Having grown up in New England, I know that people there are more direct. We moved to the South when I was 12, and the girls there are a special kind of rude. They'll insult you to your face, but make it sound nice. It's an art form. Bless your heart.😂
end of the day it doesnt matter. they are women who live in the south. they dont even have the right to decide if they want a child or not lol. they are second class citizens compared to women of the north. they probably arent allowed to be openly aggressive.
Thank you Kabir for defending us American women. I am not a rude person bc i cant tolerate rude. The words "please and thank you" are very easy to say.
Merry Christmas, Kabir! I like how much you laughed. My spouse has 30 Chicago relatives- I go in with a flak jacket to family events. I just try really hard not to interact with people when I am in NYC. In contrast, the ladies in front and behind me at my last grocery line all shared what items we were buying to specifically add to our dogs' food, what breeds we owned and how many people were coming to our homes for Christmas.
This is the deal with Rhode Island- most locals have to put up with entitled people that go there to their Ivy league schools ( Brown University & Rhode Island School of Art and Design, for example). For about 150+ years they've had to have the uber wealthy have "cottages" in Newport, RI, so these people are a pain in the butt. Most locals are blue collar and a bit resentful. Understandable. Growing up in California & still living there, its a lot of pressure to be able to make enough to live her and at the same time look like you are mellow while doing it. The median house price in my area is just under 1.5 mil, so that takes some serious money to afford the lifestyle. People work long hours to afford the lifestyle. The California cool vibe is real but not easy to maintain. Yes, in LA there are people living in their own personal reality show, commonly called being a Main Character. Florida has attracted the crazies for years. The police take absolutely ZERO nonsense from people who want to mess with them or local laws.
Not only that, there are the guys from Boston who drive down to Providence to go to the clubs. They think they're sophisticated until... they get cut down to size by Providence women.
@@JIMBEARRI Thanks for your comment! I actually thought RI was pretty cool when I was there. I was doing the regular tourist thing in Newport, but I could pick up on the local vibe. I did find the worst drivers were in Mass & the best in Maine. Actually if I could handle the weather, I'd move to Maine, its a beautiful area.
I spent most of my childhood Summers in Maryland, I experienced what I would call the Mid Atlantic freeze it's not a direct rudeness it's a coldness that fades away when you get to know people. I experienced more rudeness in NYC where people didn't care I was in a wheelchair they just pushed past me and my family.
I'm formally from New Jersey and the women were not all that rude they can be but not commonly, not in my area anyway. I live in NW Florida now, and so far, everyone has been nice.
As a fourth generation Jersey Girl, I can honestly say that we're only rude when it's called for. Usually when someone else is rude first. Then it's no holds barred. We can be the sweetest girl ever, but if you're rude to us, we get...more than slightly cranky. 🙂
@hippiemama52 😆 Tell me about it! I was a 2nd generation (my parents brought us there when I was 12) Jersey boy and if you got under my skin you got city cabbie Tony Soprano or quiet crazy. I lived 10 minutes west of Englishtown, 20 mins east of Princeton, 20 mins NW of Great Adventure, and about an hour NW of Seaside Heights.
Trust me Massachusetts isn't that bad at all. So many of walk past me and always smile and say Good Morning if it's morning. They hold the door open for me. Probably because I have bone cancer in my spine and it's hard to walk with my walker. So strangers talk to me and help me. Strangers so sweet to my.
That’s not fair to say about NJ women. It is VERY rude to approach the bagel store counter without deciding what to order first. Step aside so the other people in line can get their bagels and be on their way! Maybe speaking up makes us impatient, but not rude.
No wonder Aussies, including our ladies, are so well liked internationally. Queen Mary of Denmark, who is married to the ruling king Frederick for one. She's originally from the Australian state of Tasmania. The Danes love her, and we love Frederick. We adopted him as an Honorary Aussie years ago. Rude behaviour is unacceptable in Australia. Behave like that, and people will avoid you like the plague. We'd be too polite to call you that b word. But we'd be thinking about it and giving you a dirty look. Not too long ago, an American woman became a social media sensation for all of the wrong reasons. When footage of her behaving like a total Karen to a lady checkout operator in a supermarket was posted and went viral. Be a polite lady if you visit Australia or be prepared to be punished by the Aussies. Our biggest insult is to be called "Un-Australian." It has to do with your attitude and not where you're from. I know of one Australian born singer whose career still hasn't recovered after being called that over a decade ago.
I live in Western NY, Buffalo area. I can tell you that the rest of the state definitely gets a bad rep bc of the city. The across the whole state thing is a bit of a farce imo lol
Never, ever get in line at a deli or pizzeria without already knowing what you want to order. I do not care where you live in the US. Stay away from the ordering line unless you are really ready to order. Figure out what you want well beforehand. Holding up the line makes you the rude person, not us.
@@squeasel09 Maybe you should learn to decide before entering the location? Stop believing that you have the right to hold up the line for everyone else. If you do not know what you want, do not get on line until you do. My hour lunch should not become two hours because you do not know how to decide beforehand.
@benjamindouglas862 I don't care about your time. There, that's rude. Me deciding what I want, when I've also already waited my time in line, isn't being rude
@ESUSAMEX not everybody is a regular, item's change consistently, whoever is ordering also waited in line. Maybe...just maybe...don't be a self centered prick?
I'm from Sacramento in northern CA, and I feel like that score was all about southern CA. From Fresno down to San Diego, basically. The northern 60% of the state is, for the most part, only like that where the rich people live, and those enclaves are pretty exclusive.
@@tinagarcia3571 That's part of the wine country so its allied with rich people. There are many parts of Northern California that is really kick back. Lots of small towns- like Red Bluff, that are very old school. People in Oregon have their own attitudes, don't even get me started on Portland ( AKA Portlandia). I have family in Bend and there is an attitude there too.
Are you and your family Native Calis? Because whenever I see someone blasting a grocery checker, bus driver, et cetera, I ask them where they are originally from. Not once have they said they were born here like me and my son. Who is currently having to endure extreme racism in your parts. Is there anyplace safe for a Native American to go to in the United States?
@@mtngrl5859 I live in a village of 700 people nowhere near any cities in Oregon, but the funny thing is you just proved Briggs right. Your snootiness is show LOL!
@@tinagarcia3571 It's not snootiness, it's creating context. Let's compare like to like. If you live in a tiny town of 700 people, one can't compare that to a bustling city. Let's take Sacramento, that is the capitol of California, its going to have a complete different experience than to your small village. If one lives in a small town, people are invariably friendly. So, it's not representative of the entire state. My sister lives in Bend, Oregon and it's not or less friendly than many similar areas in California or the East Coast. I choose to live in a smaller town and I find people to be friendly, but I also have a career that allows me to be location independent. Many people don't have that option, so they adjust to the circumstances of being around many people.
California, New York, anywhere you have large cities the people in general are ten times more rude. Stuck up, think they're better than everyone else, etc
Having grown up in New England, I know that people there are more direct. We moved to the South when I was 12, and the girls there are a special kind of rude. They'll insult you to your face, but make it sound nice. It's an art form. Bless your heart.😂
I'm a fellow New Englander born,raised and still live. I agree we are not rude , and we are direct.
end of the day it doesnt matter. they are women who live in the south. they dont even have the right to decide if they want a child or not lol. they are second class citizens compared to women of the north. they probably arent allowed to be openly aggressive.
I moved South as an adult and had to figure out the two forms of bless your heart. One is true sugar sympathy, but the other cuts your jugular.
I heard that in some countries, people are rude to foreigners because they don’t care if you don’t ever come back.
Thank you Kabir for defending us American women. I am not a rude person bc i cant tolerate rude. The words "please and thank you" are very easy to say.
Merry Christmas, Kabir! I like how much you laughed. My spouse has 30 Chicago relatives- I go in with a flak jacket to family events. I just try really hard not to interact with people when I am in NYC. In contrast, the ladies in front and behind me at my last grocery line all shared what items we were buying to specifically add to our dogs' food, what breeds we owned and how many people were coming to our homes for Christmas.
I'm a NYC women, I wouldn't say we are rude, yes, direct. I worked in hospitality and always had a blast with tourists.
This is the deal with Rhode Island- most locals have to put up with entitled people that go there to their Ivy league schools ( Brown University & Rhode Island School of Art and Design, for example). For about 150+ years they've had to have the uber wealthy have "cottages" in Newport, RI, so these people are a pain in the butt. Most locals are blue collar and a bit resentful. Understandable.
Growing up in California & still living there, its a lot of pressure to be able to make enough to live her and at the same time look like you are mellow while doing it. The median house price in my area is just under 1.5 mil, so that takes some serious money to afford the lifestyle. People work long hours to afford the lifestyle. The California cool vibe is real but not easy to maintain. Yes, in LA there are people living in their own personal reality show, commonly called being a Main Character.
Florida has attracted the crazies for years. The police take absolutely ZERO nonsense from people who want to mess with them or local laws.
Not only that, there are the guys from Boston who drive down to Providence to go to the clubs. They think they're sophisticated until... they get cut down to size by Providence women.
@@JIMBEARRI Thanks for your comment! I actually thought RI was pretty cool when I was there. I was doing the regular tourist thing in Newport, but I could pick up on the local vibe. I did find the worst drivers were in Mass & the best in Maine. Actually if I could handle the weather, I'd move to Maine, its a beautiful area.
@@mtngrl5859 What I said about the Boston crowd in Providence applies equally in Newport. They have to be cut down to size in Newport as well.
"Mispronounce 'skull kill'??" LMAO. School kill--Mr. UA-cam expert. SCHOOL KILL
I spent most of my childhood Summers in Maryland, I experienced what I would call the Mid Atlantic freeze it's not a direct rudeness it's a coldness that fades away when you get to know people. I experienced more rudeness in NYC where people didn't care I was in a wheelchair they just pushed past me and my family.
I'm formally from New Jersey and the women were not all that rude they can be but not commonly, not in my area anyway. I live in NW Florida now, and so far, everyone has been nice.
As a fourth generation Jersey Girl, I can honestly say that we're only rude when it's called for. Usually when someone else is rude first. Then it's no holds barred. We can be the sweetest girl ever, but if you're rude to us, we get...more than slightly cranky. 🙂
@hippiemama52 😆 Tell me about it! I was a 2nd generation (my parents brought us there when I was 12) Jersey boy and if you got under my skin you got city cabbie Tony Soprano or quiet crazy.
I lived 10 minutes west of Englishtown, 20 mins east of Princeton, 20 mins NW of Great Adventure, and about an hour NW of Seaside Heights.
Trust me Massachusetts isn't that bad at all. So many of walk past me and always smile and say Good Morning if it's morning. They hold the door open for me. Probably because I have bone cancer in my spine and it's hard to walk with my walker. So strangers talk to me and help me. Strangers so sweet to my.
Hawaii is to laid back to be rude
Wow. There is 40 other states! Here's to his next video: 10 states with the rudest men. Lol
New York, , California are probably top 2…lol
Pittsburgh, PA 100% correct 😂🤦🏿♀️
Yes! Connecticut! 😂
The natives in Florida doesn't act like that we just don't give a crap how much you like us
That’s not fair to say about NJ women. It is VERY rude to approach the bagel store counter without deciding what to order first. Step aside so the other people in line can get their bagels and be on their way! Maybe speaking up makes us impatient, but not rude.
All this just makes for a good challenge.
Notice how it’s either the northeast or high populations
I think men are ruder than women in California. But people pretty much leave each other alone.
We Texans are not rude. Hell i as a woman I even open doors for men with no thank you. Just say fU under my breathe. Lol
No wonder Aussies, including our ladies, are so well liked internationally. Queen Mary of Denmark, who is married to the ruling king Frederick for one. She's originally from the Australian state of Tasmania. The Danes love her, and we love Frederick. We adopted him as an Honorary Aussie years ago. Rude behaviour is unacceptable in Australia. Behave like that, and people will avoid you like the plague. We'd be too polite to call you that b word. But we'd be thinking about it and giving you a dirty look. Not too long ago, an American woman became a social media sensation for all of the wrong reasons. When footage of her behaving like a total Karen to a lady checkout operator in a supermarket was posted and went viral. Be a polite lady if you visit Australia or be prepared to be punished by the Aussies. Our biggest insult is to be called "Un-Australian." It has to do with your attitude and not where you're from. I know of one Australian born singer whose career still hasn't recovered after being called that over a decade ago.
i dont know anyone who thinks aussies are nice lol. they are seen as "ruder/trashier british people" to the rest of the world.
What?
NY and LA
I live in Western NY, Buffalo area. I can tell you that the rest of the state definitely gets a bad rep bc of the city. The across the whole state thing is a bit of a farce imo lol
I treat NYC and NY as two different animals.
Is there a video of the American states with the rudest men?
Never, ever get in line at a deli or pizzeria without already knowing what you want to order. I do not care where you live in the US. Stay away from the ordering line unless you are really ready to order. Figure out what you want well beforehand. Holding up the line makes you the rude person, not us.
Being indecisive or not knowing a menu doesn't make someone "rude". Maybe learn some patience or take a zoloft?
@@squeasel09 Maybe you should learn to decide before entering the location? Stop believing that you have the right to hold up the line for everyone else. If you do not know what you want, do not get on line until you do. My hour lunch should not become two hours because you do not know how to decide beforehand.
@benjamindouglas862 I don't care about your time. There, that's rude. Me deciding what I want, when I've also already waited my time in line, isn't being rude
@ESUSAMEX not everybody is a regular, item's change consistently, whoever is ordering also waited in line. Maybe...just maybe...don't be a self centered prick?
@@ESUSAMEX check the "newest" section for my reply. I won't type it again
Some real charmers here.
I'm from Jersey.It's not nice out here
My last SIX neighbors- two Cali, two NJ and two Memphis. Welcome to Nashville.
I'm from Sacramento in northern CA, and I feel like that score was all about southern CA. From Fresno down to San Diego, basically. The northern 60% of the state is, for the most part, only like that where the rich people live, and those enclaves are pretty exclusive.
Sorry nope , born and raised in Sonoma CA. , Smug and rude from San Francisco up, extremely PASSIVE AGGRESIVE. I live in Oregon now what a relief.
@@tinagarcia3571 That's part of the wine country so its allied with rich people. There are many parts of Northern California that is really kick back. Lots of small towns- like Red Bluff, that are very old school. People in Oregon have their own attitudes, don't even get me started on Portland ( AKA Portlandia). I have family in Bend and there is an attitude there too.
Are you and your family Native Calis? Because whenever I see someone blasting a grocery checker, bus driver, et cetera, I ask them where they are originally from. Not once have they said they were born here like me and my son. Who is currently having to endure extreme racism in your parts. Is there anyplace safe for a Native American to go to in the United States?
@@mtngrl5859 I live in a village of 700 people nowhere near any cities in Oregon, but the funny thing is you just proved Briggs right. Your snootiness is show LOL!
@@tinagarcia3571 It's not snootiness, it's creating context. Let's compare like to like. If you live in a tiny town of 700 people, one can't compare that to a bustling city. Let's take Sacramento, that is the capitol of California, its going to have a complete different experience than to your small village. If one lives in a small town, people are invariably friendly. So, it's not representative of the entire state. My sister lives in Bend, Oregon and it's not or less friendly than many similar areas in California or the East Coast.
I choose to live in a smaller town and I find people to be friendly, but I also have a career that allows me to be location independent. Many people don't have that option, so they adjust to the circumstances of being around many people.
Hawaii? Alaska? Really?
That’s just dumb. Rude women live everywhere. When you post about it, though, I see Mommy issues.
How much do you get paid to be a Licensed UA-cam Therapist?
@ zip, zero, zilch. You?
1st
Congrats
California, New York, anywhere you have large cities the people in general are ten times more rude. Stuck up, think they're better than everyone else, etc
But having said that 99% of americans are very nice people. Nicer than you will find most other places.