Reaction To 10 Things I've Learned About America Since Moving Here

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • Reaction To 10 Things I've Learned About America Since Moving Here | USA Culture React
    This is my reaction to 10 Things I've Learned About America Since Moving Here
    In this video I react to a British person's experience and things he learned after moving to the USA from Britain
    #usa #culture #reaction
    Original Video - • 10 Things I've Learned...

Комментарии • 31

  • @AxelFoleyDetroitLions
    @AxelFoleyDetroitLions 11 месяцев назад +13

    Few Americans will ever visit all 50 states. …i think this is safe to claim.

    • @DevinMcSalty
      @DevinMcSalty 11 месяцев назад +1

      A lot of Americans never leave the town they were born and if they do definitely not the county… sad huh?
      Edit: I mean county, it wasn’t a typo for country btw.

    • @AxelFoleyDetroitLions
      @AxelFoleyDetroitLions 11 месяцев назад

      @@DevinMcSalty My sister has been living in Spain for years….and has visited 50+ countries. She is moving back to NYC next month (she’s 32 years old)

  • @brithas
    @brithas 11 месяцев назад +5

    You should look into the blue ridge mountains of North Carolina it’s a really similar to the highlands of Scotland, which is why a lot of Scottish people settle in the era.

  • @brithas
    @brithas 11 месяцев назад +4

    You should watch Why Do So Many Scottish People Live in America? by Celtic history decoded

  • @andromedaspark2241
    @andromedaspark2241 11 месяцев назад +5

    Some American food can be junky, like most anywhere, but there are lots of healthy options. Portions are big for lots of reasons, but most of us happily take leftovers homs for another meal. Restaurants do that to justify higher prices, I think. If they would only pay waitstaff fairly instead of tipping
    Edit: yeah, of course on the free refills. We use a lot of ice in our cups usually. The glass is more than half ice, a refill may not be as much coke as you think.

    • @andi5262
      @andi5262 11 месяцев назад

      That’s true. I usually ask for light ice just to get a normal amount.😂

  • @fletchkc35
    @fletchkc35 11 месяцев назад +3

    No way could you get a safe apartment for $500-600. Granted this video mentions 2008. One bedroom apartments are $900-1100 right now in 2023.

  • @sisilotau2185
    @sisilotau2185 11 месяцев назад +5

    As for the immigration from the South, the issue is less about people coming in and more about the complete lack of knowing who these people are and knowing that the cartels play a large role in smuggling those coming into the country illegally which leaves them indebted to those Cartels and smugglers.
    The U.S is a massive country with plenty of room for immigrants to come in and assimilate, but we have know way of knowing how dangerous anyone that comes in is since they arent using the legal process which leaves the communities they move to susceptible to whatever criminal element is coming in and that is exacerbated by the cartel connection

    • @WolfLove89
      @WolfLove89 10 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed, along with the trafficking going on. And as of recently Chinese, Russians, Iranians coming illegally. Huge security risk along with costing taxpayers a butt load of money

  • @amycarcaterra8177
    @amycarcaterra8177 11 месяцев назад +2

    Bigger Portions = Leftovers for lunch or dinner

  • @thekevindeucey
    @thekevindeucey 11 месяцев назад +1

    New sub...
    Found you through your hockey reactions. I grew up in Sweden and SW London.
    Ended up living in Washington DC for quite a while.
    So, long story short I'm a huge footy and hockey fan. My teams are the Washington Capitals and Chelsea FC. I know, RED & BLUE. I get conflicted and confused about it myself. 😅
    Anyway, I'm digging your content. Glad I found your channel.

  • @kevinmarsh8922
    @kevinmarsh8922 10 месяцев назад +1

    I think living in the midwest is great. I lived in LA and it was the worst. Seatles great but expensive. I love Michigan now, it's absolutely beautiful and much less costly.

  • @ZincFold
    @ZincFold 11 месяцев назад +1

    Most Americans believe elections will change things but it never does. 😂
    Prove me wrong.

  • @selectivecole
    @selectivecole 11 месяцев назад +3

    We are big and we have a lot going on all over. (a United States citizen)

  • @AC-ni4gt
    @AC-ni4gt 11 месяцев назад +3

    I live in a mountainous area that has rare earthquakes. Nothing has happened much but I am not betting much on it.

  • @lane6866
    @lane6866 11 месяцев назад

    New York gets terribly hot and humid summers and bitterly cold winters just like the Midwest, just and FYI,

  • @addierobinson7230
    @addierobinson7230 11 месяцев назад

    I don't know many places in Indiana where you can get an apartment for 500 a month unless its in a very unsafe area.

  • @starparodier91
    @starparodier91 11 месяцев назад +1

    My best friend moved here from Canada in 2002 when she was 11. Her and her mom both became citizens back in 2018 and I remember her hating the extra paperwork when she got her first job, etc. but nothing major (that she’s ever told me).

  • @thethrashingofthechrist
    @thethrashingofthechrist 11 месяцев назад

    I grew up fairly poor in the Appalachian Mountains in the Virginia/Kentucky area. Most of my family was Scots/Irish/English that came over in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, some as indentured servants. Its kinda tough for working class people. Glad I've had my family to fall back on because there have been several times that I had to move back. You definitely need a vehicle if you're living in rural areas. Did enjoy living in Omaha, Nebraska and Lexington, Kentucky though. Omaha has a great downtown area and you can speed like hell to get to Lincoln. Lmao. Lexington is cool, but you're also fairly close to Louisville, Cincinnati, and Huntington. So thats cool as well.

  • @sbmonarch
    @sbmonarch 11 месяцев назад +1

    2 million people illegally crossed the border last two years. same in uk brother. look how thats been

  • @christophermerlot3366
    @christophermerlot3366 11 месяцев назад

    Here in Toronto my late wife and I had a basic routine when going out for dinner: we'd split an appetizer, have our mains and she would have a small dessert (esp. if tiramisu was available) and I would have a digestif. When we slipped across the border to visit, we had a rule: no appetizer. The portions were just huge.

  • @iretsia5275
    @iretsia5275 11 месяцев назад

    I grew up in the Dallas (Texas) area, and I had a tornado come through when I was around 5 after we had just moved into a new-to-us house. A lot of homes near me were hit very badly, but all it did to my house was take down the already damaged fence, which insurance covered, and let me get my first dog. So it actually worked out pretty well for me, and I was so young I wasn't really aware of how bad it could have been or how bad it was for others.

  • @iretsia5275
    @iretsia5275 11 месяцев назад

    My favorite accent other than my own is basically anything related to Creole or Cajun in Louisiana. My grandpa is from there, so it always reminds me of him and gives me a good feeling, but I also just enjoy the way it can have a sort of smoothness to it.

  • @Rod-Wheeler
    @Rod-Wheeler 11 месяцев назад +3

    The southern border is an open border in the US. An American

    • @jdanon203
      @jdanon203 11 месяцев назад +1

      The US also has massive borders. Well over 10,000 km between Canada and Mexico. I don't care who you are you aren't securing borders that long no matter how hard you try or how much money you put into it.

    • @bke8073
      @bke8073 11 месяцев назад

      Lmfao we literally have concentration camps in which we put children in cages at the border not sure I would call that “open”