I'm fascinated by all the comments regarding drinking in England UNDER the age of 18. I'm gonna talk about this on my livestream tomorrow night @ 8pm UK time...please join me if you can. I wanna learn more....
@@davidpaylor5666 I wouldn't say it's often 10% ABV, it's rarely 10% ABV. It's normally 5% ABV. Some scrumpy may be 10% ABV but unless you live in say, rural parts of Devon, you're unlikely to ever encounter it.
@@davidpaylor5666 On kids drinking booze with a meal at 16, it may be legal but these days it's hard to find a pub that will allow this. Especially chain pubs who have a blanket policy against it despite as you say it being legal. It's a bit like non-alcoholic beer which pubs refuse to sell to under 18s for fear they won't be able to tell if the kid starts drinking alcoholic beer instead.
It may be legal in certain situations but if you go into a pub and say it is a legal right for your child to drink alcohol with their meal you will most likely get a response like "Well it is our legal right to refuse service for any reason, good bye"
@@davidpaylor5666- the age is 16, not 13, and they can have wine, beer or cider legally, according to gov.uk. Wine is always over 10%, cider almost never is. I don't think I can remember going into a pub that sold a cider over 10%.
@Talkathon408 and if it's that strong (which it can be) most people will mix it with something else (eg lemonade) to dilute the awful taste (I spent large parts of my childhood on a farm in S Devon that had orchards and a cider press). The local pubs would serve shandy (50/50 mix) to most teenagers but nothing stronger until you could be said to look over 18 (15 in my case).
"Jaywalking" isn't simply crossing the road. It is crossing the road if that act contravenes traffic regulations. For instance, I once received a citation for crossing a road against the traffic light. It was in downtown Seattle, my bus was on the other side of the road about to leave, and so I ran across the intersection against the red light. Unfortunately, I didn't notice the police officer siting on his motorcycle in front of the bus.
I was taught by Nikolai Poliakovs, a friend of our family, most people knew him as "CoCo, the clown", although he was not really a clown, he was an "August".
@@TheHicksonDiaries The actor who played Darth Vader in the Original Star Wars Trilogy (David Prowse) was the 'Green Cross Code' man teaching young kids how to safely cross the road during the 'Stop, Look, Listen' campaign in the 70s.
And yet so often you see Americans bragging how proud they are that they live in the "land of the free" and acting as though they're the only country on the planet that has "freedom".... It drives me up the bloody wall !!! 🤷🤷
America is the only country that has laws that tell you what you are allowed to do, anything else is illegal. The UK has laws that tell you what you CAN'T do, anything else is perfectly legal.
Lived in the States for 26 years and, yes, they know very little about any other country and are speechless to hear there are many countries that have more freedom than they do. But then that is what they are taught at school. Allegiance to the flag ever morning. Brainwashed. I have 2 grandchildren, who are now adults and they know better. Saw us most weekend and learned a lot from us.
British hens have a dot matrix printer in their bottoms which puts the Best Before date, and sometimes a picture of a lion, on the eggs as they come out!
yeah I broke my wrist. went to urgent care. it was expensive im a brit living in the US. they told me to find a dr for a specialist. this would have cost thousands I fought through the pain I h ave recovered but I now have a deformed wrist. US SUCKS for healthcare. raised 3 kids here. medical bills have killed me
@@derekhough-jm9gc I’m sorry for you, but this is not the general experience. Serious illnesses in my family (some with cancer) have mostly been successfully treated on the NHS.
Jaywalking law makes sense in big cities like New York with wide multi-lane streets. Jaywalking would really slow down traffic flow. Jaywalking law applied to 2-lane streets, however - totally unnecessary.
@@timonsolus Agreed Jaywalking would slow down traffic flow. I'm not sure that would be such a bad thing, given how many people are killed on US streets.
@@timonsolus Don't even think its necessary in big cities. As previous posters have said you are an adult and should take responsibility to cross the road. I wouldn't try crossing a 6 lane road but I have seen people do it many times. I think they are bloody mad but each to their own it's a free country.
I can't believe 66 people actually gave you a thumbs up. The logic of your statement escapes me. But I understand the sentiment behind it. I think something less offensive to Americans, but still as illogical as your original comment, would be; You can be responsible for driving a car on the motorway at 16, but you cannot be trusted to cross a road. I'm also not sure the author of the video thought this through. There are no national laws covering the use of crosswalks in the US. They mostly exist at the local level. So by default there is no requirement to cross the road at a crosswalk unless your local government has passed an ordinance that requires it. The level of high speed vehicular traffic in the US is an order of magnitude greater than the UK. So crosswalks may have a greater value in the states. Now to the other stuff. With one exception, voting, which I think should be returned to 21, I probably agree with everything else. I think drinking, smoking, cannabis, and gambling should be lowered to 18. Most of these changes we're done at the behest of lobbying organizations and NGOs. The drinking age was moved from 18 to 21 because of the mothers against drunk driving lobby. They associated under 21 Drinking with more deaths, and convinced all the state legislatures to go along with it. Good luck getting them to change.
@@ShenandoahShelty my logic is im simply stating that you put so much importance in the US on silly things like not trusting people to cross roads or banning kinder eggs for fear of children choking but all these mass shootings an no one thinks of doing something about your guns so from where im standing its americans that have no logic the rest of us manage fine to cross roads or eat sweets without choking and dont have too worry if our children will come home from school without a bullet in their head 😡
@@ShenandoahShelty my logic is simple you are so bothered in america about silly things like crossing the road so you have a jaywalking rule or banning kinder eggs incase a child chokes but its ok to have all these mass shootings and no one seems bothered about trying to stop them 😡 so im sorry for stating a fact and you think i was being offensive to the USA but im glad i grew up in a truly free country where i can cross the rd where i like eat chocolate without choking and enjoyed going to school without worrying about gettin shot 😡😡
Isnt it better to add the tax so you are aware of the governmental theft that is being applied? For instance people here in the UK bitch about fuel prices all the time but I bet most people don't realize that half of what you are paying is tax.
I'd hate to have to fathom out what I'm going to have to actually pay when I get to the Checkout (esp as so me items are Tax exempt and some are not) - the UK system of (in most cases) showing final price with Tax included (where due) is much better.
The shop has to calculate all the relevant taxes on each item in order to pay the different tax authorities. If they do that anyway, it makes sense to do that calculation when pricing the item on the shelf. In some US states I believe it is illegal to do that - hence the tax-at-till problem.
@@kyj565 That happen a lot in England? Just go into someone else's backyard and stand around? Do you do that at night, too? On someone else's property? Kind of weird.
In the USA, trespass is a criminal offence but that does NOT mean that land owners have the right to dish out summary executions of trespassers. In England and Wales, trespass is a civil offence and the landowner would have to prove that you caused damage or annoyance. There are thousands of well-used but unofficial paths across private land. In Scotland, you can roam more or less were you please.
Finding another employee to cover your holiday days off? No chance, "hey, this is your company, you are responsible for your staffing, not me. I am just telling you when I won't be here so do one"
Lol, you absolutely can NOT demand a specified annual leave timeslot in the UK (or anywhere), obviously(!!!). If no one is off over that week/two weeks/whatever then it's likely you'll get that time slot. But, ffs lol, you can not demand it. It's normally 'first in, first served'. Eminently reasonable? No?
Another few things to add to the list. 1) In Britain it is quite normal to linger in restaurants. One is not pressured to eat up and go to make way for the next customers, or presented with the bill until it is requested. 2) Tipping is not obligatory or even expected for most customer services, unlike in the USA where tipping is almost de rigueur, as the wages paid to many in customer services is very low and they depend on tips to make up their wages. 3) Maternity leave and paternity leave. In Britain it is not unusual for women to take a full year for maternity leave, 39 weeks of which are paid. Fathers can take two weeks off following the birth of their child.
@@TheHicksonDiaries Also what on earth is that with putting all the babies together in the hospital? That's got to be the weirdest thing imaginable. I always thought those babies were in ICU (when you see it on TV) but it's just the norm right. Terrifying! I think every American must have some kind of infant trauma consequently.
@@rayaqueen9657 what? no, most babies room with the mother in the US. You must be looking at old movies or something. Yes there is a nursery in the Hospital, I would think even in the UK there would be which is where they run tests, store items, etc...
@@ridingtheroad185 no there's no nursery in a hospital in the UK. There's a special care unit for premature babies etc but that's an ICU type unit with incubators. That thing with all the babies in the same room somewhere away from the mums. I've only ever seen that in US TV. Like in Friends s7e24:17.12. (edit to remove spoiler).
I was in Georgia many years ago, about 2008 and i crossed this road and it was safe to do so. Just like i would in the UK. Then i heard these sirens and this cop comes tearing across the road and actually skids to a stop and gets out and starts yelling at me. He was going on about "Jaywalking", and i was like what on earth is jaywalking. Once he heard my accent he said "Your not from around here are you?". Err no, im from the UK, just over here on work. He just said Have a nice day, got in his car and drove off !. lol. Guess he could not be bothered with a foreigner.
Generally the NHS is pretty good, especially if you have a critical or serious condition. And it is free at the point of access. You don't get charged for an ambulance, you don't pay for childbirth etc. NHS dentists can be tricky to find, but private dental treatments are much much cheaper than the US.
It does work better when it's not deliberately starved of funding and the staff are worked to the bone. But, still proud of it, it's saved my life more than once.
I'm being treated for CKD in the NHS. Regular Doctor check ups with no time limit and lots of drugs for blood pressure and kidney functions. I've paid for it out of my taxes. No rip-off insurance companies.
It might be free at point of access but people are forgetting that we pay around 10% national insurance on top of income tax, we pay for the NHS through taxes.
@@olivertaylor4779 We do pay through taxation but we get much better value for money than typical private insurance-based systems. Plus, the risk is fully pooled through the population which distributes costs fairly.
More Egg Tips - If you look at UK egg shells, they'll have pink text printed directly on the egg. 1. The Lion: there will usually be a diagram of a lion, this indicates that the chicken that laid the egg has been vaccinated against salmonella. This also means that for the most part, your egg can be eaten raw, much like they do in Japan etc. 2. The origin: there will be a country code, almost always "UK" 3. The type: next to the origin code (UK) there will be a single digit; 0, 1, 2, or 3. 0 = organic, 1 = free range, 2 = barn reared, 3 = caged chickens.
Haha true! Uk public schools are funded by the public not the government, like state schools, is how explain that one. They are still in effect ‘private schools’ though, and some people in the UK do call them that.
Public schools and private schools are the same thing here in the UK. That's not at all confusing, is it? 🙂Rule-of-thumb is that Public Schools are the famous ones, like Eton or Roedean, and you don't have to live in the area (hence "public") ; Private Schools are the same sort of "No riff-raff" thing, but they're local, you do have to live nearby. Everything else is a State School. Something like that.
I think it goes back to the days when the gentry would have their children homeschooled by Tutors/ governesses then at a certain age send them away to school which then would public rather than at home.
@@jimdaw65 Actually, they're not or at least they were not in the past. That's why 'Public Schools' were so called i.e. they were open to students from the public even if there was a fee to be paid whereas a 'Private' School was as the name denotes 'Private' i.e. It was not open to students from the public suggesting perhaps it could only be attended by those who were invited. Public schools were so called for very good reason. Today as you point out, the two have become confused. If I go back say 50 years I can say with 100% certainty that 99% of British people would have referred to fee paying schools in the UK as 'Public Schools' (of which incidentally there are thousands). It's also important to note that a 'Private' School by virtue of the name suggests that it cannot be joined. Language is interesting. I certainly know many British people (mostly older generation) who would not be clear on what type of school you went to if you said you attended a private school whereas if you said you had attended a public school they would have a clear understanding of what you meant. 'English' English is increasingly being influenced by 'American' English due to the overwhelming influence of American TV entertainment (movies, TV series etc). Hence...... we British can understand American English very well but the reverse isn't necessarily true. The British are quite forgiving in conversation and take terms within context and don't typically challenge them i.e. If an American referred to a private school then there's a good chance British person would assume they meant a Public School.
Here`s another. You are not, nor ever have been, obliged to carry any form of ID on your person or in your car. (We do not have ID cards in the UK). Nor are you obliged to have any documents such as car insurance etc in your car when driving.
Actually that's not strictly true. In the UK a police officer can request to see your licence, your insurance certificate and MOT certificate at any time, and if you can't you could be issued a producer to present yourself at a police station with whichever item(s) you did not have on you at the time. Failing to do that could then result in a fine and points on your licence.
@@Please_allow_me Sorry, you're wrong - you are not obliged to carry these documents in the vehicle. Yes, producing them at a later stage is perfectly acceptable but you don't have to have them with you when you drive..
@@olderwiser8347 Did you even read my reply to the original comment? I never said you *have* to. The OP stated you're not obliged to carry them, when the truth is you are to an extent, because failure to do so means you may have to produce them at a station, whereby failure to do that may result in legal action taken against you. Obliged in this case doesn't mean by law, just that simply you're strongly advised to do so and that it is your personal responsibility to ensure you have them on you, as failure to do so can ultimately lead to legal action *eventually*. The Gov.uk website specifically states you must provide be able to show any of the mentioned documents if requested by a police officer if you have been seen driving a vehicle, but just because you don't have them at that time doesn't necessarily mean a penalty will be issued there and then (refer to section 164 and 165 of the road traffic act if you must) . But there are definitely cases where failing to provide any of those documents may result in the vehicle being seized off a driver if the police officer really does suspect that the driver is driving without license, isn't insured to drive that vehicle, or that the vehicle does not have a valid MOT and the driver cannot prove otherwise. If the police officer has other means to negate this, then they may send the person on their way, or give the driver a producer. In short, drivers are obliged (though not legally) to have the right documentation with them when the drive otherwise any consequences would be there own doing.
@@Please_allow_me You are either required to carry them or you are not. Being required to produce them later is something else entirely. There is no `some extent`. Muddle headed nit picking does not get you out of it.
@@Please_allow_meMOT-Paperfree, available online, Insurance-Paperfree, available online, Road duty-online only. The only thing that can’t be checked automatically from a camera is that the driver is licensed (and named for insurance)
in UK f you’re under 18, it’s against the law: for someone to sell you alcohol to buy or try to buy alcohol for an adult to buy or try to buy alcohol for you to drink alcohol in licensed premises (such as a pub or restaurant) However, if you’re 16 or 17 and accompanied by an adult, you can drink (but not buy) beer, wine or cider with a meal.It’s illegal to give alcohol to children under 5.
I came here to make that distinction :D (further distinction: the obligation is on the person selling the alcohol, not buying - i.e. no 16/17 year old would be prosecuted for buying booze, it's the shop selling it to them who would be charged - ditto an adult procuring it for them; there are a few further subtleties when it comes to parents of teenagers allowing them to drink small quantities of low-alcohol products)
Re : Jaywalking. It's very simple. In the UK the pedestrian comes first and - even ON A ROAD - it's the driver's job NOT to kkll them (unless they just jump out in front of a moving vehicle and the driver stands no chance!) In the US the almighty car comes first! That says a lot about the two countries !!
What is interesting is that if you watch street scenes from the UK in the early 20th century there are people in the roadway and the vehicles move around them. Nowadays there is a presumption that a car can just drive at a pedestrian and they need to get out of the way. This even happens on pavements when a motorist decides they want to park on the pavement. Despite this it is still better for pedestrians to be in control of when to cross a road as we do in the UK. It is about empowering people to look after their own safety.
In the UK, there are some crossings in city centres which are signed 'Pedestrians do not have right of way'. This is complete bollocks. The only place where this is true is on a Motorway.
Jaywalking was an invention of the motor industries in the US to demean pedestrians hit by cars. Jay was quite literally a term like ‘idiot’ or ‘moron’, placing the fault of road accidents on the road crosser rather than the driver. In most of the world the driver is responsible since if you weren’t paying attention to the sides of the road you weren’t paying enough attention
Jaywalking, a law introduced by the American motor car lobbyists as they thought pedestrian accidents reflected badly on their brands. Annual leave, I'm in the UK and still check with the rest of the team that I'm ok to take dates off and it won't clash with themselves. I don't have children so generally avoid taking leave off during school holidays as my colleagues with children have more right during those dates (this is my choice rather than company mandated).
You may notice that prices go UP during school holidays, so if you can travel at other times it may be cheaper. Plus fewer pesky kids getting underfoot!
In the UK if you want to go to the toilet, you can say "I want to go to the toilet". In the US everyone gets embarrassed and avoids that by talking about rest rooms etc. Considering that per the same population the US has 5 times the UKs homicide rate. I think Americans are offended by the wrong thing.
Yet when you go to the “rest room” their cubicles gave massive gaps in the door so people can see your underwear round your ankles or peep through the massive gaps between the door and frame. Isn’t that more embarrassing than calling it a toilet? 🤷
Toilet is a euphemism from French toilette. It means ‘ little towel’ Lavatory means ‘washing place’ so bathroom and restroom are just as much euphemisms.
The construct 'Blahblah County' does not exist in British English. Most counties end in -shire and those that do not are just known to be counties, like Kent or Somerset. If you want to emphasise that you are talking about Kent as an administrative unit, then, "The County of Kent" would be used. In Ireland it is the exact opposite usage to the US, County Cork, rather than Cork County.
@@Volcano-Man The exception, that proves the rule. It's just because the city and county have the same name. It used to be the County Palatine of Durham, ruled by the Prince-Bishop of Durham.
@@Volcano-Man "Of the palace". I live in the County Palatine of Lancaster. Palatine counties were created in border regions or regions of uncertain loyalty and their earls (or bishop in the case of Durham) were given close to vice-regal powers. Chester was an early palatine county, situated on the Welsh border. Lancaster was given to Edmund Crouchback, the brother of Edward I. On the death of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, his heiress married John of Gaunt, son of Edward III. When Gaunt's son, Henry of Bollingbroke, became king the Duchy and County Palatine of Lancaster returned to royal possession, where it has remained ever since.
Somerset was Somersetshire but over time the shire was dropped, Dorsetshire and Devonshire are still in common usage. Shire counties have a Sheriff now just a ceremonial position and no longer enforces the law.
I once worked in a shop in York, England. Looking at some of our stock an American tourist said "Hey we don't see stuff like this back home in the US." I said "Well, that particular item is made in Amarillo, Texas." He replied "Amarillo? Really? Hey, we do our weekly grocery shop there, its just 80 miles away." I thought "WHAAAAAT?!"
@@TheRealRedAce Texan here. Amarillo is in the panhandle, and while the city is large, there are a LOT of farms and ranches in that general area, and likely that's why the guy was doing the grocery shopping so far away. Much of Texas is sparsely populated (particularly West Texas). Most small towns have grocery stores, but it might be that this guy's family preferred one of the larger supermarkets "in town" (aka Amarillo). The worst thing here is that we have pretty crappy public transportation outside of Dallas (I'm not sure of the situation in Houston). I live near Austin, and voters keep voting down public transport measures because they don't want to have to pay the taxes to fund them. It's ridiculous. People are so wedded to their cars here.
If you are coming to the UK on holiday - please take out travel insurance- the NHS is residence based - if you do not live in the UK you will be charged for hospital treatment outside of Accident & Emergency. If you do not have travel insurance you will need to pay and arrange repatriation yourself. If you are planning to stay in the UK over six months you can pay the immigration health surcharge which will exempt you from hospital charges.
The immigrants' health tax is £1035 per person per year now, payable in advance (£776 for students) when you apply for a visa for more than six months, unless you are a refugee (etc). You must pay even if you have private health insurance as well. People coming to work in the NHS have to pay too, whether or not they use the service themselves.
@@benh715 It is true. In theory, anyway. The problem is that almost no-one in the NHS will ask a sick or injured patient if they're a UK citizen. And even if they did, absolutely no-one in the NHS knows the procedure for filling out an invoice (except for three guys in an office somewhere, who've never even seen a patient). As a result, almost nothing that ought to be paid or ever is paid for.
@@lomax343 I am an Overseas Patients Officer - reports are run and anyone without an NHS number or new NHS number sent a Attendance Form to complete and these are followed up by telephone calls and emails - but our information is only as good as the records taken by the medical team. Patient’s from Europe are covered for necessary treatment by their EHIC (UK citizens can obtain a GHIC - we also have reciprocal agreements with a number of countries. We are now visiting admitted patients and we give them estimated invoices which indicate the possible costs of their treatment and allows them to start a claim with an insurer. Immediately necessary treatment is undertaken. I asked my manager once about how many invoices are paid and he said about 25%.
Nice Video - great job. Obviously I am Brit and have worked for my company for 30+ years. I have 28 days vacation per year, only have to go into the office 2 days per week (WFH for the rest), finish work on Friday’s at 1pm. Work-life balance is so important for continued good performance. Only having 2 weeks p.a. Vacation seems like exploitation of workers to me. I couldnt work like that - it’s almost Victorian.
I worked at Unilever for a Global Marketing Team in London and it was much the same. Work was busy and stressful, the benefits and work life balance was worth it.
Coming towards the end of the year my HR Department e-mailed me to say "John, you have 8 (out of 33) days to take for holidays left before the the end of the month you must take them" I said "can I carry them forward?".. they said "No, if you do not use them the you lose them".... needless to say I took the 8 days holiday off a week later
In the UK they are obliged to either carry them forward or pay you in lieu. It is the employers choice (it'll be in your contract) but they cannot just wipe them out like that.
Hi David I concur, if you are not going to able to take all your holidays your employer will give you the cash difference. It would be carnage for a company if everyone tried to carry over unused holidays.
It’s not that you can jaywalk here in uk. It’s just the we are allowed to cross our roads if we think it’s safe to do so. Ridiculous law. ‘Mericans are so free free.
It gets more complicated here in Australia. We have rules against something we call jaywalking, but what we mean by it is not taking the shortest route to cross the road - crossing diagonally, basically. As long as you walk straight across a single road (not diagonally across the road, and not diagonally across an intersection i.e. two roads at once) it's fine.
This principle was recently reinforced in the Highway Code with its Heirarchy of Road Users, which put Pedestrians First , then Horses, then Cyclists, then Motorists very much last.
The bank that I used to work for in the UK insisted that all employees take a two week leave of absence at least once a year, as a fraud prevention measure. The thinking being was that if you were defrauding the bank you would not be able to cover your tracks for that length of time. And it worked, a longstanding colleague I knew was sacked upon his return from holiday as it was found out during those two weeks that he had been stealing from customers. It was a great policy as everyone was 'forced' to take a leisurely vacation plus we had another three weeks off and public holidays on top of that.
I can vouch for the two-week forced holiday as I worked in The City for a dozen years or so... whilst I understood the reason behind it, I'd be going stir crazy by the second week.
The civil service used to insist that employees had two weeks leave together once a year to rest properly and be less likely to fall ill and have time off sick.
Refrigerating British eggs doesn't damage them but once refrigerated they have to stay refrigerated until you eat them because when you take them out of the fridge water gas in the air will condensate on them causing damage to the protective cuticle.
Never heard of that. All my life here in England, I’ve kept 6 eggs out in a pot on the counter and another 6 in the fridge. Sure there is a little condensation on the shells when I take them out of the fridge to refill my pot, but I’ve never had a bad egg from either practice.
@@verenamaharajah6082 You're right, it's unlikely that the eggs will go bad if you work in a clean environment and, besides that, all EU chickens have to be immunised against salmonella so the risks are reduced further.
The age limit for consuming alcohol in the UK is 5 years old. However you can't purchase alcohol until you are 18 years old. There are restrictions on spirits and the wine or beer has to be served in a designated restaurant area with a food order. Cheers😊😊
The egg thing.. the reason that the FDA says to wash your eggs is because the chickens that lay them are kept in absolutely vile conditions (to the point that they have to chlorine wash chickens after slaughter to make it safe for consumption) whereas in the UK they're not. They're kept relatively well in the UK (and the significant majority of the world), so no chlorine wash required to make the meat safe to for consumption, and no egg washing required to make those safe for consumption either.
Things that You Can’t Do in America but are OK in England 1) Keeping your opinions to yourself 2) Keeping your political affiliation to yourself 3) Own a house without 40 flags in/around it 4) Knocking on a neighbours door at any time of day/night 5) Talking quietly 6) Getting out of your car when stopped by the Police 7) Have friends with a different skin colour to your own 8) Actually learning things in school 9) Knowing both the Imperial and Metric systems (and being able to convert between them) 10) Not screaming at the telly during sports events
Regularly used to take month off to go on holiday - wonderful! A US firm once couldn't believe they were being (bluntly) turned down during an interview due to their stingy leave entitlement....
The only roads you’re not allowed to walk across are the Motorways, for obvious reasons, or if there’s a sign on a road saying otherwise( which I’ve never seen yet). Regarding time off work, Europeans say that ‘we work to live’ whereas Americans’live to work’ which seems to be true unfortunately.
American AND many UK EMPLOYERS think we all live to work! Its the workers who don't agree! The difference being in the UK, the employers don't get it all their own way.
The US is ridiculous, freedom my a... In Australia we have long service leave in addition to annual leave after 10 years of service, where you can take 13 weeks (accumulating) off at any time. Also if you have more than 8 weeks (2 years entitlement) of leave up your sleeve you are required to take time off, by law. Your 'benefits' are our entitlements, complete failure of a country.
As young children our parents usually gave us a small glass of wine with the evening meal. It was no big deal and when we were old enough to drink in Pubs (etc) there wasn't any sudden desire to rush and consume copious amounts of alcohol.
I live in the UK and used to work in Germany. It was common there to take three weeks at once for your annual vacation. If you tried to take less than two weeks then management became suspicious that you may have something to hide. Smaller UK companies are often very flexible about time off. I would take long weekends (Friday and the following Monday) then "use up" my entitlement at the end of the year, often quitting halfway through December and returning in January.
Back in the mid-1980s, I was a student visiting Washington D.C. and I got stopped by a Police Officer for Jaywalking. I think that I was crossing the road in Georgetown and I suddenly heard a man shouting "Yo!" very loudly. I turned around and realised that it was a Police Officer and he was calling for me. As I recall, he was a huge African-American man who seemed to be clinical ly obsese. I went over to him, and he got quite irate and mentioned that I had committed an offence called "Jaywalking". I was exceptionally polite to him and turned up the English accent, and he let me go. As I was speaking to him, he said "Oh, you're foreign...". Without thinking, I replied "No, no, I'm British." For years after, I found that instinctive and entirely spontaneous comment funny. Anyway, he figured that as I was "foreign" I couldn't be blamed for knowing the local laws. So, that was that.
In and around Orlando (the one in Florida, in case there's another one) they are so used to having visitors from across Europe that they don't really bother about Jaywalking. They actually have pavements/footpaths along both sides of most of the roads in the area (International Drive is a good example of this) and I've crossed a 4+ lane road, just by a police car and the police barely looked in my direction.
@@Thurgosh_OGIn 1992 I was in Orlando for the World SF Convention. One morning I walked along International Drive, to the Orange County Convention Center from the hotel where I was staying. I was told I was nuts by all the Americans I met.
In Australia, public schools are the free state-government-operated schools, and the private schools are the independent non-government schools that you have to pay to attend.
@@claymor8241 it's not a quirk.they are open to all of the public,if they ca afford the fees ,state schools norhad a catchment area ,therefore were not . The catchment areas have been dropped in some areas more recently.
My husband took 4 weeks annual leave last year for his holiday. His responsibility was to apply for leave well in advance to help the MANAGER arrange cover for him. His contact of employment doesn't give automatic right to such a lengthy leave but as he applied well in advance his manager sorted out cover. No issues! He gets 25 days leave a year, plus bank holidays and Flexi leave. His company offered him the option of buying more leave days but he could manage without having to that, especially as he got 12 days Flexi leave last year on top of his 25 days annual leave and the statutory bank holidays.
Worth pointing out that, you can go for private healthcare - but, when there's an unexpected issue or emergency, they'll pass it on to the NHS to sort out. It's the same doctors who work in both, but not the same facilities - generally the NHS can do anything, but particularly emergency care.
Yes,and many private hospitals do not have ICU care. Many a time my hospital ended up taking patients post surgery from a private hospital into our ICU when there had been a surgical complication.
Good video. About medical care, my understanding is that even private medical care in the UK is much less expensive than in the US. And of course medicines are usually cheaper, even basic over the counter products. Prescription medicines have a standard charge, which many people are exempt from paying (due to age or means), but anyone can make an annual prepayment which will cover all prescriptions for a year, for about £110. This makes sense because it encourages people to take those prescribed medicines, which helps to prevent some conditions getting worse. It can be hard to get a face to face doctor's appointment but I have found that my local doctors' surgery will do a phone appointment the same day (they don't make advance appointments usually now).
I once looked up what an appendectomy costs here in the UK, done privately. About £4k. I gather that’s about one tenth of the medical insurance excess charge that you’d anyway have to pay in the US. Private medical care has to be good and cost effective here because if it wasn’t no one would use it at all.
Brits have no idea how good they have got it, So true about holidays in the states, the national average here for holidays is 2 weeks. I used to work for a major corporation, I was always made to feel guilty when having a week off. In the past 47 years I've only had three weeks holiday in one calendar year Once, Id earned that after being with the company 8 years, the very next year the company was sold and the rules changed, that's how you keep people down.
towards the end of the calendar year, my boss will remind people to get the rest of their holidays booked in so we all don't end up having to take all of March off, to use them up. I get 8 bank holidays, 25 days paid leave and they give us a free 'rest and recouperation' day off as well. think we can also buy additional days off / unpaid leave... and we can also carry over a maximum of five days to the following year if we don't use them all.
Actually, we do know how lucky we are and feel great sympathy for our American cousins who are treated so abysmally by their government and big business.
My husband is a senior product executive with a software company here in the US. He's been working there for over 10 years. I'm not sure what his allowed vacation time is these days (3 weeks?), but he rarely takes all of it, never more than a week at a time, and is constantly checking back in even while "relaxing" on vacation, keeping up with projects, what's said in meetings, even sometimes joining an important meeting while on vacation. This week his elderly parents in another state needed help with something, so he flew out there on Thursday night, and said, "I really hate to miss a whole workday on Friday". He's not a workaholic. This is just the culture. It makes me really sad because he's always under work stress. I so wish we could move to the UK.
Jaywalking laws vary a bit around the uk. When I visited Northern Ireland a few years ago I was informed that jaywalking isn’t permitted there. Mind you that was 25 years ago and I could be mistaken. In England the idea is that the motor car is a parvenu, pedestrians have always had the liberty to cross the road wherever so it’s the motorist’s responsibility to watch out for pedestrians. That’s clearly impossible at times but that’s why you are allowed to cross the road anywhere. (Except probably in Northern Ireland)
My parents were products of the 40s. For 3 or 4 years, my dad had a local that he would visit pretty much every night to drink. After the 3 or 4 years, he went in and let the landlord of the pub know that today was his birthday. The landlord congratulated him and asked what age he was now. My dad answered '18'. 😆 Yeah, underage drinking is frowned upon, but has been a thing for a very long time!
When I was a kid, I thought "jaywalking" meant crossing the street naked! I knew it was something about crossing the street, and I had always heard "naked as a jaybird". So, naturally, crossing the street naked would be illegal.
The UK laws regarding drinking of alcohol are more complicated, and yet simple enough. It isillegal for under 5's to drink alcohol (altjough, that said, traditional gripe water was very alcoholic). Between ages 5 and 18 you can drink alcohol on private premises. Between 16 and 18 you can drink beer, cider or wine in a licensed premises if accompanied by an adult and you are eating. Between 5 and 16 you can enter a licensed premises, but not drink alcohol, if accompanied by an adult.
@@TheHicksonDiaries LLLOL I have not searched online to see if it still exists or what it contains today, if it does exist....... Gripe water was something given to young babies that would not settle, babies that sort of grizzled (that is sort of soft crying, being upset for no obvious reason). It was very nice - I remember having a spoonful when I was just a few years old when my youngest brother was just months old. It was actually quite high in alcohol (the exact % will be online somewhere), and slightly sweet. There were always tales of how some young mothers with awkward babies became alcoholics via gripe water - some tales may even have been true 😯 My mother was born around a hundred years ago, and the other thing she used to passify an unsettled baby was cinder water - take a hot coal from a fire and drop into water, and then sweeten slightly.
@@TheHaighus It is a thing in the UK, but not alcoholic. Hunting around online, I can find no reference to cot death, indeed, cot death is so rare that anyone would struggle to link it to anything.
There’s a very funny piece on TH-cam of Michael McIntyre on the Johnathan Woss show (I can’t bring myself to call him Ross) talking about how Americans need help understanding English words e.g. for years Americans had no idea what to do with spectacles. They called them ‘glasses’ and had no idea where to put them they found them useless on their thighs or shoulders until they started calling them ‘eyeglasses’. Similarly with the piece of a roadway set aside for people to walk along. When the Americans used the British term “pavement” there were so many of them injured in horrible accidents because the Americans didn’t know what those areas were set aside for. So they’d walk all over the place until they gave them a name that the Americans could understand “sidewalk” There are lots more of these. Michael McIntyre is very funny and has a great time with Mr Woss at the Americans expense
But let's be fair about someone being from another English-speaking country that has different names for things and has grown up calling them that. I'm an American, and we have friends here from the UK who use the Scottish/English terms for things still, after 15 years here, and we don't correct them or point out that they said the wrong thing. It's okay, we know what they mean (and if we don't, we ask, and the next time we know what they mean).
3:01 While the admissions process makes it a bit more complicated, you CAN send your kids to school in a different county in the UK. Some of the kids at my kids' school (in England) even come from Wales each day.
Eggs. Once they have been in the fridge, they must stay in the fridge. Taking them out allows condensation on the surface which washes off the protective layer.
Same as new Zealand. We have state funded health care but you can also have private health care. I had a job where they provided insurance where you could reclaim all costs of f doctors visits and charges for medication,
I use both NHS and private, but the key point here is - From what I hear, US private health care is way more expensive than British private health care, and there seems to be a lot of wheeling and dealing with your insurance.!!
You can also accidentally be seen by a specialist, or at a hospital not covered by your plan, ending in a life changing bill you need to negotiate over. If an ambulance is involved, you might have no control over where you’re taken. You might also find your condition isn’t covered. US health cover is often paid by employers for some reason, which causes a whole other set of issues. There is really no such thing as medical bankruptcy in England. Use the health system as you need, there is never a bill.
@@garyfreeman896 That’s not really a thing here. Everyone is equally entitled to healthcare and nobody is denied treatment, or sent home to die. That’s exactly what happens to tens of thousands of US citizens every year. Uninsured, incorrect coverage etc. Medical bankruptcy in the the US runs at over 1/2 million PER YEAR! That is 66% of all bankruptcy 😢 Those are official US stats, not something I’ve made up. It’s a world wide embarrassment that such a wealthy country lets this happen.
@@DontPanicDear I am from 'here' and there is no shortage of failures by the NHS. People die and suffer all the time due to our over stretched and badly managed NHS. And when it comes to embarrassing consider being forced to pay high taxes with the threat of prison if you don't pay just to get entered into the health care lottery. Both are heavily flawed.
Most people working for an employer in the UK will be getting an annual leave entitlement of about 30 working days and many employers will insist that people take at least one block of leave of 10 days, which including weekends will be 2 weeks. The last job that I had prior to retirement a couple of years ago gave us a leave entitlement of 36 working days. This was because it was a public sector job, linked to Civil Service pay scales. We went for a number of years without any pay rises so instead we were given additional leave days. If you didn't use all of your leave in the year you could carry over a maximum of 9 days into the next year. Due to COVID and the fact that a lot of leave wasn't used while we were working from home my leave entitlement in my last year was 45 days (9 weeks off) which I took just prior to retirement so I was out of the office from April and came back on the day of my retirement in June to hand back my laptop and ID pass. Much to the dismay of my colleagues as I managed to avoid any kind of handover exercise.
How long do you have to work there for 30 days off? In my last job in the US it increased the longer you worked for the company. By 24 years, I worked my way up to 140 hours of vacation for that year.
@@davidroddini1512 How much time off you have in the UK has less to do with how log you've worked there as it has with how high up your rank is in the company. Your boss will always get more than you do.
@@davidroddini1512 When I first started working in industry during the late 1970s our basic leave allowance was 20 days, which would raise in increments of an extra day for every 5 years served. My next employer in industry started me with 25 days leave which again rose in increments upto a maximum of 30 days. I then got a job in the public sector where my pay was linked to the Civil Service pay scales. My leave on joining was 25 days which accumulated 1 day per year upto 30 days after which the leave increase was 1 day every 5 years. We then had a period where public sector workers didn't get any pay rises but got extra leave in lieu of pay rises so I ended up with 36 days leave each year for my last 6 years including the couple of years of remote working from home during the COVID restrictions.
Before I retired, here in the UK, I worked in adult education, and there were three 10-week terms in a year (plus a little bit of work needed outside of term time) so I had about 20 weeks holiday a year!
If you live in Kent, which is a big area as many counties are, you don’t get to pick any school for your kids, there are catchment areas within the counties which your child can go to a school in. You are sometimes able to send them out of the catchment area but not miles away, Kent from top to bottom would take at least 2+ hours to travel which would be ridiculous and, unless you moved, your child wouldn’t get in a school that far away. Our eggs aren’t washed and have display and use by dates on the boxes but keeping them for months on the side or in the fridge would not be a good idea 🤢, I also would not keep them right by the cooker. ❤
It is possible to attend a state school outside the county/local authority you live in. This is particularly so when you live near a county boundary, where the nearest school may well be across the border.
You do not have to send children to a school within the catchment area, you can express a preference for other local schools. You don't really have a choice. If you live in a school catchment area and the school is full, you will probably be given a place in a nearby school.
Every year I always took 5 weeks leave in 2 tranches - 1 x 3 weeks (to go abroad) and 1 x 2 weeks for UK local holiday destination! Also had the days off between Xmas and NY, so effectively another 10 day break (for cost of 3 days leave because of the 3 Bank Holidays and weekend days). I can't imagine only going away for 1 week at a time! It takes me a few days just to stop thinking about work! I also never "touch base" with work while on leave. No work phone or laptop. They're dead to me during that time! ☠
My observation is that like most Americans, you seem to be using "England" to represent the whole of the UK (or at least Britain). All these things apply in Wales, N Ireland and Scotland just the same as England.
I’m doing my best to represent what I know and not presume. Since I’ve only lived near in England for about a year, and no where else in the UK I’m trying my best to keep my observations within that tight sphere until I can speak confidently about the same situations in other parts of the UK.
@TheHicksonDiaries Jaywalking is illegal in Northern Ireland. The school placing systems are different in each part of the UK. Otherwise I think this list is true UK wide.
Eggs breathe as they are coveredin open pores, washing a dirty egg is just going to force that dirt in through the pores of the egg, contaminating then. So rule of thumb if them come from a normal shelf don't put in your fridge but if they came chilled, same thing happens as they warm up anything on surface is sucked in, so in the fridge if already chilled
It is possible, in the States, if you're a prepper or a homesteader, to take advantage of peak laying season and put away your unwashed eggs in big jars or tubs (stacked on layers of straw) with tight lids, and store them in the cellar with potatoes, carrots, canning and so on. They will keep for months.
I 🏴 do put my eggs in the fridge to keep them fresher and it does recommend it on most of the boxes. If you are going to use some the next day you can always put a few out the night before to let them come up to room temperature. I still used mine straight from the fridge though most of the time. Living here, have you noticed that despite Webster altering the spelling of words and making them shorter, in general most of our daily words in English English, are much shorter? Refrigerator - fridge, elavator - lift, airplane - plane, sidewalk - path, restroom - bog 😁
@@mietekpadowicz2118 Webster altered the way many words were spelt (but US uses spelling 😄) and made them shorter but in general we don't arse about and just use short words for the same thing, so...restroom/bathroom 'bog/WC' 😁 Elevator ‘lift’, dumpster ‘skip’, trash can ‘bin’, waste paper basket ‘bin’, vehicle ‘car’, sidewalk ‘path’, airplane ‘plane’, parking lot ‘car park’, Trump ‘fart’, bicycling ‘cycling’, horseback riding ‘horseriding/riding’, faucet ‘tap’, restroom ‘toilet’, sweater ‘jumper’, French fries ‘chips’, pitcher ‘jug’, intersection ‘crossroads’, underwear ‘pants’ diaper ‘nappy’, suspenders, ‘braces’, vacation ‘holiday’, learned ‘learnt’, spelled ‘spelt’, dreamed ‘dreamt’, check ‘bill’, couch ‘sofa’, cell phone ‘mobile’, flashlight ‘torch’, apartment ‘flat’, cotton candy ‘candyfloss’, pacifier ‘dummy’, trunk ‘boot’, crib ‘cot’, drugstore ‘chemist’, washcloth ‘flannel’, broiler ‘grill’, counterclockwise ‘anticlockwise’, bookstore ‘bookshop’, movie theater ‘cinema’, movie ‘film’, package ‘parcel’, rutabega ‘swede’, fanny pack ‘bumbag’, scotch tape ‘sellotape’, zipper ‘zip’, Obviously there are exceptions such as soccer ‘football’, fall ‘autumn’, pants ‘trousers’, hood ‘bonnet’, meridian ‘central reservation’ closet ‘wardrobe’, line ‘queue’ but not many at all in English 🏴 compared to American English.
5:54 legally if your family are having a meal in a public house, children can drink alcohol at 16 but not purchase it from the bar an over 18 has to go to the bar to order them
About the eggs thing. Eggs in the US have to be washed by law. Eggs in Europe cannot be washed (the main reason why they arent exported/imported). The reason for this is the higher standard of husbandry in Europe, thanks mainly to EU regulations. Hens, when they lay, leave a protective coating on their eggs that forms a barrier to nasties that might make you ill.
Taking leave here in NZ is legally enforced, not the employee, but management is responsible to make sure that it is taken and failure to do so can result in legal action. Before I retired I had an entitlement of four weeks leave a year plus statutory holidays such as Christmas, Boxing Day, the Easter Holidays, Anzac Day, Waitangi Day etc. With this entitlement I was able to take several overseas holidays of more than a month with no need to maintain any contact with my place of employment, not difficult to do with effective management. Like the UK we have a national healthcare system, also a mixed system but the private insurances are far cheaper than the US models as they are usually, if not all, cooperatives, with no requirement to make a profit and no need not cover long term, providing cover for procedures such as hip replacements, heart surgery etc. and the surgeons providing these services are usually the same as those contracted to the public system so standards are high. Long term care is undertaken by the public system.
It is ‘ the county of Kent’. Kent county is an Irish word order which passed to the USA. The King’s formal representative in the county is the ‘Lord Lieutenant of the County of Kent’.
Americans can thank the organization MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) for the drinking age being 21 here. In most states, it was 21 from the end of Prohibition (1933) to the Vietnam War era (late 1960s/early 1970s), though in New York State it was 18, and some states had lower drinking ages for beer and/or wine. The age at which you were considered an adult was also 21. Most states changed the age of adulthood to 18 due to arguments that it was unfair that 18 year olds could literally be sent to their death (war) but not have full legal rights. Many (but not all) states lowered the drinking age at the same time, but it was a hodgepodge. Some states were 18, some 19, some 20, some 21. IIRC, in some counties in Wisconsin, it was 17 for beer. This encouraged young people to drive to other states with lower drinking ages, get drunk, and drive home. MADD lobbied for a consistent drinking age throughout the US. It was easier to pressure the states to raise it to 21 than to lower it. Technically, it is a state matter, but any state which lowers their drinking age will lose precious federal highway funds. (BTW, you are not considered an adult at 18 in every state. In Alabama and Nebraska, you have to be 19, and in Mississippi you have to be 21.)
Good to see you've got a KETTLE. Every English kitchen has one - for making cups of tea, which should be drank with a splash of milk. (Sugar is optional).
This was really interesting, thank you, I was always amazed that Americans had less holiday allowance knowing they work such long hours most of the time but I think there are maybe more public holiday days allocated? no comparison, but our American friends definitely make the most of those! The eggs thing is a new to me 😁 and the volume of eggs you guys eat always amazes me! Maybe I’ll eat more you don’t look a day over 18!😊. All the best to you, glad to have you here. 🥰🏴🇬🇧
Thx so much appreciate it. We don’t have any more public holidays than are here in England (not sure if it’s the same in the rest of the UK). And thx for the sweet compliments…
The “original” schools were for monks only. Then schools were made “public” to rich families - public schools were actually private for rich people. Hence why PRIVATE schools are called PUBLIC. State schools are the FREE ones
Under age drinking in pubs🍷🍻 ! No publican ( a person who runs a bar or pub) in the UK will knowingly serve under age drinkers since they will be liable for a considerable fine or even lose their license to operate. It does happen.
It strikes me that in the United States people are overly fussy about some things and it's sometimes things that really aren't that important but if you don't adhere to some crazy law you could well find yourself in serious trouble. The law surrounding payment for healthcare is the one that probably frustrates me the most. It sounds like by getting ill, if that weren't already stressful enough that the US government in their infinite wisdom insists that you pay the bill. I mean what actual use is the US government? Having said that I guess it's in-keeping with the US ideology of Work & money first, life second. Sure glad I am not in the United States or Canada.
I keep eggs both on the counter & in the fridge - usually I have a dozen (12) eggs in a ceramic egg tray on the counter, any additional eggs are on egg racks in the fridge (at present I have 13), but as I usually use 2 to 4 a day, I replace room-temperature eggs from the counter tray with eggs from the fridge. I always buy free range eggs, either from the supermarket or occasionally a local farm shop (I live in a small British town with adjacent farms & a couple of convenient farm shops).
It's common in the US for doctors to charge a co-pay, usually about $25 to $40, for some kinds of office visits. It doesn't have to be paid in cash, though. (There's usually also a co-pay for prescription medicines.) While I understand you might see some advantages in nobody paying anything, requiring a small payment does cut down on the number of people scheduling in-person doctor visits when a phone call would do as well, and makes appointments easier to get when you need them.
Nice to see that when you use the word England, you have the English flag (St Georges cross), but the item you mention are universal to the whole of the Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) and United Kingdom (which includes Northern Ireland) ~
Jfi, we don’t say ‘ Kent County’ it’s just Kent, for example, all brits will know exactly where that is,. The NHS here is actually privatised, just like doctors surgeries, most UK citizens don’t know but it’s true...if you use it’s services as a visitor, your get billed if you don’t have insurance
@@TrevM0nkey You are correct. The NHS also sometimes contracts with the Private Health Care organisations for high volume, quick turn over surgery or diagnostics. It helps with waiting lists.
When you go to a private hospital you will be asked if you have insurance and their clearance, otherwise its money up front, often when an appointment is made. Otherwise with the NHS it's all free. I had an operation to rejoin the tendons in my finger and the only thing that was said was try not to do it again!
Another is pathways in the countryside. Whilst out hiking in the UK, public pathways will often go through farmlands and private land. Yesterday I was hiking and went through two farm fields, one containing cows, the other containing sheep. Apparently that would never happen in the US.
Choosing the school to send your kids is a joke. The political idea here is that parents will want to send their children to the better performing schools. The poorer-performing schools then have to improve to get more students. As a parent I want all my local schools to be excellent and not have to faff around with "school league tables". In other words, invest in the schools!
I don't think ANY of them in the UK are great. That's what trying to run them on an ever-decreasing budget does. Which is what a Conservative government does.
The egg thing, you can leave them out but I always keep them in the fridge. I've heard you can add 4 weeks to the best before date. I've certainly used eggs beyond the best before from the fridge and they were fine.
@@philiprice7875 . I haven't seen an egg tray is a fridge for many years. I keep mine out for however long I need to, the only thing that happens is the airspace gets bigger.
Very interesting. I recall a case from quite a few years back when a brit was on holiday in Dallas. He didn't know about Jay walking. While crossing at an "inappropriate" place, a police officer called out to him to stop. When he didn't, the officer shot him, DEAD...
As to public schools in the US, it's not always true that you have to go to your assigned neighborhood school. The State of Minnesota has what we call "open enrollment", which means you can send your kids to any public school in the state as long as they have room and you can get them there. (Out-of-district schools aren't responsible for transportation.) Your child's share of school finding goes half to the district they are attending and half to their home district, so as not to unduly burden either one.
UK healthcare: urgent, go to a hospital (or call 999 for a free ambulance), typical time to arrive, be assessed, x-rayed, break confirmed, cast set & you walk out out: 90 minutes. Price £0. Zero forms (except "are you pregnant? Because we need to x-ray you.")
As someone who used to take 5 weeks at a time for my holidays (I have family on the other side of the world), I find the US attitude to be ridiculous. I also had the HR department (same company) contact me when I had worked for 3 weeks doing an extra 10 hours - I was running some high priority tests - to ask if I was being put under pressure to do the additional hours, and did I need support to challenge my senior managers . . . Not something I expected.
In UK and Europe it is compulsory for all chickens to be injected against Salmonella. Not compulsory in the USA though 70% are ( to avoid litigation). Refrigeration reduces but does not eliminate Salmonella which the US still has at about 15 times the rate of Europe. The US also has a stack of processed food additives which are banned in Europe.
I'm fascinated by all the comments regarding drinking in England UNDER the age of 18. I'm gonna talk about this on my livestream tomorrow night @ 8pm UK time...please join me if you can. I wanna learn more....
@@davidpaylor5666 I wouldn't say it's often 10% ABV, it's rarely 10% ABV. It's normally 5% ABV. Some scrumpy may be 10% ABV but unless you live in say, rural parts of Devon, you're unlikely to ever encounter it.
@@davidpaylor5666 On kids drinking booze with a meal at 16, it may be legal but these days it's hard to find a pub that will allow this. Especially chain pubs who have a blanket policy against it despite as you say it being legal. It's a bit like non-alcoholic beer which pubs refuse to sell to under 18s for fear they won't be able to tell if the kid starts drinking alcoholic beer instead.
It may be legal in certain situations but if you go into a pub and say it is a legal right for your child to drink alcohol with their meal you will most likely get a response like "Well it is our legal right to refuse service for any reason, good bye"
@@davidpaylor5666- the age is 16, not 13, and they can have wine, beer or cider legally, according to gov.uk.
Wine is always over 10%, cider almost never is. I don't think I can remember going into a pub that sold a cider over 10%.
@Talkathon408 and if it's that strong (which it can be) most people will mix it with something else (eg lemonade) to dilute the awful taste (I spent large parts of my childhood on a farm in S Devon that had orchards and a cider press). The local pubs would serve shandy (50/50 mix) to most teenagers but nothing stronger until you could be said to look over 18 (15 in my case).
In the Uk it isn't Jaywalking, we call it 'crossing the road' !
I know, no one here knows what "jaywalking" is
@@TheHicksonDiaries Most Brits know what it is, we just think it's a stupid US law.
It's insane that the US thinks adults are to retarded to cross a road, but also is totally cool with them owning firearms.
"Jaywalking" isn't simply crossing the road. It is crossing the road if that act contravenes traffic regulations. For instance, I once received a citation for crossing a road against the traffic light. It was in downtown Seattle, my bus was on the other side of the road about to leave, and so I ran across the intersection against the red light. Unfortunately, I didn't notice the police officer siting on his motorcycle in front of the bus.
@@cyberherbalistWe understand that. It's just that as adults we can navigate the traffic without laws governing it.
Darth Vader taught us how to cross the road safely using the Green Cross Code
Shout-out for Tufty the Squirrel.
I was taught by Nikolai Poliakovs, a friend of our family, most people knew him as "CoCo, the clown", although he was not really a clown, he was an "August".
What's the US equivalent of the UK 'Green Cross Code' ?
No idea what you guys are talking about….🤷♀️
@@TheHicksonDiaries The actor who played Darth Vader in the Original Star Wars Trilogy (David Prowse) was the 'Green Cross Code' man teaching young kids how to safely cross the road during the 'Stop, Look, Listen' campaign in the 70s.
And yet so often you see Americans bragging how proud they are that they live in the "land of the free" and acting as though they're the only country on the planet that has "freedom".... It drives me up the bloody wall !!! 🤷🤷
America is the only country that has laws that tell you what you are allowed to do, anything else is illegal.
The UK has laws that tell you what you CAN'T do, anything else is perfectly legal.
Lived in the States for 26 years and, yes, they know very little about any other country and are speechless to hear there are many countries that have more freedom than they do. But then that is what they are taught at school. Allegiance to the flag ever morning. Brainwashed. I have 2 grandchildren, who are now adults and they know better. Saw us most weekend and learned a lot from us.
In America, the rich are free, the poor are slaves.
America has the most barbaric history of any country yet has only existed for 250 years. It's the elephant in the American room. It's never mentioned
You know what drives me up a bloody wall? People from England thinking they know all about OUR freedoms. You don't. Read our constitution.
British hens have a dot matrix printer in their bottoms which puts the Best Before date, and sometimes a picture of a lion, on the eggs as they come out!
😝
🤣🤣🤣
I thought it was there arsehole !
Mine have tiny laser printers but I can't afford the colour toner, so I just pencil on the date 🤣🐔
🤣😂
As a British parent, I appreciate being able to send my children to school and not fear collecting them from the morgue.
Yes. We are a bit spoiled that way🙏🏻🇬🇧
That's an idiotic statemeny
@@brianmercer7200 not with the number of mass school shootings it isn’t. No shooting drills in UK.
Ridiculous comment. Not so much any more hey, with all the knife crime going on.
@@serenity8876 Number of children killed at school in the UK compared to the US? This year or any year... I'll wait for confirmation.
My wife has had cancer twice - cost for treatment. Zero -that's the power of the fantastic NHS in the UK
I hope she’s doing well now! Imagine having to go through all that and trying to figure out how to pay for it as well.
yeah I broke my wrist. went to urgent care. it was expensive im a brit living in the US. they told me to find a dr for a specialist. this would have cost thousands I fought through the pain I h ave recovered but I now have a deformed wrist. US SUCKS for healthcare. raised 3 kids here. medical bills have killed me
@@derekhough-jm9gc I’m sorry for you, but this is not the general experience. Serious illnesses in my family (some with cancer) have mostly been successfully treated on the NHS.
Anyone working pays n h insurance, so technically not free. There are many exemptions however, which is another discussion of fairness and funding.
The NHS is NOT free.
Jaywalking is the dumbest law ever. Basically like saying a grown person hasn't learnt to cross the road. Bonkers
You should look up the origin of the law; there are videos on it. It's a disgrace.
Jaywalking law makes sense in big cities like New York with wide multi-lane streets. Jaywalking would really slow down traffic flow.
Jaywalking law applied to 2-lane streets, however - totally unnecessary.
@@timonsolus Agreed Jaywalking would slow down traffic flow.
I'm not sure that would be such a bad thing, given how many people are killed on US streets.
@@PedroConejo1939Wasn't it lobbied by car manufacturers who wanted to blame pedestrians for getting run over?
@@timonsolus Don't even think its necessary in big cities. As previous posters have said you are an adult and should take responsibility to cross the road. I wouldn't try crossing a 6 lane road but I have seen people do it many times. I think they are bloody mad but each to their own it's a free country.
Lol you can be responsible for a gun at 18 but cant be trusted to cross a road 😂😂😂
Pretty much…the US is f-d up
I can't believe 66 people actually gave you a thumbs up. The logic of your statement escapes me. But I understand the sentiment behind it. I think something less offensive to Americans, but still as illogical as your original comment, would be; You can be responsible for driving a car on the motorway at 16, but you cannot be trusted to cross a road.
I'm also not sure the author of the video thought this through. There are no national laws covering the use of crosswalks in the US. They mostly exist at the local level. So by default there is no requirement to cross the road at a crosswalk unless your local government has passed an ordinance that requires it. The level of high speed vehicular traffic in the US is an order of magnitude greater than the UK. So crosswalks may have a greater value in the states.
Now to the other stuff. With one exception, voting, which I think should be returned to 21, I probably agree with everything else. I think drinking, smoking, cannabis, and gambling should be lowered to 18. Most of these changes we're done at the behest of lobbying organizations and NGOs. The drinking age was moved from 18 to 21 because of the mothers against drunk driving lobby. They associated under 21 Drinking with more deaths, and convinced all the state legislatures to go along with it. Good luck getting them to change.
@@ShenandoahShelty my logic is im simply stating that you put so much importance in the US on silly things like not trusting people to cross roads or banning kinder eggs for fear of children choking but all these mass shootings an no one thinks of doing something about your guns so from where im standing its americans that have no logic the rest of us manage fine to cross roads or eat sweets without choking and dont have too worry if our children will come home from school without a bullet in their head 😡
@@ShenandoahShelty im
@@ShenandoahShelty my logic is simple you are so bothered in america about silly things like crossing the road so you have a jaywalking rule or banning kinder eggs incase a child chokes but its ok to have all these mass shootings and no one seems bothered about trying to stop them 😡 so im sorry for stating a fact and you think i was being offensive to the USA but im glad i grew up in a truly free country where i can cross the rd where i like eat chocolate without choking and enjoyed going to school without worrying about gettin shot 😡😡
The price you see on an item in a shop is the price you pay. No tax added at the till.
Isnt it better to add the tax so you are aware of the governmental theft that is being applied? For instance people here in the UK bitch about fuel prices all the time but I bet most people don't realize that half of what you are paying is tax.
I'd hate to have to fathom out what I'm going to have to actually pay when I get to the Checkout (esp as so me items are Tax exempt and some are not) - the UK system of (in most cases) showing final price with Tax included (where due) is much better.
The shop has to calculate all the relevant taxes on each item in order to pay the different tax authorities. If they do that anyway, it makes sense to do that calculation when pricing the item on the shelf. In some US states I believe it is illegal to do that - hence the tax-at-till problem.
Fuq Costco, it keeps catching me out.
What caught me out was being charged sales tax on magazines - I don't pay vat on books and mags in England 🏴
You can also step foot on someone's property and not run the risk of being shot for trespassing
Nobody should be trespassing.
@@bmc9504 Nobody should be fucking SHOT for simple trespassing.
No, in England, if the owner is or isn't at home, you are still trespassing, which is illegal 👮🏼♂️
@@kyj565 That happen a lot in England? Just go into someone else's backyard and stand around? Do you do that at night, too? On someone else's property? Kind of weird.
In the USA, trespass is a criminal offence but that does NOT mean that land owners have the right to dish out summary executions of trespassers. In England and Wales, trespass is a civil offence and the landowner would have to prove that you caused damage or annoyance. There are thousands of well-used but unofficial paths across private land. In Scotland, you can roam more or less were you please.
Finding another employee to cover your holiday days off? No chance, "hey, this is your company, you are responsible for your staffing, not me. I am just telling you when I won't be here so do one"
May I also say that a 16 year old, can have wine/cider/beer in a restaurant purchased by the parent/adult
@@jmtiptonenglandyou can also drink from 5 years old by law. But only on private property and under and parents/ guardians are legally responsible.
@@JarlGrimmToys Yes: but lets not complicate things ~
@@jmtiptonenglandis your comment relevant to the original post?
Lol, you absolutely can NOT demand a specified annual leave timeslot in the UK (or anywhere), obviously(!!!). If no one is off over that week/two weeks/whatever then it's likely you'll get that time slot. But, ffs lol, you can not demand it. It's normally 'first in, first served'. Eminently reasonable? No?
Might be worth mentioning that these things are the same across all of the UK, not just in England.
Americans don't know the difference!
I don't suppose she has the experience to know. So I wouldn't ask her to.
She might have only been to England not Scotland,Wales and Northern Ireland so she is speaking about her experiences in England rather than the UK.
@ANoundOnAHonda: With devolved governments and assemblies health and education are not the same across the uk.
@@john_smith1471 Wales and Scotland has had their own governments for donkies years does Northern Ireland still have an assembly?
Here is something else you can’t do in the USA but you can do in the uk you can enjoy decent chocolate in the uk
Very true….dairy milk is the best! ☺️
@@TheHicksonDiaries Cadbury's went rubbish when Kraft took it over. Continental chocolate especially Belgian or Swiss is better.
Cadbury s the best!!!!🎉🎉🎉🎉
And beer.
@@TheHicksonDiaries. No it's not . Taste real chocolate
Another few things to add to the list. 1) In Britain it is quite normal to linger in restaurants. One is not pressured to eat up and go to make way for the next customers, or presented with the bill until it is requested. 2) Tipping is not obligatory or even expected for most customer services, unlike in the USA where tipping is almost de rigueur, as the wages paid to many in customer services is very low and they depend on tips to make up their wages. 3) Maternity leave and paternity leave. In Britain it is not unusual for women to take a full year for maternity leave, 39 weeks of which are paid. Fathers can take two weeks off following the birth of their child.
Wow-I’m so envious of the family leave after a baby.
@@TheHicksonDiaries you don't even get charged for holding your baby just after giving birth.
@@TheHicksonDiaries Also what on earth is that with putting all the babies together in the hospital? That's got to be the weirdest thing imaginable. I always thought those babies were in ICU (when you see it on TV) but it's just the norm right. Terrifying! I think every American must have some kind of infant trauma consequently.
@@rayaqueen9657 what? no, most babies room with the mother in the US. You must be looking at old movies or something. Yes there is a nursery in the Hospital, I would think even in the UK there would be which is where they run tests, store items, etc...
@@ridingtheroad185 no there's no nursery in a hospital in the UK. There's a special care unit for premature babies etc but that's an ICU type unit with incubators. That thing with all the babies in the same room somewhere away from the mums. I've only ever seen that in US TV. Like in Friends s7e24:17.12. (edit to remove spoiler).
I was in Georgia many years ago, about 2008 and i crossed this road and it was safe to do so. Just like i would in the UK. Then i heard these sirens and this cop comes tearing across the road and actually skids to a stop and gets out and starts yelling at me. He was going on about "Jaywalking", and i was like what on earth is jaywalking. Once he heard my accent he said "Your not from around here are you?". Err no, im from the UK, just over here on work. He just said Have a nice day, got in his car and drove off !. lol. Guess he could not be bothered with a foreigner.
I got done for jaywalking in Tashkent once. Beat that
Yeah. I know people who got out of all kinds of stuff bc of their foreign accent in the US
@@admiralbenbow5083 where’s that?
@@TheHicksonDiaries en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tashkent
I suspect he was aware of how ridiculous the Jay Walking law is or at least how it's perceived outside of the US.
Might also be worth mentioning that we don’t all live in London
We do, listen to the Tories!
@@leestockton9367 Or watch the BBC.
And that the Cornish are not English!!!
@@DerekLangdon Build a Cornwall
@@simonruszczak5563 good one! 😆
Generally the NHS is pretty good, especially if you have a critical or serious condition. And it is free at the point of access. You don't get charged for an ambulance, you don't pay for childbirth etc. NHS dentists can be tricky to find, but private dental treatments are much much cheaper than the US.
It does work better when it's not deliberately starved of funding and the staff are worked to the bone. But, still proud of it, it's saved my life more than once.
I'm being treated for CKD in the NHS. Regular Doctor check ups with no time limit and lots of drugs for blood pressure and kidney functions. I've paid for it out of my taxes. No rip-off insurance companies.
It might be free at point of access but people are forgetting that we pay around 10% national insurance on top of income tax, we pay for the NHS through taxes.
@@olivertaylor4779
We do pay through taxation but we get much better value for money than typical private insurance-based systems. Plus, the risk is fully pooled through the population which distributes costs fairly.
We don't have to sell our homes to pay for our child's cancer care.
More Egg Tips - If you look at UK egg shells, they'll have pink text printed directly on the egg.
1. The Lion: there will usually be a diagram of a lion, this indicates that the chicken that laid the egg has been vaccinated against salmonella. This also means that for the most part, your egg can be eaten raw, much like they do in Japan etc.
2. The origin: there will be a country code, almost always "UK"
3. The type: next to the origin code (UK) there will be a single digit; 0, 1, 2, or 3. 0 = organic, 1 = free range, 2 = barn reared, 3 = caged chickens.
I tried to explain to American friends that in the UK ‘Public’ schools are what we call private schools. It didn’t compute 🙄
Haha true!
Uk public schools are funded by the public not the government, like state schools, is how explain that one.
They are still in effect ‘private schools’ though, and some people in the UK do call them that.
Public schools and private schools are the same thing here in the UK. That's not at all confusing, is it? 🙂Rule-of-thumb is that Public Schools are the famous ones, like Eton or Roedean, and you don't have to live in the area (hence "public") ; Private Schools are the same sort of "No riff-raff" thing, but they're local, you do have to live nearby. Everything else is a State School. Something like that.
@@jimdaw65
Haha
It’s simple.
Uk Public schools are funded exclusively by the public, rather than state funded.
Some ppl call them private schools.
I think it goes back to the days when the gentry would have their children homeschooled by Tutors/ governesses then at a certain age send them away to school which then would public rather than at home.
@@jimdaw65 Actually, they're not or at least they were not in the past. That's why 'Public Schools' were so called i.e. they were open to students from the public even if there was a fee to be paid whereas a 'Private' School was as the name denotes 'Private' i.e. It was not open to students from the public suggesting perhaps it could only be attended by those who were invited. Public schools were so called for very good reason. Today as you point out, the two have become confused. If I go back say 50 years I can say with 100% certainty that 99% of British people would have referred to fee paying schools in the UK as 'Public Schools' (of which incidentally there are thousands). It's also important to note that a 'Private' School by virtue of the name suggests that it cannot be joined. Language is interesting. I certainly know many British people (mostly older generation) who would not be clear on what type of school you went to if you said you attended a private school whereas if you said you had attended a public school they would have a clear understanding of what you meant. 'English' English is increasingly being influenced by 'American' English due to the overwhelming influence of American TV entertainment (movies, TV series etc). Hence...... we British can understand American English very well but the reverse isn't necessarily true. The British are quite forgiving in conversation and take terms within context and don't typically challenge them i.e. If an American referred to a private school then there's a good chance British person would assume they meant a Public School.
Here`s another. You are not, nor ever have been, obliged to carry any form of ID on your person or in your car. (We do not have ID cards in the UK).
Nor are you obliged to have any documents such as car insurance etc in your car when driving.
Actually that's not strictly true. In the UK a police officer can request to see your licence, your insurance certificate and MOT certificate at any time, and if you can't you could be issued a producer to present yourself at a police station with whichever item(s) you did not have on you at the time. Failing to do that could then result in a fine and points on your licence.
@@Please_allow_me Sorry, you're wrong - you are not obliged to carry these documents in the vehicle. Yes, producing them at a later stage is perfectly acceptable but you don't have to have them with you when you drive..
@@olderwiser8347 Did you even read my reply to the original comment? I never said you *have* to. The OP stated you're not obliged to carry them, when the truth is you are to an extent, because failure to do so means you may have to produce them at a station, whereby failure to do that may result in legal action taken against you. Obliged in this case doesn't mean by law, just that simply you're strongly advised to do so and that it is your personal responsibility to ensure you have them on you, as failure to do so can ultimately lead to legal action *eventually*. The Gov.uk website specifically states you must provide be able to show any of the mentioned documents if requested by a police officer if you have been seen driving a vehicle, but just because you don't have them at that time doesn't necessarily mean a penalty will be issued there and then (refer to section 164 and 165 of the road traffic act if you must) . But there are definitely cases where failing to provide any of those documents may result in the vehicle being seized off a driver if the police officer really does suspect that the driver is driving without license, isn't insured to drive that vehicle, or that the vehicle does not have a valid MOT and the driver cannot prove otherwise. If the police officer has other means to negate this, then they may send the person on their way, or give the driver a producer. In short, drivers are obliged (though not legally) to have the right documentation with them when the drive otherwise any consequences would be there own doing.
@@Please_allow_me
You are either required to carry them or you are not.
Being required to produce them later is something else entirely.
There is no `some extent`. Muddle headed nit picking does not get you out of it.
@@Please_allow_meMOT-Paperfree, available online, Insurance-Paperfree, available online, Road duty-online only. The only thing that can’t be checked automatically from a camera is that the driver is licensed (and named for insurance)
in UK f you’re under 18, it’s against the law:
for someone to sell you alcohol
to buy or try to buy alcohol
for an adult to buy or try to buy alcohol for you
to drink alcohol in licensed premises (such as a pub or restaurant)
However, if you’re 16 or 17 and accompanied by an adult, you can drink (but not buy) beer, wine or cider with a meal.It’s illegal to give alcohol to children under 5.
I came here to make that distinction :D (further distinction: the obligation is on the person selling the alcohol, not buying - i.e. no 16/17 year old would be prosecuted for buying booze, it's the shop selling it to them who would be charged - ditto an adult procuring it for them; there are a few further subtleties when it comes to parents of teenagers allowing them to drink small quantities of low-alcohol products)
@@brumplum Stupid isnt it?!
Kids these days have no interest in drinking. They will grow up not being able to take their drink. I blame the schools
@@seanoconnor8843 The should bring back the rum ration, but for primary schools!
But I have never known or heard of anyone giving a 5 year old alcohol - or even a 10 year old.
Re : Jaywalking. It's very simple. In the UK the pedestrian comes first and - even ON A ROAD - it's the driver's job NOT to kkll them (unless they just jump out in front of a moving vehicle and the driver stands no chance!)
In the US the almighty car comes first! That says a lot about the two countries !!
What is interesting is that if you watch street scenes from the UK in the early 20th century there are people in the roadway and the vehicles move around them. Nowadays there is a presumption that a car can just drive at a pedestrian and they need to get out of the way. This even happens on pavements when a motorist decides they want to park on the pavement. Despite this it is still better for pedestrians to be in control of when to cross a road as we do in the UK. It is about empowering people to look after their own safety.
In the UK, there are some crossings in city centres which are signed 'Pedestrians do not have right of way'. This is complete bollocks. The only place where this is true is on a Motorway.
Jaywalking was an invention of the motor industries in the US to demean pedestrians hit by cars. Jay was quite literally a term like ‘idiot’ or ‘moron’, placing the fault of road accidents on the road crosser rather than the driver.
In most of the world the driver is responsible since if you weren’t paying attention to the sides of the road you weren’t paying enough attention
Finding someone to cover for while your on holiday that's not my job that's the managers job to find cover
My sentiments exactly!
Jaywalking, a law introduced by the American motor car lobbyists as they thought pedestrian accidents reflected badly on their brands.
Annual leave, I'm in the UK and still check with the rest of the team that I'm ok to take dates off and it won't clash with themselves. I don't have children so generally avoid taking leave off during school holidays as my colleagues with children have more right during those dates (this is my choice rather than company mandated).
Very decent and considerate of you.
Although. Places are quieter outside of school hols, so it has a practical benefit...
nonsense, jaywalking law exists in the majority of the countries with no car industries.
You may notice that prices go UP during school holidays, so if you can travel at other times it may be cheaper. Plus fewer pesky kids getting underfoot!
@@David-wp2iw Actually, Jaywalking laws only exist in about 20 countries/States. That's hardly "the majority" of the worlds 197 countries/states.
@@Rapscallion2009 And offer better value 😉
In the UK if you want to go to the toilet, you can say "I want to go to the toilet". In the US everyone gets embarrassed and avoids that by talking about rest rooms etc. Considering that per the same population the US has 5 times the UKs homicide rate. I think Americans are offended by the wrong thing.
It makes me laugh when an American will say “Aw Shit! I’ve stepped in some doggy do”
In the UK you just say nothing and just go!
"Toilet" , meaning "washing" is as just much of a Euphemism as "Rest room".
Yet when you go to the “rest room” their cubicles gave massive gaps in the door so people can see your underwear round your ankles or peep through the massive gaps between the door and frame. Isn’t that more embarrassing than calling it a toilet? 🤷
British people are also offended by talking about the African American homicide rate.
Toilet is a euphemism from French toilette. It means ‘ little towel’ Lavatory means ‘washing place’ so bathroom and restroom are just as much euphemisms.
The construct 'Blahblah County' does not exist in British English. Most counties end in -shire and those that do not are just known to be counties, like Kent or Somerset. If you want to emphasise that you are talking about Kent as an administrative unit, then, "The County of Kent" would be used. In Ireland it is the exact opposite usage to the US, County Cork, rather than Cork County.
Did you know there is only one County in England - County Durham!
@@Volcano-Man The exception, that proves the rule. It's just because the city and county have the same name. It used to be the County Palatine of Durham, ruled by the Prince-Bishop of Durham.
@@urseliusurgel4365 I know! Now why is Lancashire 'The County Palatine of Lancashire?' Yes I know, but do you?
@@Volcano-Man "Of the palace". I live in the County Palatine of Lancaster. Palatine counties were created in border regions or regions of uncertain loyalty and their earls (or bishop in the case of Durham) were given close to vice-regal powers. Chester was an early palatine county, situated on the Welsh border. Lancaster was given to Edmund Crouchback, the brother of Edward I. On the death of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, his heiress married John of Gaunt, son of Edward III. When Gaunt's son, Henry of Bollingbroke, became king the Duchy and County Palatine of Lancaster returned to royal possession, where it has remained ever since.
Somerset was Somersetshire but over time the shire was dropped, Dorsetshire and Devonshire are still in common usage. Shire counties have a Sheriff now just a ceremonial position and no longer enforces the law.
In the UK you can have shops in the suburbs, so you can shop locally without a car. Not allowing this is worse than anything on this list.
I once worked in a shop in York, England. Looking at some of our stock an American tourist said "Hey we don't see stuff like this back home in the US." I said "Well, that particular item is made in Amarillo, Texas." He replied "Amarillo? Really? Hey, we do our weekly grocery shop there, its just 80 miles away." I thought "WHAAAAAT?!"
@@TheRealRedAce But can you 🎵 Show Me The Way To Amarillo 🎵
@@dedistaulapanodki6293 Lol, turn left at Oklahoma.
@@TheRealRedAce Texan here. Amarillo is in the panhandle, and while the city is large, there are a LOT of farms and ranches in that general area, and likely that's why the guy was doing the grocery shopping so far away. Much of Texas is sparsely populated (particularly West Texas). Most small towns have grocery stores, but it might be that this guy's family preferred one of the larger supermarkets "in town" (aka Amarillo).
The worst thing here is that we have pretty crappy public transportation outside of Dallas (I'm not sure of the situation in Houston). I live near Austin, and voters keep voting down public transport measures because they don't want to have to pay the taxes to fund them. It's ridiculous. People are so wedded to their cars here.
@@the_real_littlepinkhousefly Yes, I was aware of all that.
If you are coming to the UK on holiday - please take out travel insurance- the NHS is residence based - if you do not live in the UK you will be charged for hospital treatment outside of Accident & Emergency. If you do not have travel insurance you will need to pay and arrange repatriation yourself. If you are planning to stay in the UK over six months you can pay the immigration health surcharge which will exempt you from hospital charges.
I wish that were true.
The immigrants' health tax is £1035 per person per year now, payable in advance (£776 for students) when you apply for a visa for more than six months, unless you are a refugee (etc). You must pay even if you have private health insurance as well. People coming to work in the NHS have to pay too, whether or not they use the service themselves.
@@benh715 It is true. In theory, anyway. The problem is that almost no-one in the NHS will ask a sick or injured patient if they're a UK citizen. And even if they did, absolutely no-one in the NHS knows the procedure for filling out an invoice (except for three guys in an office somewhere, who've never even seen a patient). As a result, almost nothing that ought to be paid or ever is paid for.
Hello, are you my vicar? She is a Kath Abbot.
@@lomax343 I am an Overseas Patients Officer - reports are run and anyone without an NHS number or new NHS number sent a Attendance Form to complete and these are followed up by telephone calls and emails - but our information is only as good as the records taken by the medical team. Patient’s from Europe are covered for necessary treatment by their EHIC (UK citizens can obtain a GHIC - we also have reciprocal agreements with a number of countries. We are now visiting admitted patients and we give them estimated invoices which indicate the possible costs of their treatment and allows them to start a claim with an insurer. Immediately necessary treatment is undertaken. I asked my manager once about how many invoices are paid and he said about 25%.
Nice Video - great job. Obviously I am Brit and have worked for my company for 30+ years. I have 28 days vacation per year, only have to go into the office 2 days per week (WFH for the rest), finish work on Friday’s at 1pm. Work-life balance is so important for continued good performance. Only having 2 weeks p.a. Vacation seems like exploitation of workers to me. I couldnt work like that - it’s almost Victorian.
Blimey, I need to send my c.v. to your company, pronto..
I worked at Unilever for a Global Marketing Team in London and it was much the same. Work was busy and stressful, the benefits and work life balance was worth it.
@@101BadBreath I worked for Unilever at Port Sunlight back in the 1980’s. Loved my time there.
Coming towards the end of the year my HR Department e-mailed me to say "John, you have 8 (out of 33) days to take for holidays left before the the end of the month you must take them" I said "can I carry them forward?".. they said "No, if you do not use them the you lose them".... needless to say I took the 8 days holiday off a week later
If you're in the UK you should check the employment law. Carry over rules are legally prescribed.
In the UK they are obliged to either carry them forward or pay you in lieu. It is the employers choice (it'll be in your contract) but they cannot just wipe them out like that.
Hi David I concur, if you are not going to able to take all your holidays your employer will give you the cash difference. It would be carnage for a company if everyone tried to carry over unused holidays.
@@_Mentat I’m allowed to carry 7 days, I think. Big company, follows law.
Holiday is for your health. We encourage healthy lifestyles as far as possible.
It’s not that you can jaywalk here in uk. It’s just the we are allowed to cross our roads if we think it’s safe to do so. Ridiculous law. ‘Mericans are so free free.
Also, once we have stepped off the curb (on a traffic free / clear road) pedestrians have priority over vehicles. You can complete your crossing.
It gets more complicated here in Australia. We have rules against something we call jaywalking, but what we mean by it is not taking the shortest route to cross the road - crossing diagonally, basically. As long as you walk straight across a single road (not diagonally across the road, and not diagonally across an intersection i.e. two roads at once) it's fine.
This principle was recently reinforced in the Highway Code with its Heirarchy of Road Users, which put Pedestrians First , then Horses, then Cyclists, then Motorists very much last.
The bank that I used to work for in the UK insisted that all employees take a two week leave of absence at least once a year, as a fraud prevention measure. The thinking being was that if you were defrauding the bank you would not be able to cover your tracks for that length of time. And it worked, a longstanding colleague I knew was sacked upon his return from holiday as it was found out during those two weeks that he had been stealing from customers. It was a great policy as everyone was 'forced' to take a leisurely vacation plus we had another three weeks off and public holidays on top of that.
Brilliant.
I can vouch for the two-week forced holiday as I worked in The City for a dozen years or so... whilst I understood the reason behind it, I'd be going stir crazy by the second week.
When you say leave of absence do you mean using two of the four (paid minimum holiday entitlement by law) or calling in sick?
Still happens (depending on your job in the bank).
The civil service used to insist that employees had two weeks leave together once a year to rest properly and be less likely to fall ill and have time off sick.
Refrigerating British eggs doesn't damage them but once refrigerated they have to stay refrigerated until you eat them because when you take them out of the fridge water gas in the air will condensate on them causing damage to the protective cuticle.
That makes sense
Never heard of that. All my life here in England, I’ve kept 6 eggs out in a pot on the counter and another 6 in the fridge. Sure there is a little condensation on the shells when I take them out of the fridge to refill my pot, but I’ve never had a bad egg from either practice.
@@verenamaharajah6082 You're right, it's unlikely that the eggs will go bad if you work in a clean environment and, besides that, all EU chickens have to be immunised against salmonella so the risks are reduced further.
condense
The age limit for consuming alcohol in the UK is 5 years old. However you can't purchase alcohol until you are 18 years old. There are restrictions on spirits and the wine or beer has to be served in a designated restaurant area with a food order. Cheers😊😊
The egg thing.. the reason that the FDA says to wash your eggs is because the chickens that lay them are kept in absolutely vile conditions (to the point that they have to chlorine wash chickens after slaughter to make it safe for consumption) whereas in the UK they're not. They're kept relatively well in the UK (and the significant majority of the world), so no chlorine wash required to make the meat safe to for consumption, and no egg washing required to make those safe for consumption either.
There is nothing about your statement that surprises me. The US livestock ranges are despicable in most cases
Things that You Can’t Do in America but are OK in England
1) Keeping your opinions to yourself
2) Keeping your political affiliation to yourself
3) Own a house without 40 flags in/around it
4) Knocking on a neighbours door at any time of day/night
5) Talking quietly
6) Getting out of your car when stopped by the Police
7) Have friends with a different skin colour to your own
8) Actually learning things in school
9) Knowing both the Imperial and Metric systems (and being able to convert between them)
10) Not screaming at the telly during sports events
Must admit-a pretty good list. But FYI. I know MANY people who yell at the tv during sports. Especially American football.
@@TheHicksonDiaries Pardon me for saying so, but I believe you just made his point.
Americans use the metric system a lot. They just don't seem to notice for some reason.
One and Ten are rarely practiced in the UK. Unfortunately. FAR more US houses than UK houses fly the national flag.
Regularly used to take month off to go on holiday - wonderful!
A US firm once couldn't believe they were being (bluntly) turned down during an interview due to their stingy leave entitlement....
I'm so pleased you know what an English flag is.
It's amazing the amount of Americans who don't.
Yeah we do. Its the flag of Maine. Thats in England, right? :D
🏴 Good call.👍🏻
Probably similar to the _number_ of people who say _amount_ of Americans 🙂
number of!
(Please kick me. All best.)
@TheRealRedAce No, Maine is in New England(in the U.S) but we don't have that place name in the U.K.
The only roads you’re not allowed to walk across are the Motorways, for obvious reasons, or if there’s a sign on a road saying otherwise( which I’ve never seen yet).
Regarding time off work, Europeans say that ‘we work to live’ whereas Americans’live to work’ which seems to be true unfortunately.
Americans = corporate slaves.
They tend to be on high speed dual carriageways - ie they are almost motorways
There are a lot of "No Pedestrians" signs round here. Mostly on dual-carriageways and a couple on long bridges.
fyi there is a no walking sign at both ends of the medway tunnel in kent, not allowed to ride a bike through it either
American AND many UK EMPLOYERS think we all live to work! Its the workers who don't agree! The difference being in the UK, the employers don't get it all their own way.
The US is ridiculous, freedom my a... In Australia we have long service leave in addition to annual leave after 10 years of service, where you can take 13 weeks (accumulating) off at any time. Also if you have more than 8 weeks (2 years entitlement) of leave up your sleeve you are required to take time off, by law. Your 'benefits' are our entitlements, complete failure of a country.
👍👍
As young children our parents usually gave us a small glass of wine with the evening meal.
It was no big deal and when we were old enough to drink in Pubs (etc) there wasn't any sudden desire to rush and consume copious amounts of alcohol.
My parents didn't HAVE wine to give!
I live in the UK and used to work in Germany. It was common there to take three weeks at once for your annual vacation. If you tried to take less than two weeks then management became suspicious that you may have something to hide.
Smaller UK companies are often very flexible about time off. I would take long weekends (Friday and the following Monday) then "use up" my entitlement at the end of the year, often quitting halfway through December and returning in January.
What were they suspicious of?
Back in the mid-1980s, I was a student visiting Washington D.C. and I got stopped by a Police Officer for Jaywalking. I think that I was crossing the road in Georgetown and I suddenly heard a man shouting "Yo!" very loudly. I turned around and realised that it was a Police Officer and he was calling for me. As I recall, he was a huge African-American man who seemed to be clinical ly obsese. I went over to him, and he got quite irate and mentioned that I had committed an offence called "Jaywalking". I was exceptionally polite to him and turned up the English accent, and he let me go. As I was speaking to him, he said "Oh, you're foreign...". Without thinking, I replied "No, no, I'm British." For years after, I found that instinctive and entirely spontaneous comment funny. Anyway, he figured that as I was "foreign" I couldn't be blamed for knowing the local laws. So, that was that.
In and around Orlando (the one in Florida, in case there's another one) they are so used to having visitors from across Europe that they don't really bother about Jaywalking. They actually have pavements/footpaths along both sides of most of the roads in the area (International Drive is a good example of this) and I've crossed a 4+ lane road, just by a police car and the police barely looked in my direction.
@@Thurgosh_OGIn 1992 I was in Orlando for the World SF Convention. One morning I walked along International Drive, to the Orange County Convention Center from the hotel where I was staying. I was told I was nuts by all the Americans I met.
Yes. I know people who got out of traffic tickets doing the same thing
@@Thurgosh_OG I believe there is an Orlando in Hollywood.
Them dough nuts (oops sorry, Do-Nuts) come at a price!
Thankfully we are taught how to cross the road at a young age in Britain. Stop - Look -Listen (not behind the bus spotty).
“Behind the bus spotty?”
LOL
it sounds a very American turn of phrase when you call it 'Kent County' rather than just Kent!
It sounds weird and wrong.
We would say the county of Kent.
@@wessexdruid7598 I live in Kent, we just say Kent. 😊
@@clairegrant4505 Of course - but if you were going to refer to the county, specifically...
Yes, because the" Kent County" I know is south of King County in WA.
Worth mentioning that ‘public’ school in England will generally be taken to be a reference to the posher private schools, historic quirk.
That’s a good point and one I didn’t know until after I made the video
In Australia, public schools are the free state-government-operated schools, and the private schools are the independent non-government schools that you have to pay to attend.
And UK "Public" (actually private) Schools are HORRIBLE.
@@claymor8241 it's not a quirk.they are open to all of the public,if they ca afford the fees ,state schools norhad a catchment area ,therefore were not . The catchment areas have been dropped in some areas more recently.
Jaywalking in Canada is crossing against a red light.. Crossing the street is called "crossing the street"
😝
My husband took 4 weeks annual leave last year for his holiday. His responsibility was to apply for leave well in advance to help the MANAGER arrange cover for him. His contact of employment doesn't give automatic right to such a lengthy leave but as he applied well in advance his manager sorted out cover. No issues! He gets 25 days leave a year, plus bank holidays and Flexi leave. His company offered him the option of buying more leave days but he could manage without having to that, especially as he got 12 days Flexi leave last year on top of his 25 days annual leave and the statutory bank holidays.
Worth pointing out that, you can go for private healthcare - but, when there's an unexpected issue or emergency, they'll pass it on to the NHS to sort out. It's the same doctors who work in both, but not the same facilities - generally the NHS can do anything, but particularly emergency care.
And intensive care. On the whole private hospitals do not have intensive care units, so they are nicer, but more dangerous than NHS hospitals.
Yes,and many private hospitals do not have ICU care. Many a time my hospital ended up taking patients post surgery from a private hospital into our ICU when there had been a surgical complication.
Good video. About medical care, my understanding is that even private medical care in the UK is much less expensive than in the US. And of course medicines are usually cheaper, even basic over the counter products. Prescription medicines have a standard charge, which many people are exempt from paying (due to age or means), but anyone can make an annual prepayment which will cover all prescriptions for a year, for about £110. This makes sense because it encourages people to take those prescribed medicines, which helps to prevent some conditions getting worse. It can be hard to get a face to face doctor's appointment but I have found that my local doctors' surgery will do a phone appointment the same day (they don't make advance appointments usually now).
I once looked up what an appendectomy costs here in the UK, done privately. About £4k. I gather that’s about one tenth of the medical insurance excess charge that you’d anyway have to pay in the US.
Private medical care has to be good and cost effective here because if it wasn’t no one would use it at all.
Brits have no idea how good they have got it, So true about holidays in the states, the national average here for holidays is 2 weeks.
I used to work for a major corporation, I was always made to feel guilty when having a week off.
In the past 47 years I've only had three weeks holiday in one calendar year Once, Id earned that after being with the company 8 years, the very next year the company was sold and the rules changed, that's how you keep people down.
Brits have every idea of how good we have it, we just feel sorry that the US is so far behind and not developing properly.
towards the end of the calendar year, my boss will remind people to get the rest of their holidays booked in so we all don't end up having to take all of March off, to use them up.
I get 8 bank holidays, 25 days paid leave and they give us a free 'rest and recouperation' day off as well. think we can also buy additional days off / unpaid leave... and we can also carry over a maximum of five days to the following year if we don't use them all.
Actually, we do know how lucky we are and feel great sympathy for our American cousins who are treated so abysmally by their government and big business.
Love the sentiment guys. Make sure you protect it. From the power hungry people running for leadership
My husband is a senior product executive with a software company here in the US. He's been working there for over 10 years. I'm not sure what his allowed vacation time is these days (3 weeks?), but he rarely takes all of it, never more than a week at a time, and is constantly checking back in even while "relaxing" on vacation, keeping up with projects, what's said in meetings, even sometimes joining an important meeting while on vacation. This week his elderly parents in another state needed help with something, so he flew out there on Thursday night, and said, "I really hate to miss a whole workday on Friday". He's not a workaholic. This is just the culture. It makes me really sad because he's always under work stress. I so wish we could move to the UK.
Jaywalking laws vary a bit around the uk. When I visited Northern Ireland a few years ago I was informed that jaywalking isn’t permitted there. Mind you that was 25 years ago and I could be mistaken. In England the idea is that the motor car is a parvenu, pedestrians have always had the liberty to cross the road wherever so it’s the motorist’s responsibility to watch out for pedestrians. That’s clearly impossible at times but that’s why you are allowed to cross the road anywhere. (Except probably in Northern Ireland)
My parents were products of the 40s. For 3 or 4 years, my dad had a local that he would visit pretty much every night to drink. After the 3 or 4 years, he went in and let the landlord of the pub know that today was his birthday. The landlord congratulated him and asked what age he was now. My dad answered '18'. 😆 Yeah, underage drinking is frowned upon, but has been a thing for a very long time!
When I was a kid, I thought "jaywalking" meant crossing the street naked! I knew it was something about crossing the street, and I had always heard "naked as a jaybird". So, naturally, crossing the street naked would be illegal.
I laughed so hard at this. 😜
Well it probably is...
You are hilarious!
The UK laws regarding drinking of alcohol are more complicated, and yet simple enough.
It isillegal for under 5's to drink alcohol (altjough, that said, traditional gripe water was very alcoholic).
Between ages 5 and 18 you can drink alcohol on private premises.
Between 16 and 18 you can drink beer, cider or wine in a licensed premises if accompanied by an adult and you are eating.
Between 5 and 16 you can enter a licensed premises, but not drink alcohol, if accompanied by an adult.
What is gripe water?
@@TheHicksonDiaries LLLOL
I have not searched online to see if it still exists or what it contains today, if it does exist.......
Gripe water was something given to young babies that would not settle, babies that sort of grizzled (that is sort of soft crying, being upset for no obvious reason). It was very nice - I remember having a spoonful when I was just a few years old when my youngest brother was just months old. It was actually quite high in alcohol (the exact % will be online somewhere), and slightly sweet.
There were always tales of how some young mothers with awkward babies became alcoholics via gripe water - some tales may even have been true 😯
My mother was born around a hundred years ago, and the other thing she used to passify an unsettled baby was cinder water - take a hot coal from a fire and drop into water, and then sweeten slightly.
@@birdmanfree1651
I don't think it is a thing anymore, I'm pretty sure it massively raises the risk of cot death.
@@TheHaighus It is a thing in the UK, but not alcoholic. Hunting around online, I can find no reference to cot death, indeed, cot death is so rare that anyone would struggle to link it to anything.
I'll just clarify that the "eating" exception is actually a meal, a pint and a packet of crisps is only for grown-ups.
Also in the UK they don't call them 'crosswalks'. They call them 'crossings' or 'pedestrian crossings'.
Yeah. Understood. I’m just used to calling them that! lol 😜
There’s a very funny piece on TH-cam of Michael McIntyre on the Johnathan Woss show (I can’t bring myself to call him Ross) talking about how Americans need help understanding English words e.g. for years Americans had no idea what to do with spectacles. They called them ‘glasses’ and had no idea where to put them they found them useless on their thighs or shoulders until they started calling them ‘eyeglasses’. Similarly with the piece of a roadway set aside for people to walk along. When the Americans used the British term “pavement” there were so many of them injured in horrible accidents because the Americans didn’t know what those areas were set aside for. So they’d walk all over the place until they gave them a name that the Americans could understand “sidewalk” There are lots more of these. Michael McIntyre is very funny and has a great time with Mr Woss at the Americans expense
"There's a 'zebra crossing' down the road",
"Well I hope he's having more luck than I am"
But let's be fair about someone being from another English-speaking country that has different names for things and has grown up calling them that. I'm an American, and we have friends here from the UK who use the Scottish/English terms for things still, after 15 years here, and we don't correct them or point out that they said the wrong thing. It's okay, we know what they mean (and if we don't, we ask, and the next time we know what they mean).
3:01 While the admissions process makes it a bit more complicated, you CAN send your kids to school in a different county in the UK. Some of the kids at my kids' school (in England) even come from Wales each day.
Oh. Good to know. Thx
Eggs. Once they have been in the fridge, they must stay in the fridge. Taking them out allows condensation on the surface which washes off the protective layer.
Will keep that in mind. Thx
Same as new Zealand. We have state funded health care but you can also have private health care. I had a job where they provided insurance where you could reclaim all costs of f doctors visits and charges for medication,
So you’d get a bill then the insurance reimburses u?
I use both NHS and private, but the key point here is -
From what I hear, US private health care is way more expensive than British private health care, and there seems to be a lot of wheeling and dealing with your insurance.!!
It's more expensive but you get more for your money and depending on state you can pay alot less tax.
You can also accidentally be seen by a specialist, or at a hospital not covered by your plan, ending in a life changing bill you need to negotiate over.
If an ambulance is involved, you might have no control over where you’re taken.
You might also find your condition isn’t covered.
US health cover is often paid by employers for some reason, which causes a whole other set of issues.
There is really no such thing as medical bankruptcy in England. Use the health system as you need, there is never a bill.
@@DontPanicDear Medical bankruptcy in the UK is living with untreated illness or death.
@@garyfreeman896
That’s not really a thing here. Everyone is equally entitled to healthcare and nobody is denied treatment, or sent home to die.
That’s exactly what happens to tens of thousands of US citizens every year. Uninsured, incorrect coverage etc.
Medical bankruptcy in the the US runs at over 1/2 million PER YEAR!
That is 66% of all bankruptcy 😢
Those are official US stats, not something I’ve made up.
It’s a world wide embarrassment that such a wealthy country lets this happen.
@@DontPanicDear I am from 'here' and there is no shortage of failures by the NHS. People die and suffer all the time due to our over stretched and badly managed NHS. And when it comes to embarrassing consider being forced to pay high taxes with the threat of prison if you don't pay just to get entered into the health care lottery.
Both are heavily flawed.
Most people working for an employer in the UK will be getting an annual leave entitlement of about 30 working days and many employers will insist that people take at least one block of leave of 10 days, which including weekends will be 2 weeks.
The last job that I had prior to retirement a couple of years ago gave us a leave entitlement of 36 working days. This was because it was a public sector job, linked to Civil Service pay scales. We went for a number of years without any pay rises so instead we were given additional leave days.
If you didn't use all of your leave in the year you could carry over a maximum of 9 days into the next year. Due to COVID and the fact that a lot of leave wasn't used while we were working from home my leave entitlement in my last year was 45 days (9 weeks off) which I took just prior to retirement so I was out of the office from April and came back on the day of my retirement in June to hand back my laptop and ID pass. Much to the dismay of my colleagues as I managed to avoid any kind of handover exercise.
Haha. What a great story. I love it! 😍
How long do you have to work there for 30 days off? In my last job in the US it increased the longer you worked for the company. By 24 years, I worked my way up to 140 hours of vacation for that year.
@@davidroddini1512 How much time off you have in the UK has less to do with how log you've worked there as it has with how high up your rank is in the company. Your boss will always get more than you do.
@@davidroddini1512
When I first started working in industry during the late 1970s our basic leave allowance was 20 days, which would raise in increments of an extra day for every 5 years served.
My next employer in industry started me with 25 days leave which again rose in increments upto a maximum of 30 days.
I then got a job in the public sector where my pay was linked to the Civil Service pay scales. My leave on joining was 25 days which accumulated 1 day per year upto 30 days after which the leave increase was 1 day every 5 years.
We then had a period where public sector workers didn't get any pay rises but got extra leave in lieu of pay rises so I ended up with 36 days leave each year for my last 6 years including the couple of years of remote working from home during the COVID restrictions.
Before I retired, here in the UK, I worked in adult education, and there were three 10-week terms in a year (plus a little bit of work needed outside of term time) so I had about 20 weeks holiday a year!
You can park on either side of the street. You don’t have to park “with the flow of traffic.” I found that very convenient!
If you live in Kent, which is a big area as many counties are, you don’t get to pick any school for your kids, there are catchment areas within the counties which your child can go to a school in. You are sometimes able to send them out of the catchment area but not miles away, Kent from top to bottom would take at least 2+ hours to travel which would be ridiculous and, unless you moved, your child wouldn’t get in a school that far away. Our eggs aren’t washed and have display and use by dates on the boxes but keeping them for months on the side or in the fridge would not be a good idea 🤢, I also would not keep them right by the cooker. ❤
It is possible to attend a state school outside the county/local authority you live in. This is particularly so when you live near a county boundary, where the nearest school may well be across the border.
You do not have to send children to a school within the catchment area, you can express a preference for other local schools. You don't really have a choice. If you live in a school catchment area and the school is full, you will probably be given a place in a nearby school.
Every year I always took 5 weeks leave in 2 tranches - 1 x 3 weeks (to go abroad) and 1 x 2 weeks for UK local holiday destination!
Also had the days off between Xmas and NY, so effectively another 10 day break (for cost of 3 days leave because of the 3 Bank Holidays and weekend days).
I can't imagine only going away for 1 week at a time! It takes me a few days just to stop thinking about work!
I also never "touch base" with work while on leave. No work phone or laptop. They're dead to me during that time! ☠
Sounds like a dream-nvr happens in the US
My observation is that like most Americans, you seem to be using "England" to represent the whole of the UK (or at least Britain). All these things apply in Wales, N Ireland and Scotland just the same as England.
I’m doing my best to represent what I know and not presume. Since I’ve only lived near in England for about a year, and no where else in the UK I’m trying my best to keep my observations within that tight sphere until I can speak confidently about the same situations in other parts of the UK.
@TheHicksonDiaries Jaywalking is illegal in Northern Ireland. The school placing systems are different in each part of the UK. Otherwise I think this list is true UK wide.
Eggs breathe as they are coveredin open pores, washing a dirty egg is just going to force that dirt in through the pores of the egg, contaminating then. So rule of thumb if them come from a normal shelf don't put in your fridge but if they came chilled, same thing happens as they warm up anything on surface is sucked in, so in the fridge if already chilled
It is possible, in the States, if you're a prepper or a homesteader, to take advantage of peak laying season and put away your unwashed eggs in big jars or tubs (stacked on layers of straw) with tight lids, and store them in the cellar with potatoes, carrots, canning and so on. They will keep for months.
I 🏴 do put my eggs in the fridge to keep them fresher and it does recommend it on most of the boxes. If you are going to use some the next day you can always put a few out the night before to let them come up to room temperature.
I still used mine straight from the fridge though most of the time.
Living here, have you noticed that despite Webster altering the spelling of words and making them shorter, in general most of our daily words in English English, are much shorter? Refrigerator - fridge, elavator - lift, airplane - plane, sidewalk - path, restroom - bog 😁
You just wanted to say Bog 😂 Spoons Bog.. Google that Americans 😏
@@mietekpadowicz2118
Webster altered the way many words were spelt (but US uses spelling 😄) and made them shorter but in general we don't arse about and just use short words for the same thing, so...restroom/bathroom 'bog/WC' 😁
Elevator ‘lift’, dumpster ‘skip’, trash can ‘bin’, waste paper basket ‘bin’, vehicle ‘car’, sidewalk ‘path’, airplane ‘plane’, parking lot ‘car park’, Trump ‘fart’, bicycling ‘cycling’, horseback riding ‘horseriding/riding’, faucet ‘tap’, restroom ‘toilet’, sweater ‘jumper’, French fries ‘chips’, pitcher ‘jug’, intersection ‘crossroads’, underwear ‘pants’ diaper ‘nappy’, suspenders, ‘braces’, vacation ‘holiday’, learned ‘learnt’, spelled ‘spelt’, dreamed ‘dreamt’, check ‘bill’, couch ‘sofa’, cell phone ‘mobile’, flashlight ‘torch’, apartment ‘flat’, cotton candy ‘candyfloss’, pacifier ‘dummy’, trunk ‘boot’, crib ‘cot’, drugstore ‘chemist’, washcloth ‘flannel’, broiler ‘grill’, counterclockwise ‘anticlockwise’, bookstore ‘bookshop’, movie theater ‘cinema’, movie ‘film’, package ‘parcel’, rutabega ‘swede’, fanny pack ‘bumbag’, scotch tape ‘sellotape’, zipper ‘zip’,
Obviously there are exceptions such as soccer ‘football’, fall ‘autumn’, pants ‘trousers’, hood ‘bonnet’, meridian ‘central reservation’ closet ‘wardrobe’, line ‘queue’ but not many at all in English 🏴 compared to American English.
'Fridge' is actually just a contraction of 'refrigerator'.
@@timg1246 Yep, as I said above we tend to use shorter words, I even put 'refrigerator' there right next to 'fridge'.
Bog is not a Country-wide thing
& is a chav
word!🙏🏻🇬🇧
5:54 legally if your family are having a meal in a public house, children can drink alcohol at 16 but not purchase it from the bar an over 18 has to go to the bar to order them
This would never happen in the US
In UK financial services you will most likely be FORCED to take a 2 week break from work (it's an anti-fraud thing)
That's so true. An accountant who doesn't want the holiday relief to be looking through their books for more than two days is a bit of a red-flag 🙂
A lot of US employers have the same requirement for people who work with money.
About the eggs thing. Eggs in the US have to be washed by law. Eggs in Europe cannot be washed (the main reason why they arent exported/imported). The reason for this is the higher standard of husbandry in Europe, thanks mainly to EU regulations. Hens, when they lay, leave a protective coating on their eggs that forms a barrier to nasties that might make you ill.
UK regulations too. In the US they wash their eggs in chlorine due to the poor hygiene standards.
Taking leave here in NZ is legally enforced, not the employee, but management is responsible to make sure that it is taken and failure to do so can result in legal action.
Before I retired I had an entitlement of four weeks leave a year plus statutory holidays such as Christmas, Boxing Day, the Easter Holidays, Anzac Day, Waitangi Day etc. With this entitlement I was able to take several overseas holidays of more than a month with no need to maintain any contact with my place of employment, not difficult to do with effective management.
Like the UK we have a national healthcare system, also a mixed system but the private insurances are far cheaper than the US models as they are usually, if not all, cooperatives, with no requirement to make a profit and no need not cover long term, providing cover for procedures such as hip replacements, heart surgery etc. and the surgeons providing these services are usually the same as those contracted to the public system so standards are high.
Long term care is undertaken by the public system.
This sounds like heaven compared to what I experienced in the US
I’ve never left eggs out of a fridge. I’ve always kept them in a fridge. Been doing it for over 50 years.
Seems like it is more of a preference here. R u in the USA
@@TheHicksonDiaries No. I’m in UK.
If it's convenient then carry on. But you don't need to keep them in the fridge.
“Kent county “
Adorable 😂
It was charming. It’s partly because she’s addressing a largely US audience and they use ‘county’ all the time when they name places.
It is ‘ the county of Kent’. Kent county is an Irish word order which passed to the USA. The King’s formal representative in the county is the ‘Lord Lieutenant of the County of Kent’.
kent is a county??
Kent does not officially have the prefix or suffix 'County!' Only Durham has the title COUNTY Durham
You guys! 😜
Americans can thank the organization MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) for the drinking age being 21 here. In most states, it was 21 from the end of Prohibition (1933) to the Vietnam War era (late 1960s/early 1970s), though in New York State it was 18, and some states had lower drinking ages for beer and/or wine. The age at which you were considered an adult was also 21. Most states changed the age of adulthood to 18 due to arguments that it was unfair that 18 year olds could literally be sent to their death (war) but not have full legal rights. Many (but not all) states lowered the drinking age at the same time, but it was a hodgepodge. Some states were 18, some 19, some 20, some 21. IIRC, in some counties in Wisconsin, it was 17 for beer. This encouraged young people to drive to other states with lower drinking ages, get drunk, and drive home. MADD lobbied for a consistent drinking age throughout the US. It was easier to pressure the states to raise it to 21 than to lower it. Technically, it is a state matter, but any state which lowers their drinking age will lose precious federal highway funds. (BTW, you are not considered an adult at 18 in every state. In Alabama and Nebraska, you have to be 19, and in Mississippi you have to be 21.)
Good to see you've got a KETTLE. Every English kitchen has one - for making cups of tea, which should be drank with a splash of milk. (Sugar is optional).
This was really interesting, thank you, I was always amazed that Americans had less holiday allowance knowing they work such long hours most of the time but I think there are maybe more public holiday days allocated? no comparison, but our American friends definitely make the most of those! The eggs thing is a new to me 😁 and the volume of eggs you guys eat always amazes me! Maybe I’ll eat more you don’t look a day over 18!😊. All the best to you, glad to have you here. 🥰🏴🇬🇧
Thx so much appreciate it. We don’t have any more public holidays than are here in England (not sure if it’s the same in the rest of the UK). And thx for the sweet compliments…
The “original” schools were for monks only. Then schools were made “public” to rich families - public schools were actually private for rich people. Hence why PRIVATE schools are called PUBLIC. State schools are the FREE ones
Interesting. Thx for the clarification
Under age drinking in pubs🍷🍻 ! No publican ( a person who runs a bar or pub) in the UK will knowingly serve under age drinkers since they will be liable for a considerable fine or even lose their license to operate. It does happen.
Of course-I didn't mean to insinuate that anyone would put their livelyhood at stake to serve someone underage
It strikes me that in the United States people are overly fussy about some things and it's sometimes things that really aren't that important but if you don't adhere to some crazy law you could well find yourself in serious trouble.
The law surrounding payment for healthcare is the one that probably frustrates me the most.
It sounds like by getting ill, if that weren't already stressful enough that the US government in their infinite wisdom insists that you pay the bill.
I mean what actual use is the US government?
Having said that I guess it's in-keeping with the US ideology of Work & money first, life second.
Sure glad I am not in the United States or Canada.
I keep eggs both on the counter & in the fridge - usually I have a dozen (12) eggs in a ceramic egg tray on the counter, any additional eggs are on egg racks in the fridge (at present I have 13), but as I usually use 2 to 4 a day, I replace room-temperature eggs from the counter tray with eggs from the fridge. I always buy free range eggs, either from the supermarket or occasionally a local farm shop (I live in a small British town with adjacent farms & a couple of convenient farm shops).
It's common in the US for doctors to charge a co-pay, usually about $25 to $40, for some kinds of office visits. It doesn't have to be paid in cash, though. (There's usually also a co-pay for prescription medicines.) While I understand you might see some advantages in nobody paying anything, requiring a small payment does cut down on the number of people scheduling in-person doctor visits when a phone call would do as well, and makes appointments easier to get when you need them.
Nice to see that when you use the word England, you have the English flag (St Georges cross), but the item you mention are universal to the whole of the Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) and United Kingdom (which includes Northern Ireland) ~
Thank you for noticing. I’m to be as responsible as possible as I continue to learn more about my new home! 😀
The Union Jack is The Cross of St.George(England)TheSaltire of St.Patrick(Ireland) + The Cross Saltire of St. Andrew(Scotland).
Well Scotland does have a separate legal system
@@markthomasson5077 And it is better in most examples, too. Just not the recent stupidity of the SNP and its allies.
In the UK we wouldn't say "Kent County". We would just normally say "Kent"
Thx. Appreciate the knowledge.
Or “the county of Kent”.
But we do say County Durham
@@GenialHarryGrout but you don’t say “Durham County”, which is where this thread started. The OP said we don’t put “county” after the name.
@@gkbrogden9964 nope. I live in Kent, we say Kent. 😊
Jfi, we don’t say ‘ Kent County’ it’s just Kent, for example, all brits will know exactly where that is,.
The NHS here is actually privatised, just like doctors surgeries, most UK citizens don’t know but it’s true...if you use it’s services as a visitor, your get billed if you don’t have insurance
No this only applies in England. Not in Wales you won't. Different countries different system.
the NHS isn't privatised at all. It's still funded by the government. Private companies do have contracts but the service hasn't been privatised.
@@TrevM0nkey You are correct. The NHS also sometimes contracts with the Private Health Care organisations for high volume, quick turn over surgery or diagnostics. It helps with waiting lists.
When you go to a private hospital you will be asked if you have insurance and their clearance, otherwise its money up front, often when an appointment is made. Otherwise with the NHS it's all free. I had an operation to rejoin the tendons in my finger and the only thing that was said was try not to do it again!
Another is pathways in the countryside. Whilst out hiking in the UK, public pathways will often go through farmlands and private land. Yesterday I was hiking and went through two farm fields, one containing cows, the other containing sheep. Apparently that would never happen in the US.
You’re absolutely right…it would be trespassing
Choosing the school to send your kids is a joke. The political idea here is that parents will want to send their children to the better performing schools. The poorer-performing schools then have to improve to get more students. As a parent I want all my local schools to be excellent and not have to faff around with "school league tables". In other words, invest in the schools!
I don't think ANY of them in the UK are great. That's what trying to run them on an ever-decreasing budget does. Which is what a Conservative government does.
The egg thing, you can leave them out but I always keep them in the fridge. I've heard you can add 4 weeks to the best before date. I've certainly used eggs beyond the best before from the fridge and they were fine.
eggs dont NEED to be stored in fridge but as fridge makers put an egg tray in the door it makes a convenient place to store them
@@philiprice7875 .
I haven't seen an egg tray is a fridge for many years. I keep mine out for however long I need to, the only thing that happens is the airspace gets bigger.
Storing eggs in lime water can keep them in a useable state for as much as 2 years.
@@Thurgosh_OG question is "why do you want to store eggs for 2 years?" it is not if the chickens are going to stop laying them
@@Thurgosh_OG My Mum used to tell me they stored them in isinglass years ago. Seems if you keep air out they last.
Very interesting. I recall a case from quite a few years back when a brit was on holiday in Dallas. He didn't know about Jay walking. While crossing at an "inappropriate" place, a police officer called out to him to stop. When he didn't, the officer shot him, DEAD...
That's terrible. Guy must have thought he wasn't doing anything wrong so didn't stop, and got murdered!
This is so sad. It’s not good that I’m not surprised tho. America messed me up
I will bet you a dollar he is not a policeman any more...
As to public schools in the US, it's not always true that you have to go to your assigned neighborhood school. The State of Minnesota has what we call "open enrollment", which means you can send your kids to any public school in the state as long as they have room and you can get them there. (Out-of-district schools aren't responsible for transportation.) Your child's share of school finding goes half to the district they are attending and half to their home district, so as not to unduly burden either one.
Essentially all these things are valid anywhere across Europe
Thx for the info
Not the jaywalking. Crossing against the light is frowned upon (even if not unlawful) in some countries, e.g. Germany, Switzerland.
Some European countries use the co-pay system for medical visits, that was mentioned in the video as something the US has that the UK doesn't.
Hey. Hope you guys are well. Enjoy the holiday weekend. J 👍
Thanks! You too!
UK healthcare: urgent, go to a hospital (or call 999 for a free ambulance), typical time to arrive, be assessed, x-rayed, break confirmed, cast set & you walk out out: 90 minutes. Price £0. Zero forms (except "are you pregnant? Because we need to x-ray you.")
As someone who used to take 5 weeks at a time for my holidays (I have family on the other side of the world), I find the US attitude to be ridiculous.
I also had the HR department (same company) contact me when I had worked for 3 weeks doing an extra 10 hours - I was running some high priority tests - to ask if I was being put under pressure to do the additional hours, and did I need support to challenge my senior managers . . . Not something I expected.
50 Countries
in Europe
altogether💜💜
Mrca is a Country🤔💜
& Europe is a massive Continent🤗💜
Just like Asia
& Africa!😅💜
🙏🏻💜🇬🇧💜
In UK and Europe it is compulsory for all chickens to be injected against Salmonella. Not compulsory in the USA though 70% are ( to avoid litigation). Refrigeration reduces but does not eliminate Salmonella which the US still has at about 15 times the rate of Europe.
The US also has a stack of processed food additives which are banned in Europe.
Yes. You’re correct.