Although I don't think that characteristic can be generalized across the whole population, there are far too many like that. I mean, just look at one of our major presidential candidates. He is someone who has both characteristics and wears them like a badge of honor. In all honesty though, every country that has come into the position of "world leader" falls into a similar cultural trap. Although I would say that the U.S. has fallen in and kept digging out the bottom of the trap as if that was the way out.
When a person from New Mexico was denied a marriage license in Washington DC because the clerk and supervisor thought that New Mexico was a foreign country, that told me all I needed to know.
When living in California, I told the lady on the phone that I had attended Edison Jr. High school. She asked: How do you spell Edison? Though that name appears on the monthly electrical bill, did she not know how to spell it, or was she lazy not to make an effort to think. 😮
The dumbing down of 🇺🇸 wasn't an accident. When John D Rockefeller bought his influence in government & head of education, his literal quote was "I don't want a nation of thinkers, I want a nation of workers" ~ John D Rockefeller
well, he understood the education system in use, thats all, the US uses the Prussian system after all, like many other countries do, and that has, in its core, just two purposes, to create obedient workers and loyal soldiers. it is also, why the higher education is so harshly split up and terribly expensive, so that the future leaders could be amongs themselves and network. The Prussians came up with the system after getting a beating in the Napoleonic Wars and it spread out during the Industrial Revolution for obvious reasons. that people like Rockefeller thought it to be quite alright, is, i'm sure, even today still something shared among the so called elites. by the way, the entire higher education networking thing is the main reason, journalism had become a subject you had to study. when you look at the journalists who broke the big scandals like watergate, you will find people, that don't really fit todays ideals of a journalist, a ex-soldier that went to Yale on a scholarship to study history and a university dropout who wrote local news stories for a living. today, there is no way those guys would get the jobs they had back then, working on something like this...
John D Rockefeller was never in government, his influence was the result of him being super-rich. In particular, he formed the GEB, a non-governmental group that had a huge influence on public education in the US. Also, it is not clear that he ever said the quote that you attribute to him...but the quote is representative of the attitude of the GEB.
@@raistormrs German here. You've done something wrong. This education system, which you look down on, produced 88 Nobel Prize winners in the 20th century, in the field of natural sciences and medicine alone. In fact, this system was developed to supplement a country whose only truly abundant natural resource, coal, with something much more valuable: Knowledge! And that continues to this day, throughout Germany's success story. I would say that the USA perverted this system and did not implement it correctly. Because even before the founding of the German Empire, Germany had its nickname... "The country of poets and thinkers..."
25 years ago on a beach in California, I was asked by a local person how I could possibly live in England with its awful weather. I replied that it made more sense to live with the rain than it did to live on a fault line!
I am from Middle America. Every single Californian I ever met in my life are smug, believing California is the best just because of the weather. They look down on anyone who is not from California, yet they think they are the most tolerant and accepting people. They are not self-aware that they are the poster children of bigotry.
I grew up in California . . . I've now lived in France for 40 years and I believe that, after nearly 20 years of education in the States, the majority of my knowledge has been aquired since I've lived in Europe. Sad as it may be, I just thnk Americans, in general, just don't care to know more about the world, because they believe they're the center and everything revolves around them. Why do you think they elected D.T.?
@@B-A-L Extreme weather: More than 4,500 deaths in England from 2022 heat // UK weather: Further heavy rain could cause danger to life after ... 23.05.2024 ... Further heavy rain could cause a danger to life and travel disruption after a mudslide resulted in one death on Wednesday, the Met Office has warned. // Colder winter weather sees a 30% increase in deaths with over-60s most vulnerable. You might want to think about the last part of your statement again
do you want to have real freedom today you have to go to Eu especially Scandinavia fir you are not free if you are not free to seek your dreams and that is most people in Scandinavia but many ignorant fools mostly republicans are shouting about freedom in America but you are not free in especially red states, public education is made as bad as possible so that the ignorant individuals who come out are more likely to believe the lies maga and religious fanatics shut out, because it is only in the US, China and Russia that people pledge allegiance to the flag /country in the EU, you just go to school and learn. Americans also talk about religious freedom, but the least religious state in America is still far more religious in the most religious country in the EU, and in the EU you also have the right to be sick without you and your family going bankrupt and becoming homeless. In the EU, the healthcare system is a human rights for rich and poor they for the same treatment, however the richest can go to America and pay 4 to 5 times more for the same treatment what is an Asprin that costs 80 dollars in a hospital 😱🤮 or what about education in the EU there is free education all the way to PhD the only thing you pay is for some books and if you want to be an exchange student and that for you support in Denmark for all students from high school and up 800 to 900 dollars a month from the state to help with the rent and other expenses so they can focus on their studies so no America is not as free as you think.
I’m glad you’re there Joel - you are an ambassador that any country would be proud to have. Your openness to other cultures and what can be learnt is a constant joy.
I was in London the last couple of days, we were heading to an Italian Restaurant which was in an area with a range of individual restaurants and a pub, we overheard an American tourist saying "Why isn't there anywhere to eat, don't they have McDonalds here," they really couldn't see the wood for the trees.
@RushfanUK is a reason why Americans are not respected in the rest of the world . The stupidity and arrogance they are right. When clearly they have no idea and then storm off in a rage because they have been corrected and then make up stories to cover themselves!!
The USA is driven by money money money and everything else is secondary, USA is ranked 25th in the world for wealth inequality meaning a smaller number of people hold a large amount of the wealth and by contrast the UK is ranked 140th. The USA is controlled by wealth and the few controlling it have no desire for that to change it and threaten their wealth. I’ve worked for American owned organisations, all they are concerned with is profit, profit, profit, where as non American organisations I’ve worked for have a far better balance with employee welfare, doing the right thing and profit and generally have a moral,compass. Unfortunately the greed of the USA always wins out, partly due to the fact that the general population don’t stand up because they are far more controlled than they care to realise, I don’t see Americans as stupid, I just pity them because they are only allowed to know what those with the wealth allow them to know - too much knowledge could be dangerous!
Yes, the United States is a plutocracy ruled by the top 120 wealthiest family clans, that have produced senators, governors, judges, and mayors for generations and collaborated closely with multibillion dollar corporations.
One thing you are not, Joel, is dumb or stupid. Wait a minute, that's two things. I'm completely out of your age range, a grandmother indeed, but I recognise a bright spark when I see one, and come back to watch your videos because I appreciate your intelligence and perceptive observations on your adventures overseas.
I have always related Intelligence and curiosity. American education does not seem to nurture curiosity, yet this is where the desire for all knowledge begins.
Same here, except, despite my age (71) I am not a grandparent...despite my three offspring being aged nearly 37 and 31 !! I don't think I will ever be a Grandmother! ("As for the ladies" : "Mama Mia" ?! I have never seen it - nor ever wanted to!!)
@@brigidsingleton1596 The grandparent thing? My son's partner is 39 and they have 2, under 4s and trying for a third. My next door neighbour had an after 40 surprise first child. So who knows? My first was at 33
Stupidity can be very nice. My wife and I were talking Polish at a small Californian Steak house in 2002. The manager inquired about our country of origin. After we paid the bill and left, he ran after us in the street and asked "Do you know that the Pope is Polish?". We really loved that.
Don't worry mate, there are so many Americans who are expanding their knowledge of the big wide world through channels similar to yours. I've been watching your channel for about 2 years & yours is the best IMO.
It would be a completely different story if they were to vote for a narcissist, a con man, a rapist, a coup plotter, so let's not make a big deal about it.
At the 18.00 mark they do talk about "convicted Republicans..." - I immediately thought of "Diaper-Don-the-Orange-Con", "Vance-in-a-Trance" and "Empty-Headed-Greene" (see what I did there? MT 'headed' Greene... LOL). 😉😊
@@StewedFishProductions I'm still in complete shock at the thought of Trump being allowed to run. He's a convicted felon. His handling of the pandemic was just awful. We will never know how many people died because of Trump's stupidity. I've been to the US twice, but will NEVER visit again. It is a broken wreck.
Hmmm ... if you mean Trump ... then YOU have clearly been propagandised by THE MEDIA. The european media basically COPY CNN ... which is LYING about Trump 24/7 ... even making stuff up. And his "criminal conviction" was a FARCE of a show trial where the DA had the campaign promise to "work every day on prosecuting Trump" ... completely missing ASSUMPTION OF INNOCENCE.
Mate - I wish every American was capable of the same level of self awareness as you. You guys will be fine so long as you maintain your compassion and desire to be educated 👍
The worst of all is the Hollywood dramatisation of the WWII incident when a German enigma encoding machine was taken from a U-boat submarine. In real history it was carried out by a British commando unit. The movie, inevitably, made it into an American operation!
U-571 I believe and yes you're quite right the US didn't retrieve it which is how it ended up in Bletchley Park which allowed us to decipher the German naval codes with the help of Alan Turing
Australia bought one just before the Berlin Wall came down and they dropped in price. It looks like a weird typewriter. I went to a talk about it and the room was full of maths nerds in cardigans.
Same with the movie “Argo”. No mention anywhere in the entire movie of the Canadians who were the ones who actually pulled the rescue off. During a interview President Carter had to keep reminding the interviewer that the rescue was a success because of the Canadian Embassy and its ambassador.
@MjII7 Funny you say that. I had a US guy on another video about WWII proclaiming they'd won it and we'd lost it and would've lost without em. I said Battle of Britain, we pushed Hitler back and stopped the invasion over a uwar b4 US entered. His reply....'Yeah but the RAF had Ameeican pilots though so even then we helped you fight it'. Erm dud, there were 6 US airmen who fought in the Battle of Britain. 6! Out of many thousands. Seems he didn't appreciate that fact. Nor the fact that Russia liberated Berlin not the US, as that was his next claim. I just felt pity by the end.
Canadian here and I live in Ontario just across the border from New York state and I have meet americans that think we live in igloos, have snow year round and all speak french
@@ae4116 Are You saying that NY Buffaloes - coming over to Hamilton - think that You live in igloos ? You can see across The Lake Toronto - Skyline & CNN Tower !
I'm 58, born in and live in Indianapolis, Indiana. Grew up blue collar, working class, 1st generation to earn a college degree. Gen X. I work in public education and can say that students get the same information my generation received. But, the type of student has changed. Overstimulated. Can't focus. Traumatized. Needs to be entertained and be having fun and mustn't have to cope with boredom. They are the offspring of a generation of kids who received the self esteem curricula of the 90s. It became about feelings, and we've lost the plot since then. Never have I seen such anti-intellectualism in America culture. Apparently, there is no such thing as an expert. Higher education is scoffed at. People under 40 know nothing about their government, the geography of their country/world. We still have a reactionary, puritanical streak which tends to celebrate knownothingness.
I think you'll find that it's predominantly older people who get on the conspiracy train and don't believe that any expert is actually an expert in their field. Have you seen the flat earthers? They're not exactly in their teens/early 20s. While I agree that young people are overstimulated and certainly they're disenfranchised, its not as simple as saying it's because people care more about feelings now. There is a whole section of society that don't believe in climate change, that the earth is round, and they seemingly believe everything is a conspiracy and that nothing is to be believed even known scientific facts. This doesn't seem to be down to young people.. I think that's just your view as a 58 year old?
@@raystewart3648 Knowledge comes in many different forms - the question is whether or not you can use the knowledge you have learned to accomplish something. That pretty much applies to people in every line of work. I would say that anyone who has gained expertise at doing something well is "smart".
@@raystewart3648 Well educated does not mean WISE. There is a difference between knowledge and wisdom. Also, people can be uneducated but 'street-smart'.
@@raystewart3648here is the thing, if you have read and fully understood the complete works of Shakespeare.. then you are educated .. if you have a high school diploma or a degree from trump university .. not so much
Another factor is the USA's priority on individualism which allows states to set their own educational agendas without oversight from the federal government. When you have no international studies in your schools, no history studies outside your own what do you expect. Add in low wages and a lack of holiday pay which means limited access to go on holidays and expand their horizons.
Yes, it is time to make the USA a civilized society - a country consisting of one state, not 50 loose sheep. And the educational system needs to be improved by introducing critical, scientific reasoning very early. And the wage for a full time job must suffice for living. Workers should have dignity and be organized in unions demanding a certain minimum wage. This is not communism or socialism but simple rules for a functioning society. The right name is "social democracy", as practized in Northern Europe.
Back in the mid 1990s I took my teenage son to America for a two-week road trip starting off in New York, a flight to Denver and then a car trip to LA. We both enjoyed the trip and found generally that the Americans we came across as residents, at work or on holiday like us, on finding we were British were so kind, helpful and be interested in us, especially me being able to do many UK accents. BUT every day me and my son aged 14 and me 45, would look at each other open-mouthed at what an American had said or done, and try so much not burst out laughing. I lost count the number of times my 14-year-old son would say to me "Dad, even their older ones are like little kids", "How does this country survive every day", "This lot have the most nuclear weapons?" and my favourite "No way did they put a man on the moon".
I was asked by an American whilst on holiday "oh you come from England do you know my cousin? he lives there" like I know everyone in the UK pop almost 67 million. 🤦♂🤣
I was asked that when I was in Australia. A bit more reasonable because they asked if I knew someone who lived in the same county as me, but still incredibly lacking in sense
How is it that Americans are so bad at geography, yet us brits can name practically every state in America? I can and I've never even been there. I also notice in other videos they can barely name any former US presidents
In Italy I was once stopped outside a Post Office by an American who asked if I spoke American. I said between my English and his American, we'd probably (not prolly) get by. He wanted directions to the Post Office.
Greetings from County Durham, in the UK. I have to agree with Lily Joel. I’m a great grandfather - hey, what’s all this about your viewing community 🤣. You’re an intelligent chap who wants to learn more about what’s going on beyond your shores. There are many reaction channels but few are attempting to do anything intelligently - so bravo
I'm from Chester-le-Street, CO durham, and thoroughly agree with you, sir 👍 Great to hear US kids like this soaking up other cultures. They say travel broadens the mind - it certainly does!
I just love your videos, Joel, and I especially love your curiosity and openness to other countries and cultures. Always a pleasure listening to your remarks. Greetings from Germany.
Joel, your parents took you travelling living in different countries, i feel majority of Americans have never done that, whereas the majority of British people have taken their children abroad and shown other cultures and hopefully respect them, you are very bright and a pleasure to watch. Loved your brit vlogs 😊
I'm a Brit born in the 1950s and grew up with American film and TV shows (many of which I can still sing the themes.). I think we here, got a good feeling about American culture from it. I think ignorant is a more apt description than "stupid".
The thing about travelling and meeting different cultures, is that you realise the pros and cons of your own country. Brits are generally happy to criticise what they think is wrong in this country yet Americans seem to think this is almost being an un - American commie.
Get your kids a library card and raise them to be curious. Reading is a declining habit to the point, where universities state they are increasingly confronted with students who aren’t able to read a whole book. It’s so sad it’s almost funny.
You so right: books, interesse in others and caring for them, curiosity in the nature, how thing works, creativity, interact with others with other cultures, going to musea, being nice to people and being helpful, respect people…that make you whole and fulfill, what makes you happy 😊
@@maryotoole7389 that’s hardly the point. We had age restrictions at the library. In contrast to the internet, this system worked reliably. For example: at the local library I could get a simplified, sanitised and condensed version of books that are considered literature or significant achievements in storytelling and style or in their historical context (such as Dracula, the Divine Comedy or the Diary of Anne Frank). Obviously the original works are not age-appropriate, their language and style possibly too complex and their deeper meanings too brutal or depicting awful human behaviour. With simplified, shortened editions that had many uncommon words explained, these were ideal. There’s also a ton of light children’s books full of adventure and fun, think Enid Blyton or Thomas Brezina, we read them by the dozens. At 14-16 the rest of the library became accessible for reading and then open to check out. I read a lot of trash as a kid, but in my native language you see a _stark_ contrast between kids who read and those who don’t. So even creating a culture at home that is appreciative of arts, culture, literature and books in the most minimal way possible, makes a difference.
I think there’s always been a streak of isolationism in American culture and politics. Before WW2 is was official US foreign policy. However, I suspect there’s two reasons why people in the UK have a bit more awareness of what is going on beyond our boundaries. The first is our proximity to the rest of Europe. The second is that we used to be a colonial power whose historic actions still have an impact in former colonies.
American life has had a long history of insular ignorance-this is, after all, a big place. Reagan often spoke of his belief that God placed this continent "between two oceans" (a great place for a continent…) so that Americans could avoid involvement in other countries. To Reagan, and so to his followers, America's isolation was a feature, not a bug. But there has always been a strong current of anti-intellectualism in general. As Isaac Asimov said, “There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.” An example was Adlai Stevenson, Democratic candidate for President in the 1950s, who was memorably dismissed as an 'egghead'. But I think a couple of things happened more recently. Somehow, we moved to actual widespread contempt for education. Consider radio and television shows that portrayed high school students. Right up through the 1970s, high school was always treated with respect, even when the students found it to be a problem (popular radio character Henry Aldrich had trouble with Latin for more than a decade). But then something changed. High school began to be portrayed as a nuisance, in which classes were a contemptible distraction from the real business of the characters' social lives. In 1986's "Peggy Sue Got Married", a woman goes back in time to 1960 and experiences high school again. At one point, she tells her algebra teacher that the class doesn't matter: "Well, Mr Snelgrove, I happen to know that in the future I will not have the slightest use for algebra, and I speak from experience." This was an audience-applause line. One hardly need dig deeply into shows like Saved By The Bell (notably re-tooled from a show where the teacher was the main character) or Dawson's Creek, or any number of Disney shows to see the same dismissal of education. Why learn that stuff in school when you can become-sorry, Joel-a TH-cam 'influencer' and become rich and famous? [ side note: it is daunting to watch reaction videos for a movie like Casablanca from people who are apparently only vaguely aware of World War II ] And of course most recently, politicians learned that they could get the most ignorant people, the ones most contemptuous of intellectualism-'elites' often being a coded word for 'Jews', by the way-to vote. Now people could be not only ignorant but _proud_ of their ignorance. Republican gubernatorial candidate Kandiss Taylor questioned the most basic knowledge of geography, considering that it is a conspiracy to hide the true flat earth ("Every store, you buy a globe. There’s globes everywhere. Every movie, every TV show, news media - why? It doesn’t make sense.”) That is scary.
China and Russia are huge too, but they have actual education. it seems that the USA only had good education for the masses for a very few short years a long time ago and has replaced it with TV and celebrity culture.
Yep, the US is the richest country in average. But take away the 1% richest and 1% poorest, thus looking at 98% of the population, figures may be more realistic.
I live in the US and the UK, and you’re 100% correct about the internet and so called smart phones. There is SO MUCH incorrect information out there and people believe it. Also, another factor, money!
I was in Florida a few years ago on holiday from Yorkshire. The adverts were almost entirely about compensation for medical malpractice and car showrooms, as well as advertising local lawyers. The news was also interesting. Inbetween hurricane season warnings and the Ebola outbreak in Africa, which seemed only interesting to the US because a US nurse was involved and needed bringing home to the States, there was a wonderfully random item involving two Brits surfboarding off of the coast of England who filmed a small seal jumping up onto one of their boards and hitching a ride. An eclectic mix to be sure. :)
Also I'd just be slightly cautious about the motivation of channels that seem anti-American. There is good and bad in every country, and good and bad people. For example the segment about American music, in many Asian countries there's little exposure to Western, African or South American cultures, film, music or television for example. The K/J-pop charts in Asia are still dominated by Asian artists peddling K-pop in (mostly) Korean or Japanese. When you look at the Grammys it's entirely mixed but look at Asian music award shows and there are no black artists or white western folk, Australian pipe bands, etc... So I wouldn't go too hard on yourself. Other places have their issues as well. And the US has also done a lot of good in the world. I mean, it's not Yorkshire ;), but you should still rightly be proud to be an American.
From my time in the advertising industry, I know that there is hardly any difference between advertising and propaganda. In both scenarios, it works through constant repetition.
I'm from advertising + gov't communications, and I endorse this message. Problem-solution alone covers half of it. (Be afraid, but don't despair - I have a plan.)
But advertizing implies that the victim will have to spend money. Even the dumbest wallet holder hesitates and knows the limit. Propaganda affects the brain. A commodity most people don't take care about. But it can ingest unlimited lies.
@@FR-PL-UA-WARSZAWA Sure, but in both cases it's about money. In advertising it's about your money that should go to a company. In propaganda it's about the money of the so-called politicians, although the direction of flow is not always so clear. It's always about money in some way.
I am a Brit and was involved in a project at a Midwestern University. While in America, my British accent attracted some curiosity. I was asked some weird questions, like, 'How did you get here? Did you drive across?' 'You sure have picked up the language well.'
I am an Australian and have been complimented by Americans on how well I am able to speak English while if I can say a few words in Australian language to them.
I'm a Scot. I've been asked if we have things like washing machines and 'proper' roads...eem a Scot invented rhe road surfacing, tarmac. 🤔 Also, apparently my English is great, what's my 1st language? Erm. How the hell do you answer them? Lol
@@evertjan9479 what's your point? I know, it is to show the world you're triggered by the truth and are defensive about your lack of culture and socio-historical understanding. Congrats.
@@firstsurname7099 Dude, I am Dutch in the Netherlands EVERYONE WHO IS NOT FROM THE NETHERLANDS AND LIVES NOT THERE IS IN A 3TH WORLD COUNTRY, OR TO PUT IT IN PERSPECTIVE (YOUR FORMER AND SOON TO BE NEXT PRESIDENT) A SHITHOLE... YOU AREN'T DUTCH, YOU ARE BENEATH ME. (SKIN COLOR DOESN'T MATTER)
@@Phiyedough I suspect that the system is so regimented that they'd never discover. Weird place - te population are shorter than S Koreans due to poor diet, they have no money for farm fertiliser so use "night soil" everywhere, only a couple of styles of hair-cut allowed (slight exageration). Very difficult to imagine living under their rules, laws, norms.
@@birdie1585 I bet that they will immediately discover that you have stolen a pair of tweezers if it has a tiny portrait of Kim Jung-un engraved in it and then, inject truth serum into you to make you confess that you were there in N.Kor to secretly use the tweezers on their ""dear leader's" nose hairs when he is asleep
I want to disappoint you, even though North Korea is a closed country, it learns a lot and is interested in others. It's the same in terms of culture. Russian Russian popular artists, for example, performed quite well even contemporary Russian songs in Russian (there was such a concert). You can't do this in a couple of days without an interest in language and culture. I cannot speak for education, but I think it is taken from the example of socialist countries, so it should not be bad. I think your opinion about North Korea is just another stereotype.
@@LanaLender A lot of what you say about Korea accepting Russian culture applies to many, many countries in the "West". That apart, you seem to be in a parallel universe somewhere.
It's not that we hate Americans it's the foreign policy being supported by ignorance and the arguments when travelling with Americans based on ignorance. It seriously becomes exhausting and frustrating, I'm South African, and the comments by tourists from the States!!!!!
@dre7767 YES, Americans are so far out of touch with their comments and rudeness. When I was in the USA, the willingness was made by Americans to kill people for some conspiracy theory or lack of education and lack of general knowledge! Everything was a conspiracy. Generally, it was due to very poor education and the American journalist playing on the idea of conspiracy and lack of education to influence what Americans think!!
'Travel broadens the mind'. Not many Americans have a passport let alone travel to other countries around the world. This is due to the poor wages, the lack of long holiday time and lack of curiosity about the world. Also, Americans have been indoctrinated in some things. The stand-out is their misunderstanding of social democracy, as in Australia. They freak out when they see the word 'social' regarding politics, thinking that it is socialism , which it is NOT.
Absolutely agree with your comments. (US)Americans have been so brainwashed that the moment the word, "communal" or "community" comes up, they think "aarrgh .. communism!" and "social" (from which was derived, "society") - "socialism!". Talk about people being dumbed down. So, the USA has no community and no society at all. It's all a conglomeration of individuals all doing their own separate thing totally divorced from one another. I wonder what do they tag the U.S. military, the police and fire department and paramedics as being? /s
Really I think this isn't the actual picture of Americans . Just a subset of Americans. And, if you educate yourself on the world. What is wrong with not traveling. Many people simply can not afford it.
Years ago I was in hospital. My male nuse was African as betrayed by his accent. I asked what country he was from. He said GAMBIA. I returned THE GAMBIA the proper name. HE smiled the biggest smile. Knowledge is fun.
I remember having a conversation with an American in a bar in Florida and he actually asked me: "Why are you always having revolutions"?! I nearly hit the floor with the stupidity of the question. We had one Revolution in England and that was during the mid 1600s. I am not including the Glorious Revolution where King William and Queen Mary were put on the throne because it was not violent and that was in the final years of the 1600s. Other than than, nothing. As for the US, you've had two violent Revolutions, the first the War of Independence and then the American Civil War. I am staggered by just how little many Americans know about other cultures.
The Americans know very little of other cultures while they invent their own such as having George Washington and his militia capturing British airports in the American War of independence and WW2 being won by the U.S. all on its own lonesome self while the allies were just spectators in the background.
@@George-k6o9t btw, Russia (its leadership and propaganda) also thinks, that 'the USSR won WWII all on its own, while the allies were mere spectators in the background.' So this sentiment is not unique to America. 14 Nov. 2024. (Added a date for if and when Russia changes its mind one day.)
If Trump is elected, anything could happen, A TH-camr as US Ambassador to England isn't that far fetched, can't be any worse than him employing his idiot sons.
@@Imgettingaword We (in the Netherlands) remember that very well... Trump appointed his 'buddy' Pete Hoekstra as US ambassador in The Hague, he is almost, even better at spreading dirty lies than DonOld...
In Stratford upon Avon . In the cottage were William Shakespeare was born , aNew York women kept asking the most ridiculous questions of the guide. Did Shakespeare have a garage ? and To think Shakespeare was born in that crib !! If that had been true Shakespeares Mother wouldhave had to be a contorsionist . It was a rocking crib !!
The irony is that Brits (and the world) have been brainwashed into believing that a bloke called William Shakespeare wrote groundbreaking plays when we really know nothing about the life of the Upstart Crow other than he really had no formal education. So that would certainly hit the mark then... An untravelled, uneducated son of a glove maker. The smart money is still on Edward De Vere or Francis Bacon. But naturally that messes up the fairytale (and tourism).
ReJerry Lewis the film the Intern shows up the American health care system Lewis smuggles young mentally ill woman into the hospital where he works. When the hospital director finds out he wants to throw her out. "This is not a charity we need to make a profit.. in 60 years nothing has changed sadly.
I'm a Aussie, wife is a kiwi and we have both met strange Americans in our lives. Then I see name a country??? Alaska??? It goes on and on. But I've met some awesome Americans too. We are quite happy .....and safer if Americans don't know we exist thanks.
American ignorance is not just a result of those factors. The American education system has a LOT to answer for. I spent a year living and working in Texas for my British company about 20 years ago. I recall one conversation with some locals along the lines of "We Americans have never lost a war" to which I replied "What about the War of 1812?". The responses fell into two categories: 1. What was the War of 1812? (85%) 2. Hell yea! We won that one as well!! (15%) Given that in 1815 the US President Madison, who started the war in the first place, sent Envoys to ask for peace and the Royal Navy had invaded Washington DC and burned down all the public and government buildings there including the Presidential Mansion*, I reckon that we Brits can count that as a win for us. The USA asked for peace, not Great Britain. And yet my American friends had either never heard of it or had been taught that they had won it. Amazing!!! * : If you ever wondered why The White House is white it is because after the burned out shell was rebuilt it was painted white to cover over the smoke damage. 😜
@@rebeccat94 Given when it was, some 20 years ago, there were probably some Vietnam Vets around and I didn't want to stir up any bad memories for them by bringing up that awful conflict. Also, it was a long time before the Afghanistan retreat.
I’m just glad that a lot of your fellow Americans have started to research other countries and customs. Some like yourself have actually ventured outside of the American narrative. Most people outside of America believe that the American story is indoctrinated into their people from an early age. Love Love Love that some of you are venturing out into the world. One place you may want to put on your bucket list is The Isle of Skye, the most beautiful vista in the world 😊
Meanwhile, even though parts of England are borderline semi-arid, very sunny & drought prone (especially south & east), there are still a few Americans (Californian's) that think Britain is sometimes akin to a Charles Dickens novel. It's how a few American's cope & everybody laugh's at them!
Hi JP i really like you and your channel!!! Especially with you videos on your travel around The UK 🇬🇧 and how you enjoy and embrace our country and our culture! But as for your fellow Americans and your country 😮😮😮 I am really so glad there is 3000 miles of Ocean between The UK 🇬🇧 and The USA 🇺🇸!!! we are 2 countries divided by the same language??? I am so glad i am a Brit and I know our country isn't perfect!!! But us Brits just get things! We don't get taken in by idiots and we all get along together! Also we love taking the piss out of each other and its doesn't bother us if you take the piss out of the uk 🇬🇧 We are not fanatical patriots like Americans and we just enjoy being brits because we don't need to put our hands over our hearts to say we love being Brits. Keep up the good work Joel and we know you are an honorary Brit good on you mate!!!
@@robcannon9165 Exactly. Well said. I agree re the overly patriotic symbolism shown by the citizens of the US... I feel I can love my country (England) and the fact we share our islands with the Scots, the Welsh and the Northern Irish - for as long as they all wish to be part of our 'United Kingdom' ... I would not hold a grudge against any of they wanted to become independent though, as we have all mostly enough pride and love for our countries to show it in whichever way suits us best... Just not the flag-waving, flag-flying insistence upon brainwashing our children into the ritual of declaring their loyalty in school, so instilling them with a sense of guilt if they object at any time to having to parrot their declarations and remember every line even as adults, after which, most lessons learned at school, are usually only half-remembered. (unless a particular favourite school subject which they studied according to interests and fascination). There seems to be, at least in part due to the internet, the desire for some (admittedly, mostly younger) Americans to want to learn more about the rest of the world, which is surely a good thing. The only downside being possibly, the realisation that the great America is not really much better than anywhere else, that whatever their disatisfaction with their home State / country is, some of the rest of the world faces the same kinds of stresses and strains due to badly run economies and / or corrupt or plain idiotic politicians...but that their country _could_ be better if it implemented _some_ of the ideas and ideals upon which other countries are governed, if only this or that would / could be understood and pushed for, to change by the majority, who cares enough about the people to bring about any necessary change. Better healthcare coverage. Better education. Less emphasis on work over family life. Better work / holiday (vacation) rights. Better general public Transport. The list grows with every consideration for the populace. We all need to think of how each country looks after it's most valuable and most vulnerable assets, it's young, it's old, it's the ability and desire to care for its own. Not just the richest, the most famous or the greediest. 🤔...sorry for the "mini rant" 🥺 👍🙂🏴♥️🇬🇧🤭🖖
@@Jake-jr2zh i didn't vote brexit and neither did 49 percent of voters didn't! and its hard to leave Europe when its only 22 miles across the channel??? and millions of Brits holiday in Europe, live and work There. As for Johnson look what happend to him in the end as PM! The same thing will happen to Farage and they both prove you can't polish a turd
I was in Florida as a young woman and in a conversation with hotel kitchen or service employees I was asked where I was coming from. I answered from Germany and they actually asked if I had traveled by train or bus. I was somehow completely speechless. Where do you start explaining at this level???? 😢
I once saw an English comedian asking simple general knowledge questions on the streets of NY, the one that I remember most is.. Q.What is Big Ben? A. A Burger.
There's a difference between stupidity and ignorance. Ignorance can be fixed quite easily Stupidity is harder to fix. Americans may be "ignorant" but not necessarily "stupid"
This has to be true. But what is annoying is when they consider it unimportant to know about the rest of the world. That comes across as crass arrogance.
I have American in-laws and some very good friends and they are all intelligent and well travelled. Many Brits are just as thick as the thickest Americans. One of my friends works in a university in Boston and she told me that the past few years of political madness with Trump has turned her into a socialist. I never thought I'd hear an American say that, but she has spent a lot of time in the UK and Europe so....
Unfortunately the socialists we have now appear to have sold out to the 'Great Reset' from Davos. Look how they lied about and ditched Corbyn. He was not on board with the plan.
Like most Americans, it seems your friend doesn't know what socialism is. The UK and Europe aren't socialist. In fact many European countries, and particularly the Scandinavian ones, are rated as more capitalist than the US.
@@istvanglock7445Finally, it's been said. Thank you Overall, the UK has been considered quite an aggressive capitalist country. It's infuriating when people staunchly assume the opposite. I've had to argue with many Americans over this topic. As for US folk being dumb, I would like to say, nobody is dumb. People can be manipulated and easily led if they haven't been given the tools to help nurture a mind. Therefore it's easy to call people dumb, when really you have to look at their background. I've lived in the US. I've heard and seen what is churned out on the radio and news networks. It's propaganda at its best. Very little fact checking and a lot of fear mongering. As many people were sharing stories of US folk saying stupid things. I admit, one of my favourite questions from a US guy had to be while i was living and working in New Zealand. He asked "Can I drive to Stewart Island?" While pointing at the map, wondering how he could drive his car onto Stewart Island. I gave him a chance to figure out why he couldn't drive to the island. Unfortunately I had to explain to him. I will admit, all my staff in NZ agreed, that the few Americans who travelled to NZ were never rude, but they had to be #1 for the most shocking questions. The US folk kept us entertained.
I do find it utterly astonishing how little Americans know about their own political system and, indeed, any other political system. Particularly annoying is their complete inability to differentiate between Communism, Socialism and Marxism.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Ummm, there's a lot more than three kinds of political system and Socialism is not even slightly despotic. Are Sweden, Denmark, Norway 'despotic'?
@@YorkshireTeaNiceNStrong I thought it was pretty obvious that I was referring to the three schools of ill-founded dogma you mentioned. I'll tell you one thing though... the Scandinavian countries are definitely headed that way. P.S I've no idea about the US "ejukayshun sistim", I'm from Lancashire in the UK.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Yup, no idea what you're talking about. You think Scandinavia, consistent leaders in the world happiness index (the countries best functioning and serving their people) are heading towards your imaginary hellscape? The evidence would seem to contradict that.
Keep travelling Joel.....maybe broaden the geographical field (try to include the southern hemisphere, eg Aus, NZ, Asia, Sth America etc)! Most importantly, stay curious & open minded - you'll become fascinated with all that is out there...really!!
@@danmayberry1185 Change the name of Greenland to GORMland and send every country's gormless people there. The Gormless People's Republic of Gormland.. It would be like the movie "Idiocracy".
Thank you for this video. I learned SO MUCH MORE from this "reaction" video than I have Ever learned from any other reaction video! I'd definitely be interested in more of this kind of content 🙂👍
Liberalism is simultaneously both the dumbest,and despite the name,the most malicious ideology currently doing the rounds across the Anglosphere. Indeed the sage who predicted the liberal would be the new Fascist was bang on the money.
Hey Joel, my online friend and I were discussing your last video and as we connected by a love of an artist called Ren we both agreed that you might find him interesting. We know you don't normally do music reactions but we would love it if you delved into the world of Ren, his take on life, society, greed etc might resonate with you too. I think Ali has suggested the Money Game Trilogy which is an excellent choice so we're trying to bribe you to react to them lol. You may do them and decide it's not for your channel and that's fine but I think you might like him regardless. You should pick up quite a few extra subs from it too as there is a large enthusiastic (obsessive) fan base who eat reactions for breakfast 😅 and we would definitely promote yours in the community, it's called The Rising Tide. Just a suggestion, either way enjoy your coffee mate 👍 (Just be sure to watch the official Money Game 2 video if you do and not the live version, they're very different)
@@adrianhempfing2042 Ren allows anyone to react even for monetisation, if you do get an automatic claim, he will clear it. Even if it doesn't make the channel I'm sure Ren's messages will resonate with Joel. Thanks for your time Adrian.
My friend’s mum was a tour guide for a coach company. About 20 years ago, she was taking questions from the passengers on a Stone Henge tour. An American woman put her hand up and said: ‘why did they build it so near to the road?’ Everyone on the coach (including the driver and my friends mum) just started laughing…
I am from US...State of Iowa...we have limestone quarries...couple from NY came in to buy some stone...after they were given a tour of the place their guide ( a friend of mine ) asked, " Any questions?" The wife then asked, " After you remove the stone, how long does it take to grow back? " My friend was left speechless...
Delighted to increasingly see you come to considered and thoughtful conclusions as you increase in age and have had travel experiences that many American's won't (like Australia, a lot of that have to do with privilege). I'm sure all that can and will be said has already about the informative and succinct video featured. Personally, my favourite part is that the first two examples of American films featured Aussie actors (Heath Ledger and Errol Flynn) in the starring roles Am enjoying the channel more the more I go along.
I've not caught your bideos gor a while; as a granny I love how wise you are growing! You are a one of the lovely Americans. Sadly I dont want to visit USA anymore.
What made me chuckle was the narrator in the video calling the guy for saying zee axis instead of zed axis and then he went on to pronounce cellist incorrectly. It's of Italian origin and should be pronounced cellist. I'm not sure if cellist is an American pronunciation or not but still made me chuckle. Good video Joel, as always
In order to teach the correct pronunciation of 'cellist' one must surely use an 'h' ( _aitch_ _NOT_ "haitch" btw, though I doubt _you'd_ mispronounce _aitch_, yourself?!) ...and so 'chellist' for _cellist_ (and 'chello' 'for cello'?) Oh and, Joel... Just curious, have you ever heard of Cary Grant*? (As Tyler Rumple* _apparently_ has _never_ heard of him!!😮?!)
@@richardevans6433 No they don't! That's ignorant southerner stuff. 'in t' wardrobe', is pronounced as 'int wardrobe' - with the 't' a silent glottal stop - it is not pronounced 'in tuh wardrobe' in Yorkshire or anywhere else. Living for a while in London, a friend of mine sometimes made a point of badly imitating Londoners' accent. They didn't like it either.
One thing about the MamaMia movie. Not so american actually och you can feel it. It was first a musical played in London and it still plays there. The music is written by two of ABBA:s members,the swedish famous group ABBA. One of the mainactors in the film is swedish, another one is brittish. Only the beachsceens are from Greece. The rest are from a studio.
I get really fed up with Netflix, it's stuffed full of low budget American films, cheesy plots where you can predict the ending after 5 minutes of watching. I watched 'Shadowlands' for free on TH-cam last night, a very British film.
Good to see you are using that right, which at the moment is allowed ,of discrimination . In other words ,your choice. The internet allows content from all over the world, until some governments disallows it.
“The rest is entertainment “ podcast had an interesting discussion regarding American streaming services such as Netflix etc,having a problem with increasing revenue in the UK is that 90% of their content is available already on the 5 main channels I players for free.
As a 52 year old Norwegian high school teacher, this is not just an US phenomena. It is a generational one. We did something wrong somewhere, and I'm sorry.
Yes, we thought working skills are enough to make a good society. Free speech needs education. It needs knowing who to respond to individuality. It needs to train our way to interact, especially when there is conflict of interests and crisis, and so much more than math and physics. Language is paramount, but also what it means, how tho evaluate the content it conveys. Knowledge about its power on oneself and others. In France there is a song with the title: To Kill With Words! All that has so much to do with what happens in these last days of US elections.
humanity took a wrong turn when they decided that everyone is separate and the ego became the predominant trait of our consciousness. we were nothing before we were alive and we will return to that nothingness. nothingness is our natural state of being. the ego goes completely against this nothingness.
11:28 I took a minor in Film Studies about 20-ish years ago and the Hays Code (aka The Motion Picture Production Code) discussed during the portion on American Films (I believe we were watching The Big Sleep). I’m super grateful to that course of classes. I was introduced to some amazing films from all over the world and the discussion about the cultures that brought about them… I already had an interest and open mind, but that minor introduced me to things I would not have looked for myself nor even now been introduced to via an algorithm.
Hello Joel. I found folk in US great fun and hard working to the point they did not have time to care about more than getting by. The world should see how it is there before judging I reckon.
I always like to say that the majority Americans have no interest in what happens beyond their county's/ city quarter's borders and you can see that on so many levels. Even some of my American friends who are well educated people baffle me with how little they know about what's going on in other regions even let alone elsewhere in the world...
From an Australian. Ignorance can be excused but ARROGANCE cannot!
They've got that by the bucket load!!!
I find Australians very arrogant,worse than Americans.
@@andypandy9013 - Sadly they have both unenviable characteristics. Throw in loudness and the picture is complete.
neither is in the nternet age. Tired of people excusing ignorance when every fcukers got a palm sized computer in their pocket connected to the WWW.
Although I don't think that characteristic can be generalized across the whole population, there are far too many like that. I mean, just look at one of our major presidential candidates. He is someone who has both characteristics and wears them like a badge of honor. In all honesty though, every country that has come into the position of "world leader" falls into a similar cultural trap. Although I would say that the U.S. has fallen in and kept digging out the bottom of the trap as if that was the way out.
When a person from New Mexico was denied a marriage license in Washington DC because the clerk and supervisor thought that New Mexico was a foreign country, that told me all I needed to know.
They need the government approval to get married!!! WTF!!
@@MikiLund only cause it's most likely a BS story 😂
LOL
I actually snorted as I laughed so hard at your comment 😂😂😂😂
When living in California, I told the lady on the phone that I had attended Edison Jr. High school.
She asked: How do you spell Edison?
Though that name appears on the monthly electrical bill, did she not know how to spell it, or was she lazy not to make an effort to think. 😮
The dumbing down of 🇺🇸 wasn't an accident. When John D Rockefeller bought his influence in government & head of education, his literal quote was "I don't want a nation of thinkers, I want a nation of workers" ~ John D Rockefeller
Wow, well that says it all, doesn’t it?
well, he understood the education system in use, thats all, the US uses the Prussian system after all, like many other countries do, and that has, in its core, just two purposes, to create obedient workers and loyal soldiers. it is also, why the higher education is so harshly split up and terribly expensive, so that the future leaders could be amongs themselves and network. The Prussians came up with the system after getting a beating in the Napoleonic Wars and it spread out during the Industrial Revolution for obvious reasons. that people like Rockefeller thought it to be quite alright, is, i'm sure, even today still something shared among the so called elites. by the way, the entire higher education networking thing is the main reason, journalism had become a subject you had to study. when you look at the journalists who broke the big scandals like watergate, you will find people, that don't really fit todays ideals of a journalist, a ex-soldier that went to Yale on a scholarship to study history and a university dropout who wrote local news stories for a living. today, there is no way those guys would get the jobs they had back then, working on something like this...
@@raistormrs 💯
John D Rockefeller was never in government, his influence was the result of him being super-rich. In particular, he formed the GEB, a non-governmental group that had a huge influence on public education in the US. Also, it is not clear that he ever said the quote that you attribute to him...but the quote is representative of the attitude of the GEB.
@@raistormrs German here. You've done something wrong. This education system, which you look down on, produced 88 Nobel Prize winners in the 20th century, in the field of natural sciences and medicine alone. In fact, this system was developed to supplement a country whose only truly abundant natural resource, coal, with something much more valuable: Knowledge! And that continues to this day, throughout Germany's success story. I would say that the USA perverted this system and did not implement it correctly. Because even before the founding of the German Empire, Germany had its nickname... "The country of poets and thinkers..."
25 years ago on a beach in California, I was asked by a local person how I could possibly live in England with its awful weather. I replied that it made more sense to live with the rain than it did to live on a fault line!
I am from Middle America. Every single Californian I ever met in my life are smug, believing California is the best just because of the weather. They look down on anyone who is not from California, yet they think they are the most tolerant and accepting people. They are not self-aware that they are the poster children of bigotry.
Just remind them we get less rain in an entire year than they get in one hurricane and nobody ever dies because of our weather!
I grew up in California . . . I've now lived in France for 40 years and I believe that, after nearly 20 years of education in the States, the majority of my knowledge has been aquired since I've lived in Europe. Sad as it may be, I just thnk Americans, in general, just don't care to know more about the world, because they believe they're the center and everything revolves around them. Why do you think they elected D.T.?
@@B-A-L Extreme weather: More than 4,500 deaths in England from 2022 heat // UK weather: Further heavy rain could cause danger to life after ...
23.05.2024 ... Further heavy rain could cause a danger to life and travel disruption after a mudslide resulted in one death on Wednesday, the Met Office has warned. // Colder winter weather sees a 30% increase in deaths with over-60s most vulnerable.
You might want to think about the last part of your statement again
@@franhunne8929 And what's the property damage and casualty numbers in the US due to tornadoes and hurricanes?
We’re all just happy that Joel and his friends are defying the stereotype.
Him, possibly. His freinds not so much tbh.
What's happened to Arturo and the other friend, not certain of his name? Is it Stefan?
Seconded 😂
do you want to have real freedom today you have to go to Eu especially Scandinavia fir you are not free if you are not free to seek your dreams and that is most people in Scandinavia but many ignorant fools mostly republicans are shouting about freedom in America but you are not free in especially red states, public education is made as bad as possible so that the ignorant individuals who come out are more likely to believe the lies maga and religious fanatics shut out, because it is only in the US, China and Russia that people pledge allegiance to the flag /country in the EU, you just go to school and learn. Americans also talk about religious freedom, but the least religious state in America is still far more religious in the most religious country in the EU, and in the EU you also have the right to be sick without you and your family going bankrupt and becoming homeless. In the EU, the healthcare system is a human rights for rich and poor they for the same treatment, however the richest can go to America and pay 4 to 5 times more for the same treatment what is an Asprin that costs 80 dollars in a hospital 😱🤮 or what about education in the EU there is free education all the way to PhD the only thing you pay is for some books and if you want to be an exchange student and that for you support in Denmark for all students from high school and up 800 to 900 dollars a month from the state to help with the rent and other expenses so they can focus on their studies so no America is not as free as you think.
Howabout Joe Montana ?
I’m glad you’re there Joel - you are an ambassador that any country would be proud to have. Your openness to other cultures and what can be learnt is a constant joy.
I was in London the last couple of days, we were heading to an Italian Restaurant which was in an area with a range of individual restaurants and a pub, we overheard an American tourist saying "Why isn't there anywhere to eat, don't they have McDonalds here," they really couldn't see the wood for the trees.
McDonald's is junk I could never eat there
Who considers McD as a restaurant ?
@RushfanUK is a reason why Americans are not respected in the rest of the world . The stupidity and arrogance they are right.
When clearly they have no idea and then storm off in a rage because they have been corrected and then make up stories to cover themselves!!
McDonalds is also OVERPRICED and doesnt even fill you up. One Döner is healthier and more filling than a stupid Burger + fries ... and it is CHEAPER!
@@Muck006 und schmeckt besser
The USA is driven by money money money and everything else is secondary, USA is ranked 25th in the world for wealth inequality meaning a smaller number of people hold a large amount of the wealth and by contrast the UK is ranked 140th. The USA is controlled by wealth and the few controlling it have no desire for that to change it and threaten their wealth.
I’ve worked for American owned organisations, all they are concerned with is profit, profit, profit, where as non American organisations I’ve worked for have a far better balance with employee welfare, doing the right thing and profit and generally have a moral,compass.
Unfortunately the greed of the USA always wins out, partly due to the fact that the general population don’t stand up because they are far more controlled than they care to realise, I don’t see Americans as stupid, I just pity them because they are only allowed to know what those with the wealth allow them to know - too much knowledge could be dangerous!
"The love of money is the root of all evil" 1 Tim. 6.10
That---in a nutshell.
Yes, the United States is a plutocracy ruled by the top 120 wealthiest family clans, that have produced senators, governors, judges, and mayors for generations and collaborated closely with multibillion dollar corporations.
@@annalieff-saxby568 along with religion.
@StevenBrown-w5b I won't disagree with that. Still, wise words are wise words no matter whether or not you believe the source of them is "divine".
One thing you are not, Joel, is dumb or stupid. Wait a minute, that's two things. I'm completely out of your age range, a grandmother indeed, but I recognise a bright spark when I see one, and come back to watch your videos because I appreciate your intelligence and perceptive observations on your adventures overseas.
Same here!
I have always related Intelligence and curiosity.
American education does not seem to nurture curiosity, yet this is where the desire for all knowledge begins.
@@Jill-mh2wn So VERY true!!
Same here, except, despite my age (71) I am not a grandparent...despite my three offspring being aged nearly 37 and 31 !! I don't think I will ever be a Grandmother!
("As for the ladies" : "Mama Mia" ?! I have never seen it - nor ever wanted to!!)
@@brigidsingleton1596 The grandparent thing? My son's partner is 39 and they have 2, under 4s and trying for a third. My next door neighbour had an after 40 surprise first child. So who knows? My first was at 33
Stupidity can be very nice. My wife and I were talking Polish at a small Californian Steak house in 2002. The manager inquired about our country of origin. After we paid the bill and left, he ran after us in the street and asked "Do you know that the Pope is Polish?". We really loved that.
Don't worry mate, there are so many Americans who are expanding their knowledge of the big wide world through channels similar to yours.
I've been watching your channel for about 2 years & yours is the best IMO.
I'm personally shocked at how some Americans could vote for a proven liar, criminal., and morally corrupt candidate for President.
It would be a completely different story if they were to vote for a narcissist, a con man, a rapist, a coup plotter, so let's not make a big deal about it.
At the 18.00 mark they do talk about "convicted Republicans..." - I immediately thought of "Diaper-Don-the-Orange-Con", "Vance-in-a-Trance" and "Empty-Headed-Greene" (see what I did there? MT 'headed' Greene... LOL). 😉😊
@@StewedFishProductions I'm still in complete shock at the thought of Trump being allowed to run. He's a convicted felon. His handling of the pandemic was just awful. We will never know how many people died because of Trump's stupidity. I've been to the US twice, but will NEVER visit again. It is a broken wreck.
Hmmm ... if you mean Trump ... then YOU have clearly been propagandised by THE MEDIA. The european media basically COPY CNN ... which is LYING about Trump 24/7 ... even making stuff up.
And his "criminal conviction" was a FARCE of a show trial where the DA had the campaign promise to "work every day on prosecuting Trump" ... completely missing ASSUMPTION OF INNOCENCE.
You forgot that he is also a rapist, thief, fascist, misogynist fascist.
Great work Joel ! Your posts are much appreciated ,from a grateful Brit !
Mate - I wish every American was capable of the same level of self awareness as you. You guys will be fine so long as you maintain your compassion and desire to be educated 👍
The worst of all is the Hollywood dramatisation of the WWII incident when a German enigma encoding machine was taken from a U-boat submarine. In real history it was carried out by a British commando unit. The movie, inevitably, made it into an American operation!
U-571 I believe and yes you're quite right the US didn't retrieve it which is how it ended up in Bletchley Park which allowed us to decipher the German naval codes with the help of Alan Turing
Australia bought one just before the Berlin Wall came down and they dropped in price. It looks like a weird typewriter. I went to a talk about it and the room was full of maths nerds in cardigans.
I would’ve loved to see their adaptation of them winning the Battle of Britain! Lol 😂
But there was a US Eagles squadron to twist the story!!
Same with the movie “Argo”. No mention anywhere in the entire movie of the Canadians who were the ones who actually pulled the rescue off. During a interview President Carter had to keep reminding the interviewer that the rescue was a success because of the Canadian Embassy and its ambassador.
@MjII7 Funny you say that. I had a US guy on another video about WWII proclaiming they'd won it and we'd lost it and would've lost without em. I said Battle of Britain, we pushed Hitler back and stopped the invasion over a uwar b4 US entered. His reply....'Yeah but the RAF had Ameeican pilots though so even then we helped you fight it'.
Erm dud, there were 6 US airmen who fought in the Battle of Britain. 6! Out of many thousands. Seems he didn't appreciate that fact. Nor the fact that Russia liberated Berlin not the US, as that was his next claim. I just felt pity by the end.
Canadian here and I live in Ontario just across the border from New York state and I have meet americans that think we live in igloos, have snow year round and all speak french
Or we are all lumber jacks
😱🤭😂😂😂
ISNT Niagara Falls - just across The BORDER ?
@@holoholopainen1627dude, you’re not helping us.
@@ae4116 Are You saying that NY Buffaloes - coming over to Hamilton - think that You live in igloos ? You can see across The Lake Toronto - Skyline & CNN Tower !
I'm 58, born in and live in Indianapolis, Indiana. Grew up blue collar, working class, 1st generation to earn a college degree. Gen X. I work in public education and can say that students get the same information my generation received. But, the type of student has changed. Overstimulated. Can't focus. Traumatized. Needs to be entertained and be having fun and mustn't have to cope with boredom. They are the offspring of a generation of kids who received the self esteem curricula of the 90s. It became about feelings, and we've lost the plot since then. Never have I seen such anti-intellectualism in America culture. Apparently, there is no such thing as an expert. Higher education is scoffed at. People under 40 know nothing about their government, the geography of their country/world. We still have a reactionary, puritanical streak which tends to celebrate knownothingness.
Well educated does not mean smart, my granddad once told me.
I think you'll find that it's predominantly older people who get on the conspiracy train and don't believe that any expert is actually an expert in their field. Have you seen the flat earthers? They're not exactly in their teens/early 20s.
While I agree that young people are overstimulated and certainly they're disenfranchised, its not as simple as saying it's because people care more about feelings now. There is a whole section of society that don't believe in climate change, that the earth is round, and they seemingly believe everything is a conspiracy and that nothing is to be believed even known scientific facts. This doesn't seem to be down to young people.. I think that's just your view as a 58 year old?
@@raystewart3648 Knowledge comes in many different forms - the question is whether or not you can use the knowledge you have learned to accomplish something. That pretty much applies to people in every line of work. I would say that anyone who has gained expertise at doing something well is "smart".
@@raystewart3648 Well educated does not mean WISE. There is a difference between knowledge and wisdom. Also, people can be uneducated but 'street-smart'.
@@raystewart3648here is the thing, if you have read and fully understood the complete works of Shakespeare.. then you are educated .. if you have a high school diploma or a degree from trump university .. not so much
Another factor is the USA's priority on individualism which allows states to set their own educational agendas without oversight from the federal government. When you have no international studies in your schools, no history studies outside your own what do you expect. Add in low wages and a lack of holiday pay which means limited access to go on holidays and expand their horizons.
Yes, it is time to make the USA a civilized society - a country consisting of one state, not 50 loose sheep. And the educational system needs to be improved by introducing critical, scientific reasoning very early. And the wage for a full time job must suffice for living. Workers should have dignity and be organized in unions demanding a certain minimum wage. This is not communism or socialism but simple rules for a functioning society. The right name is "social democracy", as practized in Northern Europe.
Back in the mid 1990s I took my teenage son to America for a two-week road trip starting off in New York, a flight to Denver and then a car trip to LA. We both enjoyed the trip and found generally that the Americans we came across as residents, at work or on holiday like us, on finding we were British were so kind, helpful and be interested in us, especially me being able to do many UK accents.
BUT every day me and my son aged 14 and me 45, would look at each other open-mouthed at what an American had said or done, and try so much not burst out laughing. I lost count the number of times my 14-year-old son would say to me "Dad, even their older ones are like little kids", "How does this country survive every day", "This lot have the most nuclear weapons?" and my favourite "No way did they put a man on the moon".
The germans helped with the engineering of that… von Braun and his bunch.
I was asked by an American whilst on holiday "oh you come from England do you know my cousin? he lives there" like I know everyone in the UK pop almost 67 million. 🤦♂🤣
I was asked that when I was in Australia. A bit more reasonable because they asked if I knew someone who lived in the same county as me, but still incredibly lacking in sense
Whilst in New York years ago I was asked if England was in London? Shocking!!
Of there was American undergrades that thought that China was an American State.
Wow, I will never again complain when they confuse my country Switzerland with Sweden 😅
Yes thats common.
How is it that Americans are so bad at geography, yet us brits can name practically every state in America? I can and I've never even been there. I also notice in other videos they can barely name any former US presidents
@@uklie01 Brits might do that as well. Equally beautiful and devoid of concrete jungles.
There’s the old story of an American visiting Windsor castle and asked why they built it so close to the airport 🤦🏻♂️
😂😂😂
Maybe he was a trumper .
It was trump after all who claimed in a speech that the US took over the British airports during the Revolutionary War
😆🤣😆
@@AlexanderWinterborn-r6p Grow up child ✊🏻
@@AlexanderWinterborn-r6p name one "american social media"?
Once when I was travelling in Europe a young American woman in her 20's asked me if the British speak American.
😂😂😂
No way seriously 😅
" sure... just a bit..."
In Italy I was once stopped outside a Post Office by an American who asked if I spoke American. I said between my English and his American, we'd probably (not prolly) get by. He wanted directions to the Post Office.
A worse example -- An American asked an English person if she spoke English as she did !
Greetings from County Durham, in the UK. I have to agree with Lily Joel. I’m a great grandfather - hey, what’s all this about your viewing community 🤣.
You’re an intelligent chap who wants to learn more about what’s going on beyond your shores. There are many reaction channels but few are attempting to do anything intelligently - so bravo
I'm from Chester-le-Street, CO durham, and thoroughly agree with you, sir 👍 Great to hear US kids like this soaking up other cultures. They say travel broadens the mind - it certainly does!
The expresion "blissful ignorance" does exist and Americans are the walking definitions.
This video truly deserves a like and a comment. Kudos 👏
As long as you thirst for knowledge and learn about other countries, then you can never be stupid. Keep learning Joel and you will be okay.
At least you're informed and are informing others.
"Cellist" is pronounced "chellist" not "sellist". Sorry, it just really bugged me!
And "convicted" democrats? I think britmonkey has some work to do on his education too.
In Dutch it's pronounced 'sellist'. ;-)
@@skabuoy but the TH-cam vlog was made by an English guy en niet een Nederlander
@@skabuoy Thank you, I didn't know that!
But since the voice in the video was speaking English in an English accent...
Might have been AI voice...
I just love your videos, Joel, and I especially love your curiosity and openness to other countries and cultures. Always a pleasure listening to your remarks. Greetings from Germany.
Being "on line" is the most extraordinary window to the outside World - if you choose to use it as such.
Joel, your parents took you travelling living in different countries, i feel majority of Americans have never done that, whereas the majority of British people have taken their children abroad and shown other cultures and hopefully respect them, you are very bright and a pleasure to watch. Loved your brit vlogs 😊
I'm a Brit born in the 1950s and grew up with American film and TV shows (many of which I can still sing the themes.). I think we here, got a good feeling about American culture from it. I think ignorant is a more apt description than "stupid".
I grew up in the states around the same time, with the same shows, but they did not portray reality---though they were fun to watch.
True, though there is a strong correlation between the two.
The thing about travelling and meeting different cultures, is that you realise the pros and cons of your own country.
Brits are generally happy to criticise what they think is wrong in this country yet Americans seem to think this is almost being an un - American commie.
Your doing great Joel. Keep sponging up the information.😊
You're not your.
@josiecoote8975 thank you for pointing it out.
Get your kids a library card and raise them to be curious. Reading is a declining habit to the point, where universities state they are increasingly confronted with students who aren’t able to read a whole book. It’s so sad it’s almost funny.
Do they allow all books though
You so right: books, interesse in others and caring for them, curiosity in the nature, how thing works, creativity, interact with others with other cultures, going to musea, being nice to people and being helpful, respect people…that make you whole and fulfill, what makes you happy 😊
@@maryotoole7389 that’s hardly the point. We had age restrictions at the library. In contrast to the internet, this system worked reliably. For example: at the local library I could get a simplified, sanitised and condensed version of books that are considered literature or significant achievements in storytelling and style or in their historical context (such as Dracula, the Divine Comedy or the Diary of Anne Frank). Obviously the original works are not age-appropriate, their language and style possibly too complex and their deeper meanings too brutal or depicting awful human behaviour. With simplified, shortened editions that had many uncommon words explained, these were ideal. There’s also a ton of light children’s books full of adventure and fun, think Enid Blyton or Thomas Brezina, we read them by the dozens. At 14-16 the rest of the library became accessible for reading and then open to check out. I read a lot of trash as a kid, but in my native language you see a _stark_ contrast between kids who read and those who don’t. So even creating a culture at home that is appreciative of arts, culture, literature and books in the most minimal way possible, makes a difference.
I think there’s always been a streak of isolationism in American culture and politics. Before WW2 is was official US foreign policy. However, I suspect there’s two reasons why people in the UK have a bit more awareness of what is going on beyond our boundaries. The first is our proximity to the rest of Europe. The second is that we used to be a colonial power whose historic actions still have an impact in former colonies.
American life has had a long history of insular ignorance-this is, after all, a big place. Reagan often spoke of his belief that God placed this continent "between two oceans" (a great place for a continent…) so that Americans could avoid involvement in other countries. To Reagan, and so to his followers, America's isolation was a feature, not a bug. But there has always been a strong current of anti-intellectualism in general. As Isaac Asimov said,
“There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.” An example was Adlai Stevenson, Democratic candidate for President in the 1950s, who was memorably dismissed as an 'egghead'.
But I think a couple of things happened more recently. Somehow, we moved to actual widespread contempt for education. Consider radio and television shows that portrayed high school students. Right up through the 1970s, high school was always treated with respect, even when the students found it to be a problem (popular radio character Henry Aldrich had trouble with Latin for more than a decade). But then something changed. High school began to be portrayed as a nuisance, in which classes were a contemptible distraction from the real business of the characters' social lives. In 1986's "Peggy Sue Got Married", a woman goes back in time to 1960 and experiences high school again. At one point, she tells her algebra teacher that the class doesn't matter: "Well, Mr Snelgrove, I happen to know that in the future I will not have the slightest use for algebra, and I speak from experience." This was an audience-applause line. One hardly need dig deeply into shows like Saved By The Bell (notably re-tooled from a show where the teacher was the main character) or Dawson's Creek, or any number of Disney shows to see the same dismissal of education. Why learn that stuff in school when you can become-sorry, Joel-a TH-cam 'influencer' and become rich and famous?
[ side note: it is daunting to watch reaction videos for a movie like Casablanca from people who are apparently only vaguely aware of World War II ]
And of course most recently, politicians learned that they could get the most ignorant people, the ones most contemptuous of intellectualism-'elites' often being a coded word for 'Jews', by the way-to vote. Now people could be not only ignorant but _proud_ of their ignorance. Republican gubernatorial candidate Kandiss Taylor questioned the most basic knowledge of geography, considering that it is a conspiracy to hide the true flat earth ("Every store, you buy a globe. There’s globes everywhere. Every movie, every TV show, news media - why? It doesn’t make sense.”) That is scary.
China and Russia are huge too, but they have actual education. it seems that the USA only had good education for the masses for a very few short years a long time ago and has replaced it with TV and celebrity culture.
Its a bit of a paradox to say the USA is the richest country when it is also the most indebted standing at $35 trillion.
Can we say that the ethos in America is `Money first'?
In debt to who tho
@@BOXOFDEMONS666 Japan, China, The United Kingdom and Luxembourg
@@dominique8233 Saudi Arabia, Emirates...
Yep, the US is the richest country in average. But take away the 1% richest and 1% poorest, thus looking at 98% of the population, figures may be more realistic.
I live in the US and the UK, and you’re 100% correct about the internet and so called smart phones. There is SO MUCH incorrect information out there and people believe it. Also, another factor, money!
First step in fixing a problem is identifying it usually. I think that explains a lot for many americans.
I am Dutch. An American once told me Americans are amazed that Europeons have houses and buildings older than their country.
I was in Florida a few years ago on holiday from Yorkshire. The adverts were almost entirely about compensation for medical malpractice and car showrooms, as well as advertising local lawyers. The news was also interesting. Inbetween hurricane season warnings and the Ebola outbreak in Africa, which seemed only interesting to the US because a US nurse was involved and needed bringing home to the States, there was a wonderfully random item involving two Brits surfboarding off of the coast of England who filmed a small seal jumping up onto one of their boards and hitching a ride. An eclectic mix to be sure. :)
Also I'd just be slightly cautious about the motivation of channels that seem anti-American. There is good and bad in every country, and good and bad people. For example the segment about American music, in many Asian countries there's little exposure to Western, African or South American cultures, film, music or television for example. The K/J-pop charts in Asia are still dominated by Asian artists peddling K-pop in (mostly) Korean or Japanese. When you look at the Grammys it's entirely mixed but look at Asian music award shows and there are no black artists or white western folk, Australian pipe bands, etc... So I wouldn't go too hard on yourself. Other places have their issues as well. And the US has also done a lot of good in the world. I mean, it's not Yorkshire ;), but you should still rightly be proud to be an American.
The policy comment you made near the end….” I’ll stay out of it!” Cracked me up. 😂😂😂
From my time in the advertising industry, I know that there is hardly any difference between advertising and propaganda.
In both scenarios, it works through constant repetition.
I'm from advertising + gov't communications, and I endorse this message. Problem-solution alone covers half of it. (Be afraid, but don't despair - I have a plan.)
But advertizing implies that the victim will have to spend money. Even the dumbest wallet holder hesitates and knows the limit. Propaganda affects the brain. A commodity most people don't take care about. But it can ingest unlimited lies.
@@FR-PL-UA-WARSZAWA Sure, but in both cases it's about money. In advertising it's about your money that should go to a company. In propaganda it's about the money of the so-called politicians, although the direction of flow is not always so clear. It's always about money in some way.
I am a Brit and was involved in a project at a Midwestern University. While in America, my British accent attracted some curiosity. I was asked some weird questions, like, 'How did you get here? Did you drive across?' 'You sure have picked up the language well.'
Oh yes, an American woman expressed surprise that I could speak English so well.
Guess, what Americans can ask if you have a German accent.
I am an Australian and have been complimented by Americans on how well I am able to speak English while if I can say a few words in Australian language to them.
@@George-k6o9t Fair dinkum cobber.
I'm a Scot.
I've been asked if we have things like washing machines and 'proper' roads...eem a Scot invented rhe road surfacing, tarmac. 🤔
Also, apparently my English is great, what's my 1st language? Erm. How the hell do you answer them? Lol
The Beatles and Rolling Stones, etc. May have got their influences from the States. But much of that influence was black America.
True, and that "black music" was primairily performed using WHITE instruments...what's your point?
@@evertjan9479 what's your point? I know, it is to show the world you're triggered by the truth and are defensive about your lack of culture and socio-historical understanding. Congrats.
@@firstsurname7099 Dude, I am Dutch in the Netherlands EVERYONE WHO IS NOT FROM THE NETHERLANDS AND LIVES NOT THERE IS IN A 3TH WORLD COUNTRY, OR TO PUT IT IN PERSPECTIVE (YOUR FORMER AND SOON TO BE NEXT PRESIDENT) A SHITHOLE...
YOU AREN'T DUTCH, YOU ARE BENEATH ME. (SKIN COLOR DOESN'T MATTER)
@@evertjan9479European instruments, what's YOUR point ?
@@firstsurname7099 Dude, my favorite music is the Blues, I just don't look at it as "being black" It's music.
World ranking in terms of insularity -
1. N Korea
2. USA
I wonder how you get on in North Korea if you once stole a pair of tweezers?
@@Phiyedough I suspect that the system is so regimented that they'd never discover.
Weird place - te population are shorter than S Koreans due to poor diet, they have no money for farm fertiliser so use "night soil" everywhere, only a couple of styles of hair-cut allowed (slight exageration).
Very difficult to imagine living under their rules, laws, norms.
@@birdie1585 I bet that they will immediately discover that you have stolen a pair of tweezers if it has a tiny portrait of Kim Jung-un engraved in it and then, inject truth serum into you to make you confess that you were there in N.Kor to secretly use the tweezers on their ""dear leader's" nose hairs when he is asleep
I want to disappoint you, even though North Korea is a closed country, it learns a lot and is interested in others. It's the same in terms of culture. Russian Russian popular artists, for example, performed quite well even contemporary Russian songs in Russian (there was such a concert). You can't do this in a couple of days without an interest in language and culture. I cannot speak for education, but I think it is taken from the example of socialist countries, so it should not be bad. I think your opinion about North Korea is just another stereotype.
@@LanaLender A lot of what you say about Korea accepting Russian culture applies to many, many countries in the "West".
That apart, you seem to be in a parallel universe somewhere.
It's not that we hate Americans it's the foreign policy being supported by ignorance and the arguments when travelling with Americans based on ignorance. It seriously becomes exhausting and frustrating, I'm South African, and the comments by tourists from the States!!!!!
I liked Trevor Noah telling them "it's not zee-bra, it's zebra. You can't name them because you don't have them."
@dre7767 YES, Americans are so far out of touch with their comments and rudeness. When I was in the USA, the willingness was made by Americans to kill people for some conspiracy theory or lack of education and lack of general knowledge!
Everything was a conspiracy.
Generally, it was due to very poor education and the American journalist playing on the idea of conspiracy and lack of education to influence what Americans think!!
'Travel broadens the mind'. Not many Americans have a passport let alone travel to other countries around the world. This is due to the poor wages, the lack of long holiday time and lack of curiosity about the world. Also, Americans have been indoctrinated in some things. The stand-out is their misunderstanding of social democracy, as in Australia. They freak out when they see the word 'social' regarding politics, thinking that it is socialism , which it is NOT.
Absolutely agree with your comments. (US)Americans have been so brainwashed that the moment the word, "communal" or "community" comes up, they think "aarrgh .. communism!" and "social" (from which was derived, "society") - "socialism!". Talk about people being dumbed down. So, the USA has no community and no society at all. It's all a conglomeration of individuals all doing their own separate thing totally divorced from one another.
I wonder what do they tag the U.S. military, the police and fire department and paramedics as being? /s
Really I think this isn't the actual picture of Americans . Just a subset of Americans. And, if you educate yourself on the world. What is wrong with not traveling. Many people simply can not afford it.
Good review of a good video ..... excellent insights Joel ...... cheers mate
Years ago I was in hospital. My male nuse was African as betrayed by his accent. I asked what country he was from. He said GAMBIA. I returned THE GAMBIA the proper name. HE smiled the biggest smile. Knowledge is fun.
Thank you for your insights- you’re an exceptionally intelligent young man, it’s been a pleasure to watch you grow
I remember having a conversation with an American in a bar in Florida and he actually asked me: "Why are you always having revolutions"?! I nearly hit the floor with the stupidity of the question. We had one Revolution in England and that was during the mid 1600s. I am not including the Glorious Revolution where King William and Queen Mary were put on the throne because it was not violent and that was in the final years of the 1600s. Other than than, nothing. As for the US, you've had two violent Revolutions, the first the War of Independence and then the American Civil War. I am staggered by just how little many Americans know about other cultures.
The Americans know very little of other cultures while they invent their own such as having George Washington and his militia capturing British airports in the American War of independence and WW2 being won by the U.S. all on its own lonesome self while the allies were just spectators in the background.
@@George-k6o9t btw, Russia (its leadership and propaganda) also thinks, that 'the USSR won WWII all on its own, while the allies were mere spectators in the background.'
So this sentiment is not unique to America.
14 Nov. 2024. (Added a date for if and when Russia changes its mind one day.)
@@mardus_ee Hmmm ... interesting. Everyone is basically, very stupid when they think and behave in this manner.
Ladies and gentlemen, the US Ambassador to the UK Mr JPS. Will happen one day.
If Trump is elected, anything could happen, A TH-camr as US Ambassador to England isn't that far fetched, can't be any worse than him employing his idiot sons.
@@Imgettingaword We (in the Netherlands) remember that very well... Trump appointed his 'buddy' Pete Hoekstra as US ambassador in The Hague, he is almost, even better at spreading dirty lies than DonOld...
Nah, he's far too intelligent to represent his country!
In Stratford upon Avon . In the cottage were William Shakespeare was born , aNew York women kept asking the most ridiculous questions of the guide.
Did Shakespeare have a garage ?
and To think Shakespeare was born in that crib !!
If that had been true Shakespeares Mother wouldhave had to be a contorsionist .
It was a rocking crib !!
The irony is that Brits (and the world) have been brainwashed into believing that a bloke called William Shakespeare wrote groundbreaking plays when we really know nothing about the life of the Upstart Crow other than he really had no formal education. So that would certainly hit the mark then... An untravelled, uneducated son of a glove maker. The smart money is still on Edward De Vere or Francis Bacon. But naturally that messes up the fairytale (and tourism).
Omg 😦
'born in that crib'? Seriously? And you're making a comment about stupidity? You do know that Shakespeare wasn't a ghetto boy from da hood, don't you?
ReJerry Lewis the film the Intern shows up the American health care system
Lewis smuggles young mentally ill woman into the hospital where he works. When the hospital director finds out he wants to throw her out. "This is not a charity we need to make a profit.. in 60 years nothing has changed sadly.
I'm a Aussie, wife is a kiwi and we have both met strange Americans in our lives. Then I see name a country??? Alaska??? It goes on and on. But I've met some awesome Americans too. We are quite happy .....and safer if Americans don't know we exist thanks.
American ignorance is not just a result of those factors. The American education system has a LOT to answer for.
I spent a year living and working in Texas for my British company about 20 years ago. I recall one conversation with some locals along the lines of "We Americans have never lost a war" to which I replied "What about the War of 1812?". The responses fell into two categories:
1. What was the War of 1812? (85%)
2. Hell yea! We won that one as well!! (15%)
Given that in 1815 the US President Madison, who started the war in the first place, sent Envoys to ask for peace and the Royal Navy had invaded Washington DC and burned down all the public and government buildings there including the Presidential Mansion*, I reckon that we Brits can count that as a win for us. The USA asked for peace, not Great Britain. And yet my American friends had either never heard of it or had been taught that they had won it. Amazing!!!
* : If you ever wondered why The White House is white it is because after the burned out shell was rebuilt it was painted white to cover over the smoke damage. 😜
@@rebeccat94
Given when it was, some 20 years ago, there were probably some Vietnam Vets around and I didn't want to stir up any bad memories for them by bringing up that awful conflict.
Also, it was a long time before the Afghanistan retreat.
@@andypandy9013 The guy with the biggest club that has a 10-inch nail struck at the clubbing end, is the one who tells and write the story. 😆
I’m just glad that a lot of your fellow Americans have started to research other countries and customs. Some like yourself have actually ventured outside of the American narrative.
Most people outside of America believe that the American story is indoctrinated into their people from an early age.
Love Love Love that some of you are venturing out into the world.
One place you may want to put on your bucket list is The Isle of Skye, the most beautiful vista in the world 😊
Joel you are among a small amount of Americans who actually have a passport !
Meanwhile, even though parts of England are borderline semi-arid, very sunny & drought prone (especially south & east), there are still a few Americans (Californian's) that think Britain is sometimes akin to a Charles Dickens novel. It's how a few American's cope & everybody laugh's at them!
Hi JP i really like you and your channel!!! Especially with you videos on your travel around The UK 🇬🇧 and how you enjoy and embrace our country and our culture!
But as for your fellow Americans and your country 😮😮😮 I am really so glad there is 3000 miles of Ocean between The UK 🇬🇧 and The USA 🇺🇸!!! we are 2 countries divided by the same language???
I am so glad i am a Brit and I know our country isn't perfect!!! But us Brits just get things! We don't get taken in by idiots and we all get along together!
Also we love taking the piss out of each other and its doesn't bother us if you take the piss out of the uk 🇬🇧
We are not fanatical patriots like Americans and we just enjoy being brits because we don't need to put our hands over our hearts to say we love being Brits.
Keep up the good work Joel and we know you are an honorary Brit good on you mate!!!
Dont get taken in by idiots? Boris johnson and a nigel farage say hello ;)
@@robcannon9165
Exactly. Well said. I agree re the overly patriotic symbolism shown by the citizens of the US... I feel I can love my country (England) and the fact we share our islands with the Scots, the Welsh and the Northern Irish - for as long as they all wish to be part of our 'United Kingdom' ...
I would not hold a grudge against any of they wanted to become independent though, as we have all mostly enough pride and love for our countries to show it in whichever way suits us best...
Just not the flag-waving, flag-flying insistence upon brainwashing our children into the ritual of declaring their loyalty in school, so instilling them with a sense of guilt if they object at any time to having to parrot their declarations and remember every line even as adults, after which, most lessons learned at school, are usually only half-remembered. (unless a particular favourite school subject which they studied according to interests and fascination).
There seems to be, at least in part due to the internet, the desire for some (admittedly, mostly younger) Americans to want to learn more about the rest of the world, which is surely a good thing.
The only downside being possibly, the realisation that the great America is not really much better than anywhere else, that whatever their disatisfaction with their home State / country is, some of the rest of the world faces the same kinds of stresses and strains due to badly run economies and / or corrupt or plain idiotic politicians...but that their country _could_ be better if it implemented _some_ of the ideas and ideals upon which other countries are governed, if only this or that would / could be understood and pushed for, to change by the majority, who cares enough about the people to bring about any necessary change.
Better healthcare coverage.
Better education. Less emphasis on work over family life.
Better work / holiday (vacation) rights. Better general public Transport.
The list grows with every consideration for the populace.
We all need to think of how each country looks after it's most valuable and most vulnerable assets, it's young, it's old, it's the ability and desire to care for its own.
Not just the richest, the most famous or the greediest. 🤔...sorry for the "mini rant" 🥺
👍🙂🏴♥️🇬🇧🤭🖖
Brexit: Sudetenland: Yalta:
Lots of Brits think they left Europe after Brexit 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Jake-jr2zh i didn't vote brexit and neither did 49 percent of voters didn't! and its hard to leave Europe when its only 22 miles across the channel??? and millions of Brits holiday in Europe, live and work There. As for Johnson look what happend to him in the end as PM!
The same thing will happen to Farage and they both prove you can't polish a turd
I was in Florida as a young woman and in a conversation with hotel kitchen or service employees I was asked where I was coming from. I answered from Germany and they actually asked if I had traveled by train or bus. I was somehow completely speechless. Where do you start explaining at this level???? 😢
Freedom of speech needs boundaries. A lot of what is spouted in the US would be termed a 'hate crime' in Britain.
I've been with Americans being extremely rude and then wondering why an argument ends in a fight !!
In that case, I must engage in hate speech every day.
If there’s boundaries then there is no free speech.
@@andyblogger1 Nothing wrong with saying what you think. Speak now or forever hold your peace. Peace is often regrettable
@@Englishsea24 there is when it's hate speech and the people consuming it are dumb fcukheads like yourself.
You are wonderful Jps,and this was very interesting and you tackled a painful subject manfully.
US dumb patriotism doesn't help either.
All so called patriotism is designed to prop up ruling class values against the people.
I once saw an English comedian asking simple general knowledge questions on the streets of NY, the one that I remember most is..
Q.What is Big Ben?
A. A Burger.
There's a difference between stupidity and ignorance. Ignorance can be fixed quite easily Stupidity is harder to fix. Americans may be "ignorant" but not necessarily "stupid"
The MAGA crowd are incredibly stupid
This has to be true. But what is annoying is when they consider it unimportant to know about the rest of the world. That comes across as crass arrogance.
It is stupid to be ignorant...
@@dutchman7623 No it depends on the circumstances.
American ignorance will never be fixed. It's a multi billion dollar industry and they start as soon as the kid is farted out the womb.
Very enjoyable video. I'm a Brit.
I have American in-laws and some very good friends and they are all intelligent and well travelled. Many Brits are just as thick as the thickest Americans. One of my friends works in a university in Boston and she told me that the past few years of political madness with Trump has turned her into a socialist. I never thought I'd hear an American say that, but she has spent a lot of time in the UK and Europe so....
Unfortunately the socialists we have now appear to have sold out to the 'Great Reset' from Davos. Look how they lied about and ditched Corbyn. He was not on board with the plan.
Very true,
But even the thickest Brit knows Europe and Africa are continents not countries.
Like most Americans, it seems your friend doesn't know what socialism is. The UK and Europe aren't socialist. In fact many European countries, and particularly the Scandinavian ones, are rated as more capitalist than the US.
@@istvanglock7445Finally, it's been said. Thank you
Overall, the UK has been considered quite an aggressive capitalist country. It's infuriating when people staunchly assume the opposite. I've had to argue with many Americans over this topic.
As for US folk being dumb, I would like to say, nobody is dumb. People can be manipulated and easily led if they haven't been given the tools to help nurture a mind.
Therefore it's easy to call people dumb, when really you have to look at their background. I've lived in the US. I've heard and seen what is churned out on the radio and news networks. It's propaganda at its best.
Very little fact checking and a lot of fear mongering.
As many people were sharing stories of US folk saying stupid things. I admit, one of my favourite questions from a US guy had to be while i was living and working in New Zealand.
He asked
"Can I drive to Stewart Island?"
While pointing at the map, wondering how he could drive his car onto Stewart Island. I gave him a chance to figure out why he couldn't drive to the island. Unfortunately I had to explain to him.
I will admit, all my staff in NZ agreed, that the few Americans who travelled to NZ were never rude, but they had to be #1 for the most shocking questions. The US folk kept us entertained.
I do find it utterly astonishing how little Americans know about their own political system and, indeed, any other political system. Particularly annoying is their complete inability to differentiate between Communism, Socialism and Marxism.
When of course most of us understand the three schools of political thought to be simply varying degrees of despotic ideologies.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Ummm, there's a lot more than three kinds of political system and Socialism is not even slightly despotic. Are Sweden, Denmark, Norway 'despotic'?
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 You really are just proving my point. I take it you don't do political science in US schools???
@@YorkshireTeaNiceNStrong I thought it was pretty obvious that I was referring to the three schools of ill-founded dogma you mentioned. I'll tell you one thing though... the Scandinavian countries are definitely headed that way.
P.S I've no idea about the US "ejukayshun sistim", I'm from Lancashire in the UK.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Yup, no idea what you're talking about. You think Scandinavia, consistent leaders in the world happiness index (the countries best functioning and serving their people) are heading towards your imaginary hellscape? The evidence would seem to contradict that.
Keep travelling Joel.....maybe broaden the geographical field (try to include the southern hemisphere, eg Aus, NZ, Asia, Sth America etc)! Most importantly, stay curious & open minded - you'll become fascinated with all that is out there...really!!
Glad to find you on youtube. Hope to have more people like you seeing thing the way it should
I sailed to some the remotest islands in the South Pacific, Michael Jackson was always playing.
It's a certain kind of American. We have the British versions, Joel.
As a show of diplomacy, the UK should send the US the word "gormless." It's a proper classification. (We Canadians could use it as well, tbf.)
@@danmayberry1185 Change the name of Greenland to GORMland and send every country's gormless people there. The Gormless People's Republic of Gormland.. It would be like the movie "Idiocracy".
@@mana3735 Problem solved!
@@danmayberry1185 Just make sure all hard edges are padded and NO SHARP THINGS.
Richness is not only measured in $$$'s
Thank you for this video. I learned SO MUCH MORE from this "reaction" video than I have Ever learned from any other reaction video! I'd definitely be interested in more of this kind of content 🙂👍
The US is not alone in this issue. ‘Information’ over knowledge and understanding is an issue which needs addressing
Liberalism is simultaneously both the dumbest,and despite the name,the most malicious ideology currently doing the rounds across the Anglosphere. Indeed the sage who predicted the liberal would be the new Fascist was bang on the money.
That was a great video you were watching & you are one of the more intelligent youtubers out there.
Yes and many Americans think that the Republic of Ireland is in the UK.
Thanks this was awesome.👏From Australia
I really think you should come to Australia, your take on the place would be very interesting.
To him it would be "the island of the day before"
Hey Joel, my online friend and I were discussing your last video and as we connected by a love of an artist called Ren we both agreed that you might find him interesting.
We know you don't normally do music reactions but we would love it if you delved into the world of Ren, his take on life, society, greed etc might resonate with you too.
I think Ali has suggested the Money Game Trilogy which is an excellent choice so we're trying to bribe you to react to them lol. You may do them and decide it's not for your channel and that's fine but I think you might like him regardless.
You should pick up quite a few extra subs from it too as there is a large enthusiastic (obsessive) fan base who eat reactions for breakfast 😅 and we would definitely promote yours in the community, it's called The Rising Tide.
Just a suggestion, either way enjoy your coffee mate 👍
(Just be sure to watch the official Money Game 2 video if you do and not the live version, they're very different)
Is this related to the Newcastle coal protests ?
Try to be active in petitions. 😊
Thank you for the dono.
Jps has done UK music reaction on patreon.
I think TH-cam can be harder for copyright music things
@@adrianhempfing2042 Ren allows anyone to react even for monetisation, if you do get an automatic claim, he will clear it. Even if it doesn't make the channel I'm sure Ren's messages will resonate with Joel.
Thanks for your time Adrian.
My friend’s mum was a tour guide for a coach company. About 20 years ago, she was taking questions from the passengers on a Stone Henge tour. An American woman put her hand up and said: ‘why did they build it so near to the road?’ Everyone on the coach (including the driver and my friends mum) just started laughing…
Ye gods!
But did she understand why everyone was laughing?
@@susansmiles2242 only when the guide told her that the stones were 5000 years older than the road…
I am from US...State of Iowa...we have limestone quarries...couple from NY came in to buy some stone...after they were given a tour of the place their guide ( a friend of mine ) asked, " Any questions?" The wife then asked, " After you remove the stone, how long does it take to grow back? " My friend was left speechless...
Delighted to increasingly see you come to considered and thoughtful conclusions as you increase in age and have had travel experiences that many American's won't (like Australia, a lot of that have to do with privilege).
I'm sure all that can and will be said has already about the informative and succinct video featured.
Personally, my favourite part is that the first two examples of American films featured Aussie actors (Heath Ledger and Errol Flynn) in the starring roles
Am enjoying the channel more the more I go along.
Tora Tora Tora was the only US box office release where the bad guys won.
I've not caught your bideos gor a while; as a granny I love how wise you are growing! You are a one of the lovely Americans. Sadly I dont want to visit USA anymore.
What made me chuckle was the narrator in the video calling the guy for saying zee axis instead of zed axis and then he went on to pronounce cellist incorrectly. It's of Italian origin and should be pronounced cellist. I'm not sure if cellist is an American pronunciation or not but still made me chuckle. Good video Joel, as always
In Yorkshire, they say tuh witch, tuh lion, tuh wardrobe.
But we still love them 🙂
In order to teach the correct pronunciation of 'cellist' one must surely use an 'h' ( _aitch_ _NOT_ "haitch" btw, though I doubt _you'd_ mispronounce _aitch_, yourself?!) ...and so 'chellist' for _cellist_ (and 'chello' 'for cello'?)
Oh and, Joel... Just curious, have you ever heard of Cary Grant*?
(As Tyler Rumple* _apparently_ has _never_ heard of him!!😮?!)
@@richardevans6433 No they don't! That's ignorant southerner stuff. 'in t' wardrobe', is pronounced as 'int wardrobe' - with the 't' a silent glottal stop - it is not pronounced 'in tuh wardrobe' in Yorkshire or anywhere else. Living for a while in London, a friend of mine sometimes made a point of badly imitating Londoners' accent. They didn't like it either.
@@richardevans6433 Utter, southern garbage. Its "twitch, t'lion an' twardrobe." I suggest you learn how to use a glottal stop?
One thing about the MamaMia movie. Not so american actually och you can feel it. It was first a musical played in London and it still plays there. The music is written by two of ABBA:s members,the swedish famous group ABBA. One of the mainactors in the film is swedish, another one is brittish. Only the beachsceens are from Greece. The rest are from a studio.
the only country where cola isnt the best-selling drink is Scotland! we have IRNBRU!
Made from girrrrders.
Malta has Kinnie...
@@la-go-xy does out out sell cola?
My 4x great grandparents were Scottish, in American terms this makes me Scottish and entitled to be proud of Irnbru - made from girders!!!
@@geofrancis2001 You can get cola on Malta, but the locals prefer Kinnies, it seems. (I was just a tourist, though)
I get really fed up with Netflix, it's stuffed full of low budget American films, cheesy plots where you can predict the ending after 5 minutes of watching. I watched 'Shadowlands' for free on TH-cam last night, a very British film.
Good to see you are using that right, which at the moment is allowed ,of discrimination .
In other words ,your choice.
The internet allows content from all over the world, until some governments disallows it.
“The rest is entertainment “ podcast had an interesting discussion regarding American streaming services such as Netflix etc,having a problem with increasing revenue in the UK is that 90% of their content is available already on the 5 main channels I players for free.
I had Netflix for a short while but found it very ‘narrow’. The same old stuff churned out with different titles!
Canadians absolutely love travel and for many it’s a must, especially for so many seeking a respite from winter.
I’d much rather see the beautiful black and white European films than over the top over productions in Technicolor
Great job Joel keep soaking all that information up ❤
As a 52 year old Norwegian high school teacher, this is not just an US phenomena. It is a generational one. We did something wrong somewhere, and I'm sorry.
Yes, we thought working skills are enough to make a good society.
Free speech needs education. It needs knowing who to respond to individuality. It needs to train our way to interact, especially when there is conflict of interests and crisis, and so much more than math and physics. Language is paramount, but also what it means, how tho evaluate the content it conveys. Knowledge about its power on oneself and others. In France there is a song with the title: To Kill With Words! All that has so much to do with what happens in these last days of US elections.
humanity took a wrong turn when they decided that everyone is separate and the ego became the predominant trait of our consciousness. we were nothing before we were alive and we will return to that nothingness. nothingness is our natural state of being. the ego goes completely against this nothingness.
didn't norway called US underdeveloped country?
@@antcommander1367 Would be right! (If a "country" at all)
11:28 I took a minor in Film Studies about 20-ish years ago and the Hays Code (aka The Motion Picture Production Code) discussed during the portion on American Films (I believe we were watching The Big Sleep). I’m super grateful to that course of classes. I was introduced to some amazing films from all over the world and the discussion about the cultures that brought about them… I already had an interest and open mind, but that minor introduced me to things I would not have looked for myself nor even now been introduced to via an algorithm.
Hello Joel. I found folk in US great fun and hard working to the point they did not have time to care about more than getting by. The world should see how it is there before judging I reckon.
11:10 when the French film was talking , all I could hear was Catherine Tate Translator
I always like to say that the majority Americans have no interest in what happens beyond their county's/ city quarter's borders and you can see that on so many levels. Even some of my American friends who are well educated people baffle me with how little they know about what's going on in other regions even let alone elsewhere in the world...