5 Things I Would Change About the USA (as a German!) | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • Let my sponsor BetterHelp connect you to a therapist who can support you - all from the comfort of your own home. Visit betterhelp.com/feli and enjoy a 10% discount on your first month.
    👉 "If you were the Queen of the USA, what's the first thing you would change?" This question from one of my Patreon supporters made me think and here is my answer!
    MENTIONED VIDEOS:
    5 Things I Would Change About Germany After Living in the USA ▸ • 5 Things I Would Chang...
    My GERMAN Sister-in-Law’s FIRST REACTION to the USA! ▸ • My GERMAN Sister-in-La...
    I Moved from Germany to the USA at 22 ▸ • I Moved from Germany t...
    WHY CINCINNATI?! Q&A About My Move to the US! ▸ • WHY CINCINNATI?! Q&A A...
    10 THINGS I LOVE ABOUT LIVING IN THE USA AS A GERMAN ▸ • 10 THINGS I LOVE ABOUT...
    Which school system is BETTER? Education in Germany vs. USA - Pt. 1 ▸ • Which school system is...
    A Day at School Germany vs. USA ▸ • A Day at School German...
    TIKTOKS & SKITS:
    • What hernia surgery co...
    www.tiktok.com/@royaventurera...
    shorturl.at/pyJN5
    shorturl.at/bmEVW
    Additional TikTok regarding walkability in the US: shorturl.at/dxzIP
    -------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    3:14 # 1
    12:17 # 2
    15:27 # 3
    18:53 # 4
    25:11 # 5
    -------------------------
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    -------------------------
    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 30 years old, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other topics I come across in my everyday life in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)

Комментарии • 4,3 тыс.

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  Месяц назад +74

    If you had the power to do so, what would you change about the US or the country YOU live in? 🤔
    ▸Are you interested in trying therapy? Try *BetterHelp* and click betterhelp.com/feli for a *10% discount* on your first month!

    • @brettwillard8892
      @brettwillard8892 Месяц назад +11

      I would change the health care system to a more EU system over our single payer. More people are in debt over healthcare than anything else I believe. I live in the USA. I replied before watching the video.

    • @_Chev_Chelios
      @_Chev_Chelios Месяц назад +22

      Socialized medicine is so great because everything is free!
      So naive. Socialized stuff costs more every time. When the people spend other people’s confiscated earnings on people who didn’t earn them, the choices are guaranteed to be less efficient and more wasteful compared to when people spend their own hard earned money.
      Refusing to acknowledge and accept this fact of human nature eventually leads to misery and poverty.

    • @robsuffridge9298
      @robsuffridge9298 Месяц назад +9

      Left a comment and it was deleted so I unsubscribed to you! Alls I said was we spend more money on our military to keep the world safe more than the top ten countries combined! And that’s the reason why things are expensive! So delete my comment again.

    • @_Chev_Chelios
      @_Chev_Chelios Месяц назад

      Take your socialist butt back to Germany, please. Unsubbed.

    • @munkeefinkelbeen5395
      @munkeefinkelbeen5395 Месяц назад +13

      Honestly, I agree with your opinions, and I'd definitely be on board with better public transportation (bullet trains, buses and light rails, etc), tighter gun restrictions (there were tighter restrictions in the Wild West than what we have now), nationalized healthcare, and free university. Taxes will be a little higher, but if everyone is paying their share, it wouldn't be a big issue. Life is better when we work together

  • @halvarf
    @halvarf Месяц назад +635

    The fact that this video needed a three minute introduction to explain to people that you actually can criticize aspects of a country without being mean or ungrateful or unpatriotic can be considered a point in itself.

    • @sherlockwho5714
      @sherlockwho5714 Месяц назад +50

      Yes exactly. We don't hate America because we want to change stuff. It's in fact a sign that we care about it

    • @smenor
      @smenor Месяц назад

      Yup and even at that people watched for the gun thing ignoring that, like healthcare and walkable cities with public transit, the reason it was obvious is that the US is an embarrassment and laughing stock because of how ridiculous we are

    • @donovanfoto3263
      @donovanfoto3263 Месяц назад +40

      As a 'FOREIGNER', you are in the PERFECT position to judge this country. Looking into the fish tank is a perspective shift that needs to be made.

    • @FlashoftheBlades
      @FlashoftheBlades Месяц назад +21

      Reminds me of what Jim Jefferies said on his comedy-style news show, with the following quotes being some good examples of this:
      “What could be more patriotic than questioning your government?”
      “America is literally a protest that became a country. The events that have shaped this nation’s history have always sprung from rebellion. Events like, the civil rights movement, women’s suffrage, gay rights…protesting is patriotism. And we seem to have forgotten that.”
      “For some reason, protesting racial injustice is considered unpatriotic, but stockpiling guns so you can shoot up a government gone mental, that makes you a patriot. Wrapping yourself in a flag that represents a time when half the country literally tried to leave America…that makes you a patriot. And when you have a President who lets this slide (white nationalists bitching about the removal of a Confederate statue), but won’t tolerate this (black athletes protesting police brutality towards others of their own ethnicity)…that just proves their point.”

    • @johnkitchen4699
      @johnkitchen4699 Месяц назад +9

      The saddest parts of this video is the reluctance of America to change (I understand the history and cultural differences - they are excuses not reasons) and the objectionable attitudes when the failings of the systems hear are pointed out (yes, I have been told to leave the country - a Christian friend (yes, a fellow church member) emailed my circle of friends and the pastor telling them I should get out of the country).
      My sister retired to Australia where her family live - after ten years, the Australian government provided her with Medicare and gives her a pension. I retired to America at a similar age for the same reason - my wife and I pay $19000 per year for Medicare and we get no pension. Our savings are disappearing!
      This video left me close to tears and praying that my family would move back to Europe so my wife and I can enjoy retirement not just try to survive it.

  • @theromulanwarhawk
    @theromulanwarhawk Месяц назад +406

    Some people like to say, "My country, right or wrong." But they forget the rest of that phrase. It goes, "My country, right or wrong. If right, to be kept right, if wrong, to be set right."

    • @JimAllen-Persona
      @JimAllen-Persona Месяц назад

      Thank you for that information. I went to look that up after you clarified it… the actual quote was: “Our country-In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be in the right, and always successful, right or wrong." In this context, Decatur's toast is not a call for undying, blind patriotic devotion to one's country as the expression is often used in modern political discourse. It is rather a prayer for guidance, wisdom, and temperance in foreign relations. This was spoken by Commodore Stephen Decatur after the war of 1812 in reference to fighting the Barbary Coast pirates. (hamptonroadsnavalmuseum.blogspot.com/2012/04/my-country-right-or-wrong-what-decatur.html)
      Honestly, I prefer your version.

    • @nearly_blind1017
      @nearly_blind1017 Месяц назад +5

      A fellow persona 5 player? 😂

    • @nearly_blind1017
      @nearly_blind1017 Месяц назад

      Nice, that Betterhelp worked for you Feli, but I have heard enough negative stuff about it that I have a bad feeling whenever someone promotes them…

    • @ah6hy
      @ah6hy Месяц назад +10

      The problem is and always has been who gets to define what is right when two people disagree? If I get to decide, I'm perfectly fine with this. 😀

    • @lauriewelsh8554
      @lauriewelsh8554 Месяц назад

      and we would have presidents, not royalty.

  • @RalfSteffens
    @RalfSteffens Месяц назад +15

    Yes, healthcare costs in the US or Europe: A few years ago my dermatologist diagnosed me with cancer and performed outpatient surgery on me. A few days later, the laboratory diagnosed malignant cancer and the doctor referred me to the university clinic. I was thoroughly examined and operated on in four places. Then a radiological examination that found no cancer. I had to pay 70 euros for seven days in the hospital.
    The follow-up tests (free for me) found no cancer.
    How many citizens in the United States are being consumed by cancer cells because they cannot afford my treatment?

    • @manuelsantiago1810
      @manuelsantiago1810 5 дней назад

      There is a lot of cases that are rare in excessive costs. Where in the world can you find a child cancer or fatal disease treatment research hospital that has an 80+% cure outcome for children at no cost for the child or parents? I know several cases of terminal diseases cured for pennies on the dollar all around the US. Why do you think millions of people around the world immigrate to the USA? Why most leaders and celebrities from Europe come to the US for their surgeries or treatment?

  • @michaelkrue4528
    @michaelkrue4528 Месяц назад +8

    You talked about safety. When I was in Germany I walked the streets without fear. At midnight in Berlin I saw old people strolling down the avenue and a kid riding a bicycle doing the same. I was on my way into München from Neuschwanstein when the terrorist attack came in July, 2016. Listening to Antenne Bayern with my limited German language they were reporting things like shelter in place, no one is allowed to come into the city, and other safety concerns. As you say the city was shutting down. People went the next night to the Marienplatz with memorials and the priest knelt and led the rosary. We have our guns to preserve our freedom. We here just have too many people who have the criminal mind and no regard for life.

    • @johnbarnett6128
      @johnbarnett6128 9 дней назад

      Germany and the rest of Europe are changing due to cultural enrichment.

  • @elizabethbrown9312
    @elizabethbrown9312 Месяц назад +94

    The price of tuition went up when the government started subsidizing loans to make it more affordable, the universities raised the price year after year.

    • @ericbonds2302
      @ericbonds2302 Месяц назад +12

      Not to mention some of the more notable Universities are sitting on multi-million dollar if not billion dollar endowments.

    • @deltadarling23
      @deltadarling23 Месяц назад +11

      And the universities started expanding their administrative/bureaucratic departments at the same time. There are a lot of reports covering "administrative bloat" in US higher education.

    • @Lonovavir
      @Lonovavir Месяц назад +6

      After my sophomore year in University I stopped tracking how many unnecessary administrative workers there were. It was too depressing.

    • @kurtschindler360
      @kurtschindler360 Месяц назад +4

      Not quite accurate. In Michigan, at least, state government greatly reduced its financial support of state universities (as the state cut costs to pay for tax reductions). Result was tuition went way up to make up for some of the difference. Actual cost per student went down, as Universities also made cuts. But the biggest burden still came as higher tuition. It would cost government (taxpayer) far less to return to levels of state support for universities seen in the 1940s-1970s than to pay for guarantee of high student loans needed today.

    • @mattp422
      @mattp422 Месяц назад

      What year was that?

  • @markadams7046
    @markadams7046 Месяц назад +402

    It amazes me how many Americans can't seem to understand that the health of the nation is also dependent on the health of the individuals in that country.

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN Месяц назад

      Yup and All the fatties that won't exercise or think smoking or vaping is a right...We re pretty fit in Denver with the bike paths and hiking

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад +27

      I think it's more so many Americans don't want to pre pay for health insurance (which is what countries like Germany do through very high tax rates) as most Americans go decades without life affecting medical problems and would be paying hundreds of thousands in taxes without truly needing expensive and important medical assistance until they're older and that's if they need it. There's also the fact many people are sketchy about leeches on the system and not enough people paying into it which places like the UK and Germany have plenty of (it's one of the many reasons the NHS is failing in the UK)

    • @gerhardma4297
      @gerhardma4297 Месяц назад +53

      @@kevinprzy4539 Unfortunately, your statements show half-knowledge. Our health insurances are not financed by taxes but every employee pays 50% of his salary and the other 50% is paid by the employer. And our overall tax burden is no higher than in the USA. Only the deductions from the salary are higher, the so-called wage or income tax. There are other taxes, but these are collected elsewhere. In total, however, we really don't pay any more than citizens in the USA and you can research this in many places on the Internet. And these people you call leeches do exist, but there are nowhere near as many of them as you think. And if you are referring to refugees, that suggests a bad attitude, which I am not trying to impute to you. Most countries with a functioning healthcare system function as a community of solidarity. If my neighbor has lung cancer because he smoked, I will contribute to his treatment even if I don't like the fact that he smokes. That's how compassion and a community of solidarity work. Not every selfish person likes this and because the USA is a community of mostly self-centered, selfish people without much compassion, it won't work there. Especially among the rich

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад +10

      @@gerhardma4297 lmao this was a total assumption comment and literally everything you said has been proven false, this feels like a fever dream with how ridiculous and wrong your comment is.

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад +15

      @@gerhardma4297 That is patently false. The USA tax burden is 27.7% of GDP and Germany's is 39.3%.
      BTW, when an employer is forced to pay something the public at large STILL foots the bill for it.

  • @nathanmeece9794
    @nathanmeece9794 Месяц назад +13

    In December 2021 I spent 3 weeks in two hospitals. First was in local hospital being treated and diagnosed as having a ischemic attack causing a small stroke. The bill was around $10,000 dollars. All I had to pay was $175 dollars since I had medicare insurance. I spent two weeks in hospital for rehab. The bill for second hospital stay was around $20,000 dollars. I guess insurance paid entire amount as I've never heard from them. I've used ambulance a few times, bill being around $2000 dollars. My Medicare monthly premium is $114 a month. I pay 3 dollars for one medication and $1.87 for another each being a 90 day supply. One thing I would change is term limits for Congress members

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod 22 дня назад

      Medicare for ALL would be a great system. It shouldn't just be for seniors 65+.

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 21 день назад

      @@Novusod NO. I know I and my wife do not want to pay through the nose for "ALL", including those that are just too lazy to work. No thanks.

    • @m.s.3041
      @m.s.3041 18 дней назад

      @@TeutonicNordwind you already do through taxes… but they are bad spended so just the minority of the population have medicare from it… if everyone joins it will be better and less expensive for the individual person

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 18 дней назад

      @@m.s.3041 No. You are silly. We only pay for the Medicare of seniors or those who cannot work and have proven that they qualify for Medicaid. That is NOWHERE NEAR 'paying for everyone'. We have good health insurance through our employer and it hardly costs us anything for top notch care. If I need and MRI, for example, I can get one within 4-6 days. Not wait for months. If I need to schedule a surgery, (and I have had 4 major ones since 2018) I can get in for it within 3-5 weeks. My cardiologist fit me in for a heart catheterization in three days. We do not need the European system of health care. NO THANKS! If somebody wants better health care, they can go purchase it or find a job that offers excellent healthcare benefits like we did.

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 18 дней назад

      I do not want Europe's taxation rates, its healthcare system or its silly gun laws. Me and my family are just fine.

  • @Verkinggettorix
    @Verkinggettorix Месяц назад +5

    I think almost every American agrees on the healthcare thing …..and I respectfully disagree about the gun laws I never want to rely on the government for my protection…. I live in a more rural environment though and I understand it’s different in the cities….all in all I enjoy hearing your take on things 👍

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 23 дня назад +2

      You are WAY OFF about your statement "almost every American" LOL (it's ridiculous. Really) With ya on guns though

  • @rlGinjaNinja
    @rlGinjaNinja Месяц назад +95

    On the health care system... Yeah, I'm in that right now.
    AFTER health insurance, I currently owe about $7,000. For a 15 minute procedure that can typically done at an urgent care, but due to circumstance had to happen at the hospital. It's so messed up

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад

      Our health care problems are because of government intervention. We need to get government out of health care. It's just gotten worse with ObamaCare.

    • @davwill124
      @davwill124 Месяц назад +3

      thats a feature of the US heath care 'system'

    • @johnclaybaugh9536
      @johnclaybaugh9536 Месяц назад

      Get better insurance. I've never paid a medical bill.

    • @justchillin4065
      @justchillin4065 Месяц назад

      ​@@johnclaybaugh9536BS...No insurance covers 100%

    • @billsnyder6391
      @billsnyder6391 Месяц назад +14

      @@johnclaybaugh9536 Right. Blame the victim.

  • @rgcookmd
    @rgcookmd Месяц назад +122

    Amazing! I'm 75 years old and have lived in the U.S. my entire life. Your five things to change about the U.S. is the precisely the same as mine. And about that healthcare thing....I practiced medicine here for 44 years, and the healthcare system is the first thing I'd change if I could.

    • @heshy14
      @heshy14 Месяц назад +2

      Do you feel guilty for making the amount of money you made as a Dr? I doubt it.

    • @klaus2t703
      @klaus2t703 Месяц назад

      @@heshy14 Tell me that you are an American without...
      Money rules America. Let other people die .. it´s all good as long you getting rich by it.

    • @wheeliebeast7679
      @wheeliebeast7679 Месяц назад +18

      ​@@heshy14 Why should he? He has skills that are far more important to a functioning society than those of many billionaires but earns a tiny fraction of the income

    • @nonamegirl9368
      @nonamegirl9368 Месяц назад

      ​@@wheeliebeast7679this!!!

    • @texasflood1295
      @texasflood1295 Месяц назад +11

      @@heshy14 4 years of pre-med, 4 years of medical school, 3-4 years of residency. Thirty years-old before making a return on investment.
      Why feel guilty?

  • @williamadler3640
    @williamadler3640 Месяц назад +1

    Love it. Great show! We really enjoyed the conversation

  • @kellywellington7122
    @kellywellington7122 Месяц назад +2

    I think you're spot on in all instances. An excellent critique; honest and thorough.

  • @law_merica
    @law_merica Месяц назад +117

    Just wanted to point out that the 2nd amendment (gun ownership) was originally to limit the government’s power. The idea is that the “people” are able to resist the government if it overturns steps its boundaries. For example if the government decided to stop elections in the USA and put a permanent leader in place, then the “people” are able to resist that. The protecting your self and your own property is secondary to that.

    • @badgerrrlattin35
      @badgerrrlattin35 Месяц назад

      I have long wondered how German Jews would have faired in the .30's & 40's if they, or Germans generally, had been armed to the teeth under some Germanic 2nd amendment in 1900?

    • @pablolasha
      @pablolasha Месяц назад +10

      No, its not secondary. When you look at state constitutions at the time the explicitly state self defense as a motivation for their analogous (2A) rights.

    • @markhoadley8678
      @markhoadley8678 Месяц назад +21

      @@pablolasha I doubt that one can rank order the utilities of a natural right, but the Federalist Papers are clearly concerned about being able to overthrow a tyrannical government, and those state constitutions often warn of the dangers of standing armies.

    • @grmpflz
      @grmpflz Месяц назад +9

      ​@@markhoadley8678 But there is also the risk, that it goes the other way round: A legally elected government, that is later disliked by a majority, may be overtrown, or a president wants to fix his presidency by motivating people to make a storm at the White House. A good demagogue is possible to manipulate people as he likes. I'm German and know about the risks, also for the USA...

    • @rlv3180
      @rlv3180 Месяц назад +34

      The original intent doesn't matter in a practical sense because the guns are here. It's like telling a guy with a broken arm he should have been more careful. The reality is that gun violence is caused by criminals. Making guns illegal doesn't mean the criminals would suddenly start obeying new laws and get rid of them. Those who follow laws, which is most people, would get rid of their guns. Then we would have armed criminals and defenseless citizens, so that's a worse scenario than the status quo. If there were an easy solution to the problem, it would have been implemented already.

  • @PhotogNT
    @PhotogNT Месяц назад +157

    I recently had to have surgery in Australia 🇦🇺.
    Prior to admission I needed multiple blood tests + echocardiogram + CT Scan + MRI + ECG total cost to me $0.00.
    Surgery (4 hours) 2 separate surgical teams for 2 different procedures theatre cost, anaesthetics total cost to me $0.00.
    3 weeks inpatient + daily blood tests + multiple X-rays + multiple ultrasounds + medications + specialist services total cost to me $0.00.
    After 3 weeks I just got out of bed and walked out and paid absolutely nothing.
    I love the Medicare universal healthcare system in Australia. I have absolutely no problems or worries about going to hospital emergency department or inpatient treatment because I know I have no issues with the cost’s causing financial stress or bankruptcy.

    • @sylviav6900
      @sylviav6900 Месяц назад +12

      Similar here in Germany:
      My new GP did a full check, blood tests, ultrasound of the whole abdomen.
      Then, I got the info that I needed surgery.
      So, I went to a hospital of my choice for a first talk with the assistant medical director to check and decide, whether the surgery really should be done. He was all relaxed and dedicated more than sufficient time to me.
      I decided for it.
      So, two weeks later, I got another ultrasound check and blood test at the hospital to prepare for the surgery the next business day.
      They did a minimal invasive procedure by endoscopy to remove the culprit from my body (around 2.5 hours with two active surgeons).
      After that, I stayed in the hospital for a total of the days, food, medication, and care, plus two more blood tests included. Also, they gave me extra medication just in case I need it (I didn't) to take home - plus a prescription for more.
      After hospital, I have stayed off sick to recover for another 1.5 weeks (and should be getting back to work next week - even though my doctor votes for yet another week off me being off. I just don't think, that's really necessary.
      All this is being covered by my minimal compulsory insurance. No extra insurance involved. I just need to pay a fee of 30€ for the three days at the hospital.
      By the way:
      Before leaving the hospital, I enquired what I should tell my employer, by when they might expect me back.
      The reply was: "Well, in the US, this would have been an ambulant surgery and people would go back to work right the next day."
      ... I am soooo glad that that's not really the measure here! Couldn't have worked right the next day, plus it would have hindered the quick recovery. So sad, a well-developped and rich country such as the US calls for this.

    • @nathan2813
      @nathan2813 Месяц назад +14

      It doesn't SEEM to cost anything, but you ARE paying for it via taxes. Albeit, it's probably still not as expensive as in the U.S. b/c organized crime doesn't inflate the cost of everything healthcare-related like it does in the U.S.

    • @Be-Es---___
      @Be-Es---___ Месяц назад +15

      In Australia there is no profit in delivering healthcare.
      THAT'S the main difference.

    • @walli6388
      @walli6388 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@nathan2813Not a tax but a member fee(?) for one of the public healthcare services. That's paid as a share of your income. At 14,6 % but no more than a max of 8760€ per year.
      It's one of those solidarity based systems.

    • @mreurovisionau
      @mreurovisionau Месяц назад +6

      Tell that to the thousands on waiting list, and why are Australians taxed higher if they don't have private insurance?
      The Australian system is great for emergency and necessary situations. It's not for things less pressing, and I've had two instances where I was forced to go private. One was to repair an AC should joint because it was deemed I could live with a permanent restriction in movement, and the other was surgery for a broken wrist that was deemed would likely heal satisfactorily if in plaster for 4 months.

  • @folkvoiceband2933
    @folkvoiceband2933 Месяц назад

    i totally agree! thanks for making the video!

  • @StLouis-yu9iz
    @StLouis-yu9iz Месяц назад +4

    Great video, I especially agree about the public transit investments being so direly needed here! 💯

  • @Helixdragon
    @Helixdragon Месяц назад +88

    I miss good bread. (from Manheim, been here for 54 years now)

    • @cimareco3617
      @cimareco3617 Месяц назад +3

      It’s written Mannheim (just FYI) 😊

    • @TheEddyrose1
      @TheEddyrose1 Месяц назад +6

      @@cimareco3617 There is also a city in Germany called Manheim, with one M. 🙃

    • @stevekelley1179
      @stevekelley1179 Месяц назад +3

      Look for an Amish community. You’ll find good bread 🥖

    • @kosmokritikos9299
      @kosmokritikos9299 Месяц назад +7

      I'm not German, but I bake my own breads using German recipes. I'll never go back. German baked goods are the best on the planet.

    • @Helixdragon
      @Helixdragon Месяц назад +3

      @@cimareco3617 typo, I am from the 2 n's...

  • @t.h.1982
    @t.h.1982 Месяц назад +40

    My son is in a relationship with a girl from Munich. My wife and I have traveled extensively so pretty open-minded. Your videos help us finetune the German mindset!

    • @Storytime2023x
      @Storytime2023x Месяц назад +6

      It’s important to know the mindset. Some would argue that the mindset in Germany isn’t even German anymore. It is very leftist and godless, I will say that.

    • @onlytheartofliving6936
      @onlytheartofliving6936 Месяц назад

      ​@@Storytime2023xwhich is good

    • @huawafabe
      @huawafabe Месяц назад +10

      ​@@Storytime2023xI mean I'm pretty happy that the German mindset changed after 1945, if that's what you call "not German anymore" 👀

    • @antjeschwarz7874
      @antjeschwarz7874 25 дней назад +1

      It is a mindset of a German girl from Munich. Nothing more, nothing less.
      What is important is her honesty, her integrity, her love for humanity. And that is what counts about every citizen of every country in the world.
      That is what can be learned from every system, be it political, healthcare, food related, art related, ideological. If there is a slip off of humanity, integrity or truth, without a serious attempt to fix that, it is not worth any defence.

    • @seanautilis15
      @seanautilis15 22 дня назад

      big whoop

  • @marcuscyron7382
    @marcuscyron7382 Месяц назад +27

    The old Schopenhauer wrote once about the impossibilitly of a lot of people to accept critics to their own country: "The cheapest sort of pride is national pride; for if a man is proud of his own nation, it argues that he has no qualities of his own of which he can be proud; otherwise he would not have recourse to those which he shares with so many millions of his fellowmen. The man who is endowed with important personal qualities will be only too ready to see clearly in what respects his own nation falls short, since their failings will be constantly before his eyes. But every miserable fool who has nothing at all of which he can be proud adopts, as a last resource, pride in the nation to which he belongs; he is ready and glad to defend all its faults and follies tooth and nail, thus reimbursing himself for his own inferiority."

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 Месяц назад

      *critiques (meaning criticism)
      critics = plural noun, meaning a person who criticizes or reviews something (perhaps as their profession)

    • @Storytime2023x
      @Storytime2023x Месяц назад +5

      Schopenhauer was a bitter old man who hated just about everything; he was also Adolf’s favorite philosopher.

    • @marcuscyron7382
      @marcuscyron7382 Месяц назад +1

      @@Storytime2023x Cheap.

    • @garylshelton2463
      @garylshelton2463 Месяц назад

      Sounds a little intellectually snobby, an educated poo poohing an uneducated one.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 Месяц назад +1

      @@marcuscyron7382 Problem with the taste of your own take?

  • @reuvenraimundhuber6664
    @reuvenraimundhuber6664 18 дней назад +1

    I was raised by German parents in Canada and spoke German up to age 5. I now live in Madison, WI and became a US Citizen a while back. I am now in the process of getting German Citizenship as well through my mother since she was German citizen when I was born. I am really excited to be qualified to get the German citizenship added which would give me full EU access. I plan on actually spending some time in the Netherlands as I really love it there. I was in Groningen area which is close to the German border up in the northern area. I met alot of German students who go to school at the University of Groningen.

  • @radioboy75
    @radioboy75 Месяц назад +59

    As far as gun violence, come live in a small town. My experience is much more like you describe in Germany. No experience with gun violence at all except hearing about it on TV (or these days, online).

    • @parryhotter3138
      @parryhotter3138 Месяц назад +29

      as for gun violence, come live in a big city in germany. No experience with gun violence at all and not hearing about it on TV (or these days, online).

    • @owenlaprath4135
      @owenlaprath4135 Месяц назад +10

      Really? You have apparently never lived in some of the small USA-towns my friends and relatives spent time in or are still living in.
      The statistics are actually blasting this nonsensical FOXNews talking point, as rural America is more violent and sees more drug use per person than big cities now!
      In a place with 1000 people, it may be less likely to witness violence, than in a city of 2 million. HOWEVER, if the big city has 100 murders/year, and the small town has 1, or maybe just 3 bar fights a year, that is actually more than the big city has at 2000 times the population! Do the math! 1 murder in a town of 1000, which is NOT uncommon, translates to 2000 in that city of 2million!

    • @artm1973
      @artm1973 Месяц назад +4

      @@owenlaprath4135 That's pretty much the case in most small or even largish towns, lots of guns but gun violence is almost non existent. Yeah a lot more drugs than there used to be unfortunately but little to no gun violence.

    • @rskissinger
      @rskissinger Месяц назад +9

      I’m from a small town and gun and other violent crimes are very rare, we also have very pro self defense laws.

    • @johnclaybaugh9536
      @johnclaybaugh9536 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@parryhotter3138I live in a big city in the US and don't have any direct experience. So there's that.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Месяц назад +73

    Servus Feli! Unlike you, after my initial 6-yr contract working in the US, my kids and I returned home. If I hadn't had school-age children, I might have chosen differently, as I had excellent healthcare insurance. Our deciding factors were safety for my kids, and the poor standard of secondary education. My oldest was 9 when we arrived in VA, but he tested out as grade 7, and already had three languages which weren't available at all until grade 9. Those issues, and refusing to helicopter my kids, made our decision easy. Grussi!

    • @coldcubanlink
      @coldcubanlink Месяц назад +9

      Our school system had huge reform around the early 2000s and it has only progressively gotten worse. Kids can't even stand at the bus pickup spot by themselves.

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Месяц назад

      The schools are being dumbed down deliberately. Not to mention used for programming and indoctrination now. The same thing is going to happen in Germany. This is a global agenda.

    • @sharonlibbra7424
      @sharonlibbra7424 Месяц назад +1

      You are so right. When we were in Europe we enjoyed not needing a car.😊

    • @johnclaybaugh9536
      @johnclaybaugh9536 Месяц назад +2

      My kids and I all have degrees and no debt. Mo medical bills. It's mostly about choices.
      As far as languages, most languages aren't available everywhere. And languages aren't the only way to measure something.

    • @johnclaybaugh9536
      @johnclaybaugh9536 Месяц назад

      ​@@sharonlibbra7424I've never needed a car in my life. So there's that.

  • @Vanloves2travel
    @Vanloves2travel Месяц назад +1

    Excellent analysis!

  • @AngelaVEdwards
    @AngelaVEdwards Месяц назад

    I find it absolutely amazing that you have a perfect “accent”. I was born, raised, and still live in the Pacific Northwest and you and I speak exactly the same. I took three years of German in high school and college and I NEVER mastered the language. I’m impressed.

  • @juanheredia2293
    @juanheredia2293 Месяц назад +115

    If you grew up in the hood of any major city, you can tell the difference between fireworks and guns, even small explosions.

    • @justarandominternetdude2579
      @justarandominternetdude2579 Месяц назад +6

      This is spot on.

    • @BrandonLeeBrown
      @BrandonLeeBrown Месяц назад +1

      And that's due to the popularity of varmint hunting?

    • @juanheredia2293
      @juanheredia2293 Месяц назад +1

      @@BrandonLeeBrown I guess that must be it

    • @brileeka
      @brileeka Месяц назад +1

      No, not always. A majority of the time it's fireworks but there are definitely times I've thought I heard fireworks and it turned out to be gun shots. Meanwhile my mom thinks everything is gunshots.

    • @juanheredia2293
      @juanheredia2293 Месяц назад +7

      @brileeka ionno The number of pops and the pattern of the pops gives it away

  • @cathywestholt5324
    @cathywestholt5324 Месяц назад +12

    It was very interesting learning the differences when I had an exchange student from Germany. You nailed it on number 1. That was exactly my pick! I not only base this on what I learned from Benjamin, but a friend's daughter was an exchange student in Germany and had a horrible skiing accident. She had excellent healthcare and her parents here were good!

  • @katiedesciose466
    @katiedesciose466 Месяц назад +2

    You are such a an articulate person.

  • @allon33
    @allon33 Месяц назад +5

    I went to the USA for a holiday, they had sugar in their bread, I was shocked. 😕

  • @user-xx2hj7xb6b
    @user-xx2hj7xb6b Месяц назад +24

    She's right about the high cost of medical insurance here. Americans shouldn't be maxing out their credit cards or even going broke paying for medical care. The rich, like she said, don't have that problem. It's the middle-class that gets squeezed the most. The United States has a shortage of general practitioners. If you don't believe it, you haven't been to the emergency room lately. There's also the ridiculously high cost of prescription medication. Some insurance just covers generic meds that, as most of us know, don't work as well or, in some cases, they don't work at all. The United States falls far short of being the proverbial "greatest country in the world" when it comes to health care.

    • @heatherturner2366
      @heatherturner2366 Месяц назад +4

      No it's not the middle class aka suburbanites, it's the poor who get screwed over the most

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Месяц назад

      It's a conundrum, because in terms of the advanced leading edge treatments, the US is the best place. That's why people come here from all over the world including the UK and Canada for treatment. Especially for rare conditions.

    • @susden9654
      @susden9654 Месяц назад +1

      No the middle class can lose everything with a bad diagnosis such as cancer. Most poor persons can qualify for medicaid as long as they don't live in a greedy state.

    • @alexysq2660
      @alexysq2660 Месяц назад +1

      Unfortunately, the US ¨falls far short¨ when it comes to soooo very many things....

    • @chrisjohnson1599
      @chrisjohnson1599 Месяц назад +1

      Because they are to busy paying to defend the world who refuses to pay for its own defense. If we were reimbursed for the costs of our military personnel and equipment defending all of these other countries who do not pay for their own defense, like Germany for one, perhaps the American government could pay for our health care, or at least stop taxing us so much so we could use that money on our own health care.

  • @jonasbartels1716
    @jonasbartels1716 Месяц назад +57

    Coming from Germany, It seems like the USA are a whole different universe. Right now, I'm sick with a torn ligament, still getting paid 100% of my wage for 6 weeks and, if needed, around 60-70% of my wage after that, as long as I am unable to walk normally. I was driven to the emergency room with an ambulance, went to the radiology, got a prothese for my ligament and walking support, went afterwards to an orthopedist for further check-up, got pain medication and Thrombose medication, just went to my primal care doctor to renew my sick leave (first one was just for 2 weeks, now it's another 4 weeks) and got new medication. Total cost for me so far for all of this? Around 30€ copay for the medication, nothing else. A good Health system is focussed on getting healthy again, not prolonging your sick leave with stress due to insanely high bills and the fear to get sick. You can focus on getting healthy again. Also, I get back my vacation days I planned, which now fall into my sick leave. No loss of paid time off, or vacation days. You get them back.
    I never had to pay for education, just lending school books and buying writing supplies. I got paid during my apprenticeship (dual system, love it) and my further job education to Bachelor professional was partially financed by my federal state and partially a credit, which was cut into half for succesful finish and even got 4.000€ bonus from the federal state, so effectively I got paid 2.000€ for the education :D Also could reduce my taxes with the costs for the classes by a few thousand Euros. A good country must support their people with good education and health system. It's not socialism, it's investment into your country.

    • @jonasbartels1716
      @jonasbartels1716 Месяц назад +6

      @@coldcubanlink So I'm not allowed to share my personal experience with the german education and health care system, unless I study the american system? No experience sharing allowed?

    • @robertapeterson8644
      @robertapeterson8644 Месяц назад +1

      Perfect , I totally agree! Thank you 💯👏

    • @user-cj7ii5xf5g
      @user-cj7ii5xf5g Месяц назад +3

      How can these other countries afford such things for their citizens? Its almost like there's a whole other country contributing the lion-share of funding for things like the United Nations, aid to war torn areas like Ukraine, and things of that nature. So I wonder if that large contributor would be able to do so much more for its own citizens if these other countries paid their "fair share" of the costs... 😜

    • @Paul-ju5px
      @Paul-ju5px Месяц назад +5

      I love the "Didn't cost me anything" mantra. SOMEONE pays for EVERYTHING. It is socialism and government's main business is protecting it's citizens, not "investing" in anything. Private business does most anything better and cheaper than government can. Farmers don't come to your door and give away their food, doctors don't beg you to allow them to operate on or treat you for free, no company just loves to pay you not to work because you tore something playing volleyball. If you don't pay, SOMEONE does, either through higher product prices, higher taxes or higher bills that they have to pay to compensate for you not paying. It's simple economics. People complain about the cost of drugs but it's the drug companies that cover the huge cost of research, raw materials, the time and expense of the approval process, etc. And when they get sick and there is a drug to cure them they thank God for the drug. SOMEONE pays for EVERYTHING. "It didn't cost me anything" may be true but the cost is passed on to someone else. Pure communist manifesto: 'From each according to ability; to each according to need'.

    • @coldcubanlink
      @coldcubanlink Месяц назад +2

      @Paul-ju5px You put it better than I ever could. Thank you

  • @jimcrawford3221
    @jimcrawford3221 Месяц назад +1

    I appreciate your views and many are in line with what many Americans think also. ❤ But it is a big, diverse country with big, diverse opinions.

  • @ibnorml5506
    @ibnorml5506 Месяц назад +21

    I agree, healthcare cost in the US is out of control. My surgery for a triple bypass (granted, serious surgery) cost $8000 per MINUTE for just the operating room and staff, forget the doctors and anesthesiologist. Total cost, over $500,000 for just the hospital. Fortunately for me, insurance covered 90% of that cost.

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад

      I have family with crappy practically free state insurance (my dads triple bypass) only ended up leaving him with a $4000 bill they broke down to $15 a month for him to pay.

    • @TicatHockey
      @TicatHockey Месяц назад +2

      $50k out of pocket... bonkers ... Should be free? paid by publicly funded health care

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад

      @@TicatHockey yeah I'm part of the public and I dont want my tax money going to some random persons health bill I'd rather have it benefit me and my local community.

    • @ibnorml5506
      @ibnorml5506 Месяц назад +1

      @@TicatHockey Paid by tax dollars. Charge me more tax, I pay into the pool, people who need the assistance use the pooled money. Plus, the cost of healthcare managed at cost and not at cost plus profit.

    • @walli6388
      @walli6388 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@kevinprzy4539I just love the US that most Christian nation of them all! Love your next, brother!

  • @nathan2813
    @nathan2813 Месяц назад +39

    U.S. life expectancy is likely lower because of obesity & injury & death associated with alcohol & drug abuse. We're much fatter here (thus more heart disease) and drive more (thus more driving injuries & deaths) than in most countries.

    • @gerhardma4297
      @gerhardma4297 Месяц назад

      As always, you can explain it well and understandably, but in the end you in the USA have surrendered to the industry and the lobbyists who bribe your politicians to maintain the status quo. Whether it's healthcare policy, gun policy or any other area that affects society as a whole. Profit and greed have taken over in the USA

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад +2

      Pretty sure it’s stress.

    • @Myrtlecrack
      @Myrtlecrack Месяц назад +5

      Yes, and we have less of a "monoculture" than other places on Feli's list, the US is a huge place with lots of different kinds of people.

    • @irmapersoff5385
      @irmapersoff5385 Месяц назад +6

      The lower life expectancy comes from many causes: sedentary lifestyles from a car-centric culture, poor nutrition as well as over eating, lack of accessible health care, high maternal and child mortality, racial health care disparities and a highly individualistic culture which equates to lack of family anf social support.

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад +7

      @@irmapersoff5385 racial healthcare disparities? They don't exist. Its a talking point with no solid data to support it.
      Car centric is because we are a large country. Many Europeans come here thinking they can see everything in a couple of weeks not realizing how spread out this country is.
      The USA defines infant mortality differently than most countries and how the WHO defines it. Its broader here than in Europe.

  • @RaulV22
    @RaulV22 Месяц назад +4

    As an immigrant from Mexico, I personally agree with most things. The healthcare system here is arguably the worst problem this country has. It’s easy to include our mental health problems which include major drug abuse and homelessness into the healthcare system. But this country also has a major culture problem. In Mexico, there are homeless people and drug problems, but neither of those to those of people stop working. Whether it’s selling gum or washing windshields, beggars often perform services to gain a few cents. But i disagree that the US has a gun problem. It has a culture problem. People here are more emotionally charged and I’ve noticed a drastic change in our youth with a lack of empathy and a lack for the value of life. Now I live on a smallish town in the middle of the country where guns are prominent, yet I don’t feel worried around people that I know have them, but I feel worried when I’m in a metro area with certain types of violent gangs. In Mexico, there are 2 gun shops in the entire country, yet gun crime is ultra high thanks to cartels. I have family members that worked for state police and they say cartels didn’t just become powerful because of the drug demand from the US, but became powerful because the police have them too much protection AND citizens are unable to defend themselves or their communities. Now there are more and more I hear from family members there that small towns are starting to take up arms against the brutal violence. Unfortunately they have to do with 60 year old weapons and ammunition. One think I admire this country for is that I have the ability to defend not only my life, but the lives of my family. I don’t know how to curb the gun violence in this country, but taking away the right for someone to say, defend their home from a potentially violent home intruder is not a fix. Some people are not going to wait 12 minutes for police to arrive knowing the average home invasion takes less than 10. I see my people suffer because they can’t protect themselves, and that’s the last thing I want my friends in the country to go through as well. Perhaps the fix isn’t “gun control” but perhaps the better, and I know harder, thing to do is to help change the culture of violence here.

    • @micahbonewell5994
      @micahbonewell5994 День назад

      I think the US's relationship with the police is a key factor, when you don't trust the police to defend you, you look for other ways to defend yourself. And the police in the US have an insane amount of power and protections with very minimal requirements for becoming an officer. They have tons of power with very minimal responsibility.

  • @georgefrazer2231
    @georgefrazer2231 Месяц назад +1

    The 'colonies' did have a German born Queen. Queen Charlotte was from Mecklenburg, German. She was a very highly educated lady who was fluent in both English, French and German. King George and Queen Charlotte spoke in German while in private. The elector of Hanover was also the King of England. George Frederick Handel was employed by the elector of Hanover who later became King George I of England. The health service in the United Kingdom may not be perfect but there is still a national health service which we are all very grateful for.

  • @bryan1174
    @bryan1174 Месяц назад +22

    I live in California, i broke my hand (14 metatarsal fractures) went rh the check in desk, and before stating the problem was asked for my id card and insurance and only after she typed all the information in did she say "what brings you in today" i told her i broke my hand and without looking up "so you broke your finger huh" no my hand inm literally holding my hand that is swollen 3x its normal size. After an hour in the waiting rpom watching sniffles, sprains and i kid you not a headache all receive treatment " because all patients are seen based on severity" i finally get in and a nurse practitioner looks at me says i bet rhat hurts orders x rays and a boxer splint! No setting of the bones no cast no pins. Tldr i have a hand tlwith no structural viability, no strength, and loss in sensitivity. So in 2 weeks i get to have my hand rebroken at every fracture set, pinned and a couple of rods ilto rebuild something simple. American medical system is a joke oh that first bill was $8477.24
    Edit: this was all done with no pain medication meanwhile the headache patient my roommate the headache guy received 2 shots of morphine and a script for narcos or whatever

    • @seegee7728
      @seegee7728 Месяц назад +4

      Wow that's seriously Fd, do that in Australia would have cost only a couple hundred dollars as our Govt medicare system would have paid for the rest.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns Месяц назад

      @@seegee7728 Try about $20 US for the visit to the ER, and you could probably get a taxi fair paid for of course.

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Месяц назад

      CA is now a 2nd world society headed for 3rd. When people think of LA now they think of homeless camps everywhere

    • @mattp422
      @mattp422 Месяц назад +2

      U.S. physician here (Pennsylvania). There are no metatarsals in the hand. There are metacarpals…five to be exact (including the thumb, which is typically not injured by the same mechanism as that which involves the other four MCs). In the 35 years I’ve been practicing, most of them at level 1 trauma centers, I’ve never seen any hand with 14 fractures involving the 5 metacarpals. Even in industrial crush injuries, MVCs, falls from heights, never. That’s just not how MC fractures work. Also, in patients with such a massive hand injury, I’ve never seen a patient splinted and sent home. There is invariably nerve and vascular injury. Such patients are always admitted to a trauma or hand surgery service with surgery performed no more than 24 hours after presentation. If there is no hand surgeon coverage at the hospital where the patient presents, they are transferred to one that has a hand surgeon available. I also seriously doubt (no offense) you would not have been given heavy-duty pain medication. Last, upon arriving at the triage desk, you would have been whisked to an exam room, stat, and an admission receptionist would have met you there, to get your info…if you were stable enough to do so. (When we receive a Level A or Level B trauma, patient care is so paramount, no clerical people even get to see the patient, let alone ask for insurance info; it’s common for them to be admitted as a "John Doe" with a temporary ID medical record number). You’re either misremembering, telling a tall-tale, or…California hospital ED care is so horrific, you need to move.

    • @bryan1174
      @bryan1174 Месяц назад

      ​@@mattp422Sorry for the mistype and the breaks weren't from a fall from hight, but rather from being tackled by a dog knocking me free of the electric scooter sending me in the opposite direction of the initial inertia of the scooter. More importantly the hospital in my town lost their trauma certifications more than 10 years ago. Normally any and all trauma cases are lifeflighted or receive ambulance support after stabilization. And as a Dr you should know better than to assume you've seen everything. I wish RUclips comments allowed pictures so you could see the x-rays and updates and read the summery reports including the determination made by my current orthopedic surgeon who is treating me now. I hope that clarifies the situation for you. And in all my years of riding bikes motorcycles and scooters this was the first time I was tackled by a dog while riding thank you for correcting my errors

  • @kilo3324
    @kilo3324 Месяц назад +17

    Thanks! - Edit: sorry for the edit. I clicked way to fast on the super thanks. Were going to Germany (Flying into Munich) in Sept to visit my wife's family near Nuremberg. And as a special treat we are bringing my sons girlfriend along so she can experience another culture outside the USA and see what life is all about. You're videos are so good. I was stationed in Germany in the 90's. Please, don't get me started on the "sugar" in all our food, and SALT! lol :) When we were in Normandy in 2019 we stayed in a home and during the breakfast met with a British couple who were also visiting Normandy. They even said the food in America is over salted and has way too much sugar lol :). Keep up the good work!

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  22 дня назад +1

      You're not wrong about the food!! I've heard American complain about the food in European countries not being salty enough but I think it's just because they're used to way too much salt in their food! And I was shocked when I tried regular (toast) bread in the US and it tasted SWEET but it wasn't advertised as sweet. I realized that they add sugar to a lot of the bread here which was kind of weird to me at first.

  • @glendacaudill530
    @glendacaudill530 Месяц назад +1

    AGREE, and I'll add (or extend with healthcare?) the lack of assistance and/or costs of assisted living, nursing homes, etc., in the USA. If you have a family member who need around the clock care, e.g., has dementia, etc...

  • @docCeltic
    @docCeltic Месяц назад +2

    I've lived in traveled all around the world. On many occasions, I've been asked about what I think about a country.What's good about it?What's bad about it and what I would change and even about its politics. What I always say is, This is your country. This is for you to control change and shape as you would like to. And as for your politics it's not my place. This is your country you need to like it to be.. Of course I hope nations around the world would create spaces that are fair and free, But it's not up to me to tell them how to do that.

    • @m.s.3041
      @m.s.3041 18 дней назад +1

      But for change it needs input on how to make it different or how it could be different in the first place… we humans are sticking easily to habits and environments without the thought about change… so good input from outside can change that

  • @jimtaylor2443
    @jimtaylor2443 Месяц назад +34

    Great video. I am 77 and have never known anyone who has been shot. I like your comment that people say that Cincinnati is violent and dangerous. Statistics show it is the most violent city in the US, so I am not surprised by your comments. I agree with most of what you say. Thanks.

    • @stevewood3171
      @stevewood3171 Месяц назад +3

      St. Louis consistently ranks as the most dangerous city in the US. Cleveland consistently rates as more dangerous than Cincinnati, btw.

    • @landslave
      @landslave Месяц назад +2

      If what you say is true, about Cincinnati being the most violent, I am shocked! I would have guessed the most violent to be Baltimore, St Lou MO, NOLA, or Memphis. I would have guessed Cincinnati to be in with less violent cities like Chicago, New York. Detroit, Cleveland and Philadelphia.

    • @christineherrmann205
      @christineherrmann205 Месяц назад

      The point is to actually check state gun laws. A lot of these federal problems are mitigated in some states. Should they be better at a federal level? Yes. But there's no denying the effects of state laws.

    • @pmberkeley
      @pmberkeley Месяц назад

      Yeah, I went to visit by cousin in Cincinnati when she was there for college and it was over new years and within a few days there had already been several homicides in the news. Many places that I've lived, the first homicide of the year was maybe sometime in the spring or summer. Not several in the first few days of the year! I was shocked. I had no idea it was such a dangerous city.

    • @briannavisconti5112
      @briannavisconti5112 Месяц назад +3

      I'm in Yonkers next to the Bronx. I don't know anyone who'd ever been shot. I don't know why people live in fear. I'm more scared of knives, honestly.

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 Месяц назад +135

    Imagine you were attacked in your home, you called the police and they said "sorry, your police insurance doesn't cover you for this. Goodbye" That's the US healthcare system.

    • @Dosbomber
      @Dosbomber Месяц назад +7

      But then we can exercise our second amendment right and take care of our own "surgery".

    • @EASYTIGER10
      @EASYTIGER10 Месяц назад +6

      @@Dosbomber But is that a good way to do things? ie, Have private militias paid for by private insurance instead of police paid for by taxes, and that people rely primarily on privately owned firearms to protect themselves?

    • @Dosbomber
      @Dosbomber Месяц назад

      @@EASYTIGER10 Splitting this into two different paragraphs because the analogy is stretching too far...
      Anything the government gets involved in ends up corrupted, inefficient, wildly overpriced (taxed), and dysfunctional. Nationalized (socialist) health care is all of those things. I've known two people who were given a 10-month waiting period to see an NHS oncologist for a cancer that would, without immediate treatment, kill them in 3. Their solution? Come to America and get the medical problem actually treated by medical professionals. There's a reason Canada has endorsed "assisted suicide" as a medical treatment. Their tax-funded NHS can't afford actual timely health care, and the government is taking a lion's share of that money for "administration" expenses.
      As for the analogy of police vs private firearms, having a working local police department who are doing their jobs and incarcerating actual criminals, reducing the chance of a home invasion in the first place, would be great. Unfortunately, government involvement (and increasing "diversity") has also led to this being way too expensive and corrupt, and so is being "regional"-ized so now it takes hours for someone to show up to help you. Having a means of defending your own family when the crisis is "in your face" is literally of life-and-death importance.
      The government doesn't care about you. Why would you trust them as the only source of either protection OR medical treatment?

    • @dieSpinnt
      @dieSpinnt Месяц назад +3

      @@EASYTIGER10 Cool:)
      That's the plot of "Mad Max"? Isn't it? Hehehehe
      Greetings from Germany where Healthcare isn't free, but a community driven insurance and cheap and good as sliced bread!:)
      I wish you all good health! (Or a speedy recovery of your system to something actually human ... because that lies in the hand of the voters. You;) )

    • @timprussell
      @timprussell Месяц назад +4

      That was how the fire departments were at one time.

  • @jbsimmons54
    @jbsimmons54 Месяц назад +2

    About 65% of seniors over 65 have standard Medicare (public insurance) and the rest have Medicare HMO (private insurance). To eliminate the 20% copay, most get private Medigap insurance. Then for Rx, there's public/privately administered insurance for that. Once you have all that, almost everything is paid for, except for small copays for Rx and larger copays for specialty drugs and brand name drugs. Diabetic insulin is now capped at $35/month. Canada ha "free health care" but they pay quarterly provincial premiums for it. I think today it's $450 CDN.

  • @timduncan6750
    @timduncan6750 Месяц назад +3

    Some of these might be controversial to some but I think we can all agree on the bread. I hate I can’t get good bread where I live.

  • @nathan2813
    @nathan2813 Месяц назад +53

    It's best to not rely on media reports to accurately gauge incidence of gun violence. Rather, check statistics online reporting injury & death from guns. Then compare that between metro cities & rural areas. I think you'd find it's most-often associated with drug sales & gangs in metro cities - men aged 16-35.

    • @jjboyd01
      @jjboyd01 Месяц назад

      the last thing drug dealers want is gunmen lurking round. gangs? living in USA gangs serve a purpose of protection... There are far too many people for police protect.

    • @gerhardma4297
      @gerhardma4297 Месяц назад

      And what is that supposed to tell us? That these dead are therefore not relevant? That these people don't count? Second-class people? Criminals, scum? And what about other crimes carried out with armed force, such as robberies? Surely that's only ever black people and drug addicts or gangs, isn't it? And the statistics alone with the categorization of 16 - 35 year olds already show how broken the USA is! 16-year-olds are included? In the rest of the world, 16 to 18 year olds are busy with the opposite sex and are not part of the statistics for murders. It doesn't help to always talk yourself up. The USA is very close to the abyss... but not just because of the guns but because of its politicians and the rift through society.

    • @karlstreed3698
      @karlstreed3698 Месяц назад +13

      I live in rural Brown County Ohio. Our violent crime rate is very low, possibly because almost every house has a gun and children are taught gun safety. I am 71 and know of no one who has been shot outside of military service. I am friends withe retired and active cops, none who have been shot. Several have been involved in shootings. When I was in college, I was a part time armed guard in East. St. Louis which was a very high crime area and was never required to use a weapon. If you are aware of the area you are in and avoid situations that could be dangerous you will not have any problems. By the way, I have a concealed handgun license and have carried a gun every day for the last 20 years.

    • @hartmutholzgraefe
      @hartmutholzgraefe Месяц назад +8

      I'd like to offer a different view on the topic, based on statistics:
      About 1000 persons are shot do death by US police per year on average over the last years, and the number is slowly rising.
      At the same time here in Germany, at about one quarter the population, and higher overall population density the number of shots fired by police on human targets is at about 50 to 60 per year over the last two decades, and the number of actual kills per year is around ten on average.
      Whether you blame that on the quasi omnipresence of guns in the US of A, or the usually much shorter education time of police officers is up to you. I'd say it's a combination of both ...

    • @jjboyd01
      @jjboyd01 Месяц назад

      @@karlstreed3698 drugs are everywhere but in your county,

  • @gregblair5139
    @gregblair5139 Месяц назад +74

    Maybe American houses should have German-style windows.

  • @matthewthomas3413
    @matthewthomas3413 Месяц назад +1

    Seeing someone on RUclips bring up how critical mental health is to someone's health is amazing to hear that.

  • @maurizioalbera
    @maurizioalbera 18 дней назад

    Great Feli, as always. Cheers :)

  • @Bartrum
    @Bartrum Месяц назад +9

    All really good points. As an American who now lives in Spain, I don't have to worry about going bankrupt over medical costs. In general, the bread does suck in the US, too soft as you mentioned.

    • @johng5710
      @johng5710 Месяц назад +1

      Let a french bread loaf sit out for a day and it turns crusty...or buy a baguette that is already crusty...I can go to my local grocery store in Indiana and get one whenever I want

    • @inigogarcia4336
      @inigogarcia4336 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@johng5710tell me you haven't had decent bread in your lifetime without actually telling me you haven't.

  • @Myrtlecrack
    @Myrtlecrack Месяц назад +13

    It sounds like Canada might be what you want. My part of the US has heavy gun ownership, and yet "gun violence" is VERY rare, I actually like to see citizens carrying a gun in public. I personally only carry in public when I am camping and/or hiking in remote locations. Like many Americans, I like driving my own car, and in my rural home it is the only real option, I tend to steer clear of large cities since I have no need or desire to be in one. As for the rest, all these social programs take money, and I believe it is the responsibility of the individual to provide themselves with higher education and health care.

    • @pepita46
      @pepita46 Месяц назад +5

      so why do you pay local taxes for the police force? You have a gun, you should be able to protect yourself! And do you pay local taxes for a fire brigade you might never use? According to your logic, people should provide basic needs for themselves!

    • @kataetwas2825
      @kataetwas2825 Месяц назад +4

      While you're at it, be your own doctor. And if you're sick and need a nursing home and you run out of money, just provide the care by yourself as well.

    • @Ljw48
      @Ljw48 Месяц назад +3

      Ridiculous responses. Police, fire and medical are protection for all people we are responsible as individuals for our own needs. Society can’t pay everything unless you don’t care how much tax you pay the government for these FREE things. There are thousands of jobs that don’t require a 4 year college degree. And as people that have graduated have found out just because you have a degree you don’t necessarily get a job that compensates for the cost of your education.

    • @pepita46
      @pepita46 Месяц назад +3

      @@Ljw48 if you are responsible for your own needs, is calling the police or fire brigade when you need help any different? I am sorry but you are the one who is being ridiculous! Why should you pay to repair a section of the highway if you don’t need to use it according to your logic? Maybe you are not aware that the costs of a degree is very affordable in Europe and in some countries even totally free …

    • @Myrtlecrack
      @Myrtlecrack Месяц назад +2

      @@pepita46 If you can read English then you will see I specified health care and higher education. Saying that I am against paying for anything else is a "strawman" argument.

  • @jphunkpunk792
    @jphunkpunk792 Месяц назад +4

    Unfortunately, most of all of the negatives are by design here in the US. I would like to change those things, too.

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 21 день назад

      Of course millions of us don't view like you do so nah

  • @garricksmalley1733
    @garricksmalley1733 Месяц назад +2

    Having lived here all my life so far I agree with all of your suggestions.
    Feli for Queen

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 21 день назад

      HELL to the NO!!! Enjoy your socialist mindset though

  • @chromeninja6811
    @chromeninja6811 Месяц назад +45

    I'd have more than two viable political parties. I hate the binary choice. The two we have don't really represent me, it would be nice to have other realistic options to vote for.

    • @johng5710
      @johng5710 Месяц назад +1

      RFK Jr?

    • @raymonddrake3675
      @raymonddrake3675 Месяц назад +4

      It's very hard to create a stable system of government which does not give out-sized leverage to fringe parties with a multiparty system. The problem with coalitions as in Europe is that little, sometimes crazy parties can easily become king-makers in a governing coalition. That's the flip side of the coin in terms of the alternative political system.

    • @mikkorenvall428
      @mikkorenvall428 Месяц назад +2

      @@raymonddrake3675 Can, but do not nessecery become. And the best side is that also minorities get noted and representented.

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 Месяц назад

      *me. It (to fix your comma splice run-on)

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 Месяц назад

      @@mikkorenvall428 *necessarily
      *represented.

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester Месяц назад +10

    1. Healthcare-a very complicated subject.
    2. College-My college, it now coasts 20 times as much to go to school there as compared to 1989. I am told that this is to pay the ultra high salaries of professors. Suddenly, community college seems very appealing.
    3. Public Transportation. Again, a complicated subject as HOA's have really screwed things up.
    4. Gun Laws-a really good fix is, you commit a violent offense, you will spend the rest of your life behind bars. A lot, and I do mean, A LOT of violent crimes are committed by repeat offenders.
    5. Bread & Dairy-For a brief moment, when I was 8, my family was part of a trading circle. Somehow the USDA got wind of us and shut the whole thing down because unpasteurized milk, to the USDA, was a scary thing. We would let the milk naturally cool, skim off the cream and turn the cream into cheese. Since no one was being harmed, why did the USDA threaten to drop the hammer on everyone in the circle?

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад +8

      Indeed. We are WAY too lax with the wantonly violent and infringe the rights of those of us who are never violent which just further emboldens the criminals. My state is particularly bad about this, almost every murder ends with the reporter saying and the suspect has a long history of violent crime. The 6 safest states all have permitless carry, and Ohio recently went to permitless carry and saw a decrease in the homicide rate in 6 of the 8 biggest cities.

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 Месяц назад

      Milk that hasn't been pasteurized can transmit deadly diseases such as tuberculosis. If you are the producer and consumer of unpasteurized milk on your farm, the FDA probably won't know unless you squawk about it.
      FDA regulation prevents massive outbreak of diseases via the drinking of milk.

    • @michaausleipzig
      @michaausleipzig Месяц назад

      The US already has the highest incarceration rate of any western country. It's obviousely not working. And US prisons would be considered human rights violations in any civilised country. And don't get me started in the prison industrial complex.
      As long as your only answer to reoffenders is to cry for longer prison sentences, nothing will change. Many european countries have great success with rehabilitation programs. The US could easily take a leaf out of their book. If only that weren't such an un-american thing to do...

  • @thejourney1369
    @thejourney1369 Месяц назад +13

    Our healthcare system definitely needs a major overhaul. I’m legally blind because for years I couldn’t afford the meds and care to treat glaucoma.
    I’m 67 and live in a rural area and I don’t know anyone who has been shot or affected by guns. My cousin used to live next door to my parents and her husband often did target practice, so I’ve definitely heard gunshots. I’m bummed because with my sight loss, I can’t get a conceal carry permit. And cities and states that have the strictest gun laws have the most gun violence. In England, it’s knives. You can’t legislate changes to peoples hearts, that has to come from them.

    • @brentwoodbay
      @brentwoodbay Месяц назад +1

      "And cities and states that have the strictest gun laws have the most gun violence" Totally pointless if people can move freely between gun and no gun areas! .

    • @Pystro
      @Pystro 27 дней назад +1

      "You can’t legislate changes to peoples hearts" true. All those people in the US who it turns out shouldn't have had access to a gun, probably shouldn't own airsoft guns or pepper spray, or carry knives either. (Not to say that there aren't probably similar shares of the population in other countries that shouldn't have access to the latter items - and thus by extension guns.)
      But there's still a difference between someone having to pull the trigger once from across a parking lot to put you into an early grave, and them having to stab you 5 times to achieve the same.

    • @mackereltabbie
      @mackereltabbie 24 дня назад

      There's way more knife crime (per capita) in the US than in the UK, what are you on about?

  • @MegaMerlin2011
    @MegaMerlin2011 Месяц назад +3

    "Well, there's American food all the way across town." Lady, I was in China for 6 years and Thailand 6 months. You tell me there's pizza 2 hours away, I don't care I'm going. :D

  • @johnvonsauers8867
    @johnvonsauers8867 Месяц назад +12

    great show Feli,❤❤❤❤ I'm over 80 years old with one foot in the grave, so I really no longer care what they do.

    • @hellskitchen10036
      @hellskitchen10036 Месяц назад +3

      I'm with you dude !

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 Месяц назад

      As long as you haven't died, you should care about what others have to live with. Haven't you heard of "leaving a legacy" before ?

  • @Paranguro
    @Paranguro Месяц назад +32

    Totally agree something needs to be done for all citizens of "greatest" country to have access to healthcare. The last year of my 93yr old mom was spent in and out of hospital which is not unusual for someone that old. She racked up tremendous medical bills that she couldn't pay living off SSC only. When dad died, she inherited house. Then when mom died I inherited it. But before she died, there was chance that medical providers could've gone after house after her death for bills due. Unbelievable ! I had to talk to lawyer and we did some legal maneuvering to help keep buzzards away. During last week when she was in hospice, a rep asked us if we still wanted them to try to bring her heart back if it stopped. When we replied yes, the rep implied without directly saying that bill collectors could possibly go after house. Unbelievable and shameful! My dad was a WW2 veteran who bought house with help of government backed loan.

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад

      Didn’t she have Medicare?

    • @jonok42
      @jonok42 Месяц назад

      She should have had Medicare and medicaid.
      What makes you feel that it's shameful for Bill collectors to require payment from the estate of the deceased? That happens everywhere.
      It doesn't matter how they acquired the asset. They still have to pay their debt.
      I'm not opposed to a better Healthcare system in the US, but payment of debt is still the law.

    • @kenkaufman9998
      @kenkaufman9998 Месяц назад +2

      The obvious solution is to TAX everyone to do that. Lets do what Germany does and tax EVERYONE, 14% to pay for it. No Expections.

    • @Paranguro
      @Paranguro Месяц назад +1

      Correction. Mom was living off dads gov pension not off SSC which is requirement to get medicare

    • @levidezern3190
      @levidezern3190 Месяц назад +1

      @@kenkaufman9998 the first 10,000 is untaxed no exceptions you left that part out

  • @stephengamber7000
    @stephengamber7000 Месяц назад

    Glad to see you have over 564,000 subscribers!!! YAY!

  • @user-tg6im6yh6b
    @user-tg6im6yh6b Месяц назад

    If you want hard crusted bread, (1) avoid Walmart and go to Kroger or similar, (2) avoid the bread counters and head for the fresh baked bread section, usually next to the Deli. Plenty of hard crusted loaves with various accent seasoning. Sourdough, olive oil, garlic and rosemary/thyme are all there.

  • @oliverkerins5628
    @oliverkerins5628 Месяц назад +30

    In Britain, it literally is free. No health insurance needed. Its government controlled and paid through general taxation. Its one of the uks proudest achievements.

    • @eugeniorossi1384
      @eugeniorossi1384 Месяц назад +1

      In Italy too.

    • @user-xx2hj7xb6b
      @user-xx2hj7xb6b Месяц назад +5

      But how good is that free care? I've heard where it takes months to get needed surgery and procedures in the UK and other places. The UK also has private medical care for those that can afford it.

    • @SpidermanandJeny
      @SpidermanandJeny Месяц назад +4

      How are your taxes? Have there been protests about the govt trying to change anything about the benefits received? How does it feel to have to pay almost 1/5 (18 percent) of your income just to healthcare?

    • @oliverkerins5628
      @oliverkerins5628 Месяц назад +2

      @@user-xx2hj7xb6b waiting lists being high is a relatively new phenomenon. The current conservative government have driven the health service into the ground. The NHS was one of the best health services in the world 14 years ago under the labour government. The way they've dealt with the health service is one of the main reasons the conservatives are over 20% behind the labour party in the opinion polls and are facing oblivion at the next election. It's not the system that's wrong, it's the people that have ran it.

    • @oliverkerins5628
      @oliverkerins5628 Месяц назад +2

      @@SpidermanandJeny actually per person Britain spends far less than America when you factor in government spending in both countries on healthcare. And no there are no protests over taxes. The most unpopular prime minister in my life time only lasted for less than 50 days because people didn't like how she was going to cut taxes.

  • @slamtilt01
    @slamtilt01 Месяц назад +11

    The problem with what you have suggested is the people who have benefited from the current system will not be willing to have it changed. They will say “Why is it necessary to change it. I and my family and friends have successes, you can too (Without any changes)”.

    • @Flo-vn9ty
      @Flo-vn9ty Месяц назад

      And for some reason there seem to be more people that think they benefit from the current system than people that actually do.

    • @kosmokritikos9299
      @kosmokritikos9299 Месяц назад

      And they are a slim minority, but that does not matter to them since they will tell you that the U.S. is not a democracy, but a constitutional republic. When you ask them what they mean by a constitutional republic, they will tell you that a constitutional republic is a system in which they get everything their way regardless of how few of them there may be.

    • @davwill124
      @davwill124 Месяц назад

      except that isnt true is it

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 Месяц назад

      ​@@kosmokritikos9299
      The U.S.A. is a democratic constitutional republic.
      The 2022-Jan-6 attempted coup d' etát was to sever the constitutionally mandated Congressional process to delegate the people's power resulting from the democratic votes of the electorate of the various states to the U.S.A. federal government.

  • @moleman1976
    @moleman1976 Месяц назад +1

    100% agree about the bread issue. As an American, I grew up with WonderBread, and never had any idea of questioning it. Then I went abroad (to Berlin first, then other European cities), and discovered how much better bread can be! A simple bread and cheese sandwich from a street vendor in Berlin is so much better than most of the fast food we have here in the US, and it's because their bread isn't cake!

  • @m.r.6264
    @m.r.6264 Месяц назад

    Born, raised and currently living in the US, I don't have enough experience regarding your 5th item about bread/dairy. But the first 4, I'm totally on board with needed things to change

  • @LuisSanchez-cz6op
    @LuisSanchez-cz6op Месяц назад +34

    You have to ask why some countries with very strict gun laws and low gun ownership still have high rates of gun violence. Think Latin America and Africa. And why some countries like Switzerland have high rates of gun ownership but low rates of violence. Could it be that factors other than guns are involved?

    • @augustiner3821
      @augustiner3821 Месяц назад +5

      you know the answer.

    • @inigogarcia4336
      @inigogarcia4336 Месяц назад

      Like lack of social cohesion and economic disparity? That's a very commie comment from you!

    • @alexysq2660
      @alexysq2660 Месяц назад

      ...🙄....

    • @dontanton7775
      @dontanton7775 Месяц назад

      Yeah, it's called childhood. People become what they are raised to be and to what environment they are exposed. It doesn't help that parents are treated like: "oh, you got a baby? well that's your own fault then".

    • @micahbonewell5994
      @micahbonewell5994 День назад

      If you're curious about Switzerland's relationship with guns, Johnny Harris did a video on the topic. I'm not sure I agree with his conclusions but I found the discussion interesting.
      His argument is essentially that the US views gun ownership as a right whereas Switzerland views it as a duty.

  • @jbach2002
    @jbach2002 Месяц назад +9

    I absolutely love driving and road trips are fun, but high speed rail between major cities would be nice. I go to Jacksonville fairly regularly and it’s an almost 7 hour drive from where I am.
    I am also perfectly fine with the concept of privatized healthcare, but I do think it needs massive massive reforms

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад

      Road trips are great, and cars offer a freedom to go where one wants that mass transit does not. Jacksonville area is great for a history buff like me, Saint Augustine is a place I really enjoyed.

    • @jbach2002
      @jbach2002 Месяц назад

      @@Anon54387 absolutely agree, but mass transit would be nice for frequent trips between cities.

  • @stevenpersamanos23
    @stevenpersamanos23 Месяц назад +1

    You are 100% right.

  • @simplenorthern_mindy
    @simplenorthern_mindy Месяц назад +1

    Great video I agree with you a 💯. As someone who loves her country but sees the flaws I would love to see big changes in all topics you mentioned. Most importantly health care , education as I have encountered great debt from. And now I am helping my daughter with her higher education too. Keep the videos coming 💕

  • @acousticmagnum5200
    @acousticmagnum5200 Месяц назад +67

    yes, us Americans are being raped by the Health Care Industry (Hospitals, Medical Insurance Companies, etc). I have health insurance and even i am still scared sh!tl%ss to go to a hospital. Im surprised that this has been allowed to go on as it has. Utterly sad. For someone to get really sick and stay in a hospital for only 3 days could potentially cost them THOUSANDS, and be in debt for the rest of their life. This boggles my mind! Where have all the good people gone!

    • @blondeenotsomuch
      @blondeenotsomuch Месяц назад +1

      Ahem., if you come here and miss something like your wonderful bread, cheeses, and quark (especially quark) please open a business with the real thing. We want that stuff. We sneak it home in our luggage. So please open a cheese and bakery shop in my town, I guarantee you will be busy. Meanwhile, not about you, but when I was in Germany I missed our humor and laughter. Bring yourself to our country, be yourself, share the pleasures you find in your homeland.

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад +1

      Healthcare and insurance are two of the most regulated industries. This is why it’s so expensive.

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Месяц назад

      More rules than in Germany? I sincerely doubt that.

    • @prutteltje1300
      @prutteltje1300 Месяц назад +1

      I'm flabbergasted about the fact that if you don't have insurance the bill is less. So the health care is scamming the insurance company and therefore they bill the citizens. How is it that I as a Dutchie get all the bills paid by my insurance company if I get ill or in an accident in America. No question asked.

    • @axhed
      @axhed Месяц назад +1

      @@prutteltje1300 it was a response to insurance companies flatly denying all claims, then saying "ok, we'll pay you 75% go away" the hospital has to hire people to fight for those claims, it takes time away from the doctors and nurses to file endless paperwork to fight for the claims.
      imho you would have to be a complete sociopath to sit between a person and their health care provider to demand your cut of the transaction. for-profit health care should be outlawed again.

  • @frankmcdonald8003
    @frankmcdonald8003 Месяц назад +14

    Feli : I do not know where you live in Cincy and I don't need to know. We are from northern Ohio and every one I know has a weapon and no one is out shooting one another but we are prepared if needed. The police would take about three minutes to arrive at a problem ; what are you going to do in the mean time. The US Bureau of Vital Statistics has said that if you stay away from 4 cities ( Baltimore, Washington DC, Chicago, Atlanta) you should be pretty safe and if you include New Orleans, LA, Detroit, Houston, you should be as safe as being in Finland. Please remember that the Swiss all are armed and trained. Many of us are hunters and many of us have been trained in the military - I have no worry about my abilities nor do I have a worry about my neighbors .

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming Месяц назад

      I lived in Los Angeles for many years and every other day you heard gunshots in the distance. Unless you lived in a small town at the edge full of 1%ers, you were in the city itself and always had to be aware of your surroundings as well as where you even parked your car or walked. Some areas of town you simply didn't go into after dark - even to drive through.

    • @Dosbomber
      @Dosbomber Месяц назад

      Seriously. If you remove the most liberal 7 cities from the equation, the US is suddenly almost at the bottom of the list of "most dangerous" countries to live in.

  • @lissetteramos1761
    @lissetteramos1761 Месяц назад

    Spot on,Feli, about the healthcare, colleges and public transportation 👍👏👏👍.

  • @benerval7
    @benerval7 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you foe this list. I lived in Germany two different times and life there can be very different. We don't have higher taxes. The offset to that is that we don't have "free" healthcare or college. I would rather pay 30 thousand for a few years in college rather than 40+ percent of my income for ever. The vast majority of American gun owners never use the gun in any way against another human. It is the incredibly small percent of owners that do....and of course criminals use them. The main problem is that our laws we DO have on the books are not honestly enforced. Even the current Presidents son is known to have broke federal gun laws but the government has done nothing.

  • @amyyost5261
    @amyyost5261 Месяц назад +5

    Just a note: crème fraiche does exist here. It’s often found at places like Whole Foods, Publix, etc.

    • @benktlofgren4710
      @benktlofgren4710 Месяц назад

      Real butter and crème fraiche are the backbone of any kitchen, just like good olive oil, nice tomatoes, and onions.

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 Месяц назад

      I found it in Kroger (Vermont brand for $5.99 and Bellwether Farms for $6.99), I think she should take another look there.

    • @phoebus007
      @phoebus007 Месяц назад

      You can substitute creme fraiche with sour(ed) cream in most recipes.

    • @benktlofgren4710
      @benktlofgren4710 Месяц назад

      @@phoebus007 it is not the same, for me it is like substituting milk with soy or oat milk.

    • @TeutonicNordwind
      @TeutonicNordwind 21 день назад

      @@phoebus007 Not the same. Maybe "the next best thing" but nah

  • @carlfenger
    @carlfenger Месяц назад +10

    ... how about the ridiculous 2 weeks of vacation most Americans get per year! That's inhuman! How about zero maternity leave?

    • @tyler93539
      @tyler93539 Месяц назад +2

      people are getting 2 weeks????? everyone i know gets a week at most

    • @user-cj7ii5xf5g
      @user-cj7ii5xf5g Месяц назад +1

      Maternity leave must be nice for the people who get it, but the people still working while they are on leave get screwed. I had two ladies leave on maternity leave and a bunch of their work got dumped on me for 8-12 weeks. Did I get extra pay for all that extra work? Nope. Did I get 8-12 weeks of vacation when they returned and my work got dumped on them? Nope. And the irony is, if I asked for a raise to compensate for all this extra responsibility, when the ladies returned they would probably shout my getting paid more than them amounted to the gender pay gap... "we're working the same job but he's getting paid more than me! SEXISM!!" 🙄

    • @inigogarcia4336
      @inigogarcia4336 Месяц назад

      ​@@user-cj7ii5xf5gthe business should be prepared and, anyhow, they could hire a substitute. After all, maternity and paternity leaves are paid by taxes, not on business money (at least, here, so business don't have ridiculous excuses to overload coworkers).

    • @user-cj7ii5xf5g
      @user-cj7ii5xf5g Месяц назад

      @@inigogarcia4336 Hiring a temp (or substitute, as you put it) would cost the company money - if they won't pay extra for me to do the work, they're not going to pay extra to hire someone temporarily either. And here, maternity leave is paid for either by the company or by short-term disability insurance (which is also paid for by the company, which is why not every company offers it). Also, not all jobs can be trained in a day or even a couple weeks. At the technical level at my work, it takes up to six months to get someone properly trained to do the job...these are high level accounting positions, not entry-level data entry type jobs. You don't want to spend the time and effort to train someone for those positions just for a few months - and even finding someone who would want to only work them for a few months would also be difficult. This is where the reality of business meets the fantasy of people who don't know how businesses work.

  • @johnjulie6657
    @johnjulie6657 Месяц назад

    Feli, most American Cities west of the Mississippi River is so far a part that we're stuck using the car. From 84 to 88 I was stationed in Germany, I loved the mass transit systems! I used the IC's all the time in Deutschland!

  • @congodrums01
    @congodrums01 Месяц назад

    Feli, I agree with you on every single one of your points. Being from Europe myself and even after having lived here on the east coast for 24 years, I still find myself looking at ingredients and especially the amount of sugar in so many basic foods (bread being at the top of my list!). I will never get used to the misinterpretation of gun laws as described by the Founding Fathers... Education... Healthcare... Public transport... etc...

  • @j.p.1859
    @j.p.1859 Месяц назад +17

    Without watching this video, first thing coming to my mind is the U.S. health insurance system. It sucks big time! As a German living here for over 20 years, I really miss how it works over there.

    • @Proteus3000
      @Proteus3000 Месяц назад +1

      Yup the healthcare system here in the US is terrible. I got charged 4000 dollars for 10 stitches and a tetanus shot.

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад +2

      I would agree until I lived in the UK for 6 years, 6 years worth of extremely high taxes when the only thing I did was a yearly checkup every year (which would cost me $4 in the states with crappy free state provided health insurance)

    • @gerhardma4297
      @gerhardma4297 Месяц назад

      @@kevinprzy4539 Here we have another typical case of someone who has not understood the principle of socialized healthcare. The people in it are part of a community of solidarity. I pay my share for the treatment of other people I don't even know and that's a good thing. Because I am doing something good for society as a whole. Americans don't know and understand this principle. A country full of egomaniacs, intolerance and a lack of compassion. And you show this once again in your statement, and also that education has failed you because otherwise you would have understood the principle

  • @MrGlenspace
    @MrGlenspace Месяц назад +6

    Feli, you might need to visit other states or upper middle clans areas etc. you can all the food products you desire including authentic German food.

  • @barbaralavalle3533
    @barbaralavalle3533 Месяц назад +1

    Agree 100%. We were stationed in Germany in the late '70s, and felt safer there than in the US even then. And we did like the bread and butter better in Germany. I have tried to get German butter here, to no avail.

  • @applejuice5272
    @applejuice5272 Месяц назад

    In the UK, healthcare is free at the point of use (NHS) apart from some prescriptions, but you can organize a pre-payment certificate (PPC) which you can pay in one go or by monthly Direct Debit.
    You pay for dentist and opticians appointments (unless you're pregnant, on certain benefits or age-related - child or OAP).

  • @fraupolster
    @fraupolster Месяц назад +5

    Do you follow Type Ashton? She really digs into the costs of healthcare and education in comparisons to Germany. She is very thorough with her research. Don’t worry about all the haters, most of them do not know what they’re talking about. You have a great channel and good information. In addition, you make it fun to learn and watch. 🥰

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад

      Type Ashton is an idiot or, worse, a liar. She doesn't understand that the problems with US healthcare are due to government involvement, and that just got worse with ObamaCare. Moreover, she actually insists that something in the Bill of Rights, and referred to as a right in the 2nd Amendment itself, is actually a privilege contingent on membership in a militia.

  • @eileenderheim3768
    @eileenderheim3768 Месяц назад +38

    100% agree with all your suggestions. Lack of walkability is very frustrating; there are many areas in my town where there are not even sidewalks. Public transportation is VERY lacking and think you hit the surface on the guns.
    We could do better!

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Месяц назад +7

      guns is your average Americans fault not the law, teaching your kids the importance and how to safely use a gun and teaching them it's not a toy is very important and would lower gun violence not to mention majority (70%) of gun related crimes are committed with an illegally obtained gun.

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 Месяц назад

      @@kevinprzy4539 You're the dad of a family in the US. You own guns, because you believe in "protecting" your family. You teach your kids everything the right way. But just the fact that you own guns, guns that you, your wife and your growing up kids can get their hands on at any time, always remains. There are so many instances that happen to human beings over the course of a human life, that can trigger somebody doing something really bad and stupid. Just to name a few:
      Your wife might start cheating on you - you freak out, anger starts growing and you might use that thing on your wife.
      Or you cheat your wife and your wife does it.
      Your finances might collapse and mental health issues occur - your health insurance doesn't pay for all of this and you might choose to do something stupid.
      Your son gets bullied and has issues in school.
      Your son has mental problems during his teenager period. Or a failed love that breaks his heart.
      You develop serious family issues with other parts of your family - oncles, aunts, fathers, mothers, cousins. There are various problems, that might pop up over the course of a human life.
      You can not prepare your kids to never ever make a stupid error involving a gun. That's not possible. We're human beings with emotions and subject to sicknesses and reflex reactions that we later regret. We aren't robots. And your kids won't be any different, even if you're the best mom or dad on the planet. I'm sorry to say that, but it is true.

  • @aristillus101
    @aristillus101 Месяц назад +3

    Congrats Feli, right on target and done in a very professional way. I’ve never regretted subscribing to your channel a few years ago. Keep up the good work 👍

  • @bennett8535
    @bennett8535 Месяц назад +16

    Great list! As an American, I agree with you 100%.

  • @warrent1490
    @warrent1490 Месяц назад +5

    I would say one of Americas biggest problem is also it's greatest strengths, is the fact that we are a mixing bowl of so many cultures. Other countries don't have so many people from such different backgrounds and cultures all trying to live together.

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 Месяц назад +2

      *problems
      *its (possessive pronoun)
      it's = contraction of "it is" or "it has"
      All contractions have apostrophes. Possessive pronouns never do.

  • @michaelharmon817
    @michaelharmon817 15 дней назад

    New to your channel and love it. You got it right. There's a bunch missing though. I keep hoping for the better of our country so all my loved ones can have a full productive life. Thanks so much 👍 I'll keep watching 😁

  • @GlassicGamer
    @GlassicGamer Месяц назад +9

    College is expensive because the government got involved. Just look at the time when federal loan programs started vs the costs before.

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 Месяц назад +2

      There are a number of reasons why, but primary of which is when the Federal Government took over student loan management, instead of private institutions as it was when I went (I paid $10,000 total for my education, paid off in less than 10 years). Since the Unis were getting guaranteed money from the government, it took price control away, and thus the inflated costs with the subsequent quality going down - college should never have been pushed by companies as a requirement to get a job. I think, with the number of students going on to college (especially men) going down, and with the various lack of quality exposed to parents of future children. I suspect parents will be pushing (especially to boys) children to explore various trade schools instead, which will eventually force a much needed correction the the University system (along with getting rid of useless degree programs that do nothing for a student's future).

    • @Lonovavir
      @Lonovavir Месяц назад +3

      The increase of non-teaching staff is also a serious problem. Some universities have a 1:1 ratio of professors to office workers.

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@jaycee330
      Companies don't pay for their job seekers' college education so having a college graduate as a worker is a no-cost gain. I, generally believe that after four years of college education, a college graduate becomes more adaptable than a high-school graduate.

  • @maryhildreth754
    @maryhildreth754 Месяц назад +26

    I may not agree with some of the things you want to change,but you have every right to have and voice your opinions. We Americans certainly criticize our own country and countries we have never even visited, so discussing things you would prefer to change is perfectly fine.

    • @jonathanfinan722
      @jonathanfinan722 Месяц назад +5

      You say that like an opinion is a privilege tolerated begrudgingly. In the actual free world that isn’t the case. We have the freedom not to live under the yolk of relentless and brutal capitalism. We live in a fair and decent world which, by any reasonable definition, the USA is not.

    • @maryhildreth754
      @maryhildreth754 Месяц назад +4

      @@jonathanfinan722 you must not have read my comment at all.

    • @maxman4948
      @maxman4948 Месяц назад

      German is changing to communist state.

    • @pepita46
      @pepita46 Месяц назад +1

      Of course, it's perfectly fine! It's called having an opinion. Especially as Feli actually lives in the US and experiences firsthand all the issues she is talking about. She is entitled to a different opinion and if you think that is criticising, we definitely have different ideas of the concept.

    • @maryhildreth754
      @maryhildreth754 Месяц назад

      @@pepita46 that is not what I was saying at all. Please read what I said without trying to make it into something it isn't. My post was to support her in her right to voice her opinion, even though some may disagree with some things she said.

  • @torejorgensen5344
    @torejorgensen5344 Месяц назад +6

    What I would change in US is the "winner takes it all" political system that results in just two political parties (even though there technically are more than two, only the Democrats and Republicans matter). That results in compromises being made from slightly to one side of the center and all the way to the extreme politicians at that side, instead of isolating the extreme politicians and make compromises around the center and moderate politicians to either left or right. If USA could fix that, lots of the other stuff could probably be fixed as a result.

    • @thatguy8869
      @thatguy8869 Месяц назад

      👍

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming Месяц назад +1

      The way to fix this is to have every district's vote count as it was cast. California, for instance, has been basically throwing away 1/3 of its votes every election as one party has a lock on the state. Same with Texas. So in both states, the other side's agenda is never even brought up and often explicitly targeted. Resulting in two extremes in how the state is run - one is basically a free-for-all, and the other wants to return to 1950. With anyone in the middle or on the other side being simply ignored. Where I live now ( I used to live in California, my son in Texas - so I've seen both sides of this extreme ), it's a 50/50 state and we all have to (often begrudgingly - lol) cooperate to get anything done.

    • @torejorgensen5344
      @torejorgensen5344 Месяц назад

      @@plektosgaming In Norway we have a storting (similar to congress) with 169 members. Currently 10 political parties are represented there, some big and some small. If a country with 5.5 million people can have 10 political parties (plus several that didn't get into the storting), USA could easily have 20 or more if the election system was different. Then the sane parties could make alliances with other sane parties and let the maniacs scream in the corners without having much influence. I'm not saying our political system is perfect, but it does make it harder for outlayers to block decisions, and people can find political parties they mostly agree with.

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming Месяц назад

      @@torejorgensen5344 No, I agree. Our system here is completely broken and designed to keep the two parties in power. The thing most people don't realize is that it's all fake. That is, that these same people eat lunch together, their kids go to the same schools, they go to the same social events. They basically choose which "party" to be part of based on their state but in the end, it's two sides of the same group of people who play the "politics" game. 95% of it is fake to keep the normal people thinking there are huge differences. In the end, it's all about maintaining power. Say the right things, play the game and act a lot for the press and life goes on as normal in the easiest job in the country that also makes you a millionaire in the end.

  • @hazelreflection
    @hazelreflection Месяц назад +17

    Im an american from the midwest, and lived in South Korea for a couple years. I remember there was one time when some rando got ahold of a gun and attacked a woman and shot and injured a police officer. Everyone was APPALLED that something like that would or *could* happen, and I miss living in that kind of society, where gun violence is almost entirely unheard of and people feel safe. People are so obsessed with "freedom" here, but I felt FAR more free in a gun-free society.

    • @Soldierboy54b
      @Soldierboy54b Месяц назад +1

      If there's such a thing as "gun violence," then is there also such a thing as "gun benevolence?" If I talk to my gun, what questions should I ask her to find out which she is?

    • @Llyd_ApDicta
      @Llyd_ApDicta Месяц назад

      @@Soldierboy54b Considering your user name this is probably a moot point, but he was talking about violence that involved the usage of a firearm. If hiding behind semantics is your best defense your country (assuming you're a yank) should have gotten rid of the "right to bear arms" ages ago.

    • @Soldierboy54b
      @Soldierboy54b Месяц назад +1

      @@Llyd_ApDicta .... Semantics? This is serious. Think of all the potential car & swimming pool violence there might be out there as well!

    • @Llyd_ApDicta
      @Llyd_ApDicta Месяц назад

      @@Soldierboy54b Mayhaps but right now I am thinking about someone discussing generally accepted expressions in a language spoken by hundreds of millions of people and then producing something like this "...pool violence *there* might be out there as well!"

    • @Soldierboy54b
      @Soldierboy54b Месяц назад +1

      @@Llyd_ApDicta .... And I am thinking about the rediculous notion of assigning blame to inanimate objects.

  • @fredsands9220
    @fredsands9220 Месяц назад

    Beautifully done Feli, as usual. I definitely like the way you handled the objections on the front end. You stepped right in the middle of several age old and highly contentious political debates, therefore no one should be surprised that your opening took a while. :-) 😊 Thanks, you are very bright, well educated, and I enjoy listening to you.

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 Месяц назад

      I should hope Feli has a follow up on "5 Things I would change in Germany", it's only fair, and I bet she probably has a number of complaints about that as well.

  • @MrGlenspace
    @MrGlenspace Месяц назад +10

    In NY we have uncle Giuseppe’s, stew Leonard’s and wegmans. All three will give you good mozzarella.

    • @christineherrmann205
      @christineherrmann205 Месяц назад +3

      I keep preaching to her that she needs to consider a bluer state. I have family in OH; I've visited. I'd never move there.

    • @johnsy4306
      @johnsy4306 Месяц назад +1

      Wegman's is the best!!!

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 Месяц назад

      @@christineherrmann205 Well, Indiana is practically next door, so it's an option.

  • @halfdemon_setsuna
    @halfdemon_setsuna Месяц назад +9

    My fear as a german is, that germany is going the way the USA does in the future. I got a knee injury lately and I had to wait one month to get my MRT done, because I'm "gesetzlich versichert" (
    statutory health insurance) and I know some people with more complicated issues had to wait 2-6 Month. To get an appointment by some specialists you have to wait the same amount of time or longer, if you're not lucky. If I had the money right now to go to a "Selbstzahlerpraxis" so pay for myself by a private specialist or a private MRT-Service, I would pay my 400Euros, my appointment would be in a few days... sad enough

    • @etopsch369
      @etopsch369 Месяц назад +2

      As a German I can say that appointment in the USA would cost you $5000. That is sad. I agree that privately insured in Germany are better off, but there are obviously also some disadvantages. On average the cost of healthcare is about 15 to 20% of American healthcare I had to pay $18,000 at Miami hospital for one night

    • @halfdemon_setsuna
      @halfdemon_setsuna Месяц назад

      @@etopsch369 Yes I know that but I have that fear, many hospitals are in really bad condition… I hope this changes but I fear it won’t… some private investors will be at hand and statutory health insurance wont be accepted in this new private hospitals. Maybe there are differences from Bundesland to Bundesland but in Bremen its bad.

    • @Flo-vn9ty
      @Flo-vn9ty Месяц назад +1

      Yes the German system has it's flaws too, but it is still a lot better than in the US. Unfortunately most of this flaws were introduced because of some really dumb political decisions that were supposed to improve the system but actually made it worse. Like not paying the doctor if he already treated a certain amount of publicly insured patients. Of cause doctors now try to make patients wait till they get paid again. I also don't understand how any politician could really believe that privatizing hospitals could make them cheaper. Before hospitals just had to cover their expenses. Now they have to cover their expenses and have to make profit. How could this be cheaper?

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Месяц назад

      Yet in the USA we don't have to wait. BTW, my dad had to have a shoulder surgery. No waiting unlike our Canadian counter parts, and my dad was able to set up a (as is standard) a payment plan on the co-pay portion of the surgery at no interest.

    • @Flo-vn9ty
      @Flo-vn9ty Месяц назад +2

      @@Anon54387 Well if I decided to get private insurance or pay myself in Germany I usually wouldn't have to wait much either. But the treatment and especially the hospital care would be a LOT cheaper than in the US. And it is not only the treatment that is cheaper but also important medicine. In 2018 the insulin price in Germany was $11 (not the copay, the actual price) in the US it was $98.70 !

  • @yaowsers77
    @yaowsers77 Месяц назад

    i'm all about your #5! the one thing everyone should all agree on!

  • @narglefargle
    @narglefargle Месяц назад

    Totally agree on pretty much everything.

  • @buzzbomb67
    @buzzbomb67 Месяц назад +45

    Insurance is a scam. Between insurance and lawyers, theyve jacked prices up astronomically.

    • @jjboyd01
      @jjboyd01 Месяц назад +1

      how old r you? you'll have home insurance if you own a house..

    • @buzzbomb67
      @buzzbomb67 Месяц назад +3

      @@jjboyd01 56. I worked in the medical industry for 17 yrs and watched how insurance works. Its not that different for vehicles, homes etc. The difference being the amount and levels of corruption. I dont own, but I do have renter’s insurance.

    • @Be-Es---___
      @Be-Es---___ Месяц назад +3

      In fact; your 'out of pocket ' pays for the actual costs.
      The rest goes to profits and investors.

    • @mreurovisionau
      @mreurovisionau Месяц назад +5

      Yep, tort law is brutal in the USA and should be reformed.

    • @jjboyd01
      @jjboyd01 Месяц назад +1

      @@buzzbomb67 I've been lucky.... I'm a vet qualify for VA healthcare. A big reason to serve.

  • @thomasday8155
    @thomasday8155 Месяц назад +4

    92.1% of US Citizens have Health insurance. Thus 7.9% need to be covered through programs via Medicaid, unfortunately this has not been effectively implemented. Having lived in the EU for 3 years recently as a legal resident, I was under an EU Healthcare System. While the Healthcare was inexpensive, my Income Tax was through the roof - 65% of my salary. Thus my payment was more in the EU than my Insurance fees in the US. The issue to note was the availability of Primary Care Physicians, but the exceptional delays among specialists. I had a Knee Replacement surgery in the US that took place within two weeks of making the decision. I saw work colleagues wait years for this type of procedure.
    A similiar story with Collegiate Education. We saved money for both our sons to earn degrees without debt. The money I saved was very much in line with the extra tax I paid in EU. The biggest difference is the unbelievably overstaffed and overpaid faculty and admin staff in US compared to EU.

    • @lilawendland1648
      @lilawendland1648 Месяц назад

      There is no country in the EU where you pay 65% income tax!

    • @thomasday8155
      @thomasday8155 Месяц назад

      @lilawendland1648
      The Average (I was the CFO of an Organization, so I was a higher salary) for Austria, Belgium and France are all 55% or higher. Go ahead and look it up to see for yourself, easy to find with a Google Search. So yes, there is Income Tax at 65% and don't forget the 22% Sales Tax (in Europe the Value Added Tax VAT).
      The taxes are exceptionally high. So do you want to pay for your Healthcare and Education up front through your tax, or do you want to control yourself with personal savings and choice selections of the Insurance Plan that fits you best. As is done by 92% of the US Population. The real issue in the US is to get proper coverage, likely via Medicaid, for the remaining 8%.

    • @thomasday8155
      @thomasday8155 Месяц назад

      Look it up yourself, a Google Search will easily find it. For example, Austria, Belgium and France all AVERAGE 55% Income Tax rates. Higher brackets, like mine, easily reach 65%. Please don't forget to add the 22% Sales Tax (Value Added Tax VAT) that I paid on the items I purchased.

    • @thomasday8155
      @thomasday8155 Месяц назад

      @lilawendland1648
      Look it up yourself. Austria, Belgium and France all AVERAGE over 55%

    • @thomasday8155
      @thomasday8155 Месяц назад +1

      @lilawendland1648
      My Payment to Bank was approximately $120,000 per year, thus about $360,000 salary. I'd also note the company fully paid for my car and apartment, with a value of about $50,000 per year that was not taxable.
      But only consider the $360,000 salary. The difference in rates between US and Europe was about 30% on an Income of $360,000 or $98,000 per year in additional taxes.
      Would you rather have $98,000 to control yourself through investment, or just give it to the government to provide low cost to free Healthcare and Education?

  • @mj1234321
    @mj1234321 Месяц назад +2

    Having traveled through Germany and other parts of Europe by train, and having traveled around much of the US on Amtrak, the first thing I'd change about the US is investing in a decent high speed rail system! But I agree with all of your items in the video as well 100%.

    • @johns1039
      @johns1039 Месяц назад +1

      Bologna, because nobody is going to use it, and it is a complete waste of taxpayer money.

  • @PeterMayer
    @PeterMayer Месяц назад

    I agree with you kind! And I went to UC as a commuter and, in 1977, full-time at U.C. was $275 a quarter.

  • @thehoneybadger8089
    @thehoneybadger8089 Месяц назад +3

    When i started college at ASU in 1968, tuition was $125/semester and the books could be purchased used for about $5 to $10 or were available to be checked out of the library for a week at a time.

    • @jjboyd01
      @jjboyd01 Месяц назад

      ASU Tempe, AZ school was super cheap compared to NJ schools, I transferred back to NJ and graduated..

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад +1

      You can thank government for increased tuition.

    • @berniej.rucker4252
      @berniej.rucker4252 Месяц назад

      As of 2010: it was A WHOPPING $45K/YEAR!!! THAT did NOT include housing; food; books OR TRANSPORTATION as ASU now has FOUR SEPERATE campuses!!!
      One: East Mesa
      Two: Near Chandler about 20 miles southeast of downtown Tempe.
      Three: IN downtown Phoenix.
      Four: Downtown Tempe, which is the MAIN campus.
      To get to 1&2, you MUST drive YOURSELF!!!
      So there's ANOTHER added expense if you live just "off campus."

    • @levidezern3190
      @levidezern3190 Месяц назад

      @@themuskrat5776 you can thank capitalism for the increase capitalism needs to be abolished

    • @themuskrat5776
      @themuskrat5776 Месяц назад +2

      @@levidezern3190 no, capitalism is not to blame for college tuition rates. Rate were steady and less than inflating. It only started climbing after govt got involved.