I was happy to see another video review. Thanks. You made an interesting comment near the end regarding risk takers who left Europe in the 1800's for the U.S. That would be my family, including one set of Grandparents who came on a leaky ship, who emigrated from Northern Germany to Wisconsin where they established very large and successful farming operations. I've been to their home locations in Germany and heard the stories. They just couldn't make any progress in Germany where they were held back by the economic system in place and frequent wars at the time.
It's inspiring to see the potential for innovation in Europe with the rise of initiatives like the European Innovation Council Accelerator and the support from leaders like Daniel Ek. While there are challenges to overcome, the talent and ambition in Europe cannot be denied. Let's continue to push for growth, investment, and collaboration to make Europe a hub for cutting-edge startups and technology. The future is bright, and we have the power to shape it together. Keep pushing forward!
@TheGermanAmbassador There are at least a few European companies that have become valuable innovation leaders, and that are still based in Europe. For example ASML and Arm Holdings are definately worthwhile to mention. Those might not have majority of European sharehoders anymore, but their operations and R&D are still based in Europe. Then also Booking.com, or AVAST and AVG Technologies. There is even European alternative to Stripe called Adyen. The video made it look like as though there isn't and European innovation whatsoever.
"the mindset will not change... very few risk takers left..." that has little to do with it. why would anyone innovate for such a small reward. if i take the risk and invent the product, i should be the one reaping the greatest reward, not the government. this is why small business is so much more successful in the US, and why so many immigrants come here and are affluent within one generation. your only limit here is your ambition.
So the France is unfortunately one of bad examples how not to speak English, but you are right that Spaniards are not so much better. However a Portuguese are so much more proficient than Spaniards But kudos to Germans, and especially Austrians , not to mention Dutch , Danish, Swedes which are excellent English speakers. But as surprise even a ex soviet block ( i know that maybe is time to move on and not use this name anymore ) is doing not so bad as Poland came pretty up and even Hungary and Romania is actually not so bad especially in younger generation. So dont put Europe to the waste basket
@@PhxVanguard If we just consider English speaking countries all together , Spanish is well behind English which is official language in. United States, Canada, India, Ireland, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines Malta, , Bahamas, Barbados, Jamaica, etc... Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Fiji, All Oceania ...moreover is spoken pretty widely even in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland, Nederland, Austria, Estonia, Finland , Romania and even widely known in Brasilia or Mexico and so on ... and not to mentioned English is official language in MOST African countries , which starts with South Africa, Kenya , Ghana , Sudan, Tanzania , Malawi, etc etc
@@avitalsheva English isn't the official language in most of those countries. The US doesn't have an official language. Spanish is the second most widely spoken first language on earth. It's an indisputable fact. 😂
@@PhxVanguard Yes it is official language in those countries . You cant even look up ? It is not hard to go at least to Wikipedia and look what is official language . I give you just example of Malaysia and Malta .. Both have first languages Maltese and Malay and beside is OFFICIAL language English. Widely spoken by anybody. India has English as OFFICIAL language which is alone significant number and when I looked up then English speaking countries are about 2 billion people while Spanish speaking alltogether is about half billion .. If you even cant look up basic facts, there is no point to discuss topic
@avitalsheva English is not spoken by 2 billion people as a first or primary language. YOU obviously aren't a native English speaker. It wasn't your first language. I can tell by your sentence structure. The half billion (actually 537 million) you say speak spanish are native speakers. "As of 2022, there were about 400 million native speakers of English." Source: Ethnologue, June 2023. And again, the US does NOT have any official language. There is a difference between de facto and de jure. In fact, Spanish is spoken by 42 million people in the US and several states and territories within the US have Spanish as a de jure official language. 😂
I was happy to see another video review. Thanks. You made an interesting comment near the end regarding risk takers who left Europe in the 1800's for the U.S. That would be my family, including one set of Grandparents who came on a leaky ship, who emigrated from Northern Germany to Wisconsin where they established very large and successful farming operations. I've been to their home locations in Germany and heard the stories. They just couldn't make any progress in Germany where they were held back by the economic system in place and frequent wars at the time.
crazy, these must have been intense times^^
It's inspiring to see the potential for innovation in Europe with the rise of initiatives like the European Innovation Council Accelerator and the support from leaders like Daniel Ek. While there are challenges to overcome, the talent and ambition in Europe cannot be denied. Let's continue to push for growth, investment, and collaboration to make Europe a hub for cutting-edge startups and technology. The future is bright, and we have the power to shape it together. Keep pushing forward!
7:37 That is beautiful of Europe to have different cultures because that is what makes each European country unique in their own way. 😃
@TheGermanAmbassador There are at least a few European companies that have become valuable innovation leaders, and that are still based in Europe. For example ASML and Arm Holdings are definately worthwhile to mention. Those might not have majority of European sharehoders anymore, but their operations and R&D are still based in Europe. Then also Booking.com, or AVAST and AVG Technologies. There is even European alternative to Stripe called Adyen. The video made it look like as though there isn't and European innovation whatsoever.
"the mindset will not change... very few risk takers left..." that has little to do with it. why would anyone innovate for such a small reward. if i take the risk and invent the product, i should be the one reaping the greatest reward, not the government. this is why small business is so much more successful in the US, and why so many immigrants come here and are affluent within one generation. your only limit here is your ambition.
Half of U.S states are very conservative. They do highly encourage risk at the same time. Germany is looking to start doing the same🙏
Toll. Jetzt hab ich schlechte Laune. 😒
Aber gut zu wissen 👍🏻😊
3:34 people and investment funds from all over the world own shares in US companies
Love for algorithms. ❤
handsome host
So the France is unfortunately one of bad examples how not to speak English, but you are right that Spaniards are not so much better.
However a Portuguese are so much more proficient than Spaniards
But kudos to Germans, and especially Austrians , not to mention Dutch , Danish, Swedes which are excellent English speakers.
But as surprise even a ex soviet block ( i know that maybe is time to move on and not use this name anymore ) is doing not so bad as Poland came pretty up and even Hungary and Romania is actually not so bad especially in younger generation. So dont put Europe to the waste basket
Why should Spain change it's language when Spanish is the second most widely spoken language in the world, after mandarin.
@@PhxVanguard If we just consider English speaking countries all together , Spanish is well behind English which is official language in. United States, Canada, India, Ireland, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines Malta, , Bahamas, Barbados, Jamaica, etc... Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Fiji, All Oceania ...moreover is spoken pretty widely even in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland, Nederland, Austria, Estonia, Finland , Romania and even widely known in Brasilia or Mexico and so on ... and not to mentioned English is official language in MOST African countries , which starts with South Africa, Kenya , Ghana , Sudan, Tanzania , Malawi, etc etc
@@avitalsheva English isn't the official language in most of those countries. The US doesn't have an official language. Spanish is the second most widely spoken first language on earth. It's an indisputable fact. 😂
@@PhxVanguard Yes it is official language in those countries . You cant even look up ? It is not hard to go at least to Wikipedia and look what is official language . I give you just example of Malaysia and Malta .. Both have first languages Maltese and Malay and beside is OFFICIAL language English. Widely spoken by anybody. India has English as OFFICIAL language which is alone significant number and when I looked up then English speaking countries are about 2 billion people while Spanish speaking alltogether is about half billion .. If you even cant look up basic facts, there is no point to discuss topic
@avitalsheva English is not spoken by 2 billion people as a first or primary language. YOU obviously aren't a native English speaker. It wasn't your first language. I can tell by your sentence structure. The half billion (actually 537 million) you say speak spanish are native speakers. "As of 2022, there were about 400 million native speakers of English." Source: Ethnologue, June 2023. And again, the US does NOT have any official language. There is a difference between de facto and de jure. In fact, Spanish is spoken by 42 million people in the US and several states and territories within the US have Spanish as a de jure official language. 😂