @kellym3610 4 роки тому +1

    I’ve been to Europe. England, France, and Germany. Many people were mean and treated me like I was stupid, so why would I want to travel there again?
    By contrast, I spend 2 years traveling through South Africa and Botswana and the people were amazingly kind and welcoming.

    • @SuperMadsr
      @SuperMadsr 4 роки тому

      Thanks for that we pride ourselves in being friendly. I am a South African. Stayed in Botswana for a few years.

  • @OrealLove
    @OrealLove 4 роки тому +3

    Lmao I’m an American and now I’m a subscriber. Awesome video 😊🤙🏾

  • @pookatim
    @pookatim 5 років тому +101

    America isn't multicultural, it is multi-ethnic.

    • @AnarchoPinkoEuroBr
      @AnarchoPinkoEuroBr 5 років тому +4

      Yep. And Brazil is largely neither, just multiracial. xD

    • @3506Dodge
      @3506Dodge 5 років тому +1

      It's a series of regional cultures.

    • @squarerootof2
      @squarerootof2 5 років тому +1

      multicultural and multi-ethnic = shithole

    • @cranezilla1016
      @cranezilla1016 5 років тому +1

      America is multi bigot.

    • @aguy3082
      @aguy3082 5 років тому

      @@cranezilla1016 lol maybe because we don't live in a country with a population that's 90%+ one race.

  • @nugget3084
    @nugget3084 6 років тому +221

    My american friend wants me to say that the USA saved my country (the netherlands) in WW2
    So yesterday our conversation went like this:
    Me: we are learning about ww2 in history class
    My friend: aha, and who saved you again?
    Me: The Soviet Union, Great Britain and Canada
    My friend: ;-;

    • @rewrew1036
      @rewrew1036 6 років тому +12

      Nugget brilliant 👍

    • @Captiiva
      @Captiiva 5 років тому +14

      Yeah, you win. The USA did nothing in the war. Keep talking smack about people you do not know, and rewriting history. Just an fyi though, the US lost over 400 thousand troops fighting WW2... but do not let me interrupt your fantasy.

    • @codysagod
      @codysagod 5 років тому +96

      Captiiva The poster was specifically referring to their country, the Netherlands, so I’d say they know what they’re talking about. Not to belittle 400,000 American deaths, but why don’t you compare that to 20,000,000 Russian deaths in WWII? Or compare a percentage of the population lost in WWII to any of the other countries? Or look up how much money the U.S. made selling weapons and supplies to both sides in the years WWII was being fought before the U.S. joined in? Or ..... well, you get the idea.

    • @Captiiva
      @Captiiva 5 років тому +3

      yeah, i get the idea. Are you really trying to use russian casualties as a comparison? That is just sad. If you do not think the million Americans who sacrificed did not help save Netherlands... you know what, you win. You guys want to bash America, go right ahead, cherry picking facts does not change history.

    • @mrschimmel
      @mrschimmel 5 років тому +2

      Sovjet-Unie in Nederland? Ik hoorde wel over dat de Polen ons hielpen, maar de Russen hoor ik nu voor het eerst

  • @LyleFrancisDelp
    @LyleFrancisDelp Рік тому +1

    In visiting Ireland and Scotland in 2018 & 2019 respectively, I was well aware of the general perception of Americans by Europeans. That said, I was never treated with anything less then friendliness and respect and courtesy. I did my best to be as respectful as possible...never loud or obnoxious....and I always tipped well to help the server and the local economy. To be honest, I felt happy to be there and see everything. I was truly amazed at the sights and the culture and the people. Both places were true wonders to me and I want to go back. I also want to see more of Europe, as does the wife.

  • @johnnorris7211
    @johnnorris7211 4 роки тому +3

    I am 14 years old and have never left the United States yet I know everything on this list

    • @barneymiller7894
      @barneymiller7894 3 роки тому

      Your generation is alot more aware of what's going on in the rest of the world.

    • @anarchy2118
      @anarchy2118 3 роки тому

      @@barneymiller7894 why

    • @barneymiller7894
      @barneymiller7894 3 роки тому

      @@anarchy2118 Social media, firsthand accounts of events around the world unfiltered by the media.

    • @anarchy2118
      @anarchy2118 3 роки тому

      @@barneymiller7894 yeah,but every generation has access to that if they are alive right now.

    • @barneymiller7894
      @barneymiller7894 3 роки тому

      @@anarchy2118 Ya, but statistically they use it the most. Mostly just my opinion tho 🤷‍♂️

  • @michaeldally8532
    @michaeldally8532 4 роки тому +48

    That elephant when you talk about Africa is from a completely different continent!!

    • @stefanmuntean5289
      @stefanmuntean5289 3 роки тому +2

      Probably 90% of the world doesn't get the difference, sorry

    • @merrittmarcus13
      @merrittmarcus13 3 роки тому

      Depends on how you define continent. Lol

    • @donaldgoodinson7550
      @donaldgoodinson7550 3 роки тому +1

      @@stefanmuntean5289 You are wrong.More than 10% of the population live in Africa and India and they would know the difference.

    • @davidchiles5331
      @davidchiles5331 3 роки тому

      What??? there is a African elephant and a Indian elephant, get your facts right

    • @kingmobmor7656
      @kingmobmor7656 3 роки тому

      And so the guy riding it as well?

  • @hemidas
    @hemidas 6 років тому +295

    Why, oh why did I had to look at the comment section?

    • @4besideyouintime
      @4besideyouintime 6 років тому +27

      to experience multicultural stupidity

    • @Troglodyted
      @Troglodyted 6 років тому +4

      Your opinion is wrong!!!! Reeeee!!!!

    • @PrincessNinja007
      @PrincessNinja007 6 років тому +9

      My favorite type of exchange going on in the comments:
      "If you never leave the country, you'll never interact with people from other places!" proclaim the Dutchman and Aussie, in unison, to the American.

    • @nathanmckenzie904
      @nathanmckenzie904 6 років тому +5

      Because this is where the fun is

    • @Dorianin1
      @Dorianin1 6 років тому +4

      Ciara...the vast majority of both of those nations have passports, and travel extensively. Same as most developed nations...save one. Guess which one?

  • @SPQSpartacus
    @SPQSpartacus 4 роки тому +20

    The metric system is logical, the measures have internal coordination with each other. Example: 10cm x 10cm x 10cm cube equals 1 litre. 1 litre of water weighs 1 kilogram. And so on.
    It is completely superior, that is Why Everyone Else uses it. But one country insists on remaining outdated and impractical.

    • @nonebiz2132
      @nonebiz2132 3 роки тому +4

      Only because it is EXTREMELY expensive to convert everything over...

    • @Lawrence330
      @Lawrence330 3 роки тому +1

      Children have been learning both in schools for decades, probably close to half a century. Science and engineering employ the metric system, and various foodstuffs are sold with metric labeling.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 3 роки тому

      Once you get beyond the basics, this is all irrelevant.

    • @BNails
      @BNails 3 роки тому

      @@nonebiz2132 Which is why it should have been started a long time ago and slowly integrated before pushing the imperial system out.
      Do a sudden shift, and it's expensive. Do a gradual changeover and it happens without anyone really thinking about it.

    • @nonebiz2132
      @nonebiz2132 3 роки тому

      @@BNails The problem is all our old documents. Imagine converting land/property lines from feet to meters. Do you do this with all the old deeds, or just when a new property exchange happens?
      How do you handle how many number are significant, I.e. 40 feet is 12.192 meters, etc...
      Slowly migrating isn't the problem, it's what you do with all the old stuff and how you convert it...

  • @rtsharlotte
    @rtsharlotte 4 роки тому +21

    I thought he would mention education, healthcare and labour rights when Simon said we have a poor opinion about the USA

  • @DaimonAnimations
    @DaimonAnimations 6 років тому +70

    In Mexico nobody thinks they U.S. was the savior of WWII, Mexicans believe it was between England and Russia. Americans was just a support role but it wasn't the main power behind it.

    • @DallasMike424
      @DallasMike424 6 років тому +11

      Yes, the same Mexico who didn’t think the Japanese or Germans were evil enough to fight. Right.
      Things would be a lot better if Mexico quit sponging off the United States.

    • @MonkeyButtMovies1
      @MonkeyButtMovies1 5 років тому +13

      No, you're thinking of Americans

    • @theodorbutters141
      @theodorbutters141 5 років тому +6

      What about all the foreign aid that the Russians used to fight the war that came from the US? One third of all the trucks used by the Red Army were american made, not to mention huge ammounts of food and ammo, costing $600B in today's money or around how much we currently spend per year on our ENTIRE military. And that's just foreign aid, you're not taking into account the Pacific war or the fact that without the constant delivery of supplies from the US on a massive fleet of ships, England couldn't survive cut off from the rest of the world by german u-boats. Sure, Russia endured the ultimate sacrifice, but without support from the US, the allies could not win unless you somehow take Japan out of the equation, and even then the chances Russia and England could survive on there own were pretty slim.

    • @ricardosoto5770
      @ricardosoto5770 5 років тому +2

      True, but the price in blood was paid by the Russians. The Pacific was basically an American Show, with sone Aussi and Brit help.

    • @competence5324
      @competence5324 5 років тому +5

      Wait you mean the Mexico who would have had a military alliance with Germany it wasn’t for the Zimmerman note being intercepted and countless civilian ships being sunk by the Germans in WW1, I’m sorry the United States only joined after all the countless offenses against American interest. I think Otto Von Bismarck said it best “The Americans a very lucky people. They are bordered to the north and south by weak neighbors and the east and west by fish” that statement still stands true today tbh

  • @martiansyrup4331
    @martiansyrup4331 5 років тому +96

    Never left America, knew all of these

    • @Vagus32000
      @Vagus32000 4 роки тому +1

      #9 is why I probably will never travel outside the US. Tyranny at it’s finest

    • @bernges7228
      @bernges7228 4 роки тому +3

      @@Vagus32000 Well how are you supposed to form an opinion for yourself then?

    • @craigbenz4835
      @craigbenz4835 4 роки тому +2

      He pretty much convinced me to stay in the U. S. I can't believe his goal was otherwise.

    • @leebee5361
      @leebee5361 4 роки тому +1

      And what? That we now know that you watch a lot of telly??? Well, I'm sure THATS a revelation!!!

    • @j.a.weishaupt1748
      @j.a.weishaupt1748 4 роки тому +1

      Adam Vagus *its

  • @flikkeringlightz7472
    @flikkeringlightz7472 3 роки тому +7

    My first thought was: the world is not flat.

  • @isabellagreen3046
    @isabellagreen3046 3 роки тому +1

    I think the main reason Americans dont travel abroad is not only that the cost can be too high, since it can be fairly affordable with a little bit of research and timing when it comes to booking, its more that most Americans dont get paid vacation or any vacation time at all for that matter. I live in Germany, and I can fly a round trip to Barcelona for ten days, pay 50 for the flights, and 15 a night for a nice air bnb, and will still technically be getting paid for it all. Theres a privilege in having that kind of ease of mind when it comes to traveling.

  • @desktopkitty823
    @desktopkitty823 6 років тому +63

    Americans who never travel abroad also think there are huge differences from one state to the next. I have parents from different countries, who themselves have family members in other countries, which resulted in me spending my childhood having lived in several different places from Japan to Texas. One time when I was going to high school in Texas, a girl who had lived in Texas her entire life described Oklahoma like it was some kind of other foreign nation. I told her, "I've been to Oklahoma. It's not that different from Texas." And she demanded that I was wrong and that Oklahoma was vastly different from Texas. Well, I hope she never travels to Iceland, Japan, or England or she might die of a heart attack from the shock.

    • @danielgallagher4251
      @danielgallagher4251 5 років тому +4

      Desktop Kitty well, Oklahomans and Texans hate each other so maybe that’s why but overall I agree. You usually have to travel two or three stars in order to get a change in culture

    • @blakgumshoo
      @blakgumshoo 5 років тому

      @@danielgallagher4251 Yeah, you won't get very far telling a Texan that their state is the same as California (or vice versa). But you can't tell me otherwise that North and South Dakota are two totally different states with two totally different cultures.

    • @danielgallagher4251
      @danielgallagher4251 5 років тому

      I would agree, but there are states with shockingly different life styles and cultures even though they share a border(Louisiana and Alabama ie).

    • @CrazyMazapan
      @CrazyMazapan 5 років тому +3

      I agree. I've travelled extensively about the US and one thing that never fails to amaze me is how uniform the country really is.

    • @mischellyann
      @mischellyann 5 років тому

      daniel gallagher, Louisiana and Alabama don't share a border.

  • @mukson_pautinka3413
    @mukson_pautinka3413 5 років тому +44

    You are saying these things about European versions of WW2 as if they are wrong. The brits helped with supplies fought in the sea and temporarily occupied the luftwaffe whilst the Soviet Union stood up against the biggest assault absorbed and decimated the German army. If anything the USSR crippled the Nazis and deserve most of the credit, not the Yankees that arrived once Germany was on the run, and along with Britain and their allies rushed through an undermanned France only to than claim they were the saviors

    • @snowcrest7863
      @snowcrest7863 5 років тому +2

      Maxim......We've all heard that Fairy Tale...……..

    • @DerSenat
      @DerSenat 5 років тому

      Maxim i agree with you

    • @chimpchillin2908
      @chimpchillin2908 5 років тому

      But Americans didn't fight in the European theater we fought the Japanese you know the guys you didn't fight we crippled an entire nation in under a month we dropped a bomb and slaughtered 2 cities to stop the casualties being suffered and to bring Japan to a knee after that we start diverting more units to the other front but our battle was with Japan.

  • @dchristensen777
    @dchristensen777 3 роки тому +2

    In the USA many people cling to their guns the same as a 2 year old child clings to a teddy bear.

    • @RossOneEyed
      @RossOneEyed 3 роки тому +1

      If you study the history of most European countries, then look at when the Constitution was written, most of it makes perfect sense. Read Locke, Hobbes and Rousseau, then the writings of Adams and Jefferson. The US Constitution makes a great deal more sense afterward.

    • @uni4rm
      @uni4rm 3 роки тому

      Weird flex. Lots of places allow ownership of firearms. What about Marines and Special forces of the militaries around the world? Are they also teddy-clutching toddlers? Yeah, didn't think so. Take another swig of that soy milk. It'll be ok.

    • @kenchristie9214
      @kenchristie9214 3 роки тому

      @@uni4rm Approx. 33,000 people die every year from firearm deaths. Why is that of no concern for you?

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 3 роки тому +2

    Americans talk about the war with UK as a pinnacle moment. In the UK they've had so many colonies revolt that the US is just another on the list.

    • @griffing1799
      @griffing1799 2 роки тому

      maybe because it was a pinnacle moment??? how are you trying to say that a country teaching it’s citizens about gaining it’s independence is something odd?

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 2 роки тому

      @@griffing1799 - Not something odd! But definitely nothing that other than the interested would notice! That's the point!
      For you guys and gals in US, it was a pinnacle moment of your history! For the rest of the world. Well, let's say that is not even mentioned on history classes!
      As an example. In my own country, with almost 900 years as an established and defined nation! The American revolution is, honestly not even worth a chapter on the history books! Just a localized event!

  • @randomslavicguy2166
    @randomslavicguy2166 6 років тому +26

    Did i heard WWII? So let me tell you about this country named Poland...

    • @allanpatterson7471
      @allanpatterson7471 5 років тому

      Harsh days I knew a fellow who refused to speak at all for his internment in Poland.

  • @giorgigogolashvili3097
    @giorgigogolashvili3097 6 років тому +49

    I think anyone who doesn't travel is missing out

    • @GoodVideos4
      @GoodVideos4 5 років тому +1

      Many people also don't want to travel.

    • @smokeydoke100
      @smokeydoke100 5 років тому

      A big reason that we don't like to travel is that our transportation system sucks. Flying is expensive, cramped and intrusive. We only have one nationwide rail system, and that's slow and unreliable with old, outdated vehicles. And like our rail system, buses only travel domestically, and frankly, you're likely to end up sharing a seat with someone who's either drunk, strung out or hasn't bathed in a month.

  • @ritacobb3063
    @ritacobb3063 3 роки тому +1

    When I was younger, I lived in other countries. What this showed me not just how big the continent of Africa is but how many different countries and peoples there are. I worked with a teacher from Sierra Leone , she told me that well over 100 different languages were spoken in her country. I guess a lot of us are unaware of the complexity of our world.

  • @edwinholcombe2741
    @edwinholcombe2741 3 роки тому +2

    I am an American citizen who has lived overseas for more than half my life - mainly in east Asian countries. I miss my country and want to return to be an American in America. I'm stranded now because of the pandemic but hope to at least visit when the situation permits.

  • @38josue91
    @38josue91 5 років тому +93

    For a British person to visit Spain is like for a New Yorker to visit Illinois. European people just don't get how big the United States really is.

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini 5 років тому +8

      But the US is one of most popular destinations for Brits. Spain is a destination for a long weekend to many of us.

    • @Endoptic
      @Endoptic 5 років тому +4

      @@ethelmini But they tend to only visit certain big cities that don't even require driving. For most places, cab fare would be insane to move around much at all, and subways don't exist because that'd be even more insane in costs to produce or maintain. I've been noting EUs flipping kilometers as longer than miles even, somewhat recently...

    • @jayteegamble
      @jayteegamble 5 років тому +16

      @@ethelmini We have a new English pharmacist at work. She told us her plans for the weekend were to drive to the Grand Canyon with her kids. We were like "Um, there's no way you can drive there and back in 1 weekend." Minneapolis to the Grand Canyon is 1600 miles. It's like London to Istanbul. Her logic was that we are in "the Midwest" and the Grand Canyon is in the Midwest so it can't be that far away.

    • @TheRealDrJoey
      @TheRealDrJoey 5 років тому +11

      @@jayteegamble The Grand Canyon isn't close to ANYTHING, except, of course, the Grand Canyon!

    • @Musketeer009
      @Musketeer009 5 років тому +1

      @@TheRealDrJoey Isn't the Grand Canyon close to the centre of the Earth?

  • @aclstudios
    @aclstudios 5 років тому +18

    So I'm gonna lecture everyone about the traveling thing, about some points that have not been made in the comments.
    "BUT WHAT ABOUT AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND??" gets brought up a lot, since both share no borders (being islands), and people from those places travel a lot.
    You have to remember, those countries treat their workers way better. Minimum wage is way higher than in the USA, and they get paid way more on average over there. They also have way more time off than we do. And of course, don't charge the insane fees at their airports, travel agencies, etc. that a post-9/11 USA does.
    All of those factor into why it's hard to travel coming from the USA.
    ALSO: a lot of us are raised to be xenophobic by our families. It sucks, but it's really hard to undo this line of thinking.

    • @AnarchoPinkoEuroBr
      @AnarchoPinkoEuroBr 5 років тому +1

      Also. as a Brazilian: those two countries have single-payer universal healthcare (like my own and five other 'third world' Latin American countries...), don't circumcise their boys at birth, use the normal system for dates and higher education there isn't as unbearably expensive (in Brazil there are free Universities, both funded by the Federation and the states, not sure about Australia and New Zealand).

    • @sallyannerenolds5499
      @sallyannerenolds5499 5 років тому

      Actually, Australia shares a maritime border with New Guinea which 99.99% of Australians are unaware of. Indigenous people of both countries have freedom of movement because of family ties. There is also a maritime border with Indonesia. Both are in the Torres Strait.

  • @gunfighterzero
    @gunfighterzero 4 роки тому +1

    it cracks me up that people from the UK constantly tout the metric system as superior yet most videos i see of actual people from the UK describe something they still use miles, acres, imperial gallons and stone

  • @davecannabis
    @davecannabis 2 роки тому +2

    there are reasons american are called "Septic Tanks" in Australia, most of which are covered in this video
    a favourite Aussie joke is
    Q... whats the difference between a blue eyed american and a brown eyed american ?
    A... the blue eyed one isnt quite full yet

    • @ChadwickTheChad
      @ChadwickTheChad 2 роки тому

      Oops, you accidentally wandered onto the wrong site - this is for Americans.

  • @agcons
    @agcons 6 років тому +204

    It would behoove some people to realise that citizens of geograhically large countries have much further to travel, with much higher costs, than citizens of smaller countries if they wish to travel outside of their countries. As a Canadian who lives three time zones away from the rest of my relatives, I'll bet that I've travelled a vastly larger number of kilometres than most Europeans on my annual visits over the last 18 years - all of it without leaving Canada. My most frequent "international" visits have been, unsurprisingly, to the United States.

    • @johnnypopper-pc3ss
      @johnnypopper-pc3ss 6 років тому

      agcons How many miles ? 🤣

    • @kenlee5015
      @kenlee5015 6 років тому +9

      agcons same here, in reverse of course. I've visited Canada many times while living in Seattle, but it's too expensive to travel internationally by plane.

    • @agcons
      @agcons 6 років тому +17

      Miles? What are these "miles" of which you speak?

    • @4besideyouintime
      @4besideyouintime 6 років тому +15

      i don't think the point was about distance, but experiencing other cultures. as vast as usa might be, some european countries can be way more multicultural (despite being very small) just because of the different influences different empires had on them over the milleniums (which is easy, since usa isn't that old of a country in comparison)

    • @conorrooney2669
      @conorrooney2669 6 років тому +7

      agcons I don't know the stats but I'd be confident that countless more Europeans have visited America than the other way around.. Europe has hundreds of cultures and languages, US/Canada has one

  • @GLazarus604
    @GLazarus604 5 років тому +24

    Correction: Canadians think in a sort of hybrid system like the British. Canadians use kms for distance but feet and pounds for height and weight, though on our gov’t ID it shows cms and kilos.

    • @Luubelaar
      @Luubelaar 5 років тому +1

      Australia officially uses metric, but we still often refer to a person's height in feet and inches, and so on. So we use a weird mish-mash too.

    • @spazzen
      @spazzen 5 років тому

      @@Luubelaar That's only often because older people frown at you if you say your height in cm. Its never on official documents though and i don't know anyone under the age of 60 who couldn't tell you their height in feet and inches, but I also know most people have no Idea how to convert between the systems, they merely know their own height in feet and inches.
      Also mothers are always talking about their babies in pounds and ounces, might as well tell me it weighs the same as a stack of pancakes for all it means to me.

  • @abigailgerlach5443
    @abigailgerlach5443 3 роки тому +2

    Comparing a single country to an entire continent is a bit disingenuous
    don't you think? Choose China or Russia. Then you have a point.