Europe Explained For Americans || FOREIGN REACTS

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @foreignreacts
    @foreignreacts  9 месяцев назад +42

    Thanks for Watching now Europe seems less complicated
    Add videos and ill react
    ruclips.net/p/PLz-rPErXUIxPYHDhY06etryjLft8YpUuU&jct=_lEYlgHJXhZu4z8_rm0VfCtez1GyIg

    • @Zombie_Apocalypse
      @Zombie_Apocalypse 9 месяцев назад

      What a bunch of BS. Eastern europeans can't care less what are they called. And our economies are not good, not for multiple reasons. It's because we were not asked, but dragged into the EU and NATO, our puppet governments were demanded to destroy, pillage, cut and scrap our economies, industries, agricultures, and we were turned into just a market for western junk. That's it, simple. So, when western europeans tell you their economies are better off, that's why, a centuries old tradition. As for the EU, think of it as the western USSR.
      Just for example, from a country that's been exporting agro production to the entire USSR, now i'm buying tomatoes from Turkey, garlic from China and potatoes from Egypt. For a centuries old agricultural country like mine to import potatoes from the egyptian deserts, it means this country reached the bottom and digs further.

    • @Zombie_Apocalypse
      @Zombie_Apocalypse 9 месяцев назад

      @23:25 Don't get too excited. This is all about to change, and europeans gonna eat garbage as well. To save the planet from the climate of course. Cows are already been slaughtered en mass across Europe. Gonna eat bugs and live in pods, while keep singing the Ode to Joy, thinking what gender day is today...

    • @Zombie_Apocalypse
      @Zombie_Apocalypse 9 месяцев назад

      @27:45 Geez, i wonder what's happening too. Maybe that's happening when you import millions upon millions of absolutely unidentifiable people from countries that's been in wars and crime their entire history, and let these people running around freely. Sweden has never been like this before, Paris was never such a sewer too, and i can't care less what exact kind of ismphobic it may sound. Diversity might be a strenght over there, but here it's been proven not to be. When you import Somalia, your country becomes Somalia.

    • @homosexualbiologicalmale--3
      @homosexualbiologicalmale--3 6 месяцев назад +1

      she should not mention about vatican , that corruption , religion and spirituality dont have peaceful past

    • @miastupid7911
      @miastupid7911 6 месяцев назад +1

      If you put potatoes (boiled) in a salad with tomatoes and onions (dry, cut in thin separate slices, not the fresh green kind) and olive oil, you will love me. NAPS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY ARE NECESSARY IN 90-100 + HEAT (Fahrenheit). AND WE REFER TO OURSELVES AS EASTERN ROMAN ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN AND GRATEFUL THAT WE SURVIVED ALL THE "ISMS".

  • @pfalzgraf7527
    @pfalzgraf7527 9 месяцев назад +4972

    As a German, what I find fascinating but pretty weird in America is the general obsession with what ethnicity you are.

    • @lewis123417
      @lewis123417 9 месяцев назад +579

      Yeah, the race conversation in America is very odd from all ends

    • @susannariera
      @susannariera 9 месяцев назад +762

      I saw a vídeo of a black lady who went to somewhere in Europe, in a festival someone heard her talk and said "oh! You are American!", and she cried, because for the first time someone called her just American, not Afro-American.

    • @lewis123417
      @lewis123417 9 месяцев назад +431

      @susannariera yeah if people are going to hate you it's because you're American not because of your skin colour haha

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 9 месяцев назад +40

      ​@@susannarieraI saw that too, very touching.😢

    • @lewis123417
      @lewis123417 9 месяцев назад +15

      @TLRHFN it's hardly surprising America is the single most important country when it comes to global leadership and the defence of the West. We just want what's best for you 🤣

  • @robinwhitebeam4386
    @robinwhitebeam4386 5 месяцев назад +2311

    The UK did not leave Europe , it left the European Union (EU) . It has not moved.

    • @Czechman13
      @Czechman13 5 месяцев назад +75

      Thanks Captain Obvious

    • @robinwhitebeam4386
      @robinwhitebeam4386 5 месяцев назад +150

      @@Czechman13 The video is inaccurate , just pointing it out Lieutenant.

    • @coldbastard6859
      @coldbastard6859 5 месяцев назад

      You guys should have floated into the Atlantic and embrace the BREXIT wholeheartedly 😂

    • @parazitdetected
      @parazitdetected 5 месяцев назад +13

      😂😂😂

    • @o00Belial00o
      @o00Belial00o 5 месяцев назад +45

      The tories pretty much seem to think the UK is slowly drifting towards the US

  • @L_T86
    @L_T86 3 месяца назад +280

    Eastern European here. I don't mind if they call me that. I like my country (Bulgaria), the people, the culture, the food, the climate. In fact, we Europeans do not discriminate on the basis of race, but on cultural and religious grounds. 😂

    • @derionone
      @derionone Месяц назад +15

      @L_T86 thats because we actually learn in schools that there is only one race ... the human race

    • @beadsman13
      @beadsman13 Месяц назад +4

      @@derionone Yep, the other race died long ago in a cave. :)

    • @beadsman13
      @beadsman13 Месяц назад

      I don't know is there a big difference between Balkans and Eastern Europe (in regards how westerners view us). But as eastern European from Balkans I don't give a f. about the opinion of westerners. They are good at selling you an illusion and weak souls are biting that empty hook like a fish.

    • @ShadowGearFive
      @ShadowGearFive Месяц назад +17

      Western European here, i did not even know that being called or being Eastern European is a bad thing😂? Atleast i don’t see it as a bad thing. And i think i can speak for the majority of western Europeans.
      When i think of eastern europe, i think about hospitable and friendly people, beautiful cities like Prague, Sofia, Bratislava, Bucharest, Budapest etc. But when it comes to eastern europe i also think of Good food, often hot summers, cold winters and wet autumn’s and springs. And last but not least ofcourse i think of beautiful women with a more classic mentality.
      So i don’t really know where this being called ‘eastern euope’ is a bad thing😂?

    • @derionone
      @derionone Месяц назад

      @ShadowGearFive ahh stop the crap we all know here what you truly think ... we do t like you you dont like us no need to pretend

  • @Marli-o4g
    @Marli-o4g 9 месяцев назад +645

    I was born and raised in London so I consider myself to be English and British but my dad is Spanish and my mum is Italian but I only say that I have Spanish and Italian ancestry, I don’t say I’m Spanish-British or Italian-British as although I spent nearly every summer holiday in Spain and Italy I wasn’t born in either country so I can’t call myself Spanish or Italian. I think that is what annoys many Europeans with people from the USA claiming to be Irish-American or Italian-American for instance.

    • @difícilencontrarapodo
      @difícilencontrarapodo 9 месяцев назад +24

      I'm spanish born and raised in Switzerland. Also my daughters. We have to buy citizenship if we want to be swiss

    • @daphnelovesL
      @daphnelovesL 9 месяцев назад +1

      Can you speak Spanish and Italian?

    • @Marli-o4g
      @Marli-o4g 9 месяцев назад +26

      @@daphnelovesL hi. Yes, but our main language at home was English. However as none of my grandparents, uncles, aunts or cousins spoke English, my older brother and I had to be able to communicate with them when staying with them during school holidays.

    • @daphnelovesL
      @daphnelovesL 9 месяцев назад +1

      The more languages you speak the better it is!@@Marli-o4g

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 9 месяцев назад

      @@difícilencontrarapodo By repute they do love their gold

  • @Marli-o4g
    @Marli-o4g 9 месяцев назад +1310

    I think potato/tomato is not about preference but about climate and what can be grown (greenhouses aside).

    • @MelittaFilter-c4g
      @MelittaFilter-c4g 9 месяцев назад +17

      I live in Germany and grow my tomatoes in a sunny spot in the backyard.

    • @Marli-o4g
      @Marli-o4g 9 месяцев назад +14

      @@MelittaFilter-c4g yes. I used to do the same in my back garden in London. It was just a general view on what the meaning might be.

    • @BerishStarr
      @BerishStarr 8 месяцев назад +15

      I'm from Sweden, I grow tomatoes (and potatoes) on my balcony 🤣

    • @Marli-o4g
      @Marli-o4g 8 месяцев назад +40

      @@BerishStarr I’m sure you do. I grew grapes in my London back garden, that doesn’t mean London is known for its vineyards. 😂

    • @BerishStarr
      @BerishStarr 8 месяцев назад

      @@Marli-o4g Especially with the warm spring/summers the last few years, it has become easier.

  • @genacaldeira3793
    @genacaldeira3793 3 месяца назад +370

    In Portugal we follow the "its hot, take off your jacket. Its cold, put on a jacket" AC rule. 😂

    • @babzke1
      @babzke1 3 месяца назад +10

      We say that here in the netherlands also. But we're cheap😂

    • @genacaldeira3793
      @genacaldeira3793 3 месяца назад +11

      @@babzke1 we are poor. XD

    • @livroaberto
      @livroaberto 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@genacaldeira3793Isso😂😂😂

    • @_gaee
      @_gaee 2 месяца назад +7

      France as well, I just open my window before I got out of my house to check the weather

    • @oliuer21
      @oliuer21 Месяц назад

      In Spain it's actually fairly comnmon to have AC, but still, maybe about 1 in 10 or 20 people have it and they usually don't put it on, unless it's estrictly necessary, to save money. So most people. Because they don't have AC just kind of melt when the summer gets by and it is common to sleep without blankets and with open windows and doors.

  • @dotdesig
    @dotdesig 9 месяцев назад +894

    Rectangle - It's a polygon with only 90º angles. A square is a rectangle with sides that are all the same size.

    • @manteltje
      @manteltje 8 месяцев назад +7

      That’s a complicated way of explaining 2 triangles together make up 1 square?

    • @mrnice81
      @mrnice81 8 месяцев назад +157

      @@manteltje Triangles have nothing to do with all that. You CAN make rectangles and squares out of triangles, but the definition of a rectangle is simply as said above, a polygon with (4 x) 90° angles, a square is also a polygon with 90° angles but the additional condition of all sides are the same length.

    • @amadeuz819
      @amadeuz819 8 месяцев назад +8

      Ok why do you make it complicated? Rectangle 4 corners. Square 4 corner all sides the same length. If he didn't know with those 2 pictures and both words, how do you think he will know what an polygon is? Then you mix in the angles to confuse him even more.
      Like when you explain to a child you try to find the simplest way and she included the information of opposite sides that is useless information. Talking about angles is also useless information when you have the shapes.
      Like I wanna see you make a square if the 3 angles are 90 and one is 70 so why even confuse the person with that information.
      If you explain to a child the best way is to say 4 corners, not angles. Then 4 sides the same length and 4 corners.

    • @justmeandi8256
      @justmeandi8256 8 месяцев назад +89

      ​@@amadeuz819
      For it to be a rectangle all four corners need to be 90 degrees.
      For it to be a square all four corners need to be 90 degrees, and all four sides need to be the same length.

    • @amadeuz819
      @amadeuz819 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@justmeandi8256 My point was that you have to start with simple things. Like if you teach about gravity to someone you do not show the numbers and forces that apply to it, you drop something.

  • @vanthspiritwalker
    @vanthspiritwalker 9 месяцев назад +996

    It's not a matter of it being more expensive, but it's more the fact that AC is not very good neither for your health nor the environment

    • @philip4588
      @philip4588 9 месяцев назад +6

      You want to freeze in your home at winter? Its very common in Norway to have AC in their houses

    • @vanthspiritwalker
      @vanthspiritwalker 9 месяцев назад +96

      @@philip4588 I have heating and I do not even turn it up every day. I have a climatic house and the climate here is pretty mild

    • @MiguelBorgesphotography
      @MiguelBorgesphotography 9 месяцев назад +1

      true

    • @noefillon1749
      @noefillon1749 9 месяцев назад +5

      That's true but I'm not sure it's the main reason why europeans didn't implement it everywhere

    • @M24RV_F
      @M24RV_F 9 месяцев назад

      Do you really think that houses that don't have AC do not have heating? ​@@philip4588

  • @davidlacoste
    @davidlacoste 2 месяца назад +77

    8:20 Calling a an Irishman "British" is really a good way to start a not-so-civil argument.

    • @WilfChadwick
      @WilfChadwick 16 дней назад

      Lol, at the same time Irish have no problem replacing their people with Islamists, Africans, Eastern Europeans (the ones that Eastern Europe doesn't want). But British bad. 🤡👍🏿

    • @quickgenerichannelname3295
      @quickgenerichannelname3295 7 дней назад +1

      Same with calling a Pole a Russian

  • @THEOZZYFUL
    @THEOZZYFUL 5 месяцев назад +648

    I'm Dutch, we don't tend to judge people by their skin colour, we judge on behavior. If you come here and behave like an a-hole, no matter what colour your skin, we don't like it. We welcome everyone who is willing to respect our culture and behave civilized.

    • @petrometr
      @petrometr 5 месяцев назад +5

      yeah, right... (from one of 'bad Russians')

    • @flipmanonline
      @flipmanonline 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@petrometr if you support Putin, yes you are bad.

    • @szkocka1703
      @szkocka1703 5 месяцев назад +13

      Same in Poland.

    • @petrometr
      @petrometr 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@szkocka1703 aha...

    • @IvarTheBoneless40
      @IvarTheBoneless40 5 месяцев назад +18

      Zo zijn we inderdaad, ik ben zelf een donker persoon. Ik werk en ik houd me aan de wet en ik respecteer mijn mede inwoners van Nederland❤

  • @virtualatheist
    @virtualatheist 6 месяцев назад +1360

    "Saying Ireland is the same as the UK... Is not a good thing to do."
    That understatement here sounded very British to me.

    • @splodge561
      @splodge561 6 месяцев назад +4

      Why?

    • @kuroimushi9421
      @kuroimushi9421 5 месяцев назад +36

      It's like saying that US is the same as Canada 😏

    • @Irene-xs9pc
      @Irene-xs9pc 5 месяцев назад +21

      Only Northern Ireland is part of the uk 🇬🇧 the union flag comprises of the flags of Saint Patrick,Saint Andrew and Saint George, Ireland 🇮🇪 also known as Eire is a European country,

    • @flopjul3022
      @flopjul3022 5 месяцев назад +6

      i think thats basic recent history atleast... especially with the Troubles

    • @CoffeeTheFreshmaker
      @CoffeeTheFreshmaker 5 месяцев назад +12

      I love calling all my scottish and irish friends english. They also call me, a dane, swedish, so it's all good.

  • @lotta7235
    @lotta7235 2 месяца назад +183

    "Open a map before you open your mouth."😂🤣👍 Brilliant! I can't get over the American couple visiting Brighton who refused to accept that a girl was from Wales, because it's "not a country, it's an animal." 😂 And they were serious! 😳😵‍💫🤣🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @marcusgaius
      @marcusgaius Месяц назад +2

      Well, it isn't a country, it's a region of the UK. :)

    • @dgh25
      @dgh25 Месяц назад +1

      I have heard of an american couple who actually thought that northern lights (aka. aurora borealis), was an actual second sun, that would only appear in the northern part of Europe. And they felt cheated. 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @earthtonona13
      @earthtonona13 Месяц назад

      ⁠​⁠@@marcusgaiusGoogle is free. Wales is a country in its own right

    • @LinseyPop
      @LinseyPop Месяц назад +4

      @@marcusgaiusWhat? You’re not actually joking are you. Of course Wales is a country! 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @marcusgaius
      @marcusgaius Месяц назад

      @@LinseyPop No, it isn't. It's a part of the UK.

  • @kubapuchar7069
    @kubapuchar7069 9 месяцев назад +253

    Thing with air conditioning in Europe is, that it is seen as not environment-friendly, as it consumes lots of energy, and you can (sometimes barely) live without it. Also, we have lots of old buildings, where installing AC is very troublesome, so AC, if present, is mostly in newer ones.

    • @kognak6640
      @kognak6640 9 месяцев назад +8

      Ironically heat pumps are most environment-friendly heating methods out there and they can also cool. At my street like half of the houses have heat pump unit on their wall. Which means they have AC too. Even so if they don't need it every summer since I live in Arctic Circle. They consume very little energy because houses are very well insulated, insulation keeps cold or heat outside, it works both ways. It would be different if AC had to all the time fight against heat seeping in due lack of insulation like it's in warmer countries.

    • @Berndr
      @Berndr 6 месяцев назад +31

      on the other hand, houses in Europe are made of brick and some even date back to 18 century when we used stone and adobe, these houses naturally stay cold during summer, with no need for AC unlike American houses made of wood that even the smallest tornado would lift them of the ground and take straight to the land of OZ lol

    • @Koooles
      @Koooles 5 месяцев назад +2

      Also a lot of Europe doesn't need it because it's not hot enough. Though I notice some new buildings have it, or have some other solutions.

    • @mikelas.s.9155
      @mikelas.s.9155 5 месяцев назад +1

      In Europe we have the AC but in many houses we (I am from Croatia) turn it on only maybe 1 month in the year when the temperature is over 30 outside. My house is made by stones, cc 50 cm of walls and when it is too warm outside, in the house is just fine, maybe a little cool. And when it is cold outside, inside is ok if you put a warmer clothes on you and turn on the AC or what you use on the minimum. In the cars we all have the AC but we don't turn it on if we don't really need. Is not healthy. And yes, we have McDonald's but most of us don't care of them because we can find everywhere better "hamburger" then yours. Our breath and "pljeskavica" (the meat of hamburger) is double bigger end cost less and is healthier then McDonald's hamburger. The same goes with many other dishes.

    • @watcherzero5256
      @watcherzero5256 5 месяцев назад +6

      The trend in Europe is towards Passive Houses, houses that are so well insulated you never need to add or remove heat as they are naturally cool in summer and warm in winter.

  • @lucapolidori8817
    @lucapolidori8817 9 месяцев назад +334

    Just an example about AC: in Southern Italy and in southern Spain they are used to paint the building to bright white. Together with the spessor of their wall wich aren't wooden at all, just rocks and concrete, they reflect the sunlight and while the walls retain the temperature. So they usually don't need AC even when it's very hot.

    • @alexnavarro6941
      @alexnavarro6941 9 месяцев назад +34

      Yup. And because electricity is very very very expensive.

    • @lindasweeney969
      @lindasweeney969 9 месяцев назад +15

      Yes! What people use to heat or cool their homes is directly related to the type of weather and of course also the architecture. Passive heating or cooling which is the most economical relies on architecture to make a home pleasant to live in.

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater 9 месяцев назад +15

      Here in valencia we all use AC tho, the air is too humid and too hot to be able to survive without IT with all the climate change shenanigans, before summers were better but today's summers are too hot and too humid

    • @koi03aiv3
      @koi03aiv3 8 месяцев назад +3

      Yes like in Cyclads we have in Greece

    • @ReckDrogeek
      @ReckDrogeek 6 месяцев назад +3

      Add some window shutters and that's it.

  • @refulgent_fanta
    @refulgent_fanta 3 месяца назад +62

    Europe is not 2/3 of USA, it is in fact slightly larger. Europe has an area of 10.5 million sqkm, USA has an area of 9.8 million sqkm.
    About the square and rectangle thing. Rectangles are defined as plane figure with four sides and four right angles. Squares meet both those criteria so we can safely say that squares are rectangles. Squares on the other hand, have one additional feature: all four sides are equal. Rectangles don't need to have all sides equal.

    • @konradkuaj79
      @konradkuaj79 Месяц назад

      Yeah you can simply take a part of map and put it on another part as the globe doesnt work like that. For example Greenland may look bigger than Australia but if you would take it's real size, not from the map then you could fit ale 2 or 3 greenlands inside of Australia. So yeah, maps lie man xd

    • @usderia1679
      @usderia1679 Месяц назад +2

      I think it depends if you count all of russia or "just" the part in Europe. If you count with all of russia, europe has a greater area.

    • @refulgent_fanta
      @refulgent_fanta Месяц назад +4

      @@usderia1679 I counted just the European part of Russia. It’s 10.5 million square km.

    • @leserb9228
      @leserb9228 26 дней назад +2

      ​@@usderia1679 Russia itself is 17 million km2, so it was just the European part that was counted.

    • @mustafaozturk2542
      @mustafaozturk2542 6 дней назад

      ​@@konradkuaj79 It's just a projection that makes a mistake. We can't fit the world into 2D plane without warping it. There are some projections that manages to do that but they look weird as hell.

  • @Marli-o4g
    @Marli-o4g 9 месяцев назад +207

    We don’t get a lot of Mexican immigrants in Europe as they naturally go to their nearer neighbours in the rest of the Americas. Therefore we don’t have a lot of authentic Mexican restaurants here. However in the USA you don’t have many authentic European restaurants as once the immigrants’ American descendants have mangled the original recipes to American tastes they are an anathema to visiting Europeans. My Italian mum hated the so called Italian food she ate in the USA.

    • @jeihka1
      @jeihka1 6 месяцев назад +4

      Don't worry few places in the USA per state have decent Mexican food (considering the populations of Mexicans in the USA)

    • @Myria83
      @Myria83 5 месяцев назад +2

      We have a ton of immigrants from Perù, though, no matter the distance...

    • @Exodus-ww9bm
      @Exodus-ww9bm 5 месяцев назад

      @@Myria83we do? Which country are you from?

    • @TheJpf79
      @TheJpf79 5 месяцев назад +1

      We don't have lots of American restaurants because SPAIN is a lot closer.

    • @Myria83
      @Myria83 5 месяцев назад

      @@Exodus-ww9bm Italy.

  • @lummergnu
    @lummergnu 5 месяцев назад +1117

    It's not the European are racists, we just don't like anybody else, it's not your race, your religion, your language, we just don't like anybody else, hell, most of us don't even like our own siblings 😂

    • @Althreya
      @Althreya 5 месяцев назад +4

      Who's racist? We hate everybody equally!!!! 😅 eastern European here

    • @OrechTV
      @OrechTV 5 месяцев назад +101

      Thanks! Exactly. We don´t like even our neighbouring countries very often so ... ANYTHING/ANYONE from outside is not welcomed, it is not about your race :D .. so it is fair.... We are not racist, we just don´t like anyone around equally.... no matter your religion, race or anything ... fair and proportional hate to everything foreign ^_^ .. we don´t discriminate :D :D , I love how sarcastic but still true comment this is :D

    • @fmartingorb
      @fmartingorb 5 месяцев назад +56

      As long as people understand the rules and behave respecting the local culture, speak the language fluently... they will be accepted. I became Ukrainian for a while. Spoke Russian, understood Ukrainian. Lived and behaved like a Ukrainian, even if I look Mediterranean. It takes time, culture shock, but in the end you become part of the local population. Not easy but doable. If you do not like it you leave.

    • @skadi009
      @skadi009 5 месяцев назад +18

      selbst das Nachbardorf kann schon seit Jahrhunderten ein Feind sein - ich glaube sogar so einige Gerichtsgebäude könnten schließen wenn es keine "Nachbarkriege" gäb 😂

    • @sidlerm1
      @sidlerm1 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah nah, definitely a lot of racism

  • @alexandraboaru
    @alexandraboaru Месяц назад +6

    In Europe… we build houses with stone, brick, and other thick and hard materials which isolate from cold in the winter, as well as they isolate from heat in the summer. As opposed to the cardboard houses in us where if you punch a whole in the wall, you break it easily.

  • @sandrogattorno4962
    @sandrogattorno4962 9 месяцев назад +114

    A rettangle is a geometric figure with 4 90° degrees angle, 4 side and the 4 side are paralel in pair. So a square is a special rettangle with in addictinon the property of to have the side of the same lenght.

  • @chemazdamundi7236
    @chemazdamundi7236 4 месяца назад +154

    "Europe also has racial discrimination, some countries more than others but an interesting statement that I've heard is that we dislike or have prejudices against people from other countries rather than skin color". Not exactly COUNTRIES, but CULTURES. But yes, discrimination based on skin color is almost unheard of. It's something more cultural. For example, black Muslims are A LOT more disliked than Christian or pagan Black people. One example, in my country, Spain: Mauritanian or Senegalese are not well liked but if you are from Angola you can expect a decent or more "neutral" treatment. Even more if you are from Equatorial Guinea (old Spanish colony), you can expect a hug and a "welcome". Equatoguineans are black (bantu) but are generally considered as "black Spaniards" by the rest of us for cultural and historical reasons (they speak Spanish). So... No, skin color is not the main factor for discrimination.

    • @Richdragon4
      @Richdragon4 3 месяца назад +7

      True.

    • @hiimchaos944
      @hiimchaos944 2 месяца назад

      In Portugal most people hate gipsys, it’s crazy how much they are openly racist without any consequence

    • @balkanemperor876
      @balkanemperor876 Месяц назад +1

      but isn't paradoxal? if i have hatred towards let's say, arabic culture or their religoin, am i not inherently hating them as a population? ethnicity and culture are tied together in 99% of the cases. if i identify with european culture as a whole, i am also indirectly identifying with "white people" as a race. you mentioned equatorial guinea and the colonial past of spain, but that is only one small exception that even you said, its SPECIFICALLY because of the colonial past and the imposed spanish culture over guinea. but if you take a random black person, lets say a somalian, he will have both culture and ethnicity different, therefore, won't be greeted with a hug. and that's the case for the majority of the other countries. also, if a lighter skinned moroccan moves to your country even through the cultural difference, he will still be more accepted after 1 generation than any other subsaharan. we should stop being ashamed of this thinking, we as humans are psychologically conservative and we are indirectly wanting ethnocentrism. it's something natural even if it seen as offensive by modern standards.

    • @chemazdamundi7236
      @chemazdamundi7236 Месяц назад +10

      ​@@balkanemperor876 "am i not inherently hating them as a population? ethnicity and culture are tied together in 99% of the cases." Mmmm... No. Sorry to say it loud and clear but that percentage sounds fake. Not in our case. Christian Lebanese are waaaay more accepted than Muslim Lebanese and they are the same ethnicity. I have a convert to Islam neighbor. He is a white Spaniard and he has the eight Spanish surnames but all his family is shunning him since conversion. What the heck, I'm doing the same. "if i identify with european culture as a whole, i am also indirectly identifying with "white people" as a race." Nope. There is A LOT of Europeans with different skin colors: in Spain (and the Balkans) we have got from blonde people with blue eyes to people who looks EXACTLY like an Arab or a Gypsy. That's one reason why skin color does not matter so much (or at all) for us. More. I've NEVER seen the slightiest show of racism against a Chinese in my life in my country. That thing of racism exclusively based in skin color is a thing of the past and not so spread as some people (Americans) would like to think. Not in my part of Europe. At least in countries so traditionally mixed as Spain (we are very proud of our "mestizaje") the important things were always religion and day-to-day behavior, not skin color. You have lots of examples of coexistence in our Middle Ages between "mozárabes" (Christian Arabs) and white Christians and the extreme hate towards Jews who were "whitier". I can speak for Portugal as well. Maybe a white Moroccan can pass as a plain-looking Spaniard but as soon as he/she prays to Mekkah or rejects a ham sandwich I assure you nobody is gonna look him/her the same. It's true Spain had a slavery period but we had black Conquistadores, black governors, black priests, black guilds and even black commanders, too. And now, your other argument: a second generation black Somali (speaks Spanish, he is a Real Madrid fan, etc.) would be more accepted than a white Moroccan just arrived. A black Somali and a white Moroccan both Muslims? The Moroccan one would more hated. Why? Because Moors are our traditional enemies. As you can see culture and History weighs a loooot more than skin colour. And no, we in Europe don't identify skin color with culture or at least not so much as in America where IS a thing. Maybe some European far-right groups but they are considered fringe even by other right-wing groups. One can be a well-educated patriotic black war veteran in the USA who pays his taxes and still be hated by his white neighbors but in Europe... that's not the common case at all but I must admit racism of all kinds is growing in our continent. Maybe by American influence through social networks.

    • @zora2935
      @zora2935 Месяц назад +3

      Yes. Absolutely. When he said that he heard stories of Americans that felt mistreadyed because of skin colour, I was thinking that this is mostly due to them thinking in those terms because they are used to it from America.

  • @Malzbauer
    @Malzbauer 3 месяца назад +34

    AC generally is contributing more to climate change than heating (depending on the heating).

  • @lewis123417
    @lewis123417 9 месяцев назад +343

    For ahout 2 weeks of the year we curse the fact we dont have AC but then quickly forget about it during the winter

    • @miahan8988
      @miahan8988 6 месяцев назад +19

      I love my trusty standing fan, haha.

    • @lewis123417
      @lewis123417 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@miahan8988 I have one permanently at my side 🤣

    • @cthulucalamari2448
      @cthulucalamari2448 5 месяцев назад +2

      Can't relate. I'm from Alabama, and we'd straight up evaporate in the summer, and even spring and autumn at times, without AC. My fan also runs 24/7. How has it not caught fire yet? Idk, but it definitely works hard. 😂

    • @KovCapyWizz
      @KovCapyWizz 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@cthulucalamari2448does alabama get very humid.?
      I live next to a river and pretty much wet-lands and let me tell you. Even 20°c can feel like 40 with high humidity 😭

    • @someguy3508
      @someguy3508 5 месяцев назад +1

      In Cyprus and Greece we definitely use AC a lot. Especially in Cyprus since everywhere you're surrounded by water so the humidity is very high. In extreme cases in the summer it reaches 90+% with 40+ Celsius temperatures. It's impossible to live without AC. Even when you're sitting outside in the evening you're sweating. In the northern parts of Europe It's different though

  • @elisabetastanisel83
    @elisabetastanisel83 5 месяцев назад +253

    For the record Romania is the only Latin country in East Europe in middle of Slavic ones!Romanian language is Latin!

    • @milkienay
      @milkienay 5 месяцев назад +38

      Don't forget the poor appendix Moldova 😂 we are not slavs. We speak Romanian.

    • @JamesPond62
      @JamesPond62 5 месяцев назад +20

      Interestingly enough aside from some understandable slavic loan words, it's also the closest to original Latin. Pretty cool, I think

    • @MatheusDC9
      @MatheusDC9 5 месяцев назад +14

      As a brazilian, i love to study romanian, it has a lot of similarities because of our roots.

    • @walery-m4h
      @walery-m4h 5 месяцев назад +1

      Hungary?

    • @kinnanton
      @kinnanton 4 месяца назад +22

      @@walery-m4h Hungarian language isn't latin and nor slavic.

  • @saras.4940
    @saras.4940 3 месяца назад +20

    “Maybe open the map before opening your mouth.” Oh I loove that😂😂😂

    • @spencerburke
      @spencerburke Месяц назад

      Maps are contentious too. She probably got that 'British Islands' term from a British map, yet at the same time understands that Irish people aren't British... Strange.

  • @fluffybunny5238
    @fluffybunny5238 5 месяцев назад +410

    This comment section:
    - 59% talking about AC
    - 40% talking about potatoes/tomatoes
    - 1% normal comments

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 5 месяцев назад +16

      What about geometry?

    •  5 месяцев назад +3

      @@stephenlee5929 yeah, but only europeans do mention. 😀

    • @novy1198
      @novy1198 5 месяцев назад +2

      what normal comments means? lol

    • @BramLastname
      @BramLastname 5 месяцев назад +4

      How are potatoes not part of the normal comments?

    • @stellaf.
      @stellaf. 5 месяцев назад

      Giusto!

  • @anka6649
    @anka6649 5 месяцев назад +346

    As czech it quite hurt me that she mistaken czech crowns for polish zlotys ㅠㅠ

    • @Y4R05L4V
      @Y4R05L4V 4 месяца назад +144

      As Pole it quite hurt me that she mistaken polish zlotys for czech crowns ㅠㅠ

    • @anka6649
      @anka6649 4 месяца назад

      @@Y4R05L4V valid 🫱🏻‍🫲🏼

    • @DionIvel
      @DionIvel 4 месяца назад +28

      Man I feel bad for you two but honestly your comments are kinda funny 😂

    • @virenor
      @virenor 4 месяца назад +59

      As an another Pole I'm torn between sympathy for the Czech and the fellow Pole.

    • @budapestkeletistationvoices
      @budapestkeletistationvoices 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Y4R05L4Vpotato tomato

  • @soap3010
    @soap3010 3 месяца назад +35

    We don't really need ac in Germany. Because our buildings are made out of brick and stone. Not paper like in the us. So it takes time to really heat up your apartment. In the night we open out windows and in the morning just close the windows and the heat stays out for the most part.
    And we have standard vents or a mobile ac unit. When it's really hot for a longer time. But usually it's really hot 2 weeks and then it will cool off. Sorry for my bad English grammar. 😅

    • @gerafinali4384
      @gerafinali4384 Месяц назад

      And it's not that hot in Germany.

    • @ag4444
      @ag4444 Месяц назад +1

      Speak for yourself. I’m German and my apartment gets to 35 degrees in the summer and it’s so unbearable that I need to leave the apartment. I would love AC. It’s definitely needed in my apartment.

    • @RedDevil2557
      @RedDevil2557 19 дней назад

      ​@@ag4444 winters do have become softer and summers warmer than compared to 10 years ago

    • @mecronorm2110
      @mecronorm2110 19 дней назад

      Unfor in belgium my belgium appartement, i have way to big windows in my room, and it becomes 3x the heat of the rest of the appartement. So really need some ac tbh

  • @ezraabbadon5082
    @ezraabbadon5082 9 месяцев назад +80

    We dont need ac because the concrete and stone buildings are insulating. If done right, you dont need ac because the inside of the house just doesn't get that hot. In our case, during the height of summer the inside of the house is 5 to 10 degrees cooler. No ac needed. Plus, the body adapts. The more time you spend in hot or cold, the less it'll bother you

    • @SingingSealRiana
      @SingingSealRiana Месяц назад

      The heat outside also feels worse if you come from a cooled down house, then if you adapt to the temperature and have a few degrees between inside and outside and not enough to make you freeze

    • @ezraabbadon5082
      @ezraabbadon5082 Месяц назад

      @@SingingSealRiana
      True, the sudden changes of temperature are stressful for our bodies

  • @davidpelc
    @davidpelc 9 месяцев назад +159

    Since when is Poland using Czech Crowns? Because in the picture there are not Polish Zlotys, its Czech banknotes.😝

    • @miahan8988
      @miahan8988 6 месяцев назад +17

      LOL I noticed, that part was funny.

    • @auradb1140
      @auradb1140 5 месяцев назад

      Llegan donde llegan....viven en su mundo

    • @simonjebavy
      @simonjebavy 5 месяцев назад +1

      14:53 was about to comment that

    • @igormatkowski5488
      @igormatkowski5488 5 месяцев назад +2

      thank you. I was wondering what kind of money it was because it wasn't mine zł

    • @davidpelc
      @davidpelc 4 месяца назад +1

      @@igormatkowski5488 I´ve said it already. They were Czech crowns.

  • @victorx3820
    @victorx3820 4 месяца назад +8

    I'm from Spain and we do have ac but we mostly use it for cooling because electricity is very expensive and they heat less than the radiators summing it up

  • @meinm3575
    @meinm3575 6 месяцев назад +101

    In school you had to learn all the countries and their capitals.
    That was always fun :)

    • @katerina13aar
      @katerina13aar 5 месяцев назад +12

      That was the best part of geography! (Read: the ONLY good part.)
      I had to learn about wind movement and land formation, a little bit about agriculture, and specific science on stuff I don't remember, and beyond the part about how the thawing of the Ice Age caused dramatic changes to the earth, it was boring as HELL.

    • @silviuvisan505
      @silviuvisan505 4 месяца назад +1

      My brain couldn't handle that.

    • @animanhwa7417
      @animanhwa7417 4 месяца назад +1

      For me that was the best part, learning new names was something I didn't like​@@katerina13aar

    • @coke-cinelle
      @coke-cinelle 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes countries, capitals and flags ! I still know most of them but I struggle with the balcans 😅 too many countries in a small space 🤯

    • @pedroguerreros1699
      @pedroguerreros1699 Месяц назад +1

      I remember learning all countrys, the capital, the flag and put it on a blank map. But 20 years later, i have forgot a lot of them, probably because i don't use that information a lot now.

  • @Lorre982
    @Lorre982 9 месяцев назад +199

    Potato/tomatos = different cilmate zone, tomatos hot temperature potatos cold cilmate

    • @ionaguirre
      @ionaguirre 6 месяцев назад +9

      No. Hot isnt good for tomatoes, they are mostly water. Sun is the key. Tomatoes need Sun light.

    • @rayhathaway7831
      @rayhathaway7831 5 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@ionaguirreit is about the type of foods eaten not grown. Northern countries have lots of cooked hot meals which include potatoes whereas Southern Europe being hotter have lots of salad type meals with tomatoes also known as a Mediterranean diet

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 5 месяцев назад

      @@ionaguirre Denmark has lots and lots of sunlight in the summer. At midsummer it only gets dark for 3 hours. But our tomatoes utterly suck because the sunlight starts way before it's hot enough to grow tomatoes and, thus, ends before the tomatoes are properly ripe.

    • @bastian6625
      @bastian6625 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​​@@rayhathaway7831Yes, and this is traditionally obviously linked to what you were able to grow yourself nearby.

    • @giuseppesagona7522
      @giuseppesagona7522 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@ionaguirreyeah, we planted tomatoes in our farm last week and they're probably not going to grow because the climate has been too hot with next to no rain in the last month

  • @doctorkuroneko8762
    @doctorkuroneko8762 3 месяца назад +9

    16:30 Italian dude here! Here (and in Spain) we don’t really use ACs because of the price and because people aren’t used to it, so for example some will get sick from the sudden temperature change from inside to outside

    • @xbizydown
      @xbizydown Месяц назад

      In Russia every second flat has AC

    • @kajsafalck8117
      @kajsafalck8117 Месяц назад

      I turn it off if I have an AC in a hotel room.

  • @moritzwi2261
    @moritzwi2261 4 месяца назад +24

    13:40 american school system 😂

  • @sztuczna_roslina
    @sztuczna_roslina 5 месяцев назад +117

    In Poland we believe that AC makes you sick, that's why we hardly ever use it and if we do we never make the air point on us. In summer if the heat is too much we just use sometimes fans but not all the ppl have it.

    • @titolilo
      @titolilo 4 месяца назад +3

      We in sothern spain have it, bur bcause we must, here in summer we have around 40/45C, so even in public buildings is obligated to have ACs

    • @Justforfun-rv5vq
      @Justforfun-rv5vq 4 месяца назад

      In Germany to

    • @Neexienous
      @Neexienous 4 месяца назад +2

      In Poland sometimes it's like that too. Once we had even 50+°C. 😅​@@titolilo

    • @msz-moimskromnymzdaniem6115
      @msz-moimskromnymzdaniem6115 4 месяца назад +1

      AC can be harmful if the filter isn't cleaned frequently, and when you leave a warm, air- conditioned room and go outside where it's cool.

    • @titolilo
      @titolilo 4 месяца назад +3

      @@Neexienous wtf, really? Where?

  • @anna3046
    @anna3046 3 месяца назад +57

    Portugal is the most Western European country and historically, Western Europe always included Portugal and Spain but this girl decided that geography Portugal and Spain are not in the western hemisphere. She probably needs to take some geography classes!

    • @kryokori
      @kryokori 3 месяца назад +4

      must be cause you're a tomatoe country 🤔🙃

    • @Richdragon4
      @Richdragon4 3 месяца назад +13

      Southern.
      Westerners are rich. It is mandatory. You can't be in the club if you're not rich.

    • @NataliaLopez-ns4mi
      @NataliaLopez-ns4mi 3 месяца назад +2

      Que locura,
      Ni caso a esta chica.
      Se lía con todo.

    • @nicoladc89
      @nicoladc89 2 месяца назад +7

      The Iberian peninsula, the Italian peninsula and the Balcanic peninsula are all in the Southern Europe. They are separated from the Continental Europe (that's divided into western and eastern) and they are all "attached" to the South. Iberia is litterally attached to the South of France.

    • @geemo4284
      @geemo4284 2 месяца назад +1

      I think Ireland and Iceland are further West than the Iberian peninsula, but I get your point

  • @embreis2257
    @embreis2257 9 месяцев назад +59

    7:03 [Finland] 'because they were a part of something.' well, not really. sort of, but not really. Finland was _not_ a Warsaw Pact country and it wasn't occupied by Soviet troops. two very important distinctions from all the other countries the young lady was talking about when she explained why nobody wants to be called 'Eastern Europe' nowadays. however, the Fins were pressed into some kind of 'neutrality' between East and West by Stalin. it hindered their progress and stifled their wealth until the Soviet Union collapsed.

    • @BibEvgen
      @BibEvgen 9 месяцев назад

      No. She said that some Finns have shit in their heads that they impose on other people.

    • @dzejrid
      @dzejrid 5 месяцев назад

      *cough* Grand Duchy of Finland *cough*
      Yes, it was a thing.

    • @embreis2257
      @embreis2257 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@dzejrid she wasn't walking about ancient history, just what happened during and after WW2.

    • @dzejrid
      @dzejrid 5 месяцев назад

      @@embreis2257 doesn't matter. Once under muscovite yoke, you never forget it.

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 5 месяцев назад

      Eine sehr freiwillige Neutralität, besonders, wenn man bedenkt, daß es nicht der Teddybär ist, dessen Pranke auf Karelien liegt.

  • @BernhardGiner
    @BernhardGiner 9 месяцев назад +35

    German here. We use more and more „ACs“ to heat our rooms (heat pumps). They are more efficiant and cheaper in the long term. Oil and natural gas become more and more expensive
    Fortunately the temperatures are relatively mild in Germany and most of the houses are pretty good insulated so most of the year we don’t need to heat or cool our houses. So most of the year we need just something for warm water.

    • @kajsafalck8117
      @kajsafalck8117 Месяц назад

      Same in Sweden. The big difference between Germany and Sweden is the way of paying! So close but so different! I can’t recognise the current Swedish money, (we changed some years ago), and I pay 99% with card or Swish or the phone. And that is of course a week spot, but very handy.

    • @BernhardGiner
      @BernhardGiner Месяц назад

      @@kajsafalck8117 Here, too, I no longer see the big difference. (A lot has changed here during the pandemic.) I also now mostly pay by card or cell phone - although not necessarily 99% of the time, but certainly around 70%-80%. (Funnily enough, except at Amazon and some other online stores - which was the reason why I got a credit card in the first place back then: to be able to pay in the Internet 😂😂 (they have SEPA direct debit mandates)).
      If a store doesn't offer card payment, that's ok for me because I almost always have cash with me. In the worst case, I pay by invoice/transfer (this happened to me once in a restaurant: the card reader was broken and I didn't have enough cash, now it would also work by direct bank transfer or PayPal or similar)

  • @MarcoDeLasVegas
    @MarcoDeLasVegas 3 месяца назад +18

    AC is used in Europe for malls, hotels and workplaces mainly.
    AC maybe usefull in Spain, Portugal, Italy and south of France, but for the rest of the Europe, it's mainly useless for most of the year except 2 or 3 weeks a year.

    • @XabierXabi
      @XabierXabi 2 месяца назад

      Most of the units instaled have a warming option as well and in Spain many households shifted to aerotherma with dólar planes generating power to support both heating and ac.
      I would say this system IS getting leader in Sunny áreas, growing In the north in single houses and middle south Spain leading system in detached housing as winters are very cold and summers very Hot. Spain IS the leading renewable producer growing by the day solar, windmill and hydrogen ready hubs. The north has advanced ubique tides energy production energy. Many detached houses have complemented gas or fuel heating wáter supply with solar system and ac cold warm sistema to take advantage of Sunny even winter days using warm función from solar panels.

    • @Henrik976
      @Henrik976 Месяц назад

      They are pretty common in Scandinavia as well because it's one of the most energy efficient way to heat your house. Around 40% off all households in Norway have some sort of heat exchanger/AC

  • @OrkarIsberEstar
    @OrkarIsberEstar 9 месяцев назад +54

    to ancestry - it really doesnt matter. What does matter is - do you speak the language, are you familiar with the culture, do you know the laws, have you visited the places, do you live there, have you been through the school system of the country - as in....a black guy that grew up in germany is german. a blonde blue eyed american who was raised in the US by german parents...is not german, hes american.

  • @sameebah
    @sameebah 9 месяцев назад +34

    I found through my travels with work that it is always worth learning the basic phrases of a language. Even being able to say please and thank you, or "I don't understand" goes a long way in establishing a relationship.

    • @ionaguirre
      @ionaguirre 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Eskerrik asko
      Please Mesedes
      Excuse me. Barkatu
      I dont understand. Ez dut ulertzen
      From Navarra, nothern Spain.😊

  • @Aine197
    @Aine197 Месяц назад +4

    Not knowing the relationship between rectangles and squares highlights one big difference between the US and Europe: general education

  • @urszulakosiba2272
    @urszulakosiba2272 5 месяцев назад +168

    Poland here! Geografically we ARE in central Europe, we also had tons of wars with Russia in the span of a thousad years of our existence so we trully do not like to be associated with East of Europe. But following that logic we had tons of wars with Germany, but we wouldnt have problem with being called Western Europeans. Eastern Europe is also culturally diffenet than Central Europe, which is another reason we do not like being called that. When it comes to Slavic communty we have three groups: Eastern Slavs are Russians, Ukraininas and Belarussians. Southern Slavs are basically Balkans. And Western Slavs are Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia. And this way of dividing Slavs is also the best way of dividing what the rest of the world likes to call eastern Europe. Im not stating Poland is in Western Europe, but we are definatelly NOT in Eastern! So plese, for the love of our difficult history call us Central Europe.

    • @jeremyjacque370
      @jeremyjacque370 5 месяцев назад +19

      I would even add that Romania is not a Slavic country, it's Latin

    • @babajagasimsy
      @babajagasimsy 5 месяцев назад +20

      The geographical border on the east of Europe is where URAL Mountains are. Not many people realise this. Look at the map. If you take that into account, Poland is right in the middle... I've just noticed, it has a bit of a heart shape too :D Sure! I'm from Poland! Greets!

    • @damyr
      @damyr 5 месяцев назад +18

      The division on Western and Eastern Europe is the remnant of the Cold War, when there was the Western democracy and the Eastern communism. Such political division influenced the economy in many ways, thus the difference between Western and Eastern Europe is still obvious and still very actual.
      In other words, Poland is geographically in Central Europe, but colloquially and economically, and even culturally and architecturally, it still belongs to the Eastern Europe. And it will remain like that, probably for a few more generations in the future, until those differences fade out.
      So, even if it's just a colloquial term, no need to act angry about it, especially because it's true.

    • @urszulakosiba2272
      @urszulakosiba2272 5 месяцев назад +14

      @@damyr Economically sure we are way beyond West, but for the love of any Daity you choose to belive, do not say Poland culturally is the same as Eastern European countries. Our architekture is also way different than the one on the East. Trust me I know, as I live here and also have visited enough of Eastern Europe to know the difference. I do not feel offended, but as someone who actually knows the situation from the inside I still do not wish to be called an Eastern European. Respect that or do not approach me about that.

    • @damyr
      @damyr 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@urszulakosiba2272 Please, stop doing copium. No one uses the term Central Europe, except maybe map producers. Poland is a part of *THE* Eastern Europe. Period.
      "THE" means it's a common colloquial (unofficial) term, not geographical.
      On the other hand, Finland is not a part of the E. Europe, nor Greece, even if they're in some ways geographically and culturally closer to the East. I could also say that for Cyprus and Turkey.
      And architecturally... No, you can't tell me there are no communist architecture residential and official building blocks in Poland, because that'd be not true, would it?
      So, no need to be offended, because it's true. That sounds like woke culture... Woman is when you feel like a woman, even if you're a biological male. So, Poland is not feeling like it's a part of the Eastern Europe. Are you maybe a trans-European?
      I mean, just get over it.

  • @gmdhargreaves
    @gmdhargreaves 9 месяцев назад +17

    My mum is Latvian (USSR) my father was Welsh, I was born in Canada but from 2months old I’ve lived in England, I consider myself English completely! But I do look out for Welsh/Latvian footy results

  • @sarahpena9501
    @sarahpena9501 3 месяца назад +21

    Spaniard here! The nap or “siesta” thing that’s a myth, what happens is that we take a loooooong lunch breaks because a big chunk of Spain is under a lot of high and sunny temperatures most of the year, it’s not healthy to work with high temperatures and if you live in the coastal areas or near any kind of water many people go for a swim or sunbathe in summer time for a few hours and then go to work.

    • @alberto7575
      @alberto7575 Месяц назад +2

      hermano, yo soy español, y la siesta no la perdono ningún día, haga frío o calor.

    • @clarawallace7404
      @clarawallace7404 Месяц назад

      La siesta es sagrada!!

    • @HmarMCtronca
      @HmarMCtronca 6 дней назад

      Soy española y duermo la siesta. Pero coincido en todo lo demás que has dicho.

  • @ffotograffydd
    @ffotograffydd 5 месяцев назад +28

    Finland was never a Warsaw Pact country. It did have a ‘Treaty of Friendship, Co-operation, and Mutual Assistance’ with the USSR between 1948-1992, but with very different content from the Warsaw Pact.

  • @M24RV_F
    @M24RV_F 9 месяцев назад +31

    28:30 Also I finally watched the end of your video, but I live in the UK and I recently just got back from a tour around mainland Europe in a motorhome so didn't really go to touristy areas except for Amsterdam (which I detested) It's weird because I received nothing but love and met so many new people, people stopping me in the street or on public transport to talk to me, so many kind people complimenting me, people giving me gifts. Somebody offered to do me a painting so I can take kick back to the UK as a souvenir. One person even offered me to go back to their place after a music event to chill despite not knowing that person, a German girl I never met before said me if I ever visit Germany I can stay at hers. As a black male I did not feel I was treated different in any way, this kind of surprised me because a lot of people say that Europe is racist but a kind agree and disagree. I've never really faced any form of racism other than at school where children will make fun of you just for looking slightly different but it was in jest. I would say that they are more prejudice then racist but even that was not even showing because I wasn't treated any differently even though I wasn't a citizen in these countries. But then at the same time part of me thinks would they have treated me different if I wasn't from the UK and was from maybe somewhere in Africa?
    What is your personal experience from being in Finland?

    • @hachimaki
      @hachimaki 9 месяцев назад +8

      Personally I think it's incorrect to say that a place is racist, no place or people can be inherently racist, but there can definitely be more racist/xenophobic people living in some places. As far as your treatment and how much of it is down to your nationality rather than your perceived ethnicity, all I can say is that I believe most people work with whatever information they have at face value and then try to assess the situation/person depending on what information you can gather about them and then judge them accordingly. So in a sense you might have been treated better once they knew where you were from and some might just have gone completely based on your behaviour and demeanour.
      I'm glad you had a nice experience either way. Happy holidays and happy new year.

    • @M24RV_F
      @M24RV_F 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@hachimaki I agree, a country cannot be racist or xenophobic. A person isn't born racist or xenophobic it's taught. As for my experience a lot of the time people would try to talk to me in their own native language speaking to me the first time but even when I did and say that I was English that wasn't the main focal point of the conversation but like you said and I say this to everybody - I judge people on face value and like you said their demeanour that they are presented with whether it's direct or indirectly. Truth be told I haven't gotten many bad experiences in my lifetime to speak of and I spend a lot of time in places where you don't typically see people of colour and usually I'm the only one there and nobody treats me as if I'm any different. What I often wondered is if I would get this same treatment as an adult male in the USA? Happy New year brother 👍

    • @Timbothruster-fh3cw
      @Timbothruster-fh3cw 9 месяцев назад

      The older generation might depending, but most of them are dying off or dead, younger people in America aren't like that despite what the media says.​@@M24RV_F

    • @uksoloz
      @uksoloz 5 месяцев назад +1

      I’ve hear stories or videos of Americans going Italy and until they speak in Italy you are presumed to be northern African so they will give a cold shoulder coz how they act when they get Italy legal or illegal but I’ve only seen a couple like that don’t know how wide spread that is.

    • @tantuce
      @tantuce 23 дня назад +1

      ​@@M24RV_F since you are British , you were behaving the British way - your gestures, eye contact, accent, way of speaking and the typical British consideration of others around you or perhaps British humour - basically your culture. How you represent yourself. This is what makes you you.

  • @SD-wf8hh
    @SD-wf8hh 19 дней назад +2

    She didnt mention nothing abouth balkan countries like we dont exist 😂..if u visit europe visit balkan countries..its nice its not so crouded and its not so expencive and food is delicius..love from Slovenia❤

  • @jerzy7118
    @jerzy7118 9 месяцев назад +61

    The east and west of Europe were incorrectly defined. A piece of Russia up to the Ural Mountains is Europe and east of the Urals is Asia. Poland is in the center of Europe and from it there is Western Europe in one direction and Eastern Europe in the other.

    • @wandilismus8726
      @wandilismus8726 9 месяцев назад +9

      Poland is just where you find your car 😉

    • @haydenwayne637
      @haydenwayne637 8 месяцев назад +2

      But isn't Europe just the western end of the Eurasian tectonic plate rather than being a separate piece of land to Asia?

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@haydenwayne637 to simplify, yes Europe is the western part of Eurasia.

    • @gerroos5751
      @gerroos5751 6 месяцев назад +1

      Actually the centre of Europe is in Ukraine

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@gerroos5751 I google and the geographic center of Europe is 26 km north of Vilnius (Lithuania).

  • @DarkSister.
    @DarkSister. 9 месяцев назад +130

    AC is bad for the environment and isn't particularly good for people. Just stick a fan on like the rest of the world lol

    • @gerardflynn3899
      @gerardflynn3899 9 месяцев назад +19

      Don't forget to put a bowl of cold water in front of the fan (in hot weather)

    • @jackieblue1267
      @jackieblue1267 6 месяцев назад +3

      We would die here without AC in Australia. We've had months now of very high temperatures. A fan doesn't do much in very high temperatures but blow the hot air around.

    • @alepa2357
      @alepa2357 6 месяцев назад

      I don't know how it works in the states, but other places: no it isn't

    • @lbhh
      @lbhh 5 месяцев назад +8

      It depends on where you live. Europe is big. In Italy we can have 40 degrees for a whole week in August and we use AC because we need it.
      Certainly, we don't leave it on when we are away from the house, as americans do. We put off the A C and the lights even if we are in a hotel, and that's because of the environment and common good sense. But believe me that some days without A C in some italian cities are really hot.

    • @petrsimi
      @petrsimi 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@lbhh i think that AC is matter of building type. Its much more cheap and easy to put AC in american wooden house than in old stone or even new concrete house because you need hole or external unit and that is problem on old stone, sometimes historical houses. We cant even put that to half open window because we open windows to the side, not up :D

  • @gotlosthere7029
    @gotlosthere7029 Месяц назад +3

    Main reason Europe doesn't do AC is the way we build our houses ... solid stone which keeps the houses cool. Don't get me wrong we do suffer when it is very hot for a long time but we spend most of our days outside.

  • @Anna-fw7lm
    @Anna-fw7lm 8 месяцев назад +12

    The square is a rectangle because it's a geometric figure formed by 90 degrees angles.
    If a rectangle also has all sides of the same lenght is a type of rectangle called square.
    So every square is a type of rectangle, but not every rectangle end up being a square

  • @marinellovragovic1207
    @marinellovragovic1207 9 месяцев назад +59

    Dude just questioned if a square is a rectangle. I can't. That is literally part of the definition. You learn that in elementary school.

    • @fluffybunny5238
      @fluffybunny5238 5 месяцев назад +8

      Yeah I was like, how can you not understand it when it’s basic knowledge taught in schools? And the best part is that in the original vid it was explained pretty simply, but the guy didn’t even read the text

    • @ammaleslie509
      @ammaleslie509 5 месяцев назад

      All squares are rectangles.
      Some rectangles are not squares.

    • @Robin93k
      @Robin93k 4 месяца назад +6

      ​@@fluffybunny5238He's American right?
      They waste all their primary school math grades on trying to explain the imperial system...
      No time for basic geometry.

  • @zanmatoshin877
    @zanmatoshin877 Месяц назад +5

    We eat tomatoes in Sweden aswell. But we kinda need greenhouses to grow em. Down in Spain/italy its tomato on easy mode and alot of classic dishes include tomatoes

    • @SingingSealRiana
      @SingingSealRiana Месяц назад

      They are not in basically every dish, pretty much every european country eats both, but what big or a part of the diet they make up differs and for that the map makes sense

  • @stevefarrugia-dc7qt
    @stevefarrugia-dc7qt 9 месяцев назад +54

    After seven minutes i could not take it anymore ,the amount of mistakes and misunderstanding .

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 5 месяцев назад +4

      Lierber Steve, wenn der Beitrag nicht schon so alt wäre, würde ich Dich fragen, was Du speziell meintest mit mistakes und misunderstandig. Außer einem gewissen amüsanten understatement ist mir nichts aufgefallen, höchstens daß ich persönlich eher von Knoblauch und Zwiebeln statt von Tomaten und Kartoffeln gesprochen hätte, weil es im Deutschen kein Witz ist (Es läuft aber auf dieselben Gebiete hinaus).

  • @tonikaihola5408
    @tonikaihola5408 9 месяцев назад +25

    Square is a rectangle with sides of equal lengths

  • @a5cent
    @a5cent Месяц назад +4

    European here. On the issue of AC:
    1)
    Most of Europe is slightly more northern than the US, so it doesn't get quite as hot.
    2)
    Because in most of Europe it can get quite cold, European houses tend to be better insulated than American houses. This also helps keep homes cooler in summer.
    3)
    As the lady in the video said, people just seem willing to suffer for a few weeks every year. In my experience, most people just don't think it's necessary. I think there is an argument to be made whether the money needs to be shelled out for something that is used so rarely, but I don't think that is what is on people's minds. It's just what they are used to. They didn't have it before. Why should they have it now? That is how they think.
    4)
    The car is different. It's metal. Has no insulation. Leave that standing in the sun for a few minutes and it becomes a sauna. There Europeans also want AC.
    5)
    Do I personally agree with this? No. I think Europeans are insane. I want AC in my home, but most think I'm unnecessarily complicated.
    Bonus:
    An AC unit runs on electricity. Heating with electricity is insanely expensive. Might as well just throw dollar bills in the fireplace and heat that way. It's not what anyone wants to do.

  • @gav1233
    @gav1233 7 месяцев назад +277

    The reason why Eastern Europe is a controversial term is because the nearby countries, except for Belarus, don't want anything to do with Russia.

    • @davidknipe4113
      @davidknipe4113 5 месяцев назад

      The Belarussian people aren't too keen on Russia either. It's just the Lukashenko government that likes to kiss Russia's ass.

    • @l-esprit_de_l-ouest
      @l-esprit_de_l-ouest 5 месяцев назад

      Nothing with russia: beeing from eastern europe is is just beeing form third world low educated people with a communist remanant mind.

    • @АнтонДемин-ю4з
      @АнтонДемин-ю4з 5 месяцев назад

      Now Russia don't want the do anything with Europe, so eastern Europe vacancy is free

    • @Ar19970318
      @Ar19970318 5 месяцев назад +17

      except getting shit tone of natural resources and support Putin's economy, woops

    • @nillyk5671
      @nillyk5671 5 месяцев назад +5

      Lies 😞

  • @AP-yd1wz
    @AP-yd1wz 4 месяца назад +11

    15:03 the UK left the EU, and did not drop the Euro. They didn't drop the Euro because they never adopted it in the first place.

  • @Michelle-bo4hj
    @Michelle-bo4hj Месяц назад +1

    Good video , she is very direct , I think its to do with what part of Europe she comes from , good on her she also has a sense on humour

  • @DNA350ppm
    @DNA350ppm 6 месяцев назад +6

    This is a really good reaction video to a well-done original. A fun fact, in the Nordic countries we have "thank you" (tack, tak, kiitos) but no handy translation of please (or bitte, por favor, etc) - for different situations we have different expression, don't try to translate your expression verbatim it can sound downright condescending, bossy, or worse. We use the conditional instead and we use "thanks" much more frequently than you can imagine. We tend to forget to add bitte and please, when speaking other languages, as we don't have such words ourselves. So we sound impolite, unintentionally. For greeting-words (hei and hej) there are a bunch, so why not listen what people your age say, and imitate them (before you open your mouth, hehe) ? Looking into the eyes and smiling a very little smile is very appropriate, and an expected normal politeness. Avoiding eye-contact is a strong negative signal.

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 5 месяцев назад

      Ha! Und uns Deutschen wird nachgesagt, wir würden Leute "anstarren", wenn wir sie ansehen... Besonders höflich muß man gegüber uns nicht sein, wir würden das schnell als übertrieben empfinden. Im übrigen gilt des Wort aus Goethes FAUST: "Im Deutschen lügt man, wenn man höflich ist".

  • @magliaarancia
    @magliaarancia 9 месяцев назад +19

    i actually have ac in my house, but we dont turn it on because it's not good for the environment

  • @JoseDiaz-in6yx
    @JoseDiaz-in6yx 3 месяца назад +20

    As Spaniard I stop to see the video when she said about take a nap everyday, this is just and stereotype. Some store close because they lunch is the main meal of the day so you have to hours to eat lunch but most part of the workers prefer just an hour and come back home before. So she do not have any idea.

    • @spider9254
      @spider9254 2 месяца назад +2

      That's what I say jokingly sometimes. I love you all Spanish folks. Greetings from Portugal.

    • @echtvergoldet
      @echtvergoldet 2 месяца назад +3

      Why so butthurt? I also don't fight over who drinks the most beer, despite being German. She is generalizing a ton of things, because she wants to paint a complete picture for rather shallow american minds. So dont be offended, if she generalizes.

    • @espinoname2988
      @espinoname2988 Месяц назад

      No todos los días, pero los fines de semana o vacaciones si que está bien dormir siesta, o a mi al menos me gusta. También hay gente que acaba el turno a las 3 y ya se va a su casa a comer y a descansar y se hacen una siesta si quieren, como los funcionarios por ejemplo.
      Y lo que es super chocante desde fuera esq todo cierre a medio día. Yo llevo muchos años viviendo fuera y a veces cuando vuelvo a ver a la familia se me olvida y me quedo con cara de tonta en la puerta de la tienda cerrada a las 3 de la tarde. 😂😂

  • @herrrorschach590
    @herrrorschach590 5 месяцев назад +129

    a fight in Europe be like:
    1) an Italian says "I hate Frenchs"
    2) a German laughs, while a French gets angry
    3) the Italian and the French start argumenting, while the German vanishes up for a second
    4) the Italian and the French go on argumenting, while the German comes back with wurstels and beer
    5) the three of them start eating and drinking together while making fun of each other
    6) the three of them now are friends, probably for the rest of the life. While continuing making fun of each other for the rest of the life.

    • @gentile.5633
      @gentile.5633 5 месяцев назад +1

      And UK? XD

    • @herrrorschach590
      @herrrorschach590 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@gentile.5633 they brexed lol

    • @gentile.5633
      @gentile.5633 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@herrrorschach590 From EU not Europe

    • @saliamae
      @saliamae 4 месяца назад +3

      I love that 😂🥳

    • @vaxrvaxr
      @vaxrvaxr 4 месяца назад +25

      Making fun of the French is a great way to break the ice in Europe.

  • @ionaguirre
    @ionaguirre 6 месяцев назад +9

    Not a matter of preferences. Potatoes grow anywhere, tomatoes need water and SUN overall.😊

  • @durchfallgurgler07
    @durchfallgurgler07 3 месяца назад +6

    A rectangle is a shape with four 90° degree corners. A square is a reactanle because it has these four 90° corners, but a rectangle isnt a square because a square is like a dice: All sides are the same length. If you turn a rectangle, it looks different. But a square looks the same

  • @spyro257
    @spyro257 9 месяцев назад +56

    NOOO!! stop putting Finland and Iceland, in with Scandinavia! STOP IT! people also say "Scandinavia is a nice place" when they are in Finland... my man... can u PLZ make a vid, talking about the difference, between Scandinavia and The Nordics?? it seems like they use the 2 words, like they mean the same... and ofc, it's 95% Americans that does it...

    • @gambit8766
      @gambit8766 6 месяцев назад +6

      If we are gonna be that pedantic, technically Denmark isn't part of Scandinavia either. The Scandinavian peninsula is just Norway and Sweden, Denmark is its own peninsula and Islands.
      Denmark is culturally Scandinavian, but it can be argued that so is Finland.

    • @spyro257
      @spyro257 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@gambit8766 Iceland would be more Scandinavian than Finland, coz at least they are Vikings...

    • @ladythalia227
      @ladythalia227 6 месяцев назад +12

      @@gambit8766Scandinavia and the Scandinavian peninsula isn’t the same thing though. We don’t really use the term Scandinavian peninsula. Scandinavia is a cultural and ethnic thing rather than geographical.

    • @veronicajensen7690
      @veronicajensen7690 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@gambit8766 the term Scandinavia is not all about the peninsula in Scandinavia we don't really use that term "Scandinavian peninsula" it's about history, culture and language , the Scandinavian languages are a group of very similar Germanic languages , Finnish is not a Germanic language it's Urealic like Hungarian and Sami , Icelandic is close to Old Norse a language once spoken by Scandinavians but we don't understand it anymore , the Danes were "born" (first settled in) the southern part of what is today Southern Sweden in Halland, Blekinge and Skåne , Skåne is the modern Danish name for Scania , Scania is where the name Scandinavia comes from , the Danes lived there and then spread to what is today Denmark, but that part of Sweden was land of the Danes for thousands of years until it was lost in a war, the Scandinavian were Vikings and after that we were for a time in a union together under the Danish crown so understand it's not about a peninsula it's way more and please don't mention that Denmark is not on the peninsula because we will never get over loosing that part , llosing Norway that is ok, loosing Iceland ok, but not Skåne Swedes are allowed to joke about it , it's part of our history when we fought against each other, but for others don't mention it

    • @damyr
      @damyr 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@gambit8766 Denmark and Iceland are definitely Scandinavian countries. Finland is definitely not. But they're all Nordic countries. Tho, I'm not really sure if Denmark is considered as a Nordic country. I believe it's not.

  • @kevinbennersten1446
    @kevinbennersten1446 5 месяцев назад +21

    Swedish here, my family has lived here since 1628 on fathers side and 1369 on the mothers side. Before that, we lived in Norway, and I would never call myself Norwegian, but I see no faults in our countries, working more together, I believe both would benefit greatly

    • @real2143
      @real2143 4 месяца назад

      Of course, Norway and Sweden, very similar, norhern-germanic people!

  • @jamesverity9988
    @jamesverity9988 4 месяца назад +5

    A rectangle has four sides and four 90 degree angles. A square is a unique rectangle because all four sides are the same length

  • @acceleratum
    @acceleratum 5 месяцев назад +10

    A/C is common on cars and public buildings on southern europe and some houses, but it is expensive to run it at home due to energy costs.

  • @john-toregundersen2655
    @john-toregundersen2655 5 месяцев назад +5

    Norwegian here. Very interesting reaction, and you have many valuable perspectives, wich often comes to show in your reactions.

  • @Cherrychocol8
    @Cherrychocol8 23 дня назад +1

    The funny thing to me is that the focus point was that Europe isn't a country, whilst repeatedly calling the US America, implying that America is a country (which it is not! America also includes Canada, Mexico and a whole bunch of countries under Mexico)... 😂

  • @08Melb
    @08Melb 9 месяцев назад +11

    just a little side note here.With "America" she means the U.S.!!

    • @foreignreacts
      @foreignreacts  9 месяцев назад +1

      With the U.S.!! You mean the USA!!!!

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 5 месяцев назад

      I didn't really notice, might she have been referring to Canada also?

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 5 месяцев назад

      Deshalb spricht sie englisch, denn in den meisten anderen Ländern der Amerikas spricht man portugiesisch, spanisch, französisch oder niederländisch, und in einem ein ganz klein wenig deutsch.

    • @giuseppesagona7522
      @giuseppesagona7522 5 месяцев назад

      That's probably because we both have different ways of communicating our nationality. Like for example you would almost never hear someone from europe say I'm european, but they would immediately say I'm German / French / Italian and so on. But at least from my experience most Americans first tell they are American and then from what state they're from. So subconsciously we immediately think, he's French he must be from France and he's American, he must be from America.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 5 месяцев назад

      @@giuseppesagona7522 Don't people from USA generally tell you they are Irish/French/Italian/German American, because there grandfather's Uncle was from ...?

  • @WickedCole
    @WickedCole 5 месяцев назад +21

    100% we get that so much with people claiming to be Irish but they know NOTHING about the country. Even thinking we are part of UK which we are not.

    • @Irene-xs9pc
      @Irene-xs9pc 5 месяцев назад +4

      Stupid is Stupid, trying to explain to Americans that Northern Ireland is part of uk 🇬🇧 but Ireland is Eire 🇮🇪is like banging your head against a brick wall.

    • @robinwhitebeam4386
      @robinwhitebeam4386 5 месяцев назад

      Ireland is part of the UK !

    • @fablolliesrock
      @fablolliesrock 4 месяца назад +2

      @@robinwhitebeam4386 No it isn't.

    • @robinwhitebeam4386
      @robinwhitebeam4386 4 месяца назад

      @@fablolliesrock look at a map or talk to someone that lives there.

    • @DutchHeathen
      @DutchHeathen 4 месяца назад +3

      @@robinwhitebeam4386 You're thinking of Northern Ireland, not Ireland. This has already been explained. They are separate countries.

  • @jamesverrall754
    @jamesverrall754 2 месяца назад

    Appreciate your open mind on this video. It's so nice to hear. We're all the same at the end of the day anyway basically, but the cultural differences in "european" countries is more than enough for anyone to enjoy.
    Adding to your algorithm stats gladly

  • @OrkarIsberEstar
    @OrkarIsberEstar 9 месяцев назад +9

    Ok speaking from my home town on the heaters thing. we got heathers because in winter, temperatures can fall to -20°C (-4F°) and wed literally freeze to death without heating. And a heater is just way more practical in an urban setting than a wooden fire.
    But similiarely, in summer, temperatures rarely raise over 25°C (77F°) and turning on AC would be kinda ridiculous. Also its quite energy intense and europe tries to be climate neutral. Not to mention many places that do get hot are hot for like 3 weeks a year and installing AC for 3 weeks each year doesnt quite pay off. The maintainance cost alone just doesnt justify it. Its like buying a ferrari when you only drive 50 kilometers a year.

  • @cesarn.a.3479
    @cesarn.a.3479 5 месяцев назад +98

    I like the way she says "basically you should not make assumptions...", after assuming that all in Southern Europe are lazy napping people with bad economies. 👍

    • @ZachSawyer2077
      @ZachSawyer2077 4 месяца назад +27

      We have bad economy and she said that some people like to take naps, not all of us. Which it's not that far from truth.

    • @Lip836
      @Lip836 4 месяца назад +8

      Whats wrong about her statemenr? XD

    • @SttravagaNZza
      @SttravagaNZza 4 месяца назад +7

      Well napping is healthy, the problem si people that mistake it for laziness🤷‍♂

    • @Niraol
      @Niraol 4 месяца назад +2

      Also putting the ExYU counties in the same basket as Romania and Albania when they were not part of the red curtain and didn't get along with USSR.

    • @DiktatrSquid
      @DiktatrSquid 3 месяца назад +4

      She never said lazy, and never said everybody takes naps. And is she even wrong about the economies?

  • @a5cent
    @a5cent Месяц назад +1

    A rectangle is defined as follows:
    - A four-sided polygon with opposite sides equal and parallel, and all angles equal to 90 degrees.
    A square fits that definition, hence, a square is a rectangle. You could also say a square is a rectangle where all four sides are of equal length.

  • @S.erwinsdottir
    @S.erwinsdottir 6 месяцев назад +9

    Well.. In the South of Switzerland, basically we mix potatoes with tomatoes! 😂😂 In Switzerland by the way we speak 4 languages. Not only german, also if the main one. We speak in the South italian. And we have french and "Rätoromanisch".

  • @jacquelinevanderkooij4301
    @jacquelinevanderkooij4301 6 месяцев назад +4

    I'm bilangualing within my country. Dutch and Frisian. Also Englsh and German.
    French is for us quite different because the basic is latin. I survive but less easy.
    I like our european differenes. Cultury we are different and that is what I like and would like to be in future.

  • @susanaamaro4674
    @susanaamaro4674 Месяц назад

    I'm portuguese and I love Europe, people are friendly in most countries (especialy the mediterranian) , the history, cultures, food.. I don't even want to visit USA, there are so many beatiful places to visit in Europe, and it's safe too

  • @kellyhawkes3191
    @kellyhawkes3191 9 месяцев назад +25

    Not being rude, but what she said on Americans being loud from my limited experience is true, the British can be loud also, but when I was in a McDonald's in York, there was a load of American school kids and I almost couldn't cope with the volume, and I've known two Canadians and they where also loud as hell.

    • @mariafranciscabertoglio6759
      @mariafranciscabertoglio6759 5 месяцев назад +2

      And russian? Omg they are SOOOOO loud.

    • @robinwhitebeam4386
      @robinwhitebeam4386 5 месяцев назад +1

      And Italians , French , Spanish , Belgium , and ......

    • @Z0mbi3fi3d
      @Z0mbi3fi3d 5 месяцев назад +1

      dutch youth too, coming from a dutch person 😂😂

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@robinwhitebeam4386Psst ... und Deutsche? Manche von uns hört man sogar noch nach 22 Uhr, sodaß die Polizei gerufen werden muß. Aber tatsächlich geborene und begnadete Ruhestörer sind Russen und andere orientalische Lärmgebärende.

    • @MendingWall
      @MendingWall 4 месяца назад

      I just returned from a couple of months in Florida. I saw & heard many Europeans and they were very loud! Maybe because they were excited to be on vacation? And most of them smoke! And leave their cigarette butts on the beach. Note to Europeans- smoking is not cool anymore.

  • @CarlosalbertoLx
    @CarlosalbertoLx 9 месяцев назад +22

    This is a very generalist view, and it can be seen, that it is made by someone who does not know all of Europe, but only the most central and Nordic part.
    This story about tomatoes and potatoes is poorly told, it's not true. If we notice, it completely ignores Europe further west, etc.This (lack of) knowledge of Europe is not convincing

    • @KeesBoons
      @KeesBoons 9 месяцев назад +12

      Your criticism is very telling as well. Nobody knows all of Europe, most people don't even know a big part of their own country. She made an entertaining video, which wasn't bad on information at all, especially for people with a US American background.

    • @micade2518
      @micade2518 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@KeesBoons Yes, maybe, but full or inaccuracies.

    • @KeesBoons
      @KeesBoons 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@micade2518 I agree, but considering here audience, I think this is a good enough start.

    • @micade2518
      @micade2518 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@KeesBoons Hmmm ... isn't that a little condescending?
      The subject being so important, it'd better be treated as well as possible. I'd like to know if that lady is a History-Geography teacher?

    • @KeesBoons
      @KeesBoons 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@micade2518 Maybe it's condescending, but the level of other videos on this topic and the comments placed on these videos suggest otherwise. You don't teach university level maths in kindergarten either. If she was a History or Geography teacher this probably wouldn't be a video she would make, but you can find information about her on her channel. Apparently it's not important enough that a serious institution has made a video about it for YT, at least, I haven't been able to find it. The fact that she found it interesting to make a video about it and give it an entertaining twist as a small channel without any real resources is what I base my verdict on.

  • @yeibid
    @yeibid 3 месяца назад +20

    Portugal and Spain don’t have any beef at all, that’s totally misleading. Those are countries that hugely respect each other. Spain have some beef with France and a also a bit with UK (Some old dispute about Gibraltar).
    Visit South Europe, you won’t regret!!!!

    • @davidlacoste
      @davidlacoste 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm French and don't even know Spain has beef with us, or why.

    • @jpmf8050
      @jpmf8050 2 месяца назад +2

      Exactly! Some people might still hold grudges due to our history but most people nowadays don't care about that. We have a lot in common and normally get along really well, save for a few idiots here and there 😁

    • @yeibid
      @yeibid Месяц назад +3

      @@davidlacoste It's probably some kind of envy because there's no reason to have beef with you, guys. Salut!

    • @bilp_bloup_bot
      @bilp_bloup_bot Месяц назад +1

      @@davidlacoste I didn't know either before learning spanish the past few years... and yes, many spanish hate us lol.
      It's strange because they have a good reputation in France.

    • @davidlacoste
      @davidlacoste Месяц назад +1

      @@bilp_bloup_bot Do you know why? Do they even know why?

  • @giulioBonati
    @giulioBonati 6 месяцев назад +32

    She has the usual biases about southern Europe,tho
    Italy is the third largest economy in the EU (eighth in the world), the second largest European manufacturing industry after Germany. Italy has the second most powerful navy in the EU (the third on the European continent: it has the same number of aircraft carriers as China). It is the most visited country in the world by tourists together with France and Spain, depending on the year.

    • @fluffybunny5238
      @fluffybunny5238 5 месяцев назад +2

      She didn’t say they weren’t visited by tourists, quite on the opposite, so idk what the second part of your comment is about. When it comes to GDP per capita, Italy will a few years be behind Czechia, a former communist country, so, compared to the west, its economy is simply not that great.

    • @giulioBonati
      @giulioBonati 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@fluffybunny5238 yes yes, of course.... a G7 country, a net donor to the EU with a GDP of 1.2 billion euros. if you add the GDPs of the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland and all the Baltic countries you don't arrive at the same number. yet here we are with the old stereotypes

    • @fluffybunny5238
      @fluffybunny5238 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@giulioBonati lmao. I am talking about gdp per capita (the actual indicator) 😂 obviously overall gdp shouldn’t be compared, since countries aren’t the same size. And also, Italy has so called accumulated wealth, which countries from the former communist block can’t compare with, because of, well, communists. I am stating the facts and youre upset for no reason. Italy is still a good country but when compared to the rest of Europe it’s not doing so well economically. The fact that it’s a big net contributor (not donor cuz they aint donatong anything lol) also stems from the accumulated wealth, the problem is the economic growth is stagnating. It also doesn’t directly influence how rich/poor a country is, e.g. Poland is the biggest EU funds receiver, but not the poorest country in the EU

    • @giulioBonati
      @giulioBonati 5 месяцев назад

      @@fluffybunny5238 listen bunny, I'm just a little tired of foreigners talking down to us. French Germans and now this chick speaking from an insignificant country. That's all. Ti saluto

    • @giulioBonati
      @giulioBonati 5 месяцев назад

      @@fluffybunny5238 YT does not like my reply for whatever reason

  • @WaechterDerNacht
    @WaechterDerNacht 9 месяцев назад +4

    When it comes to discrimination, one of the relevant points probably is what countries people immigrate from dominantly at the current times.
    E.g. from building the Gotthard train tunnels until ~1990 (start of the Jugoslawian war), most discrimination in the German speaking part of Switzerland was probably against the Italians (bigger waves of immigration from Italy starting with the build of the Gotthard rail tunnel in 1872).
    In 1991 the Jugoslawian war started, which led to a big immigration wave from the balkan region (Serbia, Albania, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Croatia etc.). This led to decline of discrimination against Italians, which often were second or third generation at this time. But got replaced with an increased discrimination against people from the Balkan region. Now, many of those with Surnames from there are second generation and the dominant immigration waves, that get's attention in the news etc., is from Ethiopia and Eritrea through northern Africa. Immigration from Ukraine or neighbouring EU countries just doesn't get that much attention and therefor doesn't have the same effect.
    It's sad, but history, also in this regard, just repeats itself over and over...

    • @zagrizena
      @zagrizena 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, basically people are more uncomfortable with the most recent and most numerous newcomers.
      We are more wary of immigrants that have very different culture and/or religion, and the appearance is considered just a symptom of said difference at first glance. Once we get to know a person, and we learn they're culturally similar to us, there's generally no basis for discrimination. Then there are the nativised Roma/Sinti populations that can considerably differ culturally and people tend to distance themselves from them. And the ubiquitous immigrant workers, that we're distrustful towards, because they tend to keep to themselves and speak in a language we don't undarestand. And finally growing masses of illegal immigrants from Near East and African countries, with some Indian/Pakistani among them. These are the most shunned ATM, since they come in overwhelming numbers, come illegally, differ considerably in culture and religion and are linked to increased numbers of crimes, especially violent crimes and crimes against women. Basically they do not adapt well to our culture and disrupt it, consequently people tend to dislike anyone resembling them (groups of young brown males, especially Arabic speaking).

  • @XabierXabi
    @XabierXabi 2 месяца назад

    I like your attitude, honest and modest talking which make of you an educated, resoectful being at the same time american but nentally a citizen of the world.

  • @nocturne7371
    @nocturne7371 9 месяцев назад +5

    A rectangle has four sides with 90deg corners, so a square is a special kind of rectangle where all sides are the same length.

  • @jsonkody
    @jsonkody 5 месяцев назад +19

    Hey, greetings from Prague .. the central Europe, the heart ❤ of Europe 😁🙌

    • @organicwatermelon
      @organicwatermelon 2 месяца назад +2

      You wish

    • @bilp_bloup_bot
      @bilp_bloup_bot Месяц назад +1

      @@organicwatermelon ?

    • @hugopodpalacz5226
      @hugopodpalacz5226 21 день назад

      ​@@organicwatermeloni mean, its either Prague or Vien. Given credit to history, theres no other city that deserves such name.

  • @kaanjel
    @kaanjel Месяц назад +1

    About AC's:
    Europe be like: when you're hot in summer, do the groceries.😂

  • @MrItaliansound
    @MrItaliansound 9 месяцев назад +10

    20:29 HI! Italian here, I agree with what you said about the fact that if you were not born and lived in Italy, you are not really Italian. We in Italy refer to them as "Italian American" or "of Italian origin". In reality there is a further aspect: The Italian government grants passport and citizenship to anyone in the world if they can demonstrate that they have at least one Italian ancestor. Therefore by law they are 100% Italian and can also participate in political elections for the Italian government or can move to any country of the European Union.

    • @bilp_bloup_bot
      @bilp_bloup_bot Месяц назад

      so many people from Argentina could get an italian passport

    • @matiashermida2277
      @matiashermida2277 Месяц назад

      They do that because Argentinians are perfect beings. Who would deny citizenship to an argentinian ...

  • @AvaReed100
    @AvaReed100 5 месяцев назад +4

    Hot summers like we have now have not always been a thing or rather a problem here in Europe.
    Also since the houses are usually build out of stone and not cardboard, they are better isolated.

  • @kikikintamasangrasshuepfer8954
    @kikikintamasangrasshuepfer8954 Месяц назад

    Mathematically every square is technically also rectangular. Check the word rectangle rect angle =right angle.
    Germany has at around 83 million people.
    It is well explained. For a short presentation it is very accurate.
    Reason why Germany has 16 federal countries? It used to have over 1500 countries. It was very fragmented.
    Yes. It is true. We believe our education system is overall better than the US. But it doesn't mean we reject the individual American.

  • @zofitomas3165
    @zofitomas3165 7 месяцев назад +4

    14:59 it's not Polish money, it's Czech money, at 5000 is Tomáš Garrigue Gasaryk

  •  9 месяцев назад +13

    who comes to europe to eat mexican food when Mexico is a neighbor of us go visiti mexico dah

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 5 месяцев назад +2

      But it is shocking how many Americans, (on YT/reddit etc) seem to find it difficult to understand.

  • @lucazeppegno8256
    @lucazeppegno8256 Месяц назад +1

    1) The real duvision is not potatoes/tomatoes but oil/butter. In Southern Europe potatoes are used in a ton of different dishes normally.
    2) Southern European Countries do not have all bad economies: Italy is the third largest economy and net contributor in EU budget and Spain has anyway a large economy in absolute terms. A little bit of stereotypes in that video...
    P.S.
    A rectangule has 4 right angles, so a square IS a rectangle, but other rectangles not having equals sides aren't a square.

  • @Pippis78
    @Pippis78 5 месяцев назад +12

    Nordics are actually (mostly) really friendly and ready to help out even strangers - if you get past the first hurdle of getting one to not run away from you. Finns are painfully shy more than unfriendly. It's a bit hard to say when it comes to the other Nordics because in our eyes they are over the top friendly and chatty 😂
    Everyone will be "please don't talk to me", but once you get one to talk to you they are likely to go over and beyond to help you out or what ever.
    Put yeah, the nice thing is that they are pretty genuine and honest people.

    • @organicwatermelon
      @organicwatermelon 2 месяца назад

      Im disagree. They are not honest. The same swedish

    • @jpmf8050
      @jpmf8050 2 месяца назад +1

      I don't know, some of the rudest people I've ever met in my life were from Finland. I worked with quite a few of them and they can be really standoffish. Swedish people on the other hand were normally nicer and friendlier, with a few exceptions. Of course these are just my experiences, but yeah they confirmed that some of the Nordic stereotypes exist for a reason

  • @cireenasimcox1081
    @cireenasimcox1081 9 месяцев назад +9

    Back when we all rode dinosaurs to school instead of buses, we were taught about air-borne pollution and global solutions, and the American heating/cooling - and those enormous domestic vehicles - came in for a lot of discussion. Because it was so damn long ago I remember very little of the technical stuff - but I do know that I've gone through life since then taking a lot of notice of how different societies deal with climate.
    In Sri Lanka our house was made of stone/cement, with big, deep verandahs around all 4 sides, In Papua New Guinea the house was raised up on high stilts and and from waist-high to the floor the walls were of louvred glass so you could adjust them to catch any small breeze, In Malaysia most of the external walls of the homes fold right back so you catch all the breezes, in Switzerland, though many of the houses are stone/bricks etc. they're lined with wood-panelling which keeps the chill out..while in Oz ALL these different styles are used in modern Australian architecture adapted to the differing locale.(sorry, got carried away, thinking back🤫)
    All of which is to say that everytime I hear a RUclipsr from the USA say they couldn't live in X-place without having AC - I feel really sad. We humans have lived through all kinds of climatic conditions in our long history - long, long before electricity. We adapt: - clothes/housing/shoes/food - or else we would have been wiped from the face of the earth. I want to pat those You-tubers on the back and say "Don't worry - you're not going to suffer from heat or cold! Give it a go!!"🤗🤗

  • @slawomirmiazga3728
    @slawomirmiazga3728 4 месяца назад +2

    Air Condition in Europe is expensive. Main reason is not so common, it means less production, it means more expensive. Everything not mass produced is more expensive. Another reason is electricity. AC consuming lots of electricity which is expensive in Europe. Reasons behind it is another story. Not so many people can afford it than.