American Reacts Why Europeans Hate Living In The United States.

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose 2 месяца назад +922

    2:15 You are absolutely right. I don't understand why this guy in the video you are watching thinks we Europeans are too dumb to know the historical context and the background of racial tensions in the US. We are Europeans. We know history and we know what has been happening around the globe.

    • @cireenasimcox1081
      @cireenasimcox1081 2 месяца назад +62

      I too marvel at the earnest explanations many reactors give the rest of the world - about subjects the rest of the world are probably taught more about, than those in the US system.☺ But, whether it's done merely for the money or not, at least modern technology is allowing people to see further than the brick walls around them.

    • @arkadiuszfasula6510
      @arkadiuszfasula6510 2 месяца назад +37

      The irony is that people despite having access to all the knowledge they need on the phone - google search still prefer to listen and pass on what you can only describe as absolute bollocks. When i was growing up we’ve learnt from the books

    • @janolaful
      @janolaful 2 месяца назад +28

      The education got me this guy couldn't even spell subscribe

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 2 месяца назад +1

      @@cireenasimcox1081 👍

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 2 месяца назад +2

      @@arkadiuszfasula6510 👍

  • @arne1958
    @arne1958 2 месяца назад +661

    It surprises me that food quality/safety wasn't mentioned.

    • @riaannesimoens
      @riaannesimoens Месяц назад +22

      Yes! Me too! Maybe it wasn't on the list of factors to choose from.

    • @CuriousEnthusiast956
      @CuriousEnthusiast956 Месяц назад +4

      America has more variety of great food than any other country in the world. And in regards to safety when considering the population size, there are many many other countries out there with far smaller population and stricter gun laws and yet have more violence than America when the maths are considered. America for all it's nonsense is still better than Europe and more free outside of certain aspects.

    • @margplsr3120
      @margplsr3120 Месяц назад +3

      to basic and most important things

    • @sue-ellentaormina781
      @sue-ellentaormina781 Месяц назад +29

      Look up the Global liveability index .. the US lags behind in most all categories, including the rankings of highest standard of living, highest life expectancy, lowest mother and infant mortality rate, highest minimum wage, most liveable countries, most liveable cities .. happiest countries ! Countries with the most freedom and social justice
      The U.S. has the highest overall rate of death from firearms compared to 13 other high-income countries - it's nearly five times that of France, ...in fact Firearm-related injury is now the leading cause of death among children and teens.

    • @ElysiaWhitemoonOmega
      @ElysiaWhitemoonOmega Месяц назад +1

      itn was maybe number 11, but should have been higher i think

  • @benandrew21
    @benandrew21 2 месяца назад +420

    Well I'm not gonna speak for anyone else, but for me I would never live in the US because here in the UK I can send my child to school and be certain that he wont be shot to death.

    • @rorykeegan1895
      @rorykeegan1895 Месяц назад +5

      Tell that to Andy Murray. He'll put you straight. Half his classmates in Dunblane never got to go home.

    • @benandrew21
      @benandrew21 Месяц назад +82

      @rorykeegan1895 well thankfully I'm not sending my children to school 30 years ago you donut.

    • @Para2normal
      @Para2normal Месяц назад +95

      @@rorykeegan1895 and when Dunblane happened our Government acted quickly to ensure it wouldn't happen again, instead of sending "thoughts and prayers".

    • @easy1355
      @easy1355 Месяц назад +67

      @@rorykeegan1895 And the fact you had to go back to such a tragic but extremely rare incident, such a long time ago, is a good indication how safe our schools are compared to the monthly shootings in American schools. Good point.

    • @albe8479
      @albe8479 Месяц назад +25

      @@easy1355 and also how bad faith and hypocrites americans have become.

  • @Remrau
    @Remrau Месяц назад +120

    As a Swede, I can't think of a single thing that would be an upside moving to the US.

    • @kumaranvij
      @kumaranvij Месяц назад +5

      I've been to Sweden. It's a beautiful country, safe. But as an American, I would be incredibly bored if I had to live there, no offense. Because the two places I have lived (San Francisco, New York City) are vibrant and full of smiling, joking people, wearing weird clothes, doing unpredictable things, dancing in the streets, interacting with each other in remarkable ways, of different backgrounds...I think a lot of people don't understand the amazing place that the U.S. is. It has many great things going for it, and many bad things.
      The upsides are many. Have you visited the U.S.?

    • @Remrau
      @Remrau Месяц назад +15

      @@kumaranvij I would probably enjoy a visit (but I haven't been) but living there is a completely different matter. I could not deal with your tax system or health care system and the drug epidemic is scary AF to see. Then there's the whole having to work 5 jobs because the pay per hour is so bad in comparison to the living costs.
      I'll take living safe and boring over that anyday :) But different strokes for different folks :)

    • @kumaranvij
      @kumaranvij Месяц назад +1

      @@Remrau Sure, I'd never say, "America's better than every other place!" Every place is different. Of course people in Sweden are on the whole very fortunate. But it is not without its issues, too, of course! Doesn't Sweden have one of the highest tax rates in the world? When you say "I could not deal with your tax system," I'm not sure what you mean.
      The thing is, to say that there's no upside to moving to the U.S. is, to be frank, just silly. Of course there would be upsides - that doesn't mean there wouldn't be downsides, too. The anti-American hate I see on RUclips just gets me very worked up. I find it as offensive as anti-European hate. Why so much hate these days? Our countries are allies and people, I think, need to value that, because if we don't, we will lose it. We can be critical of each other without being reduced to insults and simplistic thinking.
      There is a vibrancy and energy in many parts of the U.S. that are just not there in Sweden. Like, for example, there is just a lack of "soul" there. Pop music, OK, Sweden is good at. But America just has soul. Not all the time, or everywhere - it is a huge and diverse country. But Swedes are just sort of stiff, which is fine, but perhaps if everyone were that stiff we'd be missing out on a lot of great music, art, comedy, and other aspects of culture. If you saw some of the U.S., you might see what I'm talking about. That's what I'd miss most if I moved there.
      You've seen too many TV shows and RUclips videos if you think the U.S. is a sea of drug-addicted miserable people with five jobs and mountains of debt. I'm pretty sure the pay per hour here is, on average, much higher than in Sweden compared to living costs, even currently when we are experiencing high inflation. And even when excluding the billionaires.
      A lot of Swedes came to America when Sweden was less fortunate than it is now - during harder times. Swedish culture is a significant influence here. It's good to look at the big picture. Hopefully in the future everyone will be doing as well as Sweden is now - and Sweden will be able to maintain its good quality of life and accept the other cultures that are now an influence there. Who knows what will happen? I think we should maintain good feelings and cultural relations between our two countries. If Europe and America stop valuing each other, I fear what will happen.

    • @manofculture4938
      @manofculture4938 Месяц назад +10

      ​​@@kumaranvijexcept its not silly, it depends on where you're moving from and what you value. Take the tax system that you mentioned. Yes we have high taxes but many prefer that over the inconvenience of your system, plus, when combine our taxes with lower rent and higher pay, it evens out.

    • @kumaranvij
      @kumaranvij Месяц назад +3

      @@manofculture4938 Oh my goodness, no one is trying to say you should want to move out of Sweden. It's silly to say there would be no upsides to living in a place like the U.S. There are obvious upsides, and obvious downsides.

  • @mikechristie6556
    @mikechristie6556 Месяц назад +123

    As a Kiwi I can assure you that we and Australians also, have the same opinion as Europeans.

    • @kumaranvij
      @kumaranvij Месяц назад

      Of hating Americans and thinking our country is a hellhole?
      It's scary; you guys are really full of hate here.

    • @ClaudiaPetersson
      @ClaudiaPetersson Месяц назад +11

      That's why my husband and I (from Germany) are looking forward to visiting your beautiful, friendly and safe country for the next 5 weeks!
      We have been there before so we know what to expect.
      All the best from Hamburg

    • @unknnoowmaxence6309
      @unknnoowmaxence6309 Месяц назад +6

      every body with common sense on this planet think like that. only american think america is great 😂

    • @kumaranvij
      @kumaranvij Месяц назад

      @@unknnoowmaxence6309 What do you think would have happened to Europe, Canada, Australia, N.Z. et al if the U.S. military weren't there to protect them from China, Russia, et al?
      I don't think America is "the best country" or anything like that. But I think Americans and their allies better start remembering how important our alliances are, as they have been in the past and surely will be in teh future. If we don't respect each other now, I worry what will happen when Putin and other dangerous dictators start taking over other lands.

    • @MrCanis4
      @MrCanis4 11 дней назад +1

      @@ClaudiaPetersson Next month I will travel to Canada again for a holiday. Never have a desire to cross over to the US.
      From Belgium.

  • @mrfomo217
    @mrfomo217 2 месяца назад +478

    Mocking a Polish guy for not spelling English words perfectly was bloody weird.

    • @arkadiuszfasula6510
      @arkadiuszfasula6510 2 месяца назад +86

      I’m Polish can we switch to Polish please, apparently making a mistake in foreign language is a terrible thing to do

    • @ElsonFernando78
      @ElsonFernando78 2 месяца назад +63

      Especially coming from a country where most of the population can barely speak proper English.
      I live in Poland for 7 years and I am always shocked with the number of polyglots in the country. From small shop clerks to delivery workers (both noble professions, don't get me wrong), I rarely come across someone who cannot talk to me in English. When asked if they speak English, they always respond "more or less" or " a little" but then they start talking and you realize it is much better than yours.
      Also many cases of Polish speaking my mother tongue (Portuguese), by choosing it as foreign language for 2 semesters in college.
      They have English since 5th grade. Then a 3rd language around the 8th grade (usually Spanish, German, or French). Then again 2 semesters in the university. That is easy 4 different languages, and I can confirm this is the reality here.

    • @pikus4392
      @pikus4392 2 месяца назад +27

      What is your superpower? I speak Polish.

    • @elizabethsellors9046
      @elizabethsellors9046 2 месяца назад +54

      The irony when Americans misspell the majority of English words. Then they take it a step further by changing the meaning and suggesting the British definitions are wrong. 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @bognagruba7653
      @bognagruba7653 2 месяца назад +11

      @@ElsonFernando78 All Poles learn English from preschool, not from 5th grade. Older generations often don't know the language, but some kids are already fluent from watching RUclips.

  • @helenwood8482
    @helenwood8482 2 месяца назад +433

    The narrator is wrong. Your healthcare system is the worst in the world and results are very poor.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 месяца назад

      Yes. The US has the lowest ages for 'natural' deaths in men and women too.

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 Месяц назад +45

      It's extremely good,if you are rich and don't mind being made poor.

    • @geddesjimmy
      @geddesjimmy Месяц назад +48

      It also has one of the highest infant death rates in the world

    • @keldsleepnot7961
      @keldsleepnot7961 Месяц назад +61

      It's because he doesn't understand that healthcare in EU countries is literally for everyone.

    • @ПръчкоПръчлев
      @ПръчкоПръчлев Месяц назад +2

      Absolutely!

  • @chrisellis3797
    @chrisellis3797 2 месяца назад +613

    Fun fact Connor, you don't have a left and a right political party. You have a right and a further right.
    I think Denmark classed Bernie Sanders as right wing and he's considered so far left he's a Commie in the US😂

    • @mikefraser4513
      @mikefraser4513 2 месяца назад +65

      You're right. An average UK conservative here in the UK would be regarded as as left-wing wing MP in the US. (Or one of "the enemy within" ..glad McCarthy's not around..but Trump is)

    • @Cold444W
      @Cold444W 2 месяца назад +25

      This framing is absolutely false and it's so annoying to continually hear it, there are too many examples of Europe being more "right-leaning" than the USA on several policies, but specially it goes on to categorize Europe as if it was one single country, Denmark is very different from Poland, which again is much different from Croatia, or from Estonia which is very different from France, Europe is not a monolith. And no, in every country in Europe Bernie Sanders would be far left, Johan Hassel the international secretary of the ruling party inn 2020 in Sweden of the Social Democrats literally attacked Bernie Sanders for being a left wing extremist, and it has happened multiple times in Scandinavian countries which at least in popular imagination are supposed to be more "left" than most of Europe.

    • @ivindhimsett9803
      @ivindhimsett9803 2 месяца назад +76

      ​​@@Cold444WIn Norway Bernie would be rated as a centrist at best, and a right leaning one.
      Yes there are differences in Europe, but let us flip it around. Several right wing politicians in Europe would absolutely be classified as left wing in the US.
      Views on healthcare, guns and taxation alone would be enough to acomplish that.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад

      No mate I'm sorry you're just ignorant look at the democrat party and their policies they're absolutely left, even in Europe they would be left. I know someone told you this meme, but it's not true the republican party is absolutely full on facist at this point and the democrats are a reasonable normal political party

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад +11

      ​@@mikefraser4513literally not true literally literally not true. You're just repeating this phrase your saw somewhere. The American democratic party are fairly similar to the labour party In the UK. They have nothing in common with the Tories. But the American republican party is far right facist right now.

  • @janradtke8318
    @janradtke8318 Месяц назад +97

    The funny thing is, that many Americans, working multiple jobs, without employee holiday, health insurance, employee rights still think they live in the greatest country in the world. And with the high risk of dying by gun for my kids.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Месяц назад +15

      I've honest-to-gods seen US Americans being interviewed and pointing out that US news papers and media shouldn't report on what goes on in other nations. ??? Okay, should make the "we are the most awesome" a bit easier to sell.
      Also: Some glass-of-mayonnaise-with-a-flag-tattoo type of father demanding that the schools teach his children that "the worst day you can have in America is still better than the best day you can have anywhere else".
      My immediate reaction: *"The job of schools is not to tell your kids fairy tales."*

    • @ChrisTenalach77777
      @ChrisTenalach77777 Месяц назад +11

      This is the reason why they called a American dream. Because people are at sleep

    • @paduroiunora
      @paduroiunora 23 дня назад

      Sounds a lot like communism. We too were told we were living in the best f*king country on the Earth. So not true. Obviously US is a lot better than communist Romania but not than Europe. I wouldn’t consider moving to the US. And low food American standards should have been on the list instead of language barrier.

    • @ybreton6593
      @ybreton6593 17 дней назад +4

      ils sont nourris la propagande d'états et la propagande du cinématographique hollywoodiennes ou les américains et les Etats Unis seraient les meilleurs partout dans le monde , de supers héros invinsibles dans les films de guerres et autres , sauf face aux extraterrestres dans les films ils attaquent toujours les Etats-Unis 😅😅😅😅🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @MrCanis4
      @MrCanis4 11 дней назад +2

      If I told them how many 'Paid Leave' days I have in Belgium, they would start crying.

  • @bellabella9181
    @bellabella9181 Месяц назад +106

    Having lived in both Europe and the USA as a child and an adult. You know what would be an interesting conversation. Sit some American kids down with some European kids and talk about gun violence. Talk about school shooter drills etc... you will soon realize the trauma and fear that American kids experience without really knowing any different. Personally as a kid feeling unsafe at school in the US never really went away.

    • @Julia-lk8jn
      @Julia-lk8jn Месяц назад +13

      Not saying that I felt all that safe at a German school; every nation has its bullies. But the thought of somebody waltzing in with his 2nd Amendment all loaded up? Never ever crossed my mind.
      Vampire attack, sure, because I may or may not have spent some time fantasizing about whom they'd empty like a drink pack. (I may have some minor character flaws.)

    • @notcompletelynormal
      @notcompletelynormal Месяц назад

      Lots of research has found that School
      Shooter drills alone have a massive impact on student mental health even months after. Testscores go down, absences go up and cases of anxiety and depression go through the roof. Just the drills, not even the real thing. Simply spending your days afraid it *’might* happen is massively detrimental to adults and children alike.
      I’ve never tried it, but I read that they even do it with kindergartners in the US. Imagine being taught to always be afraid and always be prepared to be shot from age 5. That’s like being raised by an apocalyptic cult, except the fear is justified in a whole country always ready and on the verge of bloodshed. They love their guns more than they love their children.

    • @criticalpet9886
      @criticalpet9886 7 дней назад +1

      ​@@Julia-lk8jn
      I really enjoy your humor!
      Fellow german here!
      Berlin?

  • @Patrick-q2z
    @Patrick-q2z 2 месяца назад +530

    The Europeans don’t let unfit people own guns. It’s not hard to understand why that stops mass shoutings.

    • @janolaful
      @janolaful 2 месяца назад +5

      Connor said about Sweden they have gun problems 27 Sept 2024 - Some 195 shootings and 72 bombings have taken 30 lives this year alone.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад +89

      ​@@janolaful30 total deaths though mate. And Sweden has about 120 deaths per year due to homicide. The city of Chicago ALONE in the USA has 800 homicides per year, the USA has over 20,000 total homicides. Please don't say Sweden has a problem when comparing to the United States. The difference in safety is night and day

    • @gerryatriesilke
      @gerryatriesilke 2 месяца назад +13

      We had also Law´s and Police! Most of the Criminals have Gun´s.. not normal Peolple! IF you don´t like to be Criminal,.. xou don´t need one.. that´s easy, isn´t it.. unfortunatly some People have to had guns ..and they or they Family Members, snaped. If Nobody has any Gun,.. it would be a little Safer, seeing the little Childs kills theire Siblings by some kind of accident? no, my Stepfather had gun´s and we are in constantly dangfer/fear , as he has got a drinking problem, and the Police could do nothing, as long as Nothing happend ( the law has changend a few years ago) ... i don´t want/ need anyone with a gun in my Family and i am a German!

    • @yngvekristoffersen7403
      @yngvekristoffersen7403 2 месяца назад +39

      Due to the masive amount of hunters with rifles/shotguns, Norway has more guns per capita tan the US… and with about 5M people we only have about 30 murders per year…

    • @samoday2992
      @samoday2992 2 месяца назад +3

      Say it louder ?

  • @lanamack1558
    @lanamack1558 2 месяца назад +451

    The narrator has the affrontery to criticise a Polish person's spelling. How good is his polish?

    • @CeiStockport-nx2qi
      @CeiStockport-nx2qi 2 месяца назад +38

      Because he's a numbnuts who probably wrote his script on the back of a napkin. He totally glossed over the fact that 90+% of people know you're not much at risk of being shot dead by criminals is low as long as you don't go to blatantly dodgy areas. The chance of being murdered by trigger happy, untrained cops who think they're soldiers is what would worry me.

    • @russcattell955i
      @russcattell955i 2 месяца назад +28

      As a US Citizen, the narrator has a tenuous grasp of spelling the English language too.

    • @ElunedLaine
      @ElunedLaine 2 месяца назад +22

      I thought the same thing. If he were given a Polish questionaire, how many questions could he answer ?

    • @Badgersj
      @Badgersj 2 месяца назад +4

      Ahem. "Effrontery" and "Polish" (polish is that stuff you used to put on shoes).

    • @geoffreynolds8835
      @geoffreynolds8835 2 месяца назад +1

      Exactly 😊

  • @anderslofgren8235
    @anderslofgren8235 Месяц назад +324

    Gun violence is not a perception thing, but a fact. You don't have mass shootings in Europe basically ever. And school shootings are so common in the US I think most Americans are getting desensitized to it. Yes, it's a problem but... Considering the shooting in Las Vegas, Uvalde and Parkland to mention a few notable onces it baffles most of us how you can just continue as if it's to be expected and do nothing to change it. Look up Port Arthur in Australia and how they dealt with it. It can be done if you don't allow your politicians to be bought by lobbying organisations. The perception we have of the US is that money is always more important than human lives.

    • @tjblues01
      @tjblues01 Месяц назад

      IMO, it's because Americans are very individualistic. They love their guns and as long their own children are killed in a school shootings then they just don't care. I've heard few street interviews done after those mass shootings and responses made me sick. They were similar to responses given by Germans to excuse Aktion T4 - almost absolute lack of empathy towards victims...

    • @hellequinm
      @hellequinm Месяц назад +30

      And there's another thing. I'm from a south American country, there's a lot of violence, but you know were it is, you know what to avoid and when to go out. I spend 60 days in US and I must say I felt a bit unsafe honestly. Someone out of nowhere decide to shoot random people for no reason, how do you try to keep yourself safe? You don't. I don't think they understand it this way, imagine having a child and the school being the most unsafe place for them to go. Instead of changing the gun laws, they tell parents to do homeschooling. Yeah, money way more important than lives.

    • @oglordbrandon
      @oglordbrandon Месяц назад

      Theres a giant war in Europe where hundreds of thousands have died in the last 2 years. I think it's you that's desensitized.

    • @isabelstokes4042
      @isabelstokes4042 Месяц назад +8

      So true. They are ruled by money. It's capitalism gone mad.

    • @rosehill9537
      @rosehill9537 Месяц назад +17

      As an aussie, it drives me batty how many americans think we got rid of ALL gun ownership here. We just made it you need a reason, and protection doesn't cut it, and guns that are semi - or auto have a special licensing and rules.
      The american NRA tried to buy politicians here cause they wanted to water down our gun laws. We wiped that political party off the map at the voting booth. We are VERY proud of our gun laws here in Australia.

  • @helgaioannidis9365
    @helgaioannidis9365 Месяц назад +15

    I'm German. We studied US history in our English lessons. We learned about slavery, civil war, genocide of the native people, general Custer, poverty and alcoholism as a consequence of the continued abuse against them, racial segregation, civil rights movement, Martin Luther King, black panther movement, etc. We read a story about boys growing up in the violence of the hood as well.
    I don't think Europeans don't know about American history and politics.

    • @RaoulLeDegueu
      @RaoulLeDegueu День назад

      problems of public education in country of $, I think

  • @MrTramborrios
    @MrTramborrios Месяц назад +27

    ......."Europeans may be unaware of the context and social dynamics we have"
    That's a lot of assumptions (in the video, I mean) from Europeans.
    We are not geniuses by any means, but we are not like many of you... and YES, many of us know and are familiar with the context and current social dynamics, and the past of the USA,
    We were taught (...and children today continue to be taught...) very well from childhood to know and be interested in what surrounds us, affects us or could affect us, the different idiosyncrasy of the countries that around us , including those of the EU.
    Forgive me for telling you that...this is not the USA, it is Europe, and we are very very very proud of it

  • @JM-hl9yc
    @JM-hl9yc 2 месяца назад +321

    Hi,
    About Education: I'm Polish. My son started studying Aero and Space engineering in Poland in Technical University in Warsaw. He get bachelor degree and he decided to make Msc. in France in top 5 university on the world (for its specialization). He get both in Poland and France government subsidiary for schooling for all 5 years period. Now he's doing PHD. His entire study period cost me 0$. I couldn't doit is USA. MY son doesn't have any loan so he start his life without any debt.

    • @pielmeierdieter
      @pielmeierdieter 2 месяца назад +74

      We, in Europe, understand free education for our kids as an investment in the future.

    • @johanlebacq6683
      @johanlebacq6683 2 месяца назад

      Free education does NOT exist! It all comes down to the taxpayer.

    • @francocanuck
      @francocanuck 2 месяца назад +27

      He is a EU citizen it's the reason he could do it ,my son became a chemicals engineer in France, cost at the university ZERO only pay for books ,how Americans could challenge that ???

    • @shortylucy
      @shortylucy Месяц назад +12

      You're basically living my Star Trek fantasy. I'm so happy for your son. I'm sure he'll do great things. ❤

    • @JM-hl9yc
      @JM-hl9yc Месяц назад +3

      @@shortylucy Thank you :D

  • @HJ-eb8wt
    @HJ-eb8wt 2 месяца назад +165

    I had to smile when I listened to the observation about a Pole spelling never with just one e. That Pole probably speaks at least 3 languages, so missing an e is no big deal. How many Americans know how to spell the word for never in Polish, or any other language?

    • @noelle3551
      @noelle3551 2 месяца назад +11

      I'm from the UK, apart from my own language, I can converse in Russian and French, with a bit of Chinese and Vietnamese! As for ex-pats from other countries living here, I see no need to mock them for learning our language!

    • @paulinagabrys8874
      @paulinagabrys8874 Месяц назад +2

      Polacy nie są jakimiś poliglotami. Może Ci z terenów przygraniczych czy z wyższej klasy średniej ale nie ogół społeczeństwa. Jesteśmy monoetniczni i to sprzyja braku umiejętności mówienia w obcych językach

    • @xtinkerbellax3
      @xtinkerbellax3 Месяц назад

      Hilarious coming from an American when over half of US adults are illiterate.

    • @krzyzaak
      @krzyzaak Месяц назад +9

      ​@@paulinagabrys8874 to nie jest do końca prawda. Polski system nauczania pozwala na naukę, biegłą naukę przynajmniej 2 obcych języków do ukończenia liceum. To, czy w domu i poza nim chce się dziecku, czy rodzicom nad tym pracować czy też nie jest tylko kwestią ich lenistwa, a nie miejsca z którego pochodzą, czy klasy społecznej, z której się wywodzą. Oczywiście pieniądze, czy bliska granica niejako wymusza , lub pomaga w nauce, ale większość zależy od rodzica, czy podsuwa dziecku coś po angielsku czy niemiecku, oraz czy w ogóle dba o to,czy dzieciak się języka uczy. Łatwiej jest dać tablet do ręki i mieć w dupie, sam też pamiętam jak w dupie miałem naukę niemieckiego, rosyjskiego, czy łaciny, która miałem w szkole, już o angielskim nie mówiąc, ale w obecnym świecie, dzieciak bez przynajmniej angielskiego na poziomie biegłym, to przyszły tuman i życiowy przegryw i niestety to jest fakt i trzeba się z nim zmierzyć. Żyjemy już od dawna w globalnej wiosce i nie możemy liczyć, że świat nauczy się polskiego, który jest wyjątkowo trudnym językiem. To my musimy się nauczyć międzynarodowych języków (angielski,chiński) by sobie we współczesnym świecie poradzić.

    • @suzyfarnham3165
      @suzyfarnham3165 Месяц назад +1

      Americans are stupid...I was at a gift fair in Ohio. I explained ALL my stock would be going on a container and shipped back to Australia.One woman asked why I didn't just get a U Haul and drive it all back?!! I explained Australia was an island...she then said..
      "...so don't you have bridges there???How stupid!".......Yeah?? I always got told how amazing it was that so many Australians could speak English!! OMFG????!

  • @Thorium_Th
    @Thorium_Th 2 месяца назад +353

    I'm surprised religion wasn't mentioned. That would be quite high up on my list. I feel very uneasy among religious people because they're so unpredictable. They have fantasy arguments like "because god says so" or "because it's in the bible". They can justify anything they want but at the same time they are not even following all religious rules themselves.

    • @e.458
      @e.458 Месяц назад +18

      Yeah, but American Christians are a very "special" type of religious people. Remember that Americans are the descendants of religious radicals who emigrated because their countries of origin didn't share their extreme beliefs. Things like prosperity gospel and the idea that financial (career) success equals piety is a uniquely American belief.
      Also their "because God/the Bible says so" argument somehow only seems to count for obscure texts (often mistranslated ones) that validate their bigotry, not the core teachings of Jesus (after whom they've named themselves).
      Can't make them the template/strawman for all religious people. You penalty meet religious people every day that you value and maybe even admire. You just notice them as such because they aren't the self-righteous, loud, and frankly mad type of "religious" that you expect when you think of the word.

    • @mrsmerily
      @mrsmerily Месяц назад +1

      I dont know I would say lot of religion here Europe as well. True, not christian.

    • @corringhamdepot4434
      @corringhamdepot4434 Месяц назад +13

      I was also waiting for religion to come up. Like several other things, I would be really be worried about ending up working in one of the more extremely Christian fundamentalist areas.

    • @patriciamillin-j3s
      @patriciamillin-j3s Месяц назад +18

      That’s very true, good point. Religion is taken to whole other level in the US, to the point of extreme fundamentalism

    • @patriciamillin-j3s
      @patriciamillin-j3s Месяц назад +7

      @@corringhamdepot4434So would I! When I think about it, I see myself being approached by some priest complaining that he didn’t see me in church and when I tell him I don’t go to church, I’m immediately an outcast.

  • @PeterMonks-p4u
    @PeterMonks-p4u Месяц назад +31

    I'm Australian, in the last two years I have had a triple bypass and a hart valve replaced. I also had a stroke and spent two months in rehabilitation. I also have a disability fund. This year it's around 130 k. I am on a pension. My bill for medical services is zero. In America you can work and prepare for retirement all your life, get sick and end up being homeless.

    • @Prelude_Si
      @Prelude_Si Месяц назад +4

      I live in Las Vegas currently, and I regularly feed an elderly homeless lady in a wheel chair who ended up on the street after a long illness. Happens a lot in the land of the FEE. Super sad 😢

    • @d.f.9637
      @d.f.9637 Месяц назад +6

      @@Prelude_Si In my country, all employees pay a certain percentage for health insurance, whether they use the health service or not, and everyone is absolutely fine with that. What problem do Americans have with that? Everyone will probably need some kind of health service at some point, but that doesn't mean you have to end up homeless. (And yes, there are no pre-existing condition denials, and childbirth is free, insulin too)

    • @amandafielding4451
      @amandafielding4451 Месяц назад +8

      @@Prelude_Si I'm in Ireland, I have a neighbour from USA who ended up in Ireland only because her mother got altzeimers and after losing health care she eventually ended up bankrupt and homeless. My neighbour, in despair, left her country of birth and brought her originally Irish mother "home", to a country where she'd never paid taxes, but nonetheless was housed, cared for and provided with disability benefits until she passed away. My neighbour never went back home afterwards. Unreal that their once affluent lifestyle in California was reduced to nothing and having to migrate because the healthcare there is abysmal and doesn't care if you end up homeless and dying,.

    • @Prelude_Si
      @Prelude_Si Месяц назад

      @@d.f.9637, people here have been brainwashed into believing that if we all chip in for healthcare...ready?... It's BIG BAD COMMUNISM!
      At the same time, we have no issue chipping in to bail out private banks and corporations, or financing never ending wars.
      Bernie Sanders is considered a rightwinger (centrist at best) in most of Europe, but here we think he's a bigger communist than Stalin. It's insane.

    • @ybreton6593
      @ybreton6593 17 дней назад +1

      bonjours je suis Français et je suis comme vous ! j'ai subit par deux fois des pontages coronariens + stenes , j'ai fait une Ischémie cérébrale béguaiement et une embolie pulmonaire , pour tout j'ai été pris en charge à 100% par la securitée sociale : rééducation cardiovasculaire , rééducation orthophonique pendant 10 mois . plus le traitement médicamenteux à vie anti - coagulants , vasodilatateurs , je touchais un font d'invalidité de 75% de mon salaire maintenant je suis a la retraite . j'ai de la chance de vivre dans un pays comme le mien , certes tout n'est pas parfait . dire que pour les américains des Etats-Unis la France est un pays communiste alors que les dtrois devisent de la France sont : LIBERTÉ - ÉGALITÉ - FRATERNITÉ ce que les américains ne connaissent pas

  • @theenastream3408
    @theenastream3408 Месяц назад +6

    I live in Finland. I once shared a news in Facebook, the headline was that Finnish police shot 6 times last year. My American friends asked me was it per policeman per day. No. It was all our police forces combined together in 1 year. And most of those six shots were warnings.

    • @GiorniVenibato
      @GiorniVenibato 3 дня назад

      How can I share your message in the us?

  • @ikkelimburg3552
    @ikkelimburg3552 2 месяца назад +151

    It’s not just the perception of gun violence, it’s a fact. My ex husband was sent for a year to the US for his company. We went as a family, the company my husband worked for arranged a house, two cars, education for our son and so on. They actually did their best, a big house in a gated community, a middle school that had a plethora of extracurricular activities, the works. What struck me the most was the fear. The community was like Fort Knox with an actual gate and security firm. The houses had alarms and securities that could rival the Swiss banks. Lord knows how many times I set off our own alarm and had to call the main gate that it was a false alarm. On the television: murder here, murder there, cops shooting people up, people shooting cops. I had a fulltime job driving my son around since we lived basically on an island, surrounded by things to ‘avoid’ according to our neighbors (again: fear). The straw that broke the camel’s back was the day my son came out of school announcing we needed to go shopping for a new jacket since the current one was setting off the metal detectors in his SCHOOL. A middle school! Not some innercity school that would be a perfect setting for dangerous minds the sequel, but one that was considered ‘nice’. I left with our son the same week.

    • @oulibemusic1257
      @oulibemusic1257 Месяц назад

      @@ikkelimburg3552 and now, if ever you could become pregnant or are, you would not go with your husband. European women will refuse to travel to red states, whether it is for work or for vacation. While your kid’can be shot in school, you can bleed’out with a miscarriage. African bush js safer.

    • @tedwarden1608
      @tedwarden1608 Месяц назад +19

      I’ve only known two people die from gun violence.
      Yup! They were on holiday in America :-(

    • @carolinemarchand4743
      @carolinemarchand4743 Месяц назад +9

      L lived many years in London, so many times I forgot to lock my door... and I am not counting the times I even left the keys on the door... outside...

    • @sean8514
      @sean8514 Месяц назад +6

      I don't blame you for leaving. As an American of 48 years born & raised, I would NEVER come here on purpose or raise a family here by choice. I want outta here! This place is INSANE!

    • @dominozaur98
      @dominozaur98 Месяц назад +7

      In 2020 schools in US operated only for 2 or 3 months and you still managed to have 10 school shootings...
      Few years ago i calculated how frequent are school schootings and it was about 1 or 1,5 per week and it was the worst in Texas.
      I have to that Americans are very desensitized to mass or school shootings.

  • @MartinJohansson-nn5dv
    @MartinJohansson-nn5dv 2 месяца назад +136

    Hi, I'm Swedish and this applies to me and it's MY opinion. I pay about 32% in tax and it's no problem when I see what I get for it. Medical care costs (I translate in USD so it will be easier to understand) 10 USD per doctor's visit and a maximum of 140 during a twelve-month period, then medical care is free of charge. Medicine during a 12 months is a maximum of 280 and up to this amount is a falling scale of 25.50 and 75% and then free. Leave when you have a child amounts to 400 days which are paid and can be divided between the parents. In order for women not to end up in a women's trap, part of the leave must be distributed, otherwise it will disappear for a few days, this makes our society more evenly distributed. When you are on sick leave and cannot work, you have 80% of your salary. Having your children in care when you work costs a maximum of 160 for one child and 110 for the next child. Child allowance every month is 130. As we believe that children who grow up should have the same conditions, the State pays for our educations and pays out 160 every month. You can also get a very advantageous student loan that is paid off in 25 years, it must be paid off before you turn 60. Paid vacation is about 25-30 days per year and the majority must be taken according to law, we believe that recovery benefits everyone in the long run, also the feet taken. You have the right to take leave for studies when you are working to further your education. We currently have 8 parties in the Riksdag, this means that if you don't have a majority, you cooperate with other parties to get a majority. This means that the parties do not become so polarised, but gather around the middle and this benefits most residents. When you cooperate with other parties after the election, the climate between the pariahs becomes balanced and respectful. We have one vote for every resident over the age of 18, and then it applies to ALL citizens. Votes are counted on election day and after that a government must be formed. Even people in prisons are visited by politicians, we believe that all citizens have the same value. Speaking of prison, we believe that care and education are better to get a person on the right track for the future instead of punishment. The punishment is to be deprived of liberty, not to be punished in prison, therefore we try to achieve as normal an everyday life as possible for the inmates so that it will be easier to return to society. You can say that we believe that people can improve if given the right conditions. We have some weapons in Sweden, but as we have a lot of nature and need to reduce the stock of certain species, the majority are hunting weapons, personally I don't know or know anyone who owns a gun, this is freedom for the Swedes, to feel safe. Sweden has the most single households in the world, could this be because we work 40 hours a week and have a salary that you can live on? A good gauge of value is a recent 2024 report on the happiest countries in the world. The biggest loss this year was the USA, as they fell out of the top 20 for the first time since the report began to be issued. Last year they were in 15th place, but have now fallen all the way down to 23rd place.
    1. Finland
    2. Denmark
    3. Iceland
    4. Sweden
    5. Israel
    6. Holland
    7. Norway
    8. Luxembourg
    9. Switzerland
    10. Australia
    11. New Zealand
    12. Costa Rica
    13. Kuwait
    14. Austria
    15. Canada
    16. Belgium
    17. Ireland
    18. Czech Republic
    19. Latvia
    20. Great Britain
    Equality index in the world
    Here are the most equal countries according to the report:
    Iceland
    Norway
    Finland
    New Zealand
    Sweden
    Germany
    Nicaragua
    Namibia
    Lithuania
    Belgium
    My declaration takes a maximum of 5 minutes to submit as I have no sales of property or shares and I can do that at home at the computer, just to check that the information is correct.
    We take our environment seriously and believe that green energy is better than fossil energy and strive to have as good an environment as possible. All of Europe is laughing at the United States now that we are following your election. We hear that Europe is Marxist and fascist (how does it work)? I could go on, but I think you get what I'm trying to say. Can also point out that in Sweden we have freedom of religion and do not interfere with religion in our state decisions. Sweden has had peace since 1814, over 200 years and is the country in the world with the longest peace

    • @Searover749
      @Searover749 2 месяца назад

      US people also pay taxes, but they get nothing in return : that's a great scam, but they're proud of it...
      until they have to sell their house to pay hospital fees, after a big surgery, or a cancer...
      (same scam for university : they pay hundreds of thousands $, for learning nothing, or b.llshit !
      US adults know less about the world, than european 12 yr old kids !)

    • @Stevenhufnagel
      @Stevenhufnagel 2 месяца назад

      In Sweden no single father with a female child is allowed to keep his daughter. The state will confiscate the daughter and put her into foster care....as it happened to a Ukrainian family. The mom died of cancer and the Swedish government took all 3 daughters from the father and put them into foster care, separately. Yes, they separated the kids. The father was only allowed to visit them once a year for 1 hour with a social worker present and watching. They were only allowed to communicate in swedish so the social worker would understand. The youngest daughter forgot her mother tongue within a year. One daughter was placed with muslims who threw away the necklace with a cross she got from her dying mother. She had to act muslim and follow its teachings. All girls were forbidden to practice their language or have any contact with Ukrainians or their father. The father, once exhausting all legal ways was heard by some ex military operative who helps people for a fee, I think he acted pro bono because the father had 0 money. They were smuggled to Poland where the polish state gave them asylum. Sweden actually wanted this family extradited, but Poland told them to f off. Sweden is a horrible place. The girls begged the judge to allow them to stay with their father, they cried, yet they were taken and separated, their culture, language, heritage banned. This ordeal lasted 3 years. F you sweden.

    • @pw6002
      @pw6002 Месяц назад

      Israel on the 5th place for the happiest country, despite them being at war for a year now ?
      If they really are that delusional, I understand how they can genocide Palestinians the way they do without a remorse: they are completely disconnected from reality…

    • @catherinehindle466
      @catherinehindle466 Месяц назад +9

      Thank you Martin for your in depth report . I live in Uk and my daughter married a Swedish man .Their life style is very out door oriented and it is as you say , a respectful way of living .

    • @Karrikua
      @Karrikua Месяц назад +2

      A lot of this is also true where I live too, and it is great!
      Love from Norway

  • @simbob26
    @simbob26 2 месяца назад +85

    It's not the "ownership of guns" that the rest of the world finds alarming. There are guns in almost every country. It is the complete lack of implied responsibility that normally goes along with gun ownership. In Australia, where I live, I am considered a bit of a "gun enthusiast" as I own several of them. It is my responsibility to look after them, prevent them from being stolen, store them where nobody else has access to them and only use them responsibly and safely. This is not a condition of use in the USA.

    • @mrsmerily
      @mrsmerily Месяц назад +3

      well this is what I can sign. There are actually many western countries that have lot of guns. Most are not like UK which is like the other extreme from US.

    • @Deedee-z5w
      @Deedee-z5w Месяц назад +13

      @@mrsmerily You would be surprised how many people can have guns in the UK, the difference is they have to prove they have a safe lockablestorage, the have to hold a licence which is registered with the local police, they have to have a background check which has to be renewed at intervals

    • @lillibitjohnson7293
      @lillibitjohnson7293 Месяц назад

      @@mrsmerilyall of those countries with high gun ownership than most countries. The difference highly regulated gun ownership. USA doesn’t care if mental people can go down the street and buy a gun and pow down 20 kids for shits and giggles. THATS the difference. Every other country absolutely does care if their kids come home from school. This, gun laws. Background checks. No walking around with guns willynilly. No mentally ill people allowed to buy a gun . Anyone not being able to buy a gun out of the boot of a car . You’re cooked

    • @suzyfarnham3165
      @suzyfarnham3165 Месяц назад

      THERE ARE MORE GUNS IN AUSTRALIA now THAN WHEN THE BUYBACK HAPPENED IN 1996.......DIFFERENCE...In Australia they are regulated, background checks etc. We have NOT had a stranger on stranger mass shooting since the new regulations came into law. It only took 3 months...and it was law, When NZ had the mosque shooting...new gun laws went before parliament in 6 days. America continues to do NOTHING. Actually AFTER Uvelede shooting, Texas made it EASIER to get guns??? Go figure.Stupid country.

  • @lucbgg
    @lucbgg Месяц назад +17

    I lived in Indianapolis for a while. Living in a calm neighborhood, it was globally OK, and my number one problem was finding food.
    Nothing can be described as edible, except a few items at Whole Foods. But nothing there qualified as being cheese, nor bread.
    I had to go to the hospital once (suspicion of deep vein thrombosis). I received a several thousand $ invoice, mentioning some services that never happened. Fortunately my partner, who was a nurse, had the knowledge to demolish the scam, and after several hours argument on the phone limited the invoice to 1000$.

    • @stevenclarke5606
      @stevenclarke5606 Месяц назад +4

      Too much sugar, chemicals, additives, junk food.
      Many American foods are banned in most countries of the world

  • @lucbgg
    @lucbgg Месяц назад +13

    11:00 Here in Europe, nobody has to make this kind of calculation... It baffles me that a so called developped country is full of people unable to understand that.
    I don't say it is perfect here but you don't have to chose between becoming poor or becoming even poorer because you are sick or wounded.

  • @batcollins3714
    @batcollins3714 2 месяца назад +113

    On National Irish radio yesterday an American tourist who is a non drinker complained to the host the he can't understand why the Irish drink so much.
    He got extremely angry when the host answered that the Irish don't understand how Americans are obsessed with guns to the point of having their children gunned down in their schools almost every day.
    We do t need guns in Ireland and even the Gardaí, that's our police, are unarmed.

    • @oulibemusic1257
      @oulibemusic1257 Месяц назад +13

      As a french I of course have to tease you a bit. You don’t need guns because you are too drunk to aim….loooool

    • @mehallica666
      @mehallica666 Месяц назад +8

      Never upset an Irishman. Not even a sober one.

    • @kroche90
      @kroche90 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@oulibemusic1257you know the Irish rangers are the best sniper team in the world, right?

    • @tedwarden1608
      @tedwarden1608 Месяц назад +2

      There are plenty of guns in Ireland.

    • @kroche90
      @kroche90 Месяц назад +4

      @@automaticninjaassaultcat3703 average wages in Ireland is higher than the USA... The average person in the USA lives paycheck to paycheck.

  • @carlapocock3849
    @carlapocock3849 2 месяца назад +159

    Have been watching MSNBC and Fox here in Aus ever since the presidental race began. Your politics are hilarious , it's like watching a bunch of clowns at the circus.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 месяца назад +10

      I sometimes watch The Ruben Report (Republican viewpoint) and the Late Night Show (any of them, all Democratic viewpoint) here on YT and they are both show how ridiculous US politics are.

    • @silviahannak3213
      @silviahannak3213 Месяц назад +3

      Exactly..it's more like a Concert and Comments under the Belly Line. Not about Politics and the Plan how Dump wants to do it better. So only 2 Parties...that is sad for such a big State.

    • @KlausStortebeker-nn6lw
      @KlausStortebeker-nn6lw Месяц назад +21

      Yeah, for me as a German the us election campaign it's like the biggest freak show on earth.

    • @perjus
      @perjus Месяц назад +11

      Because US politics is a circus.

    • @joachimthielker3132
      @joachimthielker3132 Месяц назад

      @@perjus Yeah, and the clown becomes president! Disgusting!

  • @ugriDnuub
    @ugriDnuub 2 месяца назад +131

    IRS: You need to pay your taxes.
    Me: How much?
    IRS: You figure it out.
    Me: But how do you know if it's correct?
    IRS: Oh we know how much it is, we just want to give you the chance to screw up.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 месяца назад +12

      And when you screw it up, we'll add a fine to the total.

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 2 месяца назад

      Do you guys get tax checks from your governments at the end of the year? Or do they just take taxes from you?

    • @ugriDnuub
      @ugriDnuub 2 месяца назад +15

      @@Kim-427 I'm Norwegian. Here your employer(s) and banks have to report all that stuff. Your employer will also pay a certain % of your gross monthly wage as a prepayment of taxes based on estimated income and wealth from previous years or your own reported estimate. Then once a year you get a form from the govt with all your reported numbers for income, debt++ from the previous year and you just check that those are correct. Then later the balance between what's been pre paid and what your actual taxes are, is either paid back to you with interest or you have to pay the missing bit. It's all checked and signed online with 2FA in about 10 min for most people.

    • @Maireadmoss
      @Maireadmoss 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@ugriDnuubSame for Australia. Called PAYG "pay as you go"

    • @gillianrimmer7733
      @gillianrimmer7733 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@Kim-427in the UK it's automatically taken out of your earnings every month if you are employed. We get a form called a P60 at the end of the tax year - it breaks down how much you've earned in the last year, how much tax you've paid , your tax code, and if you've not paid enough tax, or, more usual - if you've overpaid and the amount you will get back.

  • @owenmayes2128
    @owenmayes2128 Месяц назад +19

    Free universal education and healthcare is the norm in all first world countries, along with freedom and democracy, for some reason the US seems to think that these are communist traits: the US education system doesn't seem to be working to well, not from what we have seen recently... 🤷🏻‍♂

  • @aneta7921
    @aneta7921 Месяц назад +10

    When we are talking about language, in most of Europe, we learn British English, and American or Aussie English and dialects, confuse us first weeks. When we are talking about guns, I am from Croatia, and 30 years ago we had a war. Croatia is full of guns, mostly legal, but illegal guns were found from time to time as a war souvenirs. Inspite this, in Croatia is 28 criminal acts (murders, robbing, pockets treaft, cuns) per 100.000 inhabitants year. In USA (average) 2,450 criminal acts per 100.000 people. I was in the USA a few years ago, and in six weeks when I was there happend 2 mass shutings, 2 murders near our hotel, robbing with guns of one our friend. Today, in the midnight, I can walk through parks or streets of Zagreb without fear. It is so different.

  • @pikus4392
    @pikus4392 2 месяца назад +178

    There is simple metric how safe is your country. When you are confident that your child can travel alone (even like 7+ above) by foot,bike,bus etc - it means it is safety.

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 2 месяца назад +2

      Many of our children do that. I don’t think it’s wise to put a seven year old in charge of protecting their selves if they had to. I don’t think that would go so well. That’s a small individual against whatever may arise. It could be bad weather,automobile accident etc.

    • @isabelcarrasco4528
      @isabelcarrasco4528 2 месяца назад +21

      ​@Kim-427 How bad weather COULD be on a short-ish journey greatly depends on where you live. Like, I'm German and the only weather danger I can think of on a way short enough to send a 7-year-old on is storms, where branches or roof tiles could fall on one's head. And I feel like the adults around that child would most likely just not let the child GO outside if such a bad storm were announced?

    • @eisirt55
      @eisirt55 2 месяца назад +16

      And not get murdered in his classroom.

    • @2727daqwid
      @2727daqwid Месяц назад +12

      ​@@Kim-427 Things like weather and accidents involving traffic can be addressed. Public transport and a dense urban environment help with bad weather if one lets their kid go out alone during a storm for whatever reason. Well-designed infrastructure, narrow roads, pedestrianised roads, protected sidewalks and bike lanes, frequent crossings, speed bumps, a mix of those two (raised crossings are amazing!), speed bleeders (pieces of road that are intentionally narrower and bent) near schools, roundabouts, having schools actually within walking distance also help, etc, etc. All the things Americans hate (I'm of course generalising here for the sake of humour).
      Unfortunately, some of those solutions are not available for the USA (and other places, including in Europe, where we don't live in some uniform utopia) because of historical mistakes, poor planning or lack thereof, profit above all else mentality etc. So I totally get why people in the US wouldn't feel comfortable sending their 7yo to walk to their school every day.

    • @otapi
      @otapi 17 дней назад

      ​​​@@Kim-427An automobile accident? Name just one automobil accident where no adult is involved. It does not make a difference if your kid is alone in such situation. The kid will get help from any involved adults or from bystanders (at least it is the law in EU). What does make difference is less car traffic around schools (=mass transport, walking, bicycle).

  • @JP200
    @JP200 2 месяца назад +247

    To me the US is a dystopia that happens when you let capitalism run rampant and literally everything is 'for profit'. The love and need for money is at the root of 80% of it. And religion, or religious thinking (like the woke stuff), is responsible for the other 20%. And what makes it worse is that due to its cultural and economical dominance this 'US culture' is exported to the rest of the world 😬

    • @duncanalmond7880
      @duncanalmond7880 2 месяца назад +17

      Very well put!

    • @Thisandthat8908
      @Thisandthat8908 2 месяца назад +1

      good thing you crowbared "woke stuff" in there. I assume you do that a lot. That's hardly US specific. Also the UK for example has a level of religion being forced into schools that is shocking to see from the outside. And they are absolutely unaware of the problem.
      I think in the US there are certainly regions that are worse than others. With religion being obnoxious in society. . But your examples are not really the issues.

    • @JP200
      @JP200 2 месяца назад +13

      ​​@@Thisandthat8908You shouldn't tell people you don't know about your assumptions, it's dumb, "you do that a lot" 🙄
      It's just an obvious example of 'religious' thinking, or 'magical' thinking. Heavy with dogmas, tribalistic group thinking, forbidden words, rituals, etc etc. The US afaik is one of the most religious countries in the world, and even if you remove the 'god' element, the religious mind isn't simply gone.
      And yes, it's often the 'anglosphere' countries, including UK, Australia etc, they often share this.

    • @martinbynion1589
      @martinbynion1589 2 месяца назад +21

      It's no coincidence that Religion is at the heart of many of the worst places on earth - USA, Saudi Arabia, India, Pakistan, Israel, Iran, Afghanistan, etc or that the decline of religion is prominent in many of the best - New Zealand, Australia, Scandinavia, Germany, etc.

    • @JP200
      @JP200 2 месяца назад +15

      ​@@martinbynion1589Religion and religiousness promotes and rationalises tribalism and xenophobia.

  • @TheGramophoneGirl
    @TheGramophoneGirl 2 месяца назад +79

    24:05 "It's really the perception that 'they' have...." No perception about it. We see the stats and news stories of school/mass shootings that just do not happen here. Maybe once or twice a year, not once or twice a day!?!?! (USA: over 600 mass shootings each year over the last 4 years)
    So to a European where that just rarely ever happens, it's very frightening. And something that would scare me off from visiting, let alone living there.

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 2 месяца назад

      Why is it that you people tell us what it’s like where we live and you don’t live here? Thats like us telling you about your country and I’ve never lived there. Ridiculous!

    • @13thmistral
      @13thmistral 2 месяца назад +20

      @@Kim-427 Statistics ;)

    • @TheGramophoneGirl
      @TheGramophoneGirl 2 месяца назад +18

      @Kim-427 cos the whole video was about asking us what we think. 🙄

    • @speedy7040
      @speedy7040 Месяц назад +10

      @@Kim-427 You americans are so out of touch of reality ...and the mental gymnastics you do to defend the indefendable is amaising.
      I once saw a personne saying he does not know an american that has suffered because he does not have healthcare. The next question was „ do you know someone who did not call the ambulance and suffered at home , because he cannot affort it?” Answer „Hell, yes!”.........No conexion between his neurouns ....
      And I talked to a „responsible gun owner” who was keeping his gun in his car and when I asked if the gun is loaded , he said yes. , but has the safety on... he wanted to „protect” his kids ....because kids theese days can type with one hand while driving , but cannot open the car compartment and just ....help themselves .Right....

    • @pw6002
      @pw6002 Месяц назад +3

      @@Kim-427
      Because we keep ourselves informed. And your country does not make us dream anymore, at all.
      And I’m the first one to regret it, believe me.

  • @annikamarjatta
    @annikamarjatta Месяц назад +8

    12:15 It's true. In Denmark the government will pay you between 225 USD to about 850 USD a month. Your rate is based on your parents' income, whether you live at home or by yourself, whether you have kids and so on. But as long as you're over 18 and enrolled in some kind of education, you are eligible :)

  • @thomasblinne332
    @thomasblinne332 Месяц назад +20

    Paying taxes is not losing your money, it is contributing to society !!! If well used !!!

    • @jameshunter3177
      @jameshunter3177 Месяц назад

      The complaint is not about paying taxes but not having them deducted from your salary. This makes the paying easier and not cumbersome and fairer as the correct tax is deducted and you don’t have to complete them yourself. Not everyone is a form expert.

    • @thomasblinne332
      @thomasblinne332 Месяц назад

      @@jameshunter3177 Hi James, so beside you ,who is a trustworthy citizen ,how many people do you think would make the correct assumption of how much they have to pay ? I truly believ that you are rigth and the taxsystem is not fair but the notable differences are not in the salary class of 60 to 100 k a year. So ow exactly do you plan to realise that. Complaining is easy - HOW do you envision a fairer system ?

  • @paulbromley6687
    @paulbromley6687 2 месяца назад +41

    As a Brit I have visited the US and I mainly enjoyed it, I would never choose to live there, I would far sooner live in Portugal, Greece, Australia, Ireland, Germany, Poland, Singapore based on visits and experience of the people and places. It has a lot to do with the US lack of social cohesion and care for those less fortunate.

  • @daphnelovesL
    @daphnelovesL 2 месяца назад +173

    Did he say gun violence is not a hourly thing? This is so American comment.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад +23

      Yup USA has 20,000 homicides per year with 15,000 of them being guns. The UK has 600 total homicides per year, Sweden has 120. If you combine all the murders in Sweden AND the UK it is LOWER than the city of Chicago alone at 800 per year.

    • @CeiStockport-nx2qi
      @CeiStockport-nx2qi 2 месяца назад +8

      WookieWarriorz. Annual gun deaths in the the UK is around 65 annually. Not 600

    • @sparkyfromel
      @sparkyfromel 2 месяца назад +18

      my neighbor was an US surgeon on a international exchange program here in Australia
      he asked "how many shooting incident do you have here ?" ..the Australian surgeon said "about a couple a month"
      "as much" said the surprised American , later it turn out the US guy was asking how many time someone start shooting while in the hospital emergency
      the Australian was shocked , ours is hunting accident or family dispute , nobody shoot at nurses or doctors ...ever !

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 месяца назад +8

      @@CeiStockport-nx2qi Wookie said Homicides, not gun deaths.

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 2 месяца назад +1

      He said that because as many of you seem to feel that it’s a shooting on every corner in 50 states everyday and it’s just not like that. We’ve never had a school shooting in my state. I don’t own a gun and have never fired one and I’m not interested.

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 2 месяца назад +162

    Was religion on the questionnaire? Two Europeans who were sent to the US by their employers told me of similar experiences. One was a military officer who was sent to Texas with his family as part of an exchange training program. They rented a house in a nearby suburb from the base. Neighbors came to "welcome" them and he said that one of the first questions he was asked was "Which church do you go to?" He sure got a culture shock. The other told me about the same in another state. In Europe you can avoid the superstitious zealots.
    A problem with this guy's report is his false equivalence between the political parties. They are both bad, but one is out of control. You cannot put an openly fascist party following a cult leader spouting utter nonsense on the same level as a just normally bad party which never carries out its promises.

    • @WilliamSmith-mx6ze
      @WilliamSmith-mx6ze 2 месяца назад +2

      Just because his neighbours assumed he went to church, doesn't mean they're 'superstitious zealots', unless you're trying to apply that slur to all religious people. If it's just the done thing to go to church in a neighbourhood, they just made a false assumption. No harm was done.

    • @yngvekristoffersen7403
      @yngvekristoffersen7403 2 месяца назад +40

      Yeah, in most of europe it`s considered extremely rude and close to zealotry to even ask about your personal belief.😊

    • @Sienisota
      @Sienisota 2 месяца назад +22

      ​@@WilliamSmith-mx6ze I don't even ask about religious beliefs of my cousin, and he is family! You don't go asking your neighbours their religion, you don't assume they have one. Talking about hour own beliefs is fine, but you don't assume someone else's beliefs unless they specifically tell you and want to discuss.
      It's maybe similar if you asked your new American neighbour who they voted in the last election, and what party they belong to

    • @cecilialeitet2794
      @cecilialeitet2794 2 месяца назад +6

      There are parts of Europe (especially in the east and south) who are very religious. Up in the north we are very secular. I guess it matters very differently depending on country of origin.

    • @carrie5490
      @carrie5490 2 месяца назад +14

      @@WilliamSmith-mx6zebut why would you even ask? It’s like asking how much money someone makes, what job they do or who they vote for. You simply don’t ask it’s rude. Also, if someone is northern European you should assume they aren’t religious, it’s the most likely assumption to make.

  • @Marlene55M
    @Marlene55M Месяц назад +8

    It's always amazing how (mostly) Americans refer to Europe as if it were one country. But we're a continent with 47 countries if you count the three only partials in (Kasachstan, Turkey, Russia) with as many languages (and more plus an uncountable amount of dialects). Not to count all the different habits, cultures and other differences that make the continent so interesting. Oh, and 27 of all those countries form the European Union which is not so united as it should be. And a lot of right movement, but fortunately nothing like your new president elect.

  • @Ana_N-mlp
    @Ana_N-mlp Месяц назад +5

    I'm from east europe. Education here is free up to (and including) a university degree - no tuition fees. The state gives monetary grants to help with expenses in middle school and university (not loans - they don't have to be repaid). They're either for students from lower income families, for gifted students or those with special achievements etc. Students have subsidized public transport. They get one subsidized hot meal per day (in restaurants where eg. office workers would go to eat, not some junk fast food or cafeteria lunches). If students choose to work while studying, their income is tax-free. Most elementary and middle schools have the option for the students to rent the necessary textbooks for a token fee (around the cost of one textbook). For people who study in the same place where their family lives, it can be said that they get paid to study. I don't think I've ever met a person who finished university in debt. Between 35 and 40% of each generation has university degrees, with another 5 to 10% advanced degrees. As for the quality, undergrad education here is comparable to postgrad (masters or phd) in the US.

  • @BlueDusk95
    @BlueDusk95 2 месяца назад +96

    I don't understand the language barrier, I'm French and I survived Scotland, so I can't imagine any place where the local variant of English can be more awkward.

    • @LivariusD
      @LivariusD 2 месяца назад +2

      Tout le monde n'apprend pas forcément l'Anglais à l'école, et ne s'y intéresse pas forcément par la suite.
      Personnellement j'ai fait Allemand LV1, Anglais LV2 et Latin renforcé, mais j'aurai très bien pu choisir l'Espagnole ou l'Italien à la place de l'Anglais. Ça dépend des écoles et de ta situation géographique. Enfin, c'était comme ça y'a 15-20 ans. Je sais pas si aujourd'hui y'a pas une injonction à apprendre l'Anglais.

    • @thirstwithoutborders995
      @thirstwithoutborders995 2 месяца назад +10

      I think it was just: "What keeps you from emigrating to any other country?" - Language Barrier. It is different if you work there or go for vacation. And while most Europeans speak some English, is it fluent enough to work in the US? They could have asked this question for any other country and gotten the same answer realistically.

    • @BlueDusk95
      @BlueDusk95 2 месяца назад +3

      @thirstwithoutborders995 I've worked in Scotland.

    • @topsyfulwell
      @topsyfulwell 2 месяца назад +12

      Probably more communication barrier. When you learn it's offensive to speak your language around Americans, you know you're dealing with a cultural mindset that can't be shifted.

    • @roywilson1703
      @roywilson1703 2 месяца назад

      Salut d'Ecosse , un pays sausage Monsieur .

  • @majamaja220
    @majamaja220 2 месяца назад +56

    I add another issues which makes USA unhuman for me. For example lack of generation cohesion. In our culture ( central Europe) we care for our elderly people, visit them, help them. Lack of infrastructure in subburbs. We have schools, restaurants, local shops, bakeries... often in walking distance. We live together, for example, each weekend I hike with my friends in the mountains, pick mushrooms or berries in the forest. It prevents one from to be alone, unhealthy, and morbidly obese (I am over sixty). Why is American society so unhuman, why your homeless occupy streets of Los Angeles in tents and nobody cares, why are you so noisy, self centered and often without wider overview about the world. Can you make a video about positivities of your country for us. I am sure there are some, but i do not see any

    • @matsvanzelm7220
      @matsvanzelm7220 Месяц назад

      Very true indeed. And still a lot of people from South American country’s try to go the USA

  • @annedunne4526
    @annedunne4526 2 месяца назад +53

    Ireland does not have a lax attitude to taxes. For the majority of workers tax is automaticaĺy taken from their pay in a system called PAYE or " pay as you earn" so no filing of taxes. The tax on multinational corporations has gone up from 12.5% to 15%. Still too low in the opinion of many but not non existent. You should remember too that Europe isn't a country and each one has its own systems and laws. We know about the Republicans and the Democrats, we can't avoid it here in Europe on the news. There is no real " left" party and what we see is a cult of personality heading towards fascism versus a party who want to make positive changes for the good of its people, despite the power of money and big corporations.

    • @Aletonsi
      @Aletonsi Месяц назад

      Ireland SOES have a lax attitude to taxes if we talking towards the big companies. It's a big known thing among the EU.

  • @nik-roshansirak3398
    @nik-roshansirak3398 Месяц назад +7

    German here. I'm in a point in life, where I have to make a rather large decission on my career within the next couple of years, which also could lead to the possibility of leaving Germany. So from time to time I have a look at jobs abroad. Saw something listed in the Washington D.C. area couple of weeks ago and really started to think about, how everyday life would look for me. I work in aviation, so salary is quite okay, but not super crazy high, so living within the city limits would probably be too expensive. So I imagined living one or two hours ONE WAY outside D.C., commuting every day, of course by car, as there is no public transport, sitting in traffic all day and have to beg for my ten days vacation every year and especially that last point took me about two seconds and I came to the conclusion, that they could pay me as much as I wanted, I'd rather die, than sign that contract... 😅

  • @victoriafinney3043
    @victoriafinney3043 Месяц назад +5

    As a European.
    Yes
    The usa is Horrific.
    I've never seen such appalling poverty and deprivation.
    So much inbreeding apparent.
    Even ignoring the Horrific general conduct of the citizens.
    Its a horrible place.
    I was depressed for weeks that actual humen beings are still living like that in this modern era.

  • @zimon85
    @zimon85 2 месяца назад +64

    In Sweden you get ~$370/month if you study full time at collage or university.
    You can take a loan on top of that if you want with an interest rate of 1,2% - 1,5% and the first year after graduation is interest free. Meaning you have one year to find a job without it effecting your loan.
    Bear in mind that there is no tuition fee either. The only thing you have to pay for yourself are books and other study equipment. And living costs of course.

    • @mikkomalinen2641
      @mikkomalinen2641 2 месяца назад +11

      Almost identical system in neighbouring Finland as well.

    • @cynic7049
      @cynic7049 2 месяца назад +14

      @@mikkomalinen2641 I am pretty sure the other Nordic countries have similar system.

    • @bluedragonfly9842
      @bluedragonfly9842 Месяц назад +3

      There's Bafög in Germany. Money that supports you at university. But you have to pay I back later.

    • @oulibemusic1257
      @oulibemusic1257 Месяц назад

      @@bluedragonfly9842with no or close to no interest

    • @tmendes24
      @tmendes24 Месяц назад +2

      And in the US unless you come from a rich family or get a full scholarship, you likely have to work at LEAST part time while going to college. I had a PT work study job my first year of college with a full course load. And after the first year I worked more than I was in school. I couldn’t handle more than 2 classes a semester, bc of work schedule, stress and financial constraints.

  • @Patrick-q2z
    @Patrick-q2z 2 месяца назад +68

    On the worlds lists of best education the US is definitely not at the top. That’s really bad value for money and probably the cost leads to the exclusion of a lot of smart kids.

    • @jaripukki267
      @jaripukki267 Месяц назад

      that is why US needs massive amounts of foreign people, who have higher education

  • @d.c.4788
    @d.c.4788 2 месяца назад +29

    When your store like Walmart is bigger than your hospitals where you save lifes. Clear indicator what your government value more. Money over human life

  • @HenkvanHoek
    @HenkvanHoek Месяц назад +11

    I once was in the US and sprained my ankle, 25 years ago. The medical cost was ridiculous. More than a 1000 dollars and a year later another bill of a few 100 dollars. In the Netherlands, it happend again, the cost was nothing for me. Than I paid a monthly around 100 dollar per month for health care. We see the actual hospital bills, it was around 300 dollar. It was so overdone in the US. It also took much longer in the US. I got bills from people who I have never seen. The US system is really fucked.

  • @arjanwesselink3418
    @arjanwesselink3418 Месяц назад +5

    Gun ownership is different in Europe. No open and conceiled carry. Guns ownership is for hunting/sport and also guns are kept separate from the ammunition. No loaded weapons in european households...... and that's a good thing.

  • @etienne8110
    @etienne8110 2 месяца назад +39

    Guns would be my top1 too.
    I found it shocking in Texas how many people were walking around with guns.
    You never know how one could react in an argument, under the effets of alcohol etc...
    And the rate of homicides further convinced i was right to be afraid.
    Never felt this insecure in any other countries. USA is just unsafe to travel in, i can t imagine what it s like to live there.

  • @Rumu11
    @Rumu11 Месяц назад +32

    one thing to note about work life balance is that many places in the eu have much much stronger unions than the US. It's not the government making the companies behave, but unions a lot of the time. In the case of Denmark, there's not a government enforced minimum wage. It's handled by unions instead. Of course, the goverment also plays a big role, but I think the bigger difference is the strengths of unions in europe vs. the US

  • @kennethbruggeandersen6117
    @kennethbruggeandersen6117 Месяц назад +32

    About the education thing… It’s not the the same all over Europe. But here in Denmark, yes we get free education all the way through university. And yes, we get paid too take the education. Not much. But enough to get by. Which is something we can do, because we also pay a lot in taxes.

  • @moneytooeasy2797
    @moneytooeasy2797 Месяц назад +4

    Lived in Baltimore and the worst thing by far was giant roads the size of the Amazon river which are near impossible to cross. Far more likely to be hit by a car than a bullet

  • @stuartellis4350
    @stuartellis4350 Месяц назад +7

    Outside the US, we're constantly reminded by Americans that the US is the best country in the world. Nonsensical.

  • @Badgersj
    @Badgersj 2 месяца назад +59

    Different American accents don't worry British people so much, we have such extreme differences within our own countries that the various American accents sound like the differences between North and South London.

    • @julez8690
      @julez8690 2 месяца назад +20

      Americans always think they have these huge differences in their accents it is mindblowing. I understood them just fine wherever I was. Now England that is a whole other thing. Was in Chatham and Yorkshire . Still not sure they spoke the same language.

    • @hardyvonwinterstein5445
      @hardyvonwinterstein5445 2 месяца назад +2

      If you don't believe that, play Fallout 4 London.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 месяца назад +4

      That's true, we have over 600 recognised Accents and dialect within the UK, so US accents are easy to most of us.

    • @ronaldstrous2764
      @ronaldstrous2764 2 месяца назад +1

      I think because the survey respondents are mostly from Europe AND south America (as stated in the beginning of the video) i suspect that a lot of votes on this topic are from south America. Same goes for the topic on immigration.

    • @Searover749
      @Searover749 2 месяца назад +3

      US dialect (a kind of pidgin) is just one of the numerous dialects derived from english,
      like indian or kenyan english (but these 2 countries have nice accents and cultures).
      On the other hand, when you hear a US accent, you know you're gonna hear
      a ton of b.llshit per minute (that's a very efficient repeller for europeans).

  • @O.O.O.K999
    @O.O.O.K999 2 месяца назад +18

    No American gun violence is not exaggerated, check the statistics (I have, ages ago). America has more gun deaths p.a. than all other developed countries combined; America is the only country in the world, with more guns than people; America is the only country not in a state of conflict at home, where children get shot by other children; America is the only developed country in the list of six that combined account for 50% of global gun deaths. You DO have mass shootings, defined as when four people or more are shot dead, almost daily. The last one here in the UK was 1995 which led to and even greater tightening of our already tight gun laws and there was very little objection. I've watched several 'Americans living abroad, what made you realise America really messed you up" and gun violence is often mentioned. It's absence in other countries, seems to shock many Americans.

  • @micade2518
    @micade2518 2 месяца назад +42

    Should you come to Europe for medical treatment, there's no way that it will be "free" for you, but the cost you'll have to pay will be infinitely lower than for the same treatment in the USA.
    In France, healthcare costs are negotiated at Government level and capped. That's what makes the difference.
    NB: Your US crappy food doesn't help in preventing people from falling ill, whilst in Europe, we are protected by strict regulations on food quality and nasty disease-inducing chemicals are banned.

    • @micade2518
      @micade2518 2 месяца назад

      @matt2352 Which of my points is?

  • @TheMajortom1969
    @TheMajortom1969 Месяц назад +5

    In case anyone is interested
    the mountain in the background is the "Watzmann" near Berchtesgaden Bavaria Germany

  • @grumpymeggo
    @grumpymeggo Месяц назад +7

    You guys REALLY need more independent media in the US... It is disgusting what is said on TV every day (I don't wan't to be mean. It's just a fact)
    And in 2023 18.854 People died in the US through gun violence. That is ~2,2 People per hour. So it does occur hourly

  • @alwynemcintyre2184
    @alwynemcintyre2184 2 месяца назад +22

    The US lets big business tell the government what to do

  • @HenriBourkel
    @HenriBourkel 2 месяца назад +29

    Fun Facts:
    On the European political scale, the US doesn't have a left and a right party, but rather a moderate right party (Democrats) and an extreme right party (Republicans).
    Political parties in Europe are membership parties, not registration parties like in the US; you register as a voter, not a party supporter.
    All the things the Republicans call communist (public healthcare, public pension fund, mandatory paid vacation, etc, etc) were introduced in my country (🇱🇺.lu) mainly by the Conservatives because they are rooted in a Christian trade union movement.

    • @terra7066
      @terra7066 Месяц назад +1

      In the Heritage Foundation rank of the most capitalist countries Luxembourg is in the 7th position and USA in the 25th.

    • @geschita
      @geschita Месяц назад +1

      Are there european countries where you have to register to vote? (Just curious, because in Germany you don't register. You Just .... Vote.)

    • @istvanglock7445
      @istvanglock7445 Месяц назад +3

      Yes, and I think the registration process is responsible for much of the polarization we see in the US.

    • @mrsmerily
      @mrsmerily Месяц назад

      sorry, but many times those who call themselves liberal or even conservative in Europe are not that either. More to left on scale. This is not my opinion, I have diploma to prove it.

    • @auroraborealis270
      @auroraborealis270 Месяц назад +4

      In my Country,kids go alone in street.,Healtcare if u need, u can have.1.place is your Health.With or without Joob u can go to doktor.U can't by gun free.And many many more things.Security on 1.place.In midle night u can go aut.99 %of this America haven't.

  • @formatique_arschloch
    @formatique_arschloch 2 месяца назад +35

    Here in Finland taking care of income taxes is so easy. Government takes taxes automatically and mail yearly some papers to check. For me everything has always been right and no actions what so ever needed. Just check the simple forms (5minutes) and continue living.
    I have voluntarely raised my income tax % from 23 to 25, so at the end of the year I always get a nice sum as a return. Good for christmas holidays😂

    • @ronaldstrous2764
      @ronaldstrous2764 2 месяца назад +3

      Dutch guy here. Every year I download my tax form from the Dutch irs, check it, sign it and send it. Takes me about 15 minutes.

    • @vaiapisai1346
      @vaiapisai1346 Месяц назад +1

      Same here in NZ. Our taxes are taken out automatically by the IRD before it arrives into my bank account. Makes life so much easier 😊

  • @DXTheGamer
    @DXTheGamer 16 дней назад +3

    @McJibbin in my country ( portugal ) you get varius brackets of education costs from free to full tuition and from kindergarten to university depending on how high on the tax bracket your home income is.
    As an example, your parents can have good jobs with high pay, but if they have 3 children the median costs are high, so you and your brothers/sisters may get free university, and maybe even a free dormitory room.
    My wife got that because her parents weren't badly paid but they'r living costs where high. She even got a housing bonus to help pay for a rented bedroom since the university's dormitory was already at full capacity.

  • @DottAsado
    @DottAsado Месяц назад +4

    University in Italy for a normal degree will be about 1000/2000 $ a year. But you can apply to pay less, or nothing or get some money. A family with 2 average wages will be above the line and pay full 1000/2000$. A family with just 1 average wage probably falls in the "free study". If the income is below 1 average salary you get money. When i studied (Bologna 15 year ago) i had been living by my self for more than 2 years, i had apart time job, so i was considered independent and only my indivudual income was considered, it was low so university was free and i actually got paid. At that time how much money you got depended on where you live and where the university is. You could get about 1500$ if you study in the same city you live in. About 2500 if you have to commute. And about 4500$ a year if you live far away and you move to another city to study. This doesn't mean you have to study in the closest university to your home. You can go to any public university you want, in any city, you can choose to go to best university for what you want to do. The money you get won't cover the costs of living and studing on another city, you will need to work or get economic help from your family, but getting 4500 instead of paying helps a lot. Also, all this do not depend on your grades. You are required to pass at least about half the exams you have to take each year to keep the benefits. So you dont have to be that good a student to get the benefits every year. You can even apply for up to 1 extra year if you don't manage to graduate in time. If you never study and you fail most of your exams then you lose the benefits and you have to give the money back. You can keep studying but you just have to pay the full price. This allowed me to study, working part time on weekends. The fisrt year of university i didn't pass many exams, i almost lost the benefits, but then i got i track... I got a degree, and MA and a PhD. MA is the same thing... Phd is different, you have to pass a complex selection, but if you get between the very few selected you can get about 1100$ a month for 3 years. You are also encouraged to do part of your studies abroad. I applied for an extra scholarship to study abroad, I studied for 6 months in the Universty of Toronto and my university paid me about 3000$ a month while i was there.
    I have to say i am very happy with the education i got. My university was not perfect, it has many many flaws, but overall the education was good. When I went to U of Toronto, attended the highest levels of graduate classes and i didn't felt it was not prepared for that. The big difference was money, in north america you see beatiful campusses, amazing buildings, infrastructure, a lot more activities, more classes, more things going on. Italian universities seem very poor compared to that, everything seems chaotic and disorganized here, there is not much funding for anything... But what you actually study and learn is more or less the same you get in any good north american university. The books say the same things... is not like Ivy league universities have secret books with secret information that you can't get elsewere.
    Actually, in my experience, I noticed that regular college degree classes in Italy are far more difficult and demanding than the average in North America (i have many friends that studied in US as well). Here you have to study A LOT more in the first years, but higher level degrees like MA and PhD in North America tend to be better than here.

  • @notyourtypicalgranny
    @notyourtypicalgranny 2 месяца назад +35

    As an Australian I have a decent knowledge of American history and certainly can see why the racial tensions are more extreme. I do think that people in countries around the world know a lot more about the US than the US know about them. I can name most of the states and have general knowledge and we get a lot of US news in Australia through streaming channels. I have some wonderful friends in the US and would love to visit but I would not feel safe or comfortable going there. To be honest I don't know whether I would be more scared of citizens or police. I have never really felt unsafe in Australia. We have excellent and inexpensive healthcare and a very good education system though we also pay for university courses.

    • @anouk6644
      @anouk6644 2 месяца назад

      Although the numbers regarding (gun) violence are high in the US, in all the 12 times I’ve been there, I’ve never felt threatened or afraid. Only once I felt uneasy because we wandered off into a sketchy neighborhood. Unless your friends live in a bad area, shootings are not a daily occurrence in peoples lives. Maybe you could ask them how it is where they live? I have friends in rural Pennsylvania, Denver and Seattle and as far as I know they haven’t been anywhere near any dangerous situations.
      I like visiting the US, but would never want to live there for the reasons listed in the video.

    • @suzyfarnham3165
      @suzyfarnham3165 Месяц назад

      @@anouk6644 I have visited dozens of times and we were once warned about gunshots in Washington...We were at the Washington Hilton?? It also happened in Annapolis the same trip. Nothing to do with sketchy areas...we always stayed at nice hotels..VERY nice. Last trip in 2020..IN BROAD DAYLIGHT I watched as cars were attacked on the highway at the bridge going over to Palm Beach. You could see Mar A Lago. Smashing bottles and jabbing flagpoles at ANY car with a Biden sticker...it was February 2020. I would say Palm Beach is also a 'nice area'??? I never used to be scared when visiting America BUT THE past 8 years has changed that. I WILL never GO BACK.

  • @tonyberezowecki
    @tonyberezowecki 2 месяца назад +47

    Your take on US politics is way off. The Republican presidential candidate lies so much nothing can compare to him.

  • @ajuc005
    @ajuc005 2 месяца назад +20

    @9:48 - in some European countries tourists get free public healthcare, in others you'd have to pay for the private healthcare, but the thing Americans don't understand is that private healthcare in Europe is also super cheap compared to the US - because it has to compete with the public healthcare on price and quality - so they can't price gouge like in US. If you set your prices to 10 000 USD - people would just wait in a queue and get it done for free. And if they can't wait in a queue cause it's life-threatening - the public healthcare prioritorizes these patients so the waiting times are reasonable.
    So in practice our system is a combination of cheap private healthcare if it's nothing serious and you want to have it done quicker vs free public healthcare for serious/lifethreatening stuff or if you're broke and OK with waiting longer.
    I live in Poland and sometimes I go to a private healthcare to get non-life-threathening stuff done quicker without waiting in lines - and I've never paid more than 200 USD for anything, usually less. MRI is about 150 USD, RTG is like 20 USD or less. Typical visit to a dentist is 30-100 USD. Consultation with a specialist is also under 100 USD and with a regular first-contact doctor it's under 50 USD. So it should be easy to beat USA prices even including hotel and flights.

  • @rocoe9019
    @rocoe9019 Месяц назад +21

    I lived in american for a few years, developed epilepsy when there, the medication cost my $1,800 per month, i returned to Europe where the exact same meds cost € 34 per month without medical assistance, with medical assistance it cost me €6 per month!!!

    • @sean8514
      @sean8514 Месяц назад

      Disgusting, isn't it?

    • @bikerboy3k
      @bikerboy3k Месяц назад +1

      I looked it up and it was nowhere near 1800. What year was that ? Also the average salary in the US is 60-70k USD/year, 28k GBP in the UK and in Eastern Europe you're lucky to make 400 a month, so take that into account.

    • @JoaoOliveira-or2sp
      @JoaoOliveira-or2sp 19 дней назад

      @@bikerboy3k without the top 1000, the average salary in the us is just 35500$

    • @bikerboy3k
      @bikerboy3k 19 дней назад

      @JoaoOliveira-or2sp no it's not, you're full of shit.

    • @marceelino
      @marceelino 12 дней назад

      ​@@bikerboy3k400? Which year are you checking?

  • @Janine-o5o
    @Janine-o5o Месяц назад +6

    Gun violece would be a no for me too. It's not only that the rate of gun violence is statistically a lot higher (we're speaking over ten times as high as where I live) but also that it is so often that america has kind of an excercise for an active shooter event as we have for fire out breaks. That alone creeps me out a little. I'm not against arms per say but I'd reccon that the regulations should be a lot stricter.
    Racism is a big problem in my opinion too. But its not only the open racism, it's also how integrated race-thinking is in the culture. In my opinion every human is just that: human. And mandatorly beeing asked what race I am is so strange to me. Not only does it freak me out a little me beeing german, but I wouldn't even know what to answer!
    Also regarding the free education. Yes higher education is free in Germany even for foreign students. And there are stipendia but you won't get payed to study in general. You might have misunderstood as there is kind of an interest free state loan that you only have to pay back half, even less if you pay in one sum, but that's not pay to study in my opinion.
    And for your question about getting healthcare in europe as an american... at least in germany you will get what you need at far less than in america even without healt insurrance (we are talking about some thousand dollars if it's serious). If you do have a german health insurrance you pay a monthly contribution and if you need medical care your co-payment might be in the hundred dollars max.
    The food would be a problem too. Kinda missed that point in the list. Food in europe is a lot healthier/ better cause the goverment bans potentially dangerous ingredients like food colours and so on. And I couldn't live without some decent bread.
    And lastly, now that there are relatively loud voices openly declaring, that a womans body is not their own, that you cant choose what to do with it (for excample in terms of pr*gnacy even afte r*pe) I pesonally could not live there with a good feeling. Especialy now as I doupt the situation will get better anytime soon.
    Hope that answers some of you questions. Best wishes from Germany.🌻

  • @erikstenviken2652
    @erikstenviken2652 2 месяца назад +45

    The guns in northern europe are for hunting. Normaly not used by criminals. And the laws are strict.

    • @notyourtypicalgranny
      @notyourtypicalgranny 2 месяца назад +11

      Same in Australia, strict laws about getting and keeping guns.

    • @josephtreacy667
      @josephtreacy667 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@notyourtypicalgrannyYep. Had a really bad mass shooting about 30 years ago and that was it . Strict bans and licensing aftrr that.

    • @evelynelewis7151
      @evelynelewis7151 Месяц назад +6

      In Switzerland, when you see a chap riding a bicycle with a gun strapped to his back, you know he's going to do his regular training with the army, and you actually feel safer. In the US, the way they carry guns, showing off their "rights", is frightening, not reassuring at all.

    • @kanedNunable
      @kanedNunable Месяц назад

      @@josephtreacy667 last school shooting in UK was 1996! america has one each week.

  • @Ariadne-cg4cq
    @Ariadne-cg4cq 2 месяца назад +22

    The taxation system in most European countries is different from that in the USA. In Europe the employer deducts the tax from the employees pay packet and pays the tax directly to the tax office so the the employee doesn’t need to fill out complicated tax forms which is a very efficient and popular system. The only people who have to fill out tax forms etc are the self employed or people who run very small businesses. However some of them use accountants to do it for them.

    • @ChristiaanHW
      @ChristiaanHW 2 месяца назад +6

      the only thing i have to do during "tax season", is log in on the government site that deals with taxes, check if they haven't made a mistake and confirm i agree with the numbers they use/have.
      takes 5 minutes tops and that's it
      edit: this is in The Netherlands

    • @KathrynElizabethJaneway
      @KathrynElizabethJaneway Месяц назад +3

      In Romania it's automatically taken from our monthly salary. The only tax we have to pay ourselves is if we own a car, and / or house and we can do it online, so we don't have to waste a lot of time queuing.

  • @obugger
    @obugger 2 месяца назад +24

    I'm astonished that language is seen as a barrier. I'm British and the fact we speak English is the number one reason for people migrating here. English is globally the most widely spoken second language and already being able to speak the language (to some degree) and the opportunity to improve their English obviously makes English speaking nations very attractive to non-native speakers. The original video is downplaying the gun issue. The USA is only 4.23% of the global population but has 50% of the privately owned guns. Statistically gun homicides are 22% higher in the USA than in the EU.

    • @manub.3847
      @manub.3847 2 месяца назад +1

      "Language barrier": perhaps this answer comes from people who have learned the basics of English but feel uncomfortable using this language in communication. Or they have had the experience of being laughed at or treated badly because of their accent or imperfect pronunciation.

    • @ronaldstrous2764
      @ronaldstrous2764 2 месяца назад +3

      The survey is also amongst people from south America, so that might be a reason.

    • @S3nn4h
      @S3nn4h Месяц назад +2

      I have some experience with it. The language barrier is not really the language in itself, but the accent.
      I used to work for a Helpdesk Customer Service company. We had a European team (Spanish, French, Germans, Italians, Polish...). My colleagues had no problem taking calls in English when we were doing only EU support. Then we started to do Worldwide support. While they could still take calls from people from Africa, Middle East or Asia, they had to transfer to me all calls from South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and some from the US depending of the State, main culprit being Texas :P They just couldn't understand the customer at all (even for me some accents were very thick and hard to follow but I was able to make the call).
      And even for the UK some of my team had issues with some places, especially calls from Wales and Scotland, but I didn't mind getting the calls, the ladies from Glasgow and Cardiff were lovely and always put a smile on the face when they were calling me Love and Darling :)

  • @mikehzz9848
    @mikehzz9848 Месяц назад +5

    I've been to around 30 countries and I've never even been interested in visiting the US.

  • @Originalkugelzwerg
    @Originalkugelzwerg Месяц назад +4

    I saw a report on school shootings where the most disturbing thing was the proposed solution. A bunker in the classroom of a primary school where the children are trained to seek shelter without panic when the alarm sounds.

  • @Lily-Bravo
    @Lily-Bravo 2 месяца назад +16

    Get that commentator to write a letter in Polish, and see how he does!!

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis 2 месяца назад +12

    12:35 It's certainly correct for Denmark starting when you turn 18 - even before you get to higher education. University and similar higher education is already free, and then you get paid by the government as long as you're studying . There are obviously a number of different rules that can affect how much you get - how old are you, do you live at home (if so, how much do your parents earn) or on your own, are you a parent, etc. But probably the most common basic stipend for a university level student living on their own is around $1000 per month.

  • @mamaloh8165
    @mamaloh8165 2 месяца назад +16

    Work in the US has kind of a religious meaning due to the dominance of calvinistic protestant sects. Calvin himself was obsessed with punctuality, he is seen as the father of Swiss watch industry because of that. The pinnacle of such ideology is the Prosperity Gospel - an upside-down version of Luther's version of Protestantism, which says more or less, that the rich are good people that have been rewarded by God, the poor are bad people that are poor for that reason.. That's what scares many Europeans away, to us that looks as if the Enlightenment Epoch had never happened. The amount of religious references and remarks of public figures is irritating. All those vows of politicians about them praying all the time seem totally incredible to most Europeans. Same goes for the opposite, you know, constant references to "Satan" etc.

    • @eisirt55
      @eisirt55 17 дней назад

      Particularly unbelieveable when you consider the lack of compassion displayed on the attitudes and policies they espouse .

  • @steveroberts728
    @steveroberts728 Месяц назад +3

    The main reasons myself and my friends would never move to the US are:
    1) Gun ownership and police violence.
    2) Astronomical health care costs.
    3) The cost and poor quality of food and all the additives.
    4) Right wing politicians and Government.
    5) Racial violence.

    • @zenitaocelic4226
      @zenitaocelic4226 16 дней назад +1

      Same here. I just want to add the huge number of ignorant people.

  • @DiannVonDenWoelfen
    @DiannVonDenWoelfen Месяц назад +4

    I live in Germany. Regarding public transportation, the need to own a car has decreased further with the advent of car-sharing schemes. Regarding taxes, property taxes where I live are a mini-fraction of what they are in the States. VAT is included in the sticker price of all items, so you know what you are spending (very nice). And the USA is the only country in the world to tax its expatriate citizens, which means they are doubly taxed. This has a knock on effect that few investment banks will offer their services to you. I don’t know how it is in other countries, but in Germany the Universities are very inexpensive. The fees for one semester at the TU Dresden cost around 290 Euros. Each University student is given a ‘Semester Ticket’ which allows them access to public transportation, so there’s a nice trade off. Plus, all students receive discounts on admission to the theatre, a nice way to support the arts. BTW, there are plenty of engineering programs at German Universities that are nearly EMPTY and the Universities have developed schemes to recruit foreign students, who also benefit from this low tuition.

  • @lloydedwards809
    @lloydedwards809 2 месяца назад +20

    Having spent some months in Western US States, the "language" issue was the attitude. That's an issue with many things eg your use of "left" when referring to media/politics - left of Ghengis Khan isn't "left"!!!!!

    • @kanedNunable
      @kanedNunable Месяц назад +4

      americans grasp of politics is childish at best. calling the dems the FAR LEFT when they are centre right is hilarious.

    • @northleedspoppa
      @northleedspoppa Месяц назад

      TBF for an ancient warlord
      Khan was probably far left 😂

  • @Izzymill
    @Izzymill 2 месяца назад +40

    European education better than US

  • @billyo54
    @billyo54 2 месяца назад +21

    I went to university as a mature student here in Ireland. I did a three years bachelors degree and a one year masters degree twenty years ago. I received the equivalent of two hundred dollars a week plus an extra fifty dollars per week for book expenses for the entire four years.

    • @Izzymill
      @Izzymill 2 месяца назад

      Same in London had a grant. The good old days

  • @IMGreg..
    @IMGreg.. Месяц назад +8

    My sister had the same issue with American healthcare.
    My nephew was in NC on a soccer scholarship and was injured. He needed an MRI.
    It was cheaper to fly him back to Toronto and get the MRI done, and she had bought insurance for his time in the US.
    Same with my cousin. He needed heart surgery in Florida. They were Canadian citizens but also legal residents of the US with insurance.
    It was cheaper to fly him back to Ontario for his surgery rather than wipe out their life savings having surgery in the US.
    Both the MRI and the heart surgery were done for the cost of airfare.
    Actually, the MRI cost more because she went to a private sports clinic to jump the que. I think it cost her a couple of hundred bucks.
    You can't do that for that little in the US.
    Not in Canada, but in some European countries, you as an American could go there to have emergency surgeries done for cheap and in some cases, free.

  • @rudymaanrouf9822
    @rudymaanrouf9822 16 дней назад +1

    12:40 French here, I have a master degree from one of the top business school, didn't spent a cent and was paid around 1500€ per month. It's called an apprenticeship and basically you work part time for a company that will pay you and your school (the tuiton is then refunded to the company by the government, and when I was in school, about the first year of salary too). Not everyone do that because it's harder (many classes give homework and it's a lot harder to do them after a week of work than if you're a full time student and get about 1 or 2 free day a week to study) but it's a win-win deal for everyone : school charge higher tuition, student get first hand experience and start their careers earlier and the company have a qualified cheap worker (currently they don't even pay employer contributions).
    Edit : I realise that "gettting pay" can also mean the monthly grant (mine was around 500€) you get if you are a full time student and your parents have low income. So that's also a thing. I think between the specific student grant and subsidies targeted at every low income person a student can have a little under 1000€ per month from the government.

  • @fabangel7176
    @fabangel7176 Месяц назад +13

    We know about slavery WE learned that in school (and that slavery continue) and jilm Crowe Era. Usa is considered a very racist country. Did hé think WE know nothing even from our own country or others européen country?
    Did hé think your health system is crappy but good? It is good if you are rich.
    We are not acustomed with others langage? Hère each country as a différent langage,each country as several accent and régional langage.English is only thé official langage of UK(England, Scotland, Ireland)
    Americans think their country is so much better they dont understand why people dont want to leave there

    • @angelawood9853
      @angelawood9853 Месяц назад

      Wales too

    • @donuts7627
      @donuts7627 Месяц назад

      Also, Ireland is not in the UK, we were just occupied by them for a large chunk of our recent history.

  • @useall7665
    @useall7665 2 месяца назад +14

    When you live in europe everything is just around the corner + we dont have to deal with bullshit tax's and tips.

  • @Valokaari
    @Valokaari 2 месяца назад +7

    Higher education in Finland. From a guy who has a bachelor’s in engineering and now doing my master’s.
    During my bachelor’s the costs came from books you had to get, food (student discounted at the school diner) and housing. You also get student support from the government and if you need it, a student loan.
    In my master’s (started in September) I’ve so far payed 2,95eur for every lunch and total of 30cents for a few copies I printed. No student support but as we don’t have any physical books, those are the costs.

  • @danmpearce
    @danmpearce Месяц назад +6

    I, a Brit, visited the USA once and certainly would never go back there...

  • @malliajonathan
    @malliajonathan Месяц назад +2

    12:52 yes it’s true. In Malta you get monthly stipend and a yearly grant from the age of 16 onwards including college and University (which is free)

  • @JP200
    @JP200 2 месяца назад +27

    I recently got an 'international medical insurance' policy in the Netherlands for about €180 per month. It covers basically everything all over the world, except in... the US, China, Hongkong, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia 😏

    • @JohnDoe-xz1mw
      @JohnDoe-xz1mw 2 месяца назад +5

      are you sure it doesnt cover it? because i have something simmilar in germany, and while it doesnt cover the us directly, they will cover the cost of getting you tf out of there so you can get treatment at home.

    • @JP200
      @JP200 2 месяца назад +1

      @@JohnDoe-xz1mw Yes, I copy/pasted the list of countries in my reply from their website 😉

    • @JohnDoe-xz1mw
      @JohnDoe-xz1mw 2 месяца назад

      @@JP200 i just mean there is a difference between countries where they will just pay for you to just get treatement theire but that doesnt mean they wont get you out of coutnrys where they refuse to pay for it. im almos twilling ot bet that if you break your foot on a skilift in montana, they will get you home. at least thats definitly the deal here, if its an actual emergency not just soemthing that is uncomfortable to you but not dangerous the wont leave you hanging

    • @JP200
      @JP200 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@JohnDoe-xz1mw Sure, they won't let you die. I don't know what will happen if you're underinsured for medical. Maybe you actually have to pay for the rest of your life, just like an American? 😬
      When I on their website select my destination is the US, the monthly €180 calculates into €540 😄

    • @JohnDoe-xz1mw
      @JohnDoe-xz1mw 2 месяца назад

      @@JP200 sorry i have no idea how it works in the netherlands but in germany, all those payments are jsut "extra" all they mean is you get a nicer room in hospitals (and by nicer i mean the same room but you dont have to share them with random strangers that might snore) and free wifi, the basic coverage is not affected by that and they will take care of you wherever you are. with the excpetion of countries that there is an active travel warning, you cna chekc those on the goverment website as well, if you are STARTING yoru tripp at the time the active travel warning is already out, you are on your own.

  • @chrysalis4126
    @chrysalis4126 Месяц назад +6

    Profit based healthcare, non existent workers rights, school shootings, obsession with "stuff" and getting status from what you own even though you are in debt to have those things, food standards allowing a huge number of additives and poor animal welfare, lack of public transport and religious bigotry. That's the main reasons I wouldn't want to live there.

  • @hilarymiseroy
    @hilarymiseroy 2 месяца назад +23

    You've mentioned Swiss gun ownership before and I meant to explain. Switzerland has a small regular army but a very large militia system and one of the features is that the weapons and equipment are personally owned so are kept at home and inflate the figures.

    • @martinbynion1589
      @martinbynion1589 2 месяца назад

      Totally agree - this shows a massive ignorance of Switzerland and it's cultue. Typical of an American.

    • @obugger
      @obugger 2 месяца назад +11

      And, compared to Americans, the Swiss rarely use those weapons to commit murder.

    • @klaus2t703
      @klaus2t703 2 месяца назад +7

      @@obugger This is because the Swiss are educated and use the Militia in case of foreigners intrude. (Basically how the 2nd ammendment is meant)
      But the Americans use their guns aginst Americans. 15,000 times per year. Good job.
      Reference: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
      Just imagine how the US would act if any foreign country killed 15,000 US citizens per year. Then they surely would know that this is not right ... and they would take measures to stop this killing.
      The rest of the world thinks: 15,000 people are 15,000 people, no matter who killed them, it has to be stopped.

    • @ronaldstrous2764
      @ronaldstrous2764 2 месяца назад +2

      Funny thing, the US second ammendment was meant for militias, but now applied to everyone.

  • @ekinb.3524
    @ekinb.3524 Месяц назад +4

    I never understand the two party "democracy" USA practicing. Do not they have different ideas than the two? Should US citizens support either this or that? If every idea is not represented in the parliement, how is it a democracy? USA should not be allowed to represent democracy for the world, cuz it does not practice democracy.

  • @adventure-phil8339
    @adventure-phil8339 Месяц назад +3

    I would add a lack of democracy. Having in fact only two parties and putting so much power in the hands of one person is not really the fullness of democracy.

  • @thepoliticalhousethatjackbuilt
    @thepoliticalhousethatjackbuilt 2 месяца назад +11

    I suggest the Language Barrier is not that Europeans have a hard time understanding Americans, but rather Americans have a hard time understanding Europeans whose first language is _not_ English. If you have a French person (for example) with a strong French accent speaking English you might have to put in a little more effort to listen to what they're saying, if they mispronounce a word you'd have to make a little more effort, which Americans are not prepared to do; And therefore dismiss or ignore Foreigners trying to communicate with them. Example: criticising a Polish speaker for spelling an English word incorrectly, harsh I think (notice English, English spelling of Criticise not the American misspelling of the word with a z).

    • @soniam.p.7198
      @soniam.p.7198 Месяц назад +2

      I agree - and how many American citizens aren't even able to distinguish YOUR and YOU'RE...

  • @michaelmarchant7245
    @michaelmarchant7245 2 месяца назад +25

    It's no longer the case in the UK, but when I went to university (1985) the government paid for all the university costs and I was given a grant to give me enough money to live off while studying, so my degree cost me absolutely nothing and I didn't need to work while studying.

    • @Badgersj
      @Badgersj 2 месяца назад +5

      Same here. The payoff was that the admission standards were lowered so that they could be widened, in our day we had to pass exams to get in.

    • @michaelmarchant7245
      @michaelmarchant7245 2 месяца назад

      @@Badgersj I seem to remember that Tony Blair wanted 50% of young people to go to universtiy.

    • @Badgersj
      @Badgersj 2 месяца назад +5

      @@michaelmarchant7245 I think you're right. Doesn't seem to have done much good, lots of young people out of pocket paying for useless degrees in media studies.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад

      This is pretty much how it still works today. I got £4000 a year in grants I didn't have to repay and I did 2 years in Scotland and tuition and it was 100% free.
      Also our student loans are given by the government and is really really fair, some Americans to bankrupt due to the predatory loans they are sold.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz 2 месяца назад

      You're wrong mate, this is pretty much how it still works today. I got £4000 a year in grants I didn't have to repay free money basically and I did 2 years in Scotland and tuition was 100% free. Other 2 years were £4000.
      Also our student loans are given by the government and is really really fair, some Americans to bankrupt due to the predatory loans they are sold. WE DON'T HAVE THIS PROBLEM because the loans are repaid by a small % on income you earn over £20,000 per year.

  • @dianehodgkinson7113
    @dianehodgkinson7113 2 месяца назад +16

    I am English, I have visited the States a few times - I rarely understand 'American English' (example - You call it a Bathroom / Restroom - Yet there is no bath or rest area) we just call it a loo!
    #

  • @fernandobartolomeu5488
    @fernandobartolomeu5488 Месяц назад +3

    Good morning
    in Portugal the university is paid but the tuition fees are between 50 and 120 euros and certain courses such as medicine from the 4th year receive a salary and needy families receive state and municipal support

  • @mikeenwright2622
    @mikeenwright2622 Месяц назад +3

    Regarding healthcare outcomes. The USA isn't even in the top 10 healthcare services in the world and by far the most expensive.