A huge part of travel means expanding your horizons and looking at how other nations and cultures live. Wherever you go, you’ll see lots of upsides—as well as a ton of downsides. It gives you perspective. Ultimately, what you like about life abroad will depend on your personal priorities, whether that’s good food, affordable healthcare, rapid travel, or something else.
The American members of the r/AskReddit community recently opened up about the everyday things that people living in European countries have that they consider to be luxuries. Scroll down to read their personal opinions.
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Healthcare that doesn’t bankrupt you upon using it.
And for me after moving to France the French health care system, like the NHS under pressur but more reactive. I've had more scans etc than back thonder. The only thing I ask is why they don't ask for safety reasons how many rays I've had recently. I probably glow in the dark now, and send Geiger counters off the scale. Other than a vasectomy, never had an op back in the UK. Here in France quickly had a cataract op, after being warned by my optictian back in the UK I possibly had one. Had a knee op, then the other eye for a cataract, and at least 2 one day stays in hospital for multi tests - thought there was a colony of vampires the volume of bloods they took. Lumbar puncture, I hardly felt. A bollocks with a trainee doc who shook like a leaf trying to take a sample of salivary glands, and had to let a nurse take over. Followed for my health problems, rarely taken seriously back in UK (the only doc who did take my health seriously left for another practice in another town).
Load More Replies...Seriously, we have one of these lists narly every week and all they do is repeating the same differences and turning us against each other.
Or you could see it as " hey look at what they're doing over there maybe we can learn a thing or two".
Load More Replies...As a French, this one is the weirdest. Why don't you have it in America ? You're the richest country, why don't you have basic healthcare ??
My American son after University in NYC and working gor the banks for 2 yesrs ,run away to beautiful ,balance,safe Vienna,He is much muvh happier there...America making people Slaves whar ever they working..no soul,no security,no Culture...only primitive Churches
True. Thats what scares me about the US. And the amount of holidays you get. Really offputting
Contrary to popular belief, it's not "free" though, we pay high taxes for it (at least in France) - but it's definitely worth it
" Healthcare expenditures per capita averaged $10,191 in the U.S. in 2020 France spent 209.2 billion euros on healthcare in 2020, or about 3,100 euros per person, 0.4 per cent less than the year before. Among the EU Member States, Germany (12.8 %) and France (12.2 %) had the highest healthcare expenditure relative to GDP in 2020. La France est l' un des états européens qui dépense le plus pour sa santé mais est aussi le pays où la part des soins qui reste à la charge directe des ménages est la plus faible, selon une étude de la Drees (Service statistique public) "
Load More Replies...I'm an American living in Europe, so.. Affordable healthcare 28 days paid vacation Sick leave Affordable quality public transportation Higher food/water/environmental standards Seriously, I can never go back. Americans should be raging in the streets all the time.
Yes they should, there are so many threads about this issues here and I can't stop thinking why there are no loud protests for any of the above
Because they are distracted by other topics, such as divisive politics or religious bigots
Load More Replies...So many Americans are brainwashed by Republicans, evangelicals and delusions of what "freedom" is.
The reasons Americans don't strike is because they're indoctrinated from birth to believe the propaganda that US is the best & they're 'free'
Too many Americans see these as socialism and, despite what their religious messiah taught, they believe socialism is an evil. That worldview is most common among the less educated American working class, who sadly would benefit the most. It's not about greedy capitalism (the capitalists just need to notice the indirect benefits to themselves that are embedded in doing these things). It sucks and I wish I had moved out of the country when I had the chance.
That's a great point with the messiah, so many Christians fighting against the teachings of the Christ
Load More Replies...Americans *should* be, but they're so conditioned by the media that they simply focus on whatever they are told to focus on. It's sad that so many drones are being groomed instead of individualist being encouraged.
And more expensive everything, much, actually, most all things cost much much more, often twice what they do here. After all that tax over there, not just the people but the businesses, there isn't much left to pay for anything. So go to the hospital with your stubbed toe, it keeps you busy.
Because you can pay the bills by raging? People do rage in the states but it's not practical if you want to keep your job, especially because you more than likely have obligations like mortgages, bills, children, insurance, etc. so realism becomes a factor
Americans seem particularly prone to the delusion that they are powerless. I don't know if it's brainwashing or what.
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Being able to walk. To the shops, gym, school. Just f*****g walking anywhere without needing a car.
It didn't occur to me until now, but shopping malls essentially simulate shopping, on foot, in a town. Except you have to drive a car to get a mall, malls are impersonal and bland, offering the same things as other malls, and they rarely have good restaurants.
Malls were actually created to simulate the experience of a shopping street in a city, so you are right.
Load More Replies...this is only true if you live in a city.... I live in a small town in Germany and need a car for absolutely everything...
That didn't use to be the case at all. Car centric planning has destroyed local business in small towns. Any village used to have a bakery, butcher, grocery store and post office.
Load More Replies...Actually, I live in Wales and I cannot walk to the shops etc. I live in a rural area miles from town. Don't assume everyone lives like you.
I was going to say this too. Can't do that where I live either.
Load More Replies...If you live in a city, it makes sense...if you live in a rural area, not so much.
In Germany even small towns with 500 people or less usually have an established and reliable bus or train connection, so technically you could walk anywhere and use public transport for larger distances. However, the train/bus connection is operated way less frequent than in bigger cities which is why a lot of people still own and use a car for their commute.
Load More Replies...Some places in the USA are walkable. Portland Oregon is a great example. Seattle, San Francisco, Manhattan, Those places exist but the majority of the country is endless urban sprawl like LA and Phoenix.
I would disagree that "the majority of the country is endless urban sprawl like LA and Phoenix." The majority of the country is open country, not cities.
Load More Replies...I live in central Europe in town of population 80k. I do have car, but som s working from home, all shops or banks or bureaus are within 20 minutes of walking, I don't drive except trips outside the town. And public transport to where is too far to walk.
Because they have dumb zoning laws that don't provide for small grocery stores or other infrastructure in residential areas. In the UK, a developer isn't permitted to build a large housing project without providing a "village centre" with room for a grocery store, a takeaway, a beauty salon, a doctor's or dentists, a pharmacy etc. In the USA they are expressly forbidden from doing so (in the majority of cases).
Load More Replies...Some of the main things that tend to come up whenever someone compares and contrasts life in the United States and life in the European Union include the healthcare system, as well as paid time off. These are extremely important factors to consider before you plan to settle down somewhere.
The US is the only economically advanced country on Earth that does not have statutory paid leave, while the global average, according to Business Insider, stands at 18.2 days. Meanwhile, around half of Americans simply aren’t taking time off, which can lead to additional stress and burnout.
Not having to worry so much about getting shot at work or at school, or anywhere for that matter.
I never really thought about it either, plus I dont know who does?
Load More Replies...That is because in America, half the political system believes the right to own a gun is more important than life itself.
Chatting to another parent at my son's nursery who had moved from the US and she said the first time she heard a loud bang and her first thought was 'gunshot' then the realisation that it was incredibly unlikely (UK) was really strange for her.
As a gay man, I've been refraining from going to pride events the last couple of years for fear of shoot ups. I'm legit nervous to partake in any lgbtq activities since 2016ish.
It's not part of my consciousness until I thought of "let's go to the US.
Yeah, this is getting old. I'm not dismissing the gun problem in the US, but the only time I ever heard gun shot was in France. I was also on a train in France that got shot with an assault rifle and the guy checking the tickets shrugged it off as being something that happens from time to time. In my 12 years living in the US I have never heard a single gun shot.
Same with Canada .. not an issue. Never understood the gun culture in the us
It's not the gun culture - it's the fear culture. People who are afraid are easier to manipulate.
Load More Replies...We don't worry about that any more than we worry about getting into a car accident.
The bread. Coming back from Germany recently and all the bread back home in the US feels like I'm chewing on a kitchen sponge instead of giving my jaw a workout.
German and Austrian bakery is without doubt the best in the world in my opinion. I worked in France as well, theirs is good, but not a patch on Germany.
I submit Finnish baking. Admittedly our cuisine in general is not great, but whenever I'm abroad (Germany included) I miss the diversity of bread you find in any Finnish supermarket. Climate has forced us to use a variety of grains and sparse population has created a great many distinct "bread cultures".
Load More Replies...When I was young where I grew up in Tasmania at a weekly market there was a stall run by a German family called Brauer. They made all sorts of bread and there was this one loaf my dad used to get every week they just called German Bread and it was the best bread I've ever had. So good really thinly Sliced toased with Vegemite. I've never been able to find the recipe and they've long since stopped selling their bread. I know it was a kastenbrodt, sorry if spelling is off, part spelt, part rye and it had milk in it. I still miss it 30 odd years later.
It's spelled Kastenbrot, but that just means it has a square shape (Kasten means box), so it doesn't tell you anything about the ingredients. Maybe this one would work for you? https://www.brooot.de/mischbrote/roggenmischbrot-mit-milchsauerteig/
Load More Replies...We have a diversity of tasty, healthy bread in Norway. And probably in the other Nordic countries as well.
Most British bread is also awful. But, there are more independent bakeries appearing all of the time.
And fresh bread? Bread you can buy from a supermarket within a day of it being baked . Or go to a bakery and buy it fresher, baked that day. We can buy it in NZ like this, just like a large number of other countries.
Less sugar in products.
Not only "less sugar", but also "better sugar". High-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), one of the main drivers of the obesity epidemic in the USA, exists in Europe but it has HALF the sugar content of the american version, and it is not nearly as omnipresent. European food industry prefers cane and beet sugar (sucrose), and they use much less of it in any product. The average pro-capite sugar intake in the USA is 25% higher than Germany's, that is the EU state with the highest sugar consumption by a good margin.
Speak of what you know, if you READ American food labels, virtually everything says "No high fructose corn syrup" Maybe they are lying? Comes to much the same end, sugar in Europe is expensive so they don't eat it, it is cheap in the U.S. so we eat way way too much.
Load More Replies...As an American, I can say I would love this. My hubby and I have stopped eating fast food or even at resturants. We pretty much only eat at home so that we can cut out as much sugar as possible. It's sickening to find out just how much suger is in food that is sold that isn't a dessert!!!!
Those milkshake piled high with other food never made it to Europe. People here simply don't eat like that, and are more disgusted than intrigued to try.
Load More Replies...YES, there's even sugar in soup in the US. Some industries are too powerful in the US.
No added sugar closer to the truth. Natural sugars sufficient most of the time. The law has even changed to restrict the amount of salt in the holy baguette in France. A holy explosion of disgust but nobody actually tasted the difference!
As an American, I want this! Our government/fda is slowly killing us. A good portion of the population is now obese and many of us suffering from health issues due to poor diet.
I think a lot of the obesity problem is due to the poor quality of bakery and other 'treats' that don't work and leave one still wanting a 'treat'.
Load More Replies...US FDA regulation is much more lax than European. A lot of the additives banned in Europe are still used extensively in the US.
Load More Replies...CNBC reports that the average American employee gets 11 vacation days each year. Meanwhile, people living and working in the European Union get at least 20 paid days off each year, mandated by law. That’s before public holidays are accounted for.
A recent Morning Consult survey shows that many Americans aren’t certain that they’d actually like longer vacations. However, what they do want are longer lunch breaks and shorter workweeks.
Chocolate. I lived in Finland for a bit at 18 and their basic Fazer chocolate made our Hersheys taste like wax. They had no idea how much better it was.
Yeah I remember my uni flatmate bringing us Hersheys Kisses as a “treat” when she came back after xmas break…they tasted cheesey
Butyric acid. American milk chocolate wasn't always made from the freshest milk, so Americans developed a taste for chocolate made with slightly soured milk. These days we add butyric acid to recreate that flavor.
Load More Replies...American chocolate sucks, literally tastes like vomit, I honestly don't understand how anyone can eat it.
Well when it becomes extremely common people get used to it. I like Hersey though. I still agree there are much better brands though.
Load More Replies...American chocolate does taste of wax, I don't understand anyone who gushes over it. I watched a YouTube video of an American making proper chocolate in an independent chocolate shop. Many of the channels subscribers in the USA watched and bought from this shop and then in a follow up video seemed split. Some saying they had never had proper chocolate before and now can't eat waxy chocolate in the shops ever again and others saying they hated the real stuff as it didn't taste like hersheys etc and they believed that to be how real chocolate tastes. Everyone I know from the UK who has tried hersheys has been so excited to try it and then decided their bar is obviously out of date as it tastes just like wax. When told that's normal, they're shocked at why it's loved so much.
Fewer additives in their food. There’s a reason I lost 19 pounds when I studied abroad in London. The only way I was able to lose weight in America was through weight loss surgery!
mochahotness:
Food not filled with crazy chemicals. A lot of additives allowed in the US are banned in other countries
It exist (authorized for free production and use in 2017), but it's fructose content is limited at about 20%, while the american version goes from 42 to 55%
Load More Replies...I read a copy of MENS HEALTH in the USA once. It talked about hormones in meat and said it's nearly impossible to find meat which doesn't have them added (in the US). In the UK and EU, it isn't legally allowed.
Keeps Americans sick so they can be used for profit by the companies who are really running the US
Sorry to sound like a broken record, it is expensive to eat in Europe, at home or out, so people eat less and eat more slowly and enjoy their food, which is healthier. Americans eat fast and just stuff themselves, as their plates are always over filled, and mother always said clean your plate, there are people in - - - - - that are going hungry. Eating out at McDonalds does help either.
With English cooking all around you, it's easier to cut down and lose weight.
How common is cooking from scratch a home? Serious question because you can avoid so much sugar and other additives in your food by cooking fresh.
Cooking from scratch is simply an unattainable goal for many Americans. Between mental and physical overload from working such long hours, the higher costs of fresh food vs processed, and the existence of food deserts, it's easy to understand why so many people no longer regularly cook.
Load More Replies...We shop at Aldi where there seems to be less chemicals in the food. Read the labels. Also, cooking at home limits the chemicals in your food. You choose the ingredients while shopping. And once you have a dozen or two recipes that you like and are well practiced on, it is fun to cook and eat at home. We recently visited a national franchise brand seafood restaurant for a meal (special occasion treat). It was the first time in years. I was really disappointed in the quality of the food - and the cost. $40 per person and we make better food at home for far less.
I've taken weight, but considering I was considered underweight before, and people asked if I was ill, being able to count my ribs not a bad thing. First visit back to Northern Ireland, everyone said I'd taken weight but suited me, and I looked more healthy. Stay around the same weight, give or take 3 kilos, over the last 12 years plus. Without trying the diet is pretty healthy. Pfft yes the doc says watch the cholestérol, and found I'm at the lower limit of hyper tension, but then I'm a greedy sod now!
Appropriate drinking age (this whole have to be 21yo is f*****g stupid. Can die for the country and drive a killing machine, can own a killing machine, but can't handle a drink? Stupid).
Well American drinking culture is pretty messed up. In Europe, you might give a kid a bit of small beer or wine with dinner, but in the USA that is borderline child abuse. So the kids don't learn to hold their booze until they're on their own and have no guidance from their family.
You have to be 21 to smoke cigarettes and vapes, too. The Trump administration passed that one a couple years ago.
Vaping in the US is dangerous purely because US allows ingredients in liquid that are banned elsewhere. Another example of Americans being deliberately made sick for health care profit
Load More Replies...When drinking age in US was 18, teens learned to drink around adults. there was a lot less binge drinking, bc you could drink anywhere. It makes it too attractive when it's forbidden.
I am German and my mother was always pretty chill about these things. didn´t bat an eye when at 10 years I would sneak a sip from her Berliner weiße (beer with syrup, like raspberry or woodruff). She bought me my first, and only, Alco-pop at 14, I think it was a smirnoff Ice. I was kinda scared that you couldn´t taste the alcohol at all, it tasted like straight lemonade. And she always used to say, should I ever start drinking or smoking as a teen, I should come to her so she at least could be sure that I get the good, normal stuff and not something some shady person could have mixed something in.
Where healthcare is concerned, the United States has a very bureaucratically overloaded and wasteful system. It needs to be overhauled to make it more effective. The Peter G. Peterson Foundation reveals that the US spends more on healthcare per person than any other wealthy country in the world.
This number stood around $12,555 per American in 2022. That’s nearly twice as much as the average in developed nations ($6,414 per person). The issue is that even though the US spends so much money, the utilization rate isn’t much different from elsewhere. It means that you get less for each dollar than you would abroad.
Reasonable gun laws.
When it becomes "lavish" to expect that kids will come home from school every day, something is deeply wrong.
Again, I fear you speak of what you don't know. I live just outside of a city that has one of the highest crime rates in the U.S., I don't fear going anyplace there. I guess I am just not paranoid.
Load More Replies...Just last week, there was another school mass shooting, this time in Iowa. Trump was campaigning there and consoled the crowd by telling them to, "Get over it."
After Dunblane, the UK banned private ownership of guns and there has not been another school shooting since.
No, they didn't. You can still own a gun, just not a semi auto
Load More Replies...1- Maybe we should have more reasonable gun laws, but- there are uses for them besides in the military/police/etc. such as hunting, protecting livestock, and sometimes, when necessary, protecting ourselves. 2- Yes there are issues with how many shootings we have, but creating stricter laws won't fix that, just like creating stricter laws for drugs hasn't fixed that. 3-People will get guns. Even if just this one person is banned from buying them, they will get one from the black market or (surprisingly) they will 3-D print one and use it. Our gun laws are somewhat reasonable, even if the types of guns available to the public are sometimes excessive, but changing those laws won't change the shootings. We need to address the people and not the object.
Despite what the news would have you believe, school shootings are more rare than plane crashes.
I could lecture about the differences for hours, having spent around 2 years in Firearms Licencing as a civvy admin with the Northern Ireland Police Authority. Cops and administrators from everywhere visited us often. Clear arms still relatively easy for crims to get back there despite tight controls, but other than organised crime, little gun crime. Here in my adoptive France some drugs gangs have kalashs (cheap unreliable Chinese copies) but the Gendarmes and Police Nationale really making big inroads breaking the gangs down. Even my step son has wised up playing with his airsoft weapons in public view.
Rad architecture, lots of great food, exposure to a bunch of different cultures and languages without having to take a long flight.
Exposure to different cultures? My neighbors on one side are Korean, my neighbors on the other are from Myanmar. The couple 2 houses over is from India, on the other side is a Russian gentleman. The grocery store on the corner is Somali and next to that is a Sushi place run by Mongolians. And I live in the suburbs. What culture were you looking for? I haven't even gone over the restaurants.
I think the point was actually experiencing different cultures, not just meeting foreign people. You can hop on a train or coach and be in different countries within a few hours and cheaply.
Load More Replies...I would agree, this is one of the joys of travel in Europe, but as I said, Europeans should take better advantage of it. As for architecture, Europe has a couple of thousand years of it, we haven't been here but maybe 400 years. I live near Chicago, which is a new city. But when it comes to modern, we have it all over you poor Europeans
I grew up in south Florida in the 80's, basically the same thing, except the architecture
Okay, this is absurd. Tons of great food, different cultures and languages in the USA
There is a difference between "experience a culture" and "getting to know people from another culture". It's not the same.
Load More Replies...I've lived in various European countries & visited many US states. Your comment is not remotely true on either point
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Good cheeses.
OddConstruction116:
As a European that was what I missed the most, when I spent a few months in the US.
LOL I work at a place that specializes in charcuterie and I really don't understand the appeal of pate. It smells and looks like cat food to me but people like it because we sell a ton of the stuff.
Load More Replies...Friends from Florida came to visit. They were blown away by the selection of cheeses we served. To them, it was gourmet cheese. To us, it was just cheese from the local supermarket.
Oh, France. St Marcellin. Reblochon. And 200 other French cheeses. Vacherin....
Load More Replies...As I European, I missed the bread as much as I missed my family when I lived in the US
Except for the Euros, that picture could be from any Wisconsin grocery store.
Whoever you are, go to a good grocery store and you have more choice of WORLD cheeses than the local varieties available in Europe, including the European, and much much cheaper. Good being the key word here. Being spead out over the whole continent, this may not be that easy, but make a trip into the city once and a while.
My local grocery stores have entire open cases of cheese from all over the world. Here in the middle of the US. This is not the norm anymore. And there's better versions of American cheese than the processed version by Kraft. But Velveeta makes bomb dip.
Seriously. There are some AMAZING American cheeses. But all anyone ever thinks of is spray cheese and Kraft singles (which have their places!!!).
Load More Replies...Ever tried the northern Maroilles, that stinks to death, but tastes great, and super in les tartes au Maroilles biloute?
Oh my gosh yes!! I can't find Limberger or Esrom to save my soul without paying an arm and a leg.
Hospitals in the United Sates are consolidated, meaning there’s less competition. There’s also massive administrative waste due and inefficiency. The US spends roughly $900 per person per year on administrative costs alone. That’s four times the average admin cost in other developed nations.
Overall, despite these costs, the American healthcare system does not perform better than in other developed nations. In fact, it performs worse in areas like life expectancy and unmanaged diabetes.
More time off. When my wife gave birth to our child, she had to use all her vacation and sick pay as "maternity leave". This was a government job.
Amazing how companies in other countries can have decent paid leave and still manage to make a profit. Are American companies really that bad at what they do?
The USA is the only "advanced" country in the world that doesn't have maternity leave. THIS is what America really thinks of women and children. The grrreatest democracy in the world, YESSIR!
Just recently (US) my spouse's work decided that all PTO must be approved with 7 days notice. The only exception is if you bring the owner a note (like you're a child at school) from whatever the emergency was that was "so important". Unpaid days off are limited to 3 per year or you are instantly terminated. The owner also reduced the previous time off (80 hours per year) by 25% because people were "ungrateful". Remember, no one wants to work anymore....
In response to the above Hospital comments, we have higher administrative costs, because we offer more services. I used to live in Minnesota, and the Mayo Clinic and Rochester hospitals did a booming business servicing people who could afford to come from Europe and the World, providing superior medical and hospital care. Not what the government says you need, which is maybe half of what you want or need.
Those nifty towel heater / dryer racks.
Radiators are not a common feature in many homes in the USA. It's not surprising they don't have these specialised radiators.
Load More Replies...They’re available in the US. I have one in my home, they’re not common though.
How do you keep your towels dry then? Put them on the radiator? or do you have airing cupboards?
They have those here in Canada. Could be bought from Amazon in the U.S.
You don't have those in the US ?? Like.. Why ?? This is not high tech...
I'd like to add: no high fructose corn syrup in pretty much every product must be nice.
We do pay more, and some places have added a sugar tax on high sugar products to help deter people from consuming them.
Load More Replies...HFCS is a lot cheaper than table sugar, so manufacturers can add it freely without increasing costs. And Americans want it in their foods, whether fructose or sucrose. HFCS is somewhat worse for you than sucrose, but if HFCS were eliminated and sucrose became as cheap as HFCS is now, America would not be much healthier. Americans want sugar of any kind.
This focus on HFCS is weird. It's just a symptom of a much larger problem of using the cheapest ingredient possible. Cheap, refined flour, processed fats, and salt have much larger health impacts. Letting capitalism control your diet is a stupid thing to do.
BTW, HFCS is used because it is cheaper because the US government forces up sugar prices to support the very few US sugar producers. Simply put, they cost us $2 billion a year to give a few people $1 billion more in profit (data at least a decade old).
Job security. In the EU, there are certain rules employers must comply with for terminations, including advance notice. There is also a works council process in some cases that employers must comply with before layoffs can take place.
In the US, they can pretty much terminate you same day in many cases.
I always find this a crazy situation. No wonder so many Americans are stressed out the whole time as they have to always be better than most of their colleagues to be relatively safe from dismissal. And it just takes a personality clash or your boss having a bad day to lose your job 😕
Americans can be dismissed on a whim, and then lose access to health insurance too.
Load More Replies...For the last fifty years in America, the right has been determined to eliminate all unions.
And they've had success with that effort. I remember Saint Ron the Pompadoo (Ronald Reagan) firing all the air traffic controllers rather than negotiate. I'm sure there are earlier examples that I didn't notice at the time.
Load More Replies...Union jobs nationwide have been shrinking, and job security has largely dissipated in many formerly stable lines of work. Most employee protection laws, including restrictions on anti-union tactics by employers, have been rarely enforced. And people still wonder why income inequality has mushroomed. Depressing.
Musk must be having 'major' issues with Euro labour laws. Oh boo hoo. Those laws are there to protect the employees, and the employers from unjust work place practices.
In the US "At will" means you can get fired at any time for any reason, BUT - it also means that you are not required to give your employer notice before you quit.
Ours are are being eroded though. Who ever thought that zero hours was a good idea except for employers?
Let us not ignore the down side. It can be extremely difficult to terminate reckless, incompetent, lazy, or other bad employees in Europe.
Yes, called "at will" employment and it's horrible. They expect you to give them plenty of notice. But they can dump you for no reason in an instant.
They can terminate you here for any stupid reason they want. Opened the door to come in, on time, but started off on your left foot? Nope! Not gonna cut it here! You're fired! (Intentionally made extreme for the point)
The ability to fly out to major world cultural and historical sites for just a weekend and have it cost relatively little. I did a study abroad program in London, and the ability for me to book a weekend trip to Berlin on RyanAir for like 40 pounds never got old.
I just checked skyscanner and you can fly return from London to the following countries for under £40 this month: Norway Sweden Poland Slovakia Denmark Bulgaria Albania Finland Greece Austria Germany Czechia Spain Netherlands Portugal Croatia France Cyprus Luxembourg Estonia Italy Latvia Hungary Malta Morocco Switzerland Montenegro Slovenia Ireland Serbia, and Iceland Keep pretending Brexit caused damage, you look ridiculous
Load More Replies...Also, those prices should start to factor in environmental impact of flying
Yes. So much. It is way past time that we stop pretending that flying for fun is environmentally sustainable. I don't care if your airline promises to "offset the carbon", this is a distraction from the real issue. The muck and contrails spewed out into higher levels of the atmosphere is responsible for about 7% of global warming. Tourism as an industry is responsible for destroying almost every beach on the planet for the wildlife, for massive development in environmentally sensitive areas, for a large proportion of the housing market crisis, for destroying historic cities and making them unliveable for local people and workers, I could go on all day.
Load More Replies...Idiots voted for Brexit, old idiots, young idiots. Why are people so agest? People from the 70s voted is into Europe! (UK)
Pretty sure some European countries have free university and that sounds nice, I wouldn't mind going back and learning more skills but it's crazy expensive here.
My son is a metal fab apprentice. He’s making more money than I ever did.
Load More Replies...Here in Scotland college and university is free to all Scottish citizens. I know a lot of people who went on to leave there jobs and become 'mature' students after this became a thing. Many of them grew up poor and never even considered further education until it became possible to get a degree without racking up huge debts. Just last year a 47yr old friend of mine graduated with a degree in neurobiology despite being a single mum of 2 including a severely disabled 7yr old. Her 17yr old son just got accepted to the same university to study medicine!
I was at a TU (Technical University) to study. I paid 250 Euros per semester. Thats it. And i got Bafög (because my parents got not enough money through their jobs to support me) to cover my expenses like food and rent that i had to pay back, only in half. And that's also only because i didn't work to don't depend on it. I had to pay 10800€ back. Either in one payment to get to pay even less or in installments.
The American higher education system is designed, by its exorbitant cost, to be a privilege of and for the rich. If an ordinary person insists on attending, they pay a heavy fine in the form of student loan interest. This interest is paid to banks owned by the rich, of course.
I went to university, dropped out, waited for a year, started a new course, didn't pay for any of it
I Poland are free university of course not that presige like "politechnika" or "Uniwersytet Warszawski" but exist university for free
European here but Americans won't come up with it, so I'll help. *the Erasmus program* It isn't reserved only for Europeans (I met a Mexican girl and a Korean girl and plenty of Turks who are and are not European depending on who you ask) but generally it's mostly European centric program and a major privilege IMO. For student exchange - you can broaden your studies and move to another uni to have an entirely different skill set than anyone in your coutnry. The system of international events is so well developed that you'll do things you've never dreamed of. Social aspect is also important. It's fun of course, but you also build an amazing network without having to be rich. You find a short event in Paris two years after exchange? No problem, your friend Pierre will lend you his couch. You get a monetary scholarship so you aren't really that worried about money you'll need to move. It's really amazing. There's also Erasmus internship which helps with the problem of unpaid internships. As long as you're a student, you can take part in an internship and Eramshs will give money to you and your employer. They now have a reason to actually teach you and you actually get paid for your full time job. Erasmus also does plenty of other shorter projects for younger and older people so it's not only reserved to uni students. The accommodation and food is usually paid and you do amazing things.
Erasmus is one of the best thing to come from the EU. I don't know anyone who has participated and not enjoy it. I spent one year in Denmark through Erasmus and between the different grants, it costs me almost nothing.
My daughter studied in Toulouse and Seville via Erasmus, sadly hers was the last year that the UK was part of it.
What? A society that invests in the intellectual and social enrichment of people without generating a profit or building a consumer base? HORRIFYING!
A girl in my uni class did part of her degree in France! Before brexit. Sigh.
It's an EU education program where you get to do semesters in various universities across Europe. Any uni can be part of the program.
Load More Replies...I'm British, and I've never heard of Erasmus. (I have heard of foreign exchange students, but never knew what that meant.)
These programs are great, but UK and US gazillionaires are working OT and funding the ultra-rightists to destroy the EU. Brexit, for example, was largely funded by Murdoch, Koch, and Russian oligarchs
Access to ubiquitous and fast rail travel.
Since this is a German train in the picture: fast maybe, but not on time 😜
In America, fast rail travel would connect one city where you need a car with another city where you need a car. In Europe, you don't need a car in either.
They're trying to bring commuter trains to the US, but it's a hard sell when everyone drives/flys. Brightside, a private company trying to expansion commuter rail, opened a line from Miami to the Orlando Airport. They're considering where to put stops along the way as well as extending the route to Jacksonville if it's a success.. this same company is getting ready to build a line that goes from Vegas to I think Los Angeles, my mom's fiance worked on the one in Florida. They're trying just have to prove there's a benefit.
Japan has this too and I am eternally frustrated that countries like mine refuse to invest in it.
We sometimes pay dear for the TGVs - high speed trains, but 99% of the time cheaper than air travel, and less time spent twiddling your thumbs in an ordinary train or falling asleep at the wheel of the car.
Affordable and effective public transit.
I love visiting Europe. I can pop on a street car, bus, or underground and get to where I need to go. No dealing with traffic, no money for gas, no worry about being late. Europe public transit is very time efficient.
Not just speaking of city public transit either. For the price of a tank of gas or two in America I can pop on a train and go through 3 countries.
Not to mention Japan’s public transit with the Shinkansen. Couple hours and you’re hundreds of miles away. It’s wonderful and very easy to do.
I don’t miss much about living in Japan, but my god do I miss the public transport.
Part of my families are Japaneses who have moved back to Japan. The kids are very happy but the adults are not. The daily grind and keeping up with appearance (yes, upper middle class and above, oh yes) are taking a toll.
Load More Replies...As long as the transit companies work. If the drivers decide to strike, what you gonna do?
Most are well connected. After the far quartiers to the towns, and local towns and villages, there are connections with longer buses, even before the need for the train.
Yeah, I don't have a car and I don't plan to, because I feel no need for it in European cities
Depends on the city. The larger the city the more public transport there is. Most cities at least have a bus line.
Better work/life balance.
This includes rules about bosses not contacting employees whilst they are not working.
I do remember having a friend(Im in the UK) who had to keep his phone on 24/7, in case he had to come in and cover someones shift at work. He was working in a petrol station at the time and we could have bought tickets, got the popcorn, are settling in to watch a movie at the cinema and his phone would ring and he'd have to just get up and leave. So I think it depends, what your job is and where in Europe you work.
Load More Replies...Indeed, often, ones work just piles up when one is on vacation, so one returns to mayhem.
We have balance here! We work and live. We don't work we die. (meek lol)
Hahaha, this only applies if you are not a Domiciliary care worker, otherwise forget work/balance.
Mandated employer supported vacations.
All these European government benefits are affordable because those countries are not obsessed with ruling the entire world. A huge military budget kills everything that might help America actually become great again.
Well some of it is funded via taxes. I am not aware of how much taxes Americans pay these days but I pay 41% of my income in taxes. Therefore I have the benefit of free education, doctors and hospitals
Load More Replies...Okay, this is slightly incorrect Yes, the employer supports it by saving up a percentage of your wages every month, to be payed out when you take out these mandatory vacation days. This does not mean the employer pays for your vacation. Some contracts (mostly short-term) do not include these automatic vacation-savings and there you have to make sure you have to safe up for your lack of wages during your vacation yourself. The right to have somewhere between twenty to twenty-seven days of vacation for a full-time job is mandatory.
In some employments you just get paid your ordinary wage during your holiday.
Load More Replies...30 days of vacation leave plus a dozen public holidays a year. Thank you, Malta!
I can't even fathom. A lot of us everyday people in the U.S. either take staycations (stay at home vacations) because we can't afford a real vacation or put it on a credit card and go deeper into debt.
Historical sites.
There were people here before 1492, and they built structures...even pyramids.
Amen to that. Probably just harder to find. I recently saw a documentary about development in Miami (harbour?) where they found a historical indigenous site, but rather than preserving it they would carry on with construction after some minimal archeological work. Maybe the problem is rather a disregard for pre-colonial history.
Load More Replies...I live in a city that was founded in 50AD as a Roman castrum (military outpost). I can literally go and sit on the remains of its walls.
I'd say walk-able historic sites. Sites that are in within walking distance of public transportation and where car parks supplement walking and don't charge an arm and a leg for storing your car.
As someone in one of the other colonies, we have indigenous historical sites. It’s just that those aren’t viewed with the same gravitas as European ones.
That may be because they are not the origins of your OWN culture. One tends to take more care of things if he/she has a personal relation to it.
Load More Replies...We have many historical sites here in the US from the people who lived here way before the Europeans arrived. The problem is the US is still a white culture snob and any history that involves anyone besides white people is totally ignored.
Fruits and vegetables that taste good.
And don't cost a small fortune. Whenever I visit the USA I'm shocked at how little fruit is around outside of the supermarket and even in the supermarkets, how expensive it is! I eat a lot of fruit and veg and yet when I'm in the USA that goes down because it's not available as much and when it is, it costs so much. Easily 3-4x more and yet it tastes worse. Crazy.
This certainly applies to Southern Europe. Not so much North of the Alps.
Long as hell lunch breaks.
I once worked in the US office of a French company. Folks in France would see movies on their lunch break. Some would play full tennis games, shower afterwards, then return to work. Some would go home and take a nap.
My lunch breaks: I consider myself lucky if I can squeeze in a quick walk, quickly jam some food down my throat, and maybe take a leak and then get back to work before folks start looking for me.
This misconception is common among Americans, for some weird reason. The usual lunch break in Europe is 30 minutes to an hour. Some places in southern Spain, Greece and Italy have a longer break, to provide shelter during the hotter hours of the day, but it is limited to a few regions, jobs and is not so common anymore. Something notable, Greece has at the same time the longest lunch breaks (up to 3 hours) and the shortest average lunch break (19 minutes) due to over 40% of the workers opting to skip lunch break and a further 35% opting to have just a 15 minute break, but go home earlier.
The average across-country lunch break in the USA is 36 minutes, slightly longer than the overall average of the EU (33 minutes).
Load More Replies...You're allowed one hour lunch break. Managers (depends on the job, I speak for office jobs) are usually flex on it but you're expected to be there at 2pm. And if you take 2 hours everyday you'll be singled out. I like to have the opportunity to go to the restaurant with colleagues once in a while without anyone questioning my whereabouts, but personally I'd rather eat in 30 min and leave earlier like in the UK. But yes, some colleagues go play tennis and go the pool during lunch breaks.
WOW-I'm not even allowed to leave for lunch! If I want to eat, it has to be at my desk & I have to bring from home or use DoorDash/UberEats for$30+.....& I work for my INLAWS!!!
An hour or hour and a half is more common. This misconception is because of the French promotion of "entrepreneurs" and the start ups etc. They do the American "bonding" thing, and don't last for very long time, before folding. The stepped breaks, with senior management staying while the lower ranks go back to work gives an impression its the same crowd often.
If I worked a job where I was paid by the hour, I'd prefer getting off work 8.5 hours after starting, with a 0.5 hour lunch than having it be 9.5 with 1.5 for lunch. Of course, pay me for lunch time, and I'd opt for a 4 hour meal.
yeah but that example is not the general rule. that's not normal. normal, in most of europe, for 8 hours of work, you get 1 hour break in the middle. not time for lunch, a game and a nap. wtf.
Isn't 30-40 minutes the norm in most places these days?
Load More Replies...In all my jobs in France nobody ever took over 1 hour for lunch; so the OP's experience isn't necessarily typical
Excellent coffee and pastries in close physical proximity.
Especially when you leave near the french-italian border: you get the best viennoiseries and the best coffee in the same places. This is heaven to me.
Personally, I like watching an overworked barista microwave a factory produced scone and try to wrestle it into a soggy plastic bag. Makes me feel sophisticated.
I often wish we had pastries in the US like I eat in France, but then I realize I'd be 10 kilos heavier if that were the case.
I'm a Brit, and while it is possible to get excellent pastries (at least here in London), French and Austrian are my favorites.
Available in the US on most of the West coast. Especially Portland Seattle good parts of Southern and Northern California
Bike-able cities. When I lived in Munich it was a paradise for biking. I could take my bike almost anywhere in the city and region without much concern and I loved doing it. Not every city in Europe is like that obviously, and Munich is probably one of the best, but almost every major city I visited in Europe had a lot of people on bikes, and good infrastructure for it. Also intercity rail and bus travel. The US has both of course but just not in the same league.
Even Munich is better than the US (and New Zealand).
Load More Replies...If you tried cycling in Central London then I give you a life expectancy of about thirty minutes.
Where I live in America the odds of you still having a bike after being in a shop for 5 or 10 minutes are extremely slim.
I live in a mostly rural area, with towns every few miles. The rural bike routes are an inch (3.5 cm) to the right of the edge of the road line. This assumes that the inch is not chipped off, covered by vegetation, or otherwise damaged. Cars can't see bikers due to curves, hills, vegetation, and simply not noticing they're there. When a vehicle comes up to the bike, it's considered polite for the driver to let the biker know that he's there, by honking in the biker's ears and laughing.
Again Portland Oregon has this. I haven't driven a car in 19 years. I take the bus only when it snows. Otherwise I bike. Bikes are faster than rush hour traffic anyway.
Cubicle toilets. Public bathroom door gaps are uncomfortably wide.
Well, in the US we've decided that the war on drugs is so important that we need to take drastic action. No, not like invest in ending poverty or treatment programs or decriminalizing addicts. We just thought it was important to not give people a place to shoot up in public, and for that we're willing to watch other people take a s**t. It's called sacrifice! *insert crying eagle here*
I love the snark, I see you & am amused. For conversation's sake though let me tell you this. When I was an IV user (+20 years) it never, EVER stopped me. I've shot up in public libraries, grocery stores, book shops, gas stations, restaurants, sports events, graduations, offices, banks...stalls with no locks, stalls with high doors, DID NOT MATTER. No one actually looks through those things. The only one that really got me was a bathroom in a grocery store with a timer light, and damnit if I didn't figure that one out too.
Load More Replies...Europeans have nude beaches, are often more comfortable w/ nudity, but freaked out by our bathroom stalls. I just want it to be clean and have tp.
To be fair, nudity, and having someone watching you take a pee or poo isn't the same ;)
Load More Replies...We have to be able to tell when somebody OD'd in the bathroom. Or is that just Baltimore?
I have never caught someone trying to sneak a peek. It is simply not a thing that crosses my mind. Much ado about nothing.
Pay toilets are generaly only found in tourist areas or high-footfall public transport stations.
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I was gonna say those fresh squeezed orange juice machines in all the grocery stores, but I just read all the comments about healthcare and vacations and remembered I live in a delusional hell.
This is a thing in Spain. I have yet to see one here in Germany which makes sense because it's not like oranges grow in our climate.
I've seen them in different Edekas & in some Rewe.
Load More Replies...France has them. I think some that were in the US started to disappear for contamination concerns.
I can get fresh oranges off the trees behind my mom's house. They used to have a mango tree that was the best.
If America isn't hell, why are you so bitter and twisted?
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Easier to eat healthy. It’s so hard and expensive to eat clean.
Becoming difficult in the Uk now too thanks to all the idiots who voted for Brexit.
It's not just brexit. The whole world is going through a recession, from Europe to Asia. I'm in The Netherlands, my grocery cost had gone up at least 50% in the last few years. Takeout has gone up just as well n if not more.
Load More Replies...This isn't difficult in the states either. Eat what's in season or grow your own. There's plenty of ways to get seeds for cheap and even if you just have a balcony you can grow a decent amount of fresh vegetables.
Again geographic in the United States period when I lived on the Central Coast in California it was incredibly easy Period there were true farmers markets Every single day of the week with wonderful beautiful produce
*Where to begin*... You can summarize it as "an actual first world existence." Such things as: universal health care, strong social institutions such as labor and leisure and retirement and parent leave, all underwritten in a way that prevents runaway inequity and a two-class society; walkable/bikable and more sustainable cities which have robust public transportation within and between them, meaningful guarantees around privacy and online surveillance... ...all married to democracy. The US has some things going for it of course but if you could pick only one, ...
these comments aren't really helping the stereotype that American's are dumb. /s You lot need to read better. This entire thread is from a reddit post asking your FELLOW AMERICANS what they see as European luxury.
Half of these commenter only post about how good America is. Like that is the only thing they ever say. Hmmmmm I suspect a bot
You do realize all of these comments are from a Reddit thread asking AMERICANS? It's literally called "Americans of Reddit, what do Europeans have everyday that you see as a luxury? "
Load More Replies...I am not American, but France have the best newborn / new post-pregnancy help in the world. Actual physical help; not referrals and information leaflets. Someone even does your grocery shopping for a wee bit when you have a baby to help you with time management.
Highly debatable. You can actually get a lot help (assistant, free nursery, financial aid of 1000 euros + financial aid for each kid (for christmas, to buy food, school stuff)) etc but ONLY if you don't work or don't earn more than a certain salary level. And the bar is not that high. I'm sure some other EU countries have better policies.
In The Netherlands, it's standard to have someone come for the whole week to help after delivery. It's part of the delivery process and regardless of income level.
Load More Replies...Quality flour. I buy French and Italian flour and have it shipped to bake with because the stuff in America gives me eczema and joint pain (but I am not Celiac). Whatever the difference is, it’s legit.
You may not be celiac but maybe a gluten sensitivity? - European flour is a lot lower in gluten.
I don't think you can make such a blanket statement. The gluten content changes depending on soil which is not the same all over the continent, either in Europe nor the US.
Load More Replies...American flour is on average much higher in gluten content, due to the type of wheat used. Almost any american all-purpose flour would be considered "strong flour" in the European classification, with a W350 or above insoluble protein content. Those flours are good for baking and leavened goods, but generally not suitable for pasta and pastry making. Consider that a common trick to bake pizza is to mix 2/3 of flour from american wheat (you find it commonly in supermarkets as "Manitoba") with 1/3 of fine flour, improving the stability of the leavening while retaining digestibility.
If you use much flour, it is well worth buying a flour mill and making your own flour. It's not difficult or very expensive.
I have posted this so many times, but once more shouldn't hurt. I watch many youtube channels where people have farms or homesteads and the produce their own foods. Every single time they can say that their own produced food is so much better than store bought. Simply because store bought foods are heavily processed. It seems clear to me that food in the US is produced so far away from the shops, and on such a large scale. That it has to be extra-processed just to cope with time and distance constraints and still match from batch to batch. Think about it. If someone is in central New York. Where would be the nearest place that food is produced on a large scale? Yet how many people need to be catered for in such a big city?
I had to pay $3,000 after insurance to deliver my baby. Delivering for free or low cost seems like a luxury.
Living in Spain, age 62, I pay 1500€ a year for my private health insurance.
Living in Australia, age 56, I pay nothing for health care.
Load More Replies...Economical diesel cars that go like a scalded dog. I drove a couple while in Europe and wished I could have brought them home. Power and economy.
Economical SMALL cars in general. American cars are too damn big. You're driving 5000lb of car to move 180lb of person and 50lb of stuff. It makes no sense.
That's also due to the fact that most smaller cars in the US are labeled as not being able to pull any trailer while we europeans use VW Golfs to move trailers with up to 3.5 tons
Load More Replies...Diesel is being phased out for environmental concerns, and diesel fuel is not as economic as it used to be. In many major cities diesel cars are heavily regulated or outright banned. Most of the cars sold today are hybrids though, and are in general far less expensive to drive than diesel.
Amazing that in an eco aware Europe they use diesel. Must be because they get 40 mpg +/- so the emissions footprint is not as dirty, or equal to gas. Here (US) they use cheat software to trick emissions sniffers.
They can not ban you to owe a car you already paid for but they are making it harder to enjoy it on a regular basis. Diesel used to be cheaper fuel by 20%-25% but it getting more and more expensive day by day. I think it's more expensive than gas in most of the countries by now. Also some of the cities in Europe have banned diesels from entering the city. So it isn't economical anymore and you're getting restricted to use them in some places. Whoever is buying a new car now, it's not going to buy a diesel anymore. Also from 2035 you will not be able to sell new cars with combustion engines anymore in EU. It means that after 2035 there will be less and less gas stops in the country. That's only 11 yes from now. If you are planning to buy a new car now, a combustion engine is not the best choice.
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Cost of Living. I live in a high cost of living area in the USA and the countries I have visited in Europe (Scotland, Ireland, Spain, France, and Italy) felt so cheap and made me feel like a kid in a candy store. This may not apply to some of the Nordic countries that I haven’t visited.
This is more about the variance of cost of living in the US. I live in a low cost of living area of the US, and moving to one of the highest cost of living areas in the EU would more than triple what I pay in monthly expenses - but at the same time, the most expensive cost of living in the EU is less than a third the highest in the US. It would quite literally cost me nearly ten times as much to move from my current home in the US to the priciest part of NYC, whereas in the EU there really isn't anywhere that maintaining the same lifestyle would be a full order of magnitude difference in cost.
I'm Scottish and have some American family who occasionally visit, they always turn up with very little clothing and spend a lot of time shopping. My 2nd cousin came over a few years ago with 1 half empty suitcase, she went home 2 weeks later with 5 huge cases! She'd basically bought her whole family a whole new wardrobe!
But we do that when we go states side too. The outlets are amazing!
Load More Replies...In Greece (Kalamata) our building community fees are about €20/month, electricity €120, cable TV and internet €40 two mobile phones €24, water €10. So a little over €200/month. Food, drink and cigarettes are also really reasonable.
when did OP visit these countries? because If it was during the past few years, I doubt they'd say the same now. Europe is getting way more expensive. :')
Bidets
I used them in Italy and I really wish we had them here in America.
*sigh* if they don’t come preinstalled in the house/apartment, it’s not the same thing.
Load More Replies...I have an attachment for my normal regular toilet. Some even come with heated seats but I was too cheap to buy that kind lol
OP, we do have them here in America, they are just more expensive. I looked into them when I was replacing my toilet a few months ago. It would have cost me about $600 to $700 with the purchase and getting a plumber involved. They need to come down in price.
Better coffee.
I personally don't see a massive difference (my experience), independent US coffee shops serve very good coffee.
There are filters coffee in Europe too, and the little pods don't do good coffee either. It's really what type of coffee drinker we are, no? And how much we are willing to spend.
Load More Replies...when I traveled in the UK and Europe years ago, Nescafe Instant was ubiquitous. Change is good.
depends, you can get good coffee anywhere if you're willing to look for it. Normally it's the tiny tucked away coffee shop somewhere that you'd have had no idea was there but you found it one day and its the best coffee ever. :') (aka, not starbucks type coffee dishwater)
Cheap air travel…i feel like europeans would understand why we dont travel outside the country more when $700 dollars one way is considered a cheap international flight.
There's a difference between flying within the region (eg Europe, Asia) and flying intercontinental. Intercontinental flights are always more expensive.
Plus sometimes passing through American customs feels longer than the flight itself
Load More Replies...The thing that makes me angry on Americans’ behalf is that you’re not getting the value that’s supposed to come with high prices. Wealthy Asia-Pacific countries have expensive airlines, but our airlines win awards all the time (my country’s airline is currently the world’s safest airline, and last year they were #2 for safety and won best economy class.) It seems like Americans pay (first world) Asia-Pacific prices but get Ryanair quality.
When are you looking to go? Don't go in the summer it's always more expensive to fly to Europe. Go off season. I've got a sinking fund for $750 in air travel it can get me a round trip to most places. And economy flights can be as cheap as $40 US depending on where and when you're going.
Public baths/saunas for the community that aren't crazy expensive.
not if you have tattoo's :( (but I get it, and I respect it. Though there are more bathhouses and onsen allowing tattoo's these days, so I still got to try onsen bathtub in one hotel, but it wasn't as authentic)
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Real butter.
they have butter from pasteurized milk, less fat content and different production method.
Load More Replies...Red cheddar is orangey and it’s lovely. It’s just the processed stuff that’s 👎.
Load More Replies...The music festivals, Wacken, Download, etc.
They're spread across the country, but the US have very good music festivals ! Sincerely don't get this one.
It's a fact that Europe has a much higher density (both geographically and temporally) and variation in music festivals than the US.
Load More Replies...I don't even live in the US but I know there's some massive music festivals in the US. (Coachella, Electric Forest, Lollapalooza...) though I suppose in comparison to how many there is in the smaller space of the UK for example, they're more "accessible" than driving hundreds and hundreds of miles across several states
More than half of this isn't true or at least a huge majority.
Load More Replies...About 24 hours after the last USA-bashing article. BP, even though I live in France, I am losing my will to continue reading articles on your site when all this looks like is that editors at BP have a personal issue with the US. Try taking a hot bath to relax or talk to someone. This bitter jealousy is so unbecoming.
Dear editors, especially Jonass. Sincerely and with a full heart I offer you a thorough f**k you and your brainless xenophobic threads about nothing. You're all pathetic and disgusting with this content. The majority of it's wrong and you repeat the same things. Your website is devolving into festering reddit reposts and xenophobic trash. Downvote
You know what Europeans have that is a luxury to American’s? Not being hated on by Bored Panda every freaking day. I’m not sure why I even read this anymore.
As an Americans who still goes on this app for some reason, go f**k yourselves BP “writers”
go f**k yourself bp is the the right sentiment
Load More Replies...If you Google "sites similar to bored panda" and you're tired of being
Bashed by these clowns, check them out :). You're welcome
Load More Replies...What I find funny, as a European, is that quite often you just try to nuance some of the points, and you get served the downvote with no explanation ^^. Not trying to praise the US or deprecate the European countries we live in, but there is a middle ground on some topics mentioned.
Not sure how that is funny. It why nuance of a comment is interesting. That's why you get the downvote.
Load More Replies...Not sure how this is bashing. There is hardly a negative word in this post, rather it's a list stolen from Reddit in which (supposed) US citizens compare their subjective experiences of living in the US and another country. Given the size and diversity of the US, I'm not surprised that many US citizens' experiences differ - that doesn't make OP's experience bashy or untrue. It rather seems that those who consider these lists America-bashing rarely engage in critical discussion. I'll gladly make a list of things my country does not do as well as others/that the US does better and will not be offended if people agree.
Taken by itself, I'd somewhat agree with you. But this is a constantly recurring theme here on BP - and I mean constant. Over and over again. It's old, it's tired, and after a while, pretty offensive.
Load More Replies...Americans wonder why the world makes fun of them then go vote for Trump, make it easier to get guns, and do nothing about mass shootings and rampant racism....gee, I wonder why we make fun of your country.
More than half of this isn't true or at least a huge majority.
Load More Replies...About 24 hours after the last USA-bashing article. BP, even though I live in France, I am losing my will to continue reading articles on your site when all this looks like is that editors at BP have a personal issue with the US. Try taking a hot bath to relax or talk to someone. This bitter jealousy is so unbecoming.
Dear editors, especially Jonass. Sincerely and with a full heart I offer you a thorough f**k you and your brainless xenophobic threads about nothing. You're all pathetic and disgusting with this content. The majority of it's wrong and you repeat the same things. Your website is devolving into festering reddit reposts and xenophobic trash. Downvote
You know what Europeans have that is a luxury to American’s? Not being hated on by Bored Panda every freaking day. I’m not sure why I even read this anymore.
As an Americans who still goes on this app for some reason, go f**k yourselves BP “writers”
go f**k yourself bp is the the right sentiment
Load More Replies...If you Google "sites similar to bored panda" and you're tired of being
Bashed by these clowns, check them out :). You're welcome
Load More Replies...What I find funny, as a European, is that quite often you just try to nuance some of the points, and you get served the downvote with no explanation ^^. Not trying to praise the US or deprecate the European countries we live in, but there is a middle ground on some topics mentioned.
Not sure how that is funny. It why nuance of a comment is interesting. That's why you get the downvote.
Load More Replies...Not sure how this is bashing. There is hardly a negative word in this post, rather it's a list stolen from Reddit in which (supposed) US citizens compare their subjective experiences of living in the US and another country. Given the size and diversity of the US, I'm not surprised that many US citizens' experiences differ - that doesn't make OP's experience bashy or untrue. It rather seems that those who consider these lists America-bashing rarely engage in critical discussion. I'll gladly make a list of things my country does not do as well as others/that the US does better and will not be offended if people agree.
Taken by itself, I'd somewhat agree with you. But this is a constantly recurring theme here on BP - and I mean constant. Over and over again. It's old, it's tired, and after a while, pretty offensive.
Load More Replies...Americans wonder why the world makes fun of them then go vote for Trump, make it easier to get guns, and do nothing about mass shootings and rampant racism....gee, I wonder why we make fun of your country.
