How I see the US after living in Europe for 5 years.. (American Reacts)

  Рет қаралды 275,749

MoreJps

MoreJps

Күн бұрын

Thank you so much for watching!
🔴Other Channel: ItsJps - / itsjps
🤝INSTAGRAM: @itsjpsyt
Where should we go next? 🌏❓

Пікірлер: 1 400
@kimbirch1202
@kimbirch1202 Ай бұрын
An American tourist on holiday on a Greek Island, engaged in conversation with a local fisherman , who was sitting on the harbour wall, watching the world roll by. The American asked him of he'd been out fishing today, and he replied that he'd been out for a few hours in the morning. The tourist then asked him why he didn't fish all day. The fisherman asked why he should do that. " well, then you could catch more fish, and buy a bigger boat, and make lots of money " said the tourist. " And then what? " asked the Fisher man. " Well then you could retire , take it easy, and enjoy life " " But that's just what I'm doing now " said the Fisherman.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 27 күн бұрын
another reason is that you can't catch fish all day, because fish act on the sun and are most active early in the morning and in the evening sun, not midday
@yepyepyepyep4602
@yepyepyepyep4602 26 күн бұрын
@@Blackadder75 its a metafor mate
@waigl1845
@waigl1845 26 күн бұрын
Funnily enough, that story started life as a tale about a German tourist in Spain. The original title was "Anekdote zur Senkung der Arbeitsmoral", and it was written by Heinrich Böll in 1963
@franskehovinga1327
@franskehovinga1327 20 күн бұрын
And honestly, if he makes more money he will just spend more so he won’t even be able to retire early and enjoy life.
@kimbirch1202
@kimbirch1202 20 күн бұрын
@@franskehovinga1327 Yep , and the greedy are never satisfied.
@lucypembroke3574
@lucypembroke3574 Ай бұрын
I love videos of Americans who moved to Europe. To a large extend, they appreciate our work/life balance, our health system, our "freedom" that they have been taught only exists in America...... We western Europeans complain a lot about our countries. Then we watch these videos and are reminded how good life is in Europe
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Ай бұрын
We complain a lot about our countries. Because we know our countries could be better. Americans have a culture of believing they’re the best country in the world.
@olgahein4384
@olgahein4384 Ай бұрын
@@JarlGrimmToys *nods in german
@joshuacoldwater
@joshuacoldwater Ай бұрын
@@JarlGrimmToysoh trust me, no, no we don’t.
@nurburgringbiker
@nurburgringbiker Ай бұрын
@@JarlGrimmToys They are the indusputed number one though (For mass shootings, that is).
@praydotell3634
@praydotell3634 Ай бұрын
@coot1925
@coot1925 Ай бұрын
I'm a brit who was married to an American for 15 years. One Christmas we went to her dads real estate partners house. One the very first questions the guy asked me is what do I do as a job. I told him I'm a trucker. Then he asked me if it paid well. I said it payes the bills and allowes us to take 2 trips to Florida a year. He asked how we could afford to take that much time off work. I told him it's law to give employee's 4 weeks a year payed vacation and that all our health care is free. He didn't ask any further questions after that. ✌❤🇬🇧
@derek-press
@derek-press Ай бұрын
coot ,sorry to say this but (I am a Brit living in Germany ) the nhs is not free,you pay every month for it ,granted if it is some major OP or medication you are covered because you have paid your NI along with all the other workers,in Germany it is practically the same but the health insurance companies are private BUT controlled by the government and it is just the same as paying NI and is not expencive,I right now as i type this comment can call my doctor and get an appointment within an hour if needed or first thing in the morning ..I am not joking! I also because of the years I have worked with my company (semi retired now) have 35 days holiday plus bank holidays ..the nhs is a Dinosaur
@erelpc
@erelpc Ай бұрын
yeah although I get the impression wages are higher in the US. Though I can't confirm this and show any comprehensive data for it, we in Britain get more benefits for lesser pay. I think this is a trade off most people are happy to make. Unless you're working on a self employed basis for your employer, in which case you should be getting a higher wage than those on a permanent contract, without the benefits.
@eattherich9215
@eattherich9215 Ай бұрын
@@derek-press: the NHS is free AT THE POINT OF ACCESS - you should know this - and nobody is going to ask you to produce a health insurance plan. There is nothing wrong with the NHS that PROPER funding cannot neuter. Successive governments have tried to provide healthcare on the cheap. Time for a wholesale rethink that doesn't involve selling it to American-style healthcare providers.
@arnewengertsmann9111
@arnewengertsmann9111 Ай бұрын
@@derek-press Hm although here in Germany we have a quite similar system. It is a bit more hybrid with mandatory health insurance and private, but we still have a universal healthcare system.
@derek-press
@derek-press Ай бұрын
@@eattherich9215 @earth ,I will say this again,it is 16.15 here in Germany and i can guarantee I will get a doctors appointment within an hour or tomorrow morning 100 % you need to look into the German and French system ,the nhs has too many up there at the top earning 1500K for admin ,don't try and kid yourself ,and again I will tell you 8 o'clock tomorrow i will be sitting in front of a doctor ! 100% if needed ,stop pretending the nhs is amazing ,the nhs is a Dinosaur
@zyoninkiro
@zyoninkiro Ай бұрын
I moved to Europe over two decades ago and have lived for almost twenty years in Italy. Somethings that I love about Europe which I can't get in the US: 1. Good quality public transport - I don't need a car and can easily move around with buses, trams (streetcars), metro and trains. 2. Convenient shops - Since Europe does not have stupid "zoning" laws, shops can be in the same area as houses. Supermarkets, tobacco shops, news stands, convenience stores (bodegas), hardware stores etc an easy five to ten minute walk away. 3. Excellent quality food - Ingredient lists are short and you don't need a chemistry major to read them. Preservatives are very rare as are artificial colors and flavors. Many foods are produced within a day's drive of my city. 4. Public health insurance - I don't have to worry about bankruptcy just because I had to goto the ER. The most I ever pay is around €30 which includes EVERYTHING including tests. Wait times are typically less than wait times for seeing a specialist in the states. GP visits are free and appointments are quick. 5. Shops are human sized. While hypermarkets (Carrefour, Auchan, etc) can be found, most shops are small. Even supermarkets are pretty small, maybe twice as large as a Dollar General for many larger supermarkets. Even hypermarkets are smaller as a Wal-Mart Supercenter is a behemoth in comparison. 6. Things are genuine - So many places in the US feel like movie sets. In Europe, what you see is what you get and does not feel like a facade to evoke some type of feeling. 7. Work is just less hectic. - I work as a school teacher. My work feels valued and I am not pushed to meet artificial goals. I have worked for private language schools and even there, I more relaxed than when I worked in the States. Overall, I have no plans to return to the US anytime in the next few years. Here I work to live, not live to work.
@pinkifloyd7867
@pinkifloyd7867 Ай бұрын
Interesting considering all thats really going on right now and many are trying to leave eu 🤔
@umariireason9127
@umariireason9127 Ай бұрын
@@pinkifloyd7867 Who are?
@Hirotoro4692
@Hirotoro4692 Ай бұрын
​@@pinkifloyd7867as a European I'm not aware of "many trying to leave the EU". I just want to point out that anything you learned on fox news is probably fake so don't believe everything you hear.
@draculakickyourass
@draculakickyourass Ай бұрын
@@umariireason9127 Don't bother to ask,he probably heard thet on Russia TV
@adambazso9207
@adambazso9207 Ай бұрын
@@umariireason9127 I think mostly the morons try to leave the EU.
@T.O.P.
@T.O.P. Ай бұрын
In The Netherlands they say: I work to live, I don't live to work.
@torstenm6462
@torstenm6462 Ай бұрын
Not only in the Netherlands, in Europe.
@paulbromley6687
@paulbromley6687 Ай бұрын
We say that here in the UK too
@DanMarksman
@DanMarksman Ай бұрын
@@paulbromley6687 Denmark too!
@philiptodd6255
@philiptodd6255 Ай бұрын
Same here in the U.K.
@Celisar1
@Celisar1 Ай бұрын
@@torstenm6462But the reality is that most people are expected to work overtime and a lot of them unpaid. I should know, not only from personal experience in several jobs but also because I have worked in a field where I had to ask people about their working conditions.
@juwen7908
@juwen7908 Ай бұрын
What's good on thousands of food options, when every single one is a bad choice.
@WookieWarriorz
@WookieWarriorz Ай бұрын
The thing is, visit the USA and you'll see the actuality have limited choices on a lot of foods because they stack products WIDE you can even see this video but this is the biggest thing I noticed living in the USA. You go to an isle and it's huge and you think wow there must be.1000 options here but really there's the same 100 products as any country in Europe the USA stores just have more space to stock wide. Like this is a European supermarket. Ceral 1, cereal 2 etc in the USA it's ceral 1, ceral 1, ceral 1, cereal 1, cereal 1, cereal 2, cereal 2, cereal 2, cereal 2. The USA choices for fresh meals and packaged meals and cheap vegetables are extremely poor.
@juwen7908
@juwen7908 Ай бұрын
@@WookieWarriorz that's what I meant, even with more options, not a single one would be a healthy one. But I get what you said 😉
@carlbland68
@carlbland68 Ай бұрын
wouldnt eat american food if i was paid filled with to much crap @@WookieWarriorz
@matiacolusso5509
@matiacolusso5509 Ай бұрын
Quantity over quality, easy. Most of the food in the US contains preservatives and chemicals substances which are declared illegal in the EU, here in Europe an additive is banned until it's proved safe for the human health, in the US any substances can be used until it's proved to be dangerous. I lived in Florida for a year, I travelled to California and Massachusetts and the state of Washington...just to find the same restaurant chains I had at home. There is more food diversity in my Italian region than half of the US
@geertstroy
@geertstroy Ай бұрын
Those " thousand food options" first dramatically overblown , second bobbing around their neck concealed by goaties ...
@kallumlgltd
@kallumlgltd Ай бұрын
I used to earn a lot of money (this isn't a brag or anything) and I was TERRIBLY unhappy, then I suffered massive head trauma and I am now on disability benefits and I'm the happiest I've ever been! - my dad used to say "there's no point being the richest man in the graveyard!" Happiness comes first! 💜
@adoteq_
@adoteq_ Ай бұрын
I agree with that. Happiness to me is a balance between what you want, what you need and who you are.
@lifesbutastumble
@lifesbutastumble Ай бұрын
""there's no point being the richest man in the graveyard!"" Never heard that before, but I like it! Your dad was very wise!
@ransu7327
@ransu7327 Ай бұрын
Agree 👍
@kallumlgltd
@kallumlgltd Ай бұрын
All your comments are lovely! 💜💜
@the13thdukeofwybourne77
@the13thdukeofwybourne77 Ай бұрын
@@lifesbutastumble That saying is very old!
@wizardm
@wizardm Ай бұрын
I am a former german police officer and police trainer. The problem with US policing is that they are underfunded, badly selected and badly trained. The major police tactics is self protection and enforcing. The result is a kind of war against citizns. In Germany a police officer has to pass a difficult assesment before being hired for training. The training is about three years fulltime and is paid.
@maxs2982
@maxs2982 Ай бұрын
I am sorry but underfunded is just plain wrong. For example LAPD's yearly budget exceeds the military spending of the Czech Republic and is about twice the amount of Ireland's military spending. That is crazy. The LAPD is basically a small country's army. Instead of wasting all this money on military equipment for a police force it might be better invested in some social programs to help people get back on their feet, which would also reduce crime. The answer to more crime is almost never more police or deadlier police. As a European you should know that but I guess cops gonna be cops.
@wizardm
@wizardm Ай бұрын
@@maxs2982 Many of the problems of the US police have to do with tactics and structure. In Germany, police officers never operate alone; police patrols and the crews of police vehicles always consist of at least two officers. Another aspect is training. In Germany, police officers have almost three years of paid full-time training. This all costs more money. I therefore assumed that in the US, financial reasons lead to the police being poorly trained and police officers operate in the field alone. This leads to more aggressive behavior, an excessive fixation on self-protection and authoritarian, intimidating behavior.
@firstnamelastname7267
@firstnamelastname7267 Ай бұрын
Did you know you can be too well educated to be a cop in the US? An applicant from New York (I think) was turned down after scoring too highly on his tests, appealed the decision and LOST. Fucking joke of a country.
@galadballcrusher8182
@galadballcrusher8182 Ай бұрын
Especially as guns are way more widespread among population and not as strictly screened on licencing so many unstable individuals may carry even when heavily drinking....
@wizardm
@wizardm Ай бұрын
@@kellypickle There is no state in the USA where the police have three years of full-time training. There is also no selection process like in Germany. Before the training begins, there is a difficult test, which is divided into a theoretical and a sporting part. At the end there is a psychological assessment. Once you have passed all this, the training begins.
@LalaDepala_00
@LalaDepala_00 Ай бұрын
A teacher of mine once said in highschool "the United States offers unlimited freedom to the rich and big corporations. This includes the freedom to scam and steal."
@fragdoch-nicht1290
@fragdoch-nicht1290 Ай бұрын
Amen. "Cutting the redtape" and "deregulating" are such popular promises from politicians,and few seem to realise that it makes your air,food and water poisonous while your salary shrinks or stays the same for decades. Sadly this twisted understanding of "freedom" is propagated around the world by neoliberal think tanks. Cant say europe is still free of this,on the opposite people fight hard to keep their workers rights.
@Gyvenotjas
@Gyvenotjas Ай бұрын
This is how I felt in NYC, spent 4 weeks there as an European. I was asked if I would want to live there, and without hesitation I said no, unless I would treat it as an billionaires playground. That's the only scenario, where I can see myself living in a place like that. Sadly that stands true for most big American cities. Towns, lesser known states are much more livable but then you're dealing with the crazy welfare system.
@eattherich9215
@eattherich9215 Ай бұрын
@@Gyvenotjas: the US is an exponentially more expensive country in which to live and location doesn't really matter when you are used to European prices, social support network and not being in the clutches of the corporations.
@notlyxu
@notlyxu Ай бұрын
@@eattherich9215 The US? Expensive?
@Basca112
@Basca112 Ай бұрын
@@notlyxu The expensive thing i think of is healthcare, I live in Sweden "not the utopia some Americans think it is" but healthcare is super cheap, my grandfather and grandmother and father all died in cancer, my father in prostate cancer at age 58, "50% chanse i get it" as soon i feel something is off i contact the doctor and have it checked out and that cost me 20$ or less, that is how you catch cancer in the early stages, if it would cost me 1k or more for the same checkup i doubt i would do it for economic reasons. I do belive it is cheaper than Sweden in many other ways, the taxes in LA, NY and other big citys are probably on the same level, you just call it something else, but it is a fee for something.
@diegoapalategui579
@diegoapalategui579 Ай бұрын
I was offered a six figures job in the US....NO WAY. Almost no vacations, no liveable downtowns, superlong distances, police issues, safety issues, superexpensive medicine, bad food, ....i stay in Europe.
@michiganstad
@michiganstad 7 күн бұрын
EXACTLY
@Frivals
@Frivals 18 сағат бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@diegoapalategui579
@diegoapalategui579 17 сағат бұрын
@@Frivals What makes you laugh?
@uli48
@uli48 Ай бұрын
"Are you happy?" Best question ^^
@rachel_c4558
@rachel_c4558 18 күн бұрын
💯💯💯
@user-tk1xd9js1z
@user-tk1xd9js1z Ай бұрын
I had a history teacher who once said that the USA is a third world country. All the students in the classroom was shocked by his statement but after I have seen a lot of YT-videos with poor and homeless people I am starting to understand that he was not wrong. Greetings from Sweden!
@sungod86
@sungod86 Ай бұрын
I´m a Swede too and that statement sounds like something coming from a tired Socialist. America Bad - Sweden Good. Sweden is almost a third world country now, the healthcare system is in shambles, young people have to wait 20 years to get an apartment, the gang crimes and bombings are making society very unsafe etc.
@rtyria
@rtyria 28 күн бұрын
We are not a 3rd world country yet, but our government seems determined to make us one.
@oeokosko
@oeokosko 26 күн бұрын
There is great disparity between rich and poor, particularly so in the red states. I was shocked to see the rural poverty in Mississippi when I did a road trip in the late 80's. Also shocked by the religious and rightwing talk on the local radio stations.
@stanspb763
@stanspb763 17 күн бұрын
@@oeokosko Try the "progressive cities like San Francisco that used to be a great city and now is a ruin. Actually poor in most countries are less poor than the middle in the US. If a person in rural India was given a dollar they would have a positive net worth but give the average American family $50,000 they would still have a negative net worth of several hundred thousand, but less free time. How many 20 year olds have $150,000 negative net worth in the US? Most. College loans even for those who could not afford to continue they already have at least $100,000 in debt and if they needed a car ...which they need because the US has very poor public transportation...they need a car and it is a depreciating asset that never has a positive impact on their economic health. I moved from the US 24 years ago and dropped my cost of living $23,000 a month and have much better life than was possible. I have a choice of 273 drama theaters with in walking distance. I attend world class opera at least once a week, top ballet performances with a choice of 9 main ballet theaters, 474 museums, 54 concert halls. The last time I was in NYC with GF, she spotted a ad for an opera we both like so as it turned out the theater, the MET had tickets left, not the best but ok for only $1600!! We pay $20 for a better casts, sets, theaters and orchestra. Or 53 jazz clubs and a hundred rock clubs. When I fell carrying a heavy load, and bashed my head open the ambulance arrived with a crew of 4, one being an MD, I was taken to a head trauma hospital and two surgeons saw me as I arrived and took care of everything and was told they I could stay there or return home and a doctor would come to me, Total cost Priceless...free and I was not even a citizen. I asked by it was free and the straight answer was "you needed it". I have 600 beautiful parks within walking distance. I need no car because of excellent public transportation that is faster and cheaper, free university, twice the percentage of population have degrees compared to the US. 58 min paid vacation days so adding weekends it is 72 days minimum. up to 3 years paid family leave and having a baby allows a grant to buy a larger home for the growing family. Having a second baby created a grant of a full years income, almost no crime. My GF can walk through any neighborhood or district of the city of 7mil alone...at 3am and be perfectly safe. Our cost of living is higher than normal because I lease my home but she owns two apartments free of debt, and cost of living which is at a high level is $1400 a month for 2 adults and a spoiled cat. During covid we both contracted it and was visited regularly by a doctor, free of course. I have more access to great art, dance, music, theater, and much more than any American can have access to. Being able to walk anywhere in the stunning city, where everyone gets along. I have never seen a fight or argument on the street or in a club. 200 separate cultures are native and everyone accepts other peoples views or beliefs. There is no homeless, and the vast majority own their homes free of debt, no wonder people get along, there is little or no stress and little if any debt. The government focuses ore on the wellbeing of the general public ore than corporations or wealthy. I only return to the US for 1-2 weeks every 3-5 years and it is shocking how angry, triggered and divided people are, it is really depressing to return.
@AlejandroGaupp
@AlejandroGaupp 17 күн бұрын
The US has both, the first and the third world in one country. It is fundamental important for the US to have homeless. Everybody can see every day what happens if you do not attend or obey the system.
@MichaelHedegaardJensen
@MichaelHedegaardJensen Ай бұрын
Im sorry to say it, but I really dont see USA as a democracy.. Yes, there are free elections, but there are only 2 candidates to choose between.. thats 1 candidate from a dictatorship.. Here in Denmark, we have 14 parties and severel hundres candidates to choose from... and its not the rich people, but ordinary people with big and small educations and jobs... And you dont need to be registrered to vote... everyone over 18 with an adress in Denmark, can vote at local elections.. and to vote for the parlament, you have to be 18 , have an address in Denmark and have a danish citizenship... See.. thats a democracy in my opinion.
@Arthur-fi8qy
@Arthur-fi8qy 12 күн бұрын
I agree with you. There is no way a country that have the politics divided in lobbies of big companies be a democracy
@MichaelHedegaardJensen
@MichaelHedegaardJensen 12 күн бұрын
@@Arthur-fi8qy a other problem, is like i said... That there only are 2 candidates... Remove one of them, and you have a dictatorship. In Denmark we have 14 parties and severel hundred candidates... We elect 179 members to parliament, and the party with most votes, get the primeminlster... If they cant get majority, they team up with other parties to form a government. We have almost always had a minority government and they can do that.. As long as the government dont have a majority against them, if that happen.. They HAVE to annonce a new election... That what happened 2 years ago.
@hillock10
@hillock10 11 күн бұрын
How do they prevent wide scale voter fraud, if all you need is an address? In America, the elections are full of fraudulent voters, fake people with fake addresses, even dead people.
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 11 күн бұрын
There are 2 (actually there are often 3 or 4) candidates running AFTER the primaries. Are you not aware of the debates and campaigning that take place to narrow the field to one Democrat and one Republican? There is also a green party and others. Third and fourth parties just take votes away from the other two. You obviously don't understand what a dictatorship is. Presidents only get 4 yrs. in office before they have to run again for a maximum of 8 yrs. They have less power than Congress. If you don't know this, you're ignorant. If you do, then you're deliberately misrepresenting facts. If the USA was as tiny as Denmark, the voting process would be simple. Do you have 12 million (conservative estimate) non-Danish living there illegally who could vote since you don't require them to register? I know that's twice the population of your entire country.
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 11 күн бұрын
The USA has always had more than 2 parties.The greens, independents and libertarians just don't get enough votes. Your statement to the effect of removing one party is just silly. There are also two vice presidential candidates. Congress has more power than the president, in any case.
@Chuulip
@Chuulip Ай бұрын
I'm from Germany. I meet my best friends since childhood (3 ppl) every weekend. We're all in our mid-30s now, and I have no idea what exactly the job of 2 of them is and where they work. I know one guy is in IT, the other in physics. And for the 3rd one I know her job and employer only because I helped her apply for it back then and proofread application. But we just don't talk about these things, they're irrelevant.
@L0CkEyE
@L0CkEyE Ай бұрын
Huge differences, in America its everything about Jobs and Money, i Seen this when i was myself there. It was pretty sad. I was Glad when i came Back to germany
@jurgen_haan
@jurgen_haan Ай бұрын
Well sometimes it is something that comes up at parties or family gatherings, but it's more an easy accessible subject to break the ice and most of the time people are seriously interested in what a job entails (not how much it pays or how important it is, but what it is you actually do, it's interesting).
@Chuulip
@Chuulip Ай бұрын
@jurgen_haan yeah, when I tell people I'm a scientist, some ask "oh, cool, what do you do research on?" Because it sounds exotic. But if someone tells me they work in an office, I wouldn't give a shit at which company or institution that is. Unless maybe it's Google. Of someone told me they worked at Google I would genuinely be impressed and wanted to know more. But not because they're oh so accomplished but because working at Google sounds super interesting!
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak Ай бұрын
I know what industries they're in (my friends) but we rarely talk about work when trying to chill out and relax, unless the conversation is going dry or you've had a bad week and need to get it off your chest. It's kind of akin to talking about the weather. There are definitely people here who judge based on your occupation and wealth though, I believe classism is a bigger issue in the UK than people realise. We are closer to the US than the rest of Europe in this regard I would say.
@The92Ghost
@The92Ghost 15 күн бұрын
@@Chuulip Sounds interesting until you hear about the harsh crunching which brings us back to the USA lifestyle. Working for the big companies like Google, Facebook, Microsoft is highly anticipated by many young experts but the moment they join those companies their lifestyle turns American and usually they are trapped there for at least a decade which completely destroys them. On the other hand, usually when my friends work at those companies, my second questions is not what you do for them but from how long and if they say a year or two, I would strongly recommend them move on to more stressfree environment.
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Ай бұрын
Americans have thirty kinds of toilet paper in a shop a half hour car drive away, which is nice. I am Dutch and have thirty supermarkets, at the same distance, which have only eight kinds of toilet paper. So within five to ten minutes cycling, I have four supermarkets with eight choices, makes thirty two to pick from. The claim Americans have more choice is an illusion! I can even walk to Aldi, Jumbo, Albert Heyn, Coop, or Lidl.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
but some of those 8 choices in 4 supermarkets will be the same Page TP that every shop sells, so your poor buttocks are having less choice... oh how will you survive!? 😉
@SusanaXpeace2u
@SusanaXpeace2u Ай бұрын
Same where I am in ireland. I can walk to aldi, Lidl or supervalu. I walk everywhere as I'm on a few vus routes, id be embarrassed telling American people that I don't own a car!
@dutchman7623
@dutchman7623 Ай бұрын
@@SusanaXpeace2u So you have a giant car, triple size biggest pickup truck, with a chauffeur! Wow! I worked in city center with few and expensive parking, so used my bicycle to go to work in ten minutes. On the way home I picked up groceries from the market or shop. Car wasn't needed. Neighbors have one, but does leave its parking place only once or twice a week. Train station is about five minutes walk from my home and with connection to all cities and even the airport. Haven't been in a traffic jam for forty years!
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 11 күн бұрын
I live in a small town in the USA. I can WALK to Aldi and a large chain grocery store, two drug stores plus another in the grocery store, one compounding pharmacy, doctors, shopping, restaurants, fast food, a movie theatre, etc. I can walk out my door onto a multi-use path where bicycles and people walking to work, walking for exercise, walking their dogs go by all day. Unlike Europeans, however, I own my home with a large fenced yard for my dogs, my car is parked next to my kitchen door. I'm a few miles from a national forest with hundreds of miles of trails, gorgeous mountain views and waterfalls. Like many Americans, I can buy produce grown locally from farmer's markets and roadside stands. You Europeans simply don't know what you are talking about!
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 11 күн бұрын
@@reindeer7752 of course you know that millions of europeans also own their own homes with yards and space for cars and swimming pools, we don't all live in soviet block flats..... btw in what State do you live? it sounds nice
@teroholopainen1017
@teroholopainen1017 Ай бұрын
I am a Finn (Finland, the happiest country in the world seven year in a row) living in Australia. I did live in Germany for a year late 90's, and a few months in California in 2002. So I see where the guy in the video, the one being reacted to, is coming from and I agree. In Australia I work 40 hours a week, in US I worked 60, and in Finland I worked 37.5. What I miss in Australia are the extra 3.5 weeks of vacation time we had in Finland, as in Ozzie we only have 4 weeks a year. And here in Australia, same as in Finland, no one was really concerned about who you work for, but they do ask how you're doing. And then they are surprised when I tell them how I really am doing, as just like in US, they really don't want to know. Unlike in Finland, that question would not be asked if they really would not want to know.
@MsAnpassad
@MsAnpassad Ай бұрын
We Nordics are quite spoiled. Like we don't even have to work 37.5 to make ends meet, I worked part time in the healtcare and could still afford going abroad and at the same time study at university. Why I could afford it was that I don't have to spend tons of money on insurance or a car. People become happy when they don't have to worry and then you have the energy to care about and help others. There are no longer a need to be selfish.
@MikkoRantalainen
@MikkoRantalainen Ай бұрын
@@MsAnpassad I agree. I'm a Finn, working 37.5 hours per week and I have 38 paid vacation days per year in addition all the national free days such as xmas, new years day etc. And I'm thinking I would be willing to reduce my income a bit to have more free time. I live in a house with adequate temperature control system (I walk barefoot and in t-shirt regardless if it's +30 °C or -30 °C outside), I have FTTH internet connection and good municipality maintained outdoor recreation routes about 100 m from our house (good for running or mountain biking during summer, lighted cross-country skiing route during the winter). Basically the only bad thing is November when it's really dark and wet here. And of course, I don't agree how society spends money but I guess that's worldwide situation.
@omega1231
@omega1231 11 күн бұрын
As a Dane with family from the US, we also had to tell them to stop saying 'how are you' as a greeting, they kept getting people's life stories lol
@ejss
@ejss 2 күн бұрын
​@@MsAnpassad As a Finn I agree that its very easy to make ands meet, but there is no way I could afford to go abroad while studying unless you are talking about those cheap ferries or transfer programs. If you dont live in a big city a car is a necessity in Finland. If I didnt need a car I probably could have afforded some trips abroad.
@RuiAssuncao123
@RuiAssuncao123 Ай бұрын
why u want more money if u dont have the time to spend it?
@wykydytron
@wykydytron Ай бұрын
This. I have so many corpo rat friends. They work entire day, every day. They earn shit tone of money but they have nothing, they have been nowhere, they seen nothing they just live like npcs, good corporate dogs. I take my average wage but with a lot of free time over theirs super high wage anytime. I have time to live and I work because I have to not because work is my life.
@x-Phire
@x-Phire Ай бұрын
Because its Freedom! /sarcasm off
@sedmidivka
@sedmidivka Ай бұрын
yeah I live in the poorer EU country and my salary is like half of what American would call average. I've been to Japan, Cuba, Indonesia, most European capitals, I've been to Barcelona 3 times, Prague around 15 times, Berlin 4 times, Vienna around 15 times, Budapest 8 times, Paris, Madrid, I've been to Croatia, Greece, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Norway to catch Northern Lights (which we did a huge one, really lucky) and many more. I have my own apartment near the city center and a car. and I don't have rich parents, far from it. you don't need that much money to live. at all. just please travel, see the world, it's the best memories, I've never been to 5* hotel but had gazillion 5* experiences which those guys with their expensive guides following the formal tourist route will never ever have
@rikekonrad2094
@rikekonrad2094 Ай бұрын
They pay their hospital bills with it.
@LalaDepala_00
@LalaDepala_00 Ай бұрын
Because it makes you "better" than others.
@tussk.
@tussk. Ай бұрын
Whenever I talk to Americans about the poor work/life balance, they always say that it's worth it because the USA has the best and strongest economy in the world, but at what cost? The obsession with being the biggest and the best has come at the expense of health, family, wellbeing and peace of mind. What's the use of earning more than the next guy if you're working 60 hours a week? When do you get to take a breath and enjoy what you've worked for? We don't work ourselves into the ground, rushing around and exhausting ourselves, and we still enjoy a pretty good lifestyle. When we take a holiday, we typically go to one place and spend a week or two there, safe in the knowledge that we can go to that other place later in the year. We don't have to cram everything into the one week we get because we'll get fired if we take a single hour longer. Our job is what we do, it doesn't define who we are. When I go home, I don't spend a second thinking about work until 9am the next day. You have been told that this is socialism and will lead to the collapse of the country, but we are doing just fine. Come try it. You might like it.
@unwokeneuropean3590
@unwokeneuropean3590 Ай бұрын
Money means nothing if you lose your health and sanity while chasing it. I dont want to live to work, I want to work to get money to live how i want. The free time is the king. Americans cant have free time, they would rather work 3 jobs in a day.
@L0CkEyE
@L0CkEyE Ай бұрын
Same for me i tried to Tell an American its Better to live in Germany but she prefer to Work 70 hours a week, her Job is her Family... It Looks so sad
@donnabaardsen5372
@donnabaardsen5372 Ай бұрын
I agree 💯 percent. I lived in Europe for years and Americans are clueless about just how wonderful it is.
@marcelmoulin3335
@marcelmoulin3335 Ай бұрын
Impeccably said!
@Anaxarete
@Anaxarete Ай бұрын
over 33 trillions dollars national debt, i don't exactly call it "best and strongest economy"....
@dawnstone610
@dawnstone610 Ай бұрын
I moved to Paris France in 1987 when I was 27 years old. Nothing compares to living here. I live alone, never married, no family, but I have everything you could ever want or wish for at your feet just outside your front door. I have never driven a car or paid for medical visits or needed renovations in my apartment. I have an excellent job I do for four hours a day and enjoy all the sports and clubs I have joined for free paid for by my company. I get six weeks of vacation a year and take them to Germany, Italy, Spain and all over France and stay in cheap hotels, eat excellent food and see some amazing sites and museums for free or low costs. I walk everywhere. I eat healthy food in restaurants almost every day. i meet and chat with people all the time from my bakery, butcher, open market, cheese shop and café every day. I meet friends for lunch and coffee and a drink all the time. I sit in cafés and read for hours without being disturbed. I eat food without chemicals. I could go on.
@jonc4403
@jonc4403 Ай бұрын
No one eats food without chemicals, life is chemistry. But your meaning is clear, and it's possible to do the same in the US, at least where I am. Fresh food is readily available, you don't have to eat everything from a box, and I generally don't. It would be nice to have vacation. I haven't been to Paris since about the time you moved there, it's a beautiful city.
@BibaSenana
@BibaSenana Ай бұрын
Manifique!
@jeannetonic2207
@jeannetonic2207 7 күн бұрын
@@jonc4403paris is not that dream Life anymore, dont go now
@sandrinecozic7214
@sandrinecozic7214 2 күн бұрын
Dans les grandes villes t as pas besoin de voiture mais ailleurs oui
@sandrinecozic7214
@sandrinecozic7214 2 күн бұрын
Et tu te fais attaquer par les gentils racailles du coin .
@JamanWerSonst
@JamanWerSonst Ай бұрын
I worked in IT in Germany making about 60k a year. If I looked at similar jobs in the US they often easily paid more than double that. But thats not all there is to it. I have a month of paid vacation, free healthcare and education(no student loan debt, no worries about getting kids through uni). I never worked for more than 40 hours a week on average and no one expected me to be available outside of my regular hours. And I get paid sick days whenever I am sick and no one looks at me weird, on the contrary, people look weird when you cough all over the place in the office. When I decided to switch jobs I didn't lose my health insurance and I was paid 60% of my last salary in unemployment benefits during the months I was looking for a new job. (that is only for a certain amount of time, but plenty of time to find a new job and you get tons of assistance in finding one if you need it) The new job pays even less than the last one, and I am fine with that and expected it, I was just tired of working in IT for e-commerce and wanted to do something with more "purpose".
@richardvanbergen7175
@richardvanbergen7175 Ай бұрын
I live in the Netherlands. I read the US comments about the higher paychecks, but isn’t it true that the US is more expansive to live in. How is the standard of living in the US compared to Europe? I think fuel is cheaper in the US, but what about grocery prices? And then the rent; sometimes I see people having to pay ridiculously large amounts of rent for very few square meters. My thoughts are, even though our salary may be half compared to the US, we can manage just fine and certainly with all the benefits we have.
@prouvencau6343
@prouvencau6343 29 күн бұрын
What is the problem in paying education or health insurance when your salary doubles ?
@JamanWerSonst
@JamanWerSonst 29 күн бұрын
@@prouvencau6343 For profit education or healthcare is a bad idea, generally. Creates the wrong incentives. Apart from that, healthcare bills can be so massive that no normal person has enough liquidity to cover them, so you need an insurance system anyway. And education is usually what you need before you can get a job with a salary, so the education should be free. An overall more educated populace also creates broads benefits for everyone. Being a rich person in a poor country is something only dickheads enjoy.
@katarzynaxx563
@katarzynaxx563 29 күн бұрын
It’s the Same all over the Europe, not only in Germany.
@katarzynaxx563
@katarzynaxx563 29 күн бұрын
@@prouvencau6343Are you serious? You faint on the street and you leave the ER with 10 000 dollars bill. That is absolutely crazy. What if you are older and you start being sick and weak? How will you pay for everything? Is this ok, takt student leaves university with a debt that they must pay off for half of their life? Are you nuts?
@jannetteberends8730
@jannetteberends8730 Ай бұрын
Last year there were more people from the USA emigrating to the Netherlands, than Dutch people emigrated to the USA
@karl6458
@karl6458 Ай бұрын
yeah, usa has a bigger population than netherlands
@rikmetz4720
@rikmetz4720 Ай бұрын
​@@karl6458But netherlands has a higher population density. Actually were getting overpopulated.
@fzkxl9931
@fzkxl9931 Ай бұрын
​@@karl6458 you don't get it. America is attractive only to 3rd word people or very naive young people fed by Disney and Hollywood.
@petergriffinowl
@petergriffinowl Ай бұрын
Do the ratio, that would be the key stat here.
@willzyxOfficial
@willzyxOfficial Ай бұрын
@@karl6458 That's not how that works, as migration isn't only between US-NL, there are many more countries. This is still a net loss for the US vs NL. And it isn't normal either, as for decades more Dutch people moved to the US than the other way around. This reversal says something about the attractiveness of NL vs the US.
@createinspain
@createinspain Ай бұрын
As a Brit living in Spain, it is noticeable even between the UK and EU, let alone the USA. Spain is more relaxed and you don't have the grocery choices here either. The politics in the UK is going the same way. Divide and conquer. Lol, if you think answering about your job is bad, try answering that question if you are a housewife and or stay at home mother. The most important job, relegated to 'what do you DO all day?' -even by other women. Designer clothes and flashy cars mean nothing.
@budapestkeleti6404
@budapestkeleti6404 Күн бұрын
Due to the common language Englanders are attracted to the US and they adapt more and more of their lifestyle. At the same time public services are underfunded, police are underfunded and officers are poorly trained, public transport is dismal. Met Police are just a bunch of useless waste of taxpayers money
@fablb9006
@fablb9006 Ай бұрын
The only thing about Europe that Americans must understand is that it is not a country…. But 50 totally different countries with different cultures, languages, religions, climates, ethnicities, ways of life and level of economy. Some european countries are high income like the US, but other are much lower economically, and some are poor. You can’t say « i know Europe », europe is like this or like that… if you have lived in just one country. The same way you can’t make generalisations about the americas if you have just visited the US. Is Bolivia the same as US ? albania, montenegro or Moldova are nothing like Iceland. Portugal is nothing like Finland or Sweden,,,
@OhArchie
@OhArchie Ай бұрын
50?
@Lafayette_Ronald_Hubbard
@Lafayette_Ronald_Hubbard Ай бұрын
@@OhArchie He said europe, not the EU, so he is maybe 5 off. At least 44 but depending on how you count.
@leokaloper4132
@leokaloper4132 Ай бұрын
@@Lafayette_Ronald_Hubbard Mind that you have to follow European politics in terms of number of States. I'll be 50 (number is pure coincidence) years old soon and my hometown ( a capital) at birth has changed three States since.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
like it or not but Bolivians are called Bolivians, Brazilians are called Brazilians, etc , not Americans... Americans are those from the Divided States of America, (formerly known as USA)
@fablb9006
@fablb9006 Ай бұрын
@@Blackadder75 no all people that live in America can be called Americans.
@johnnewman366
@johnnewman366 Ай бұрын
Putting Europe aside, here’s a comparison of work/life balance between the USA and Australia: The US Federal Government does NOT mandate a single day of ‘paid’ annual, sick or public holiday leave (all left to the discretion of the employer). In Australia every full time worker is entitled, by law, a minimum of 20 days (4wks), paid annual leave, a minimum of 10 days (2wks), paid sick leave and, depending on what state we live in, between 8-10 days of paid public holidays, again, that is the legal minimum. Healthcare - in the USA, no federally mandated universal healthcare for all, US citizens regularly file for bankruptcy over medical bills, even with private health insurance, they often beg others for help on GoFundMe. In Australia, every, and I repeat every, citizen is entitled to universal healthcare, yes you can have private insurance if want, but no one goes bankrupt over medical costs. Pharmaceuticals - the Government here regulates the price, no one dies because they can’t afford basic medicines, not so in the USA. Minimum wage, USA, $7.25 p/h, Australia, $23.23 p/h, we also aren’t forced to ‘tip’ minimum wage earners, we don’t have to make up for what their employer should pay. On top of everyone’s full time wage is Superannuation (retirement fund), Australian employers are required by law to deposit another 11% of your wage into your selected Superannuation Fund. Life expectancy - USA 77.28, Australia 83.20, approx six (6) years more in Australia. US Americans often talk about work ‘benefits’, we call them ‘basic worker rights’, we don’t have to ‘beg’, employers are required ‘by law’ to pay a decent min wage, plus all of the other ‘benefits (rights)’ that US workers don’t receive. I could go on with many other comparisons too. Bottom line, the life of the average Australian is far better than the life of the average US American. Cheers,
@jacquelinehillson9589
@jacquelinehillson9589 Ай бұрын
Well said , it’s actually extremely said for everyday American citizens, they really are modern day slaves .
@markstack463
@markstack463 Ай бұрын
About 10 years ago I was in the US with a friend touring around a bit. When in Dartmouth, New Hampshire, we happened to be there during Dartmouth College's graduation week. Sat in a bar some parents picked up on our English accents and started chatting to us. It was really fun, really nice. Then after about 5 minutes they asked what we did for a living.. Because we weren't earning mega mega mega bucks like themselves (Dartmouth College is Ivy League) they immediately stopped talking to us and blanked us as if we did not exist. It was like shutters being slammed down. I wasn't upset, we just found it utterly hilarious. But on reflection we thought if this is the attitude they are going to pass onto their kids, how much are their kids going to miss out on life? How many opportunities are they going to miss out on? I felt sorry for them having to live their lives that way. I live in Brighton, possibly the most tolerant, non-judgemental (on the whole) city in the UK so the juxtaposition was enormous.
@PedroConejo1939
@PedroConejo1939 Ай бұрын
Americans love to sneer at the UK and class, saying they don't have one. They do; it's just different, but it's just as, if not more, judgemental.
@lynnm6413
@lynnm6413 Ай бұрын
Most tolerant, non-judgements if you belong to the Alphabet maybe, but if you‘re a girl or woman that wants safe women-only spaces, suddenly all that tolerance goes away, let‘s not even talk about non-judgemental. Being misogynistic is discrimination as well, you know….
@Celisar1
@Celisar1 Ай бұрын
@@lynnm6413 You make things up to then fight against them 😂. Sounds stressful.
@JR-mh8vn
@JR-mh8vn Ай бұрын
@@lynnm6413 you sound like a American lmfao
@lynnm6413
@lynnm6413 Ай бұрын
@@JR-mh8vn German, sorry 😂
@karenmoore5843
@karenmoore5843 Ай бұрын
You're an intelligent guy. Get Out!!! See what the rest of the world has to offer you. I think you'll be delighted you did. Hi from Oz
@katn1952
@katn1952 Ай бұрын
What she said ☝😊👍
@PedroConejo1939
@PedroConejo1939 Ай бұрын
You're new here, aren't you?
@brendanpelly213
@brendanpelly213 Ай бұрын
I agree 👍
@RJM56
@RJM56 Ай бұрын
"Melbourne is so central. In twenty-four hours you can be anywhere else in the world." - one Melburnian quoting another.
@niallrussell7184
@niallrussell7184 Ай бұрын
@@PedroConejo1939 that made me lol
@spencerdavies4666
@spencerdavies4666 Ай бұрын
I live in the UK, love visiting the US but always glad to return home. At home we don't own a car, I walk to the shops, cycle to work. Don't worry about health care, it's there when I need it without worrying how to pay for it. I have plenty of vacation I can book when needed. The environment I work in is very supportive of everyone employed. However what worries me is my government seem to hold up the US as an ideal state, and appear to want to move us more in that direction where business is king and employees are resources...
@DonaldoJTrumpet
@DonaldoJTrumpet Ай бұрын
Yes, absolutely. Unfortunately the Conservatives value wealth above true values, community, culture, tradition and society. They will pump sewage, if profitable. They "know the price of everything, and the value of nothing," to quote Wilde. Labour, on the other hand, can not do the maths. Some choice.
@juliaforsyth8332
@juliaforsyth8332 Ай бұрын
Shame the UK isn't looking after it's pensioners or Genuine people laid low by unemployment or illness.
@findherfiner
@findherfiner 24 күн бұрын
Same in Germany - the US have brilliant people, but the system is a fraud and it produces countless victims.
@madmark1957
@madmark1957 Ай бұрын
I am a European who has been living in the USA for more than a decade (my wife is an American) so I know both Europe and the USA well. Interesting video. Can't imagine what that guy is doing for a living in Europe that he makes significantly less money than in the states. Taxes in the US, when you include the cost of all the things that are free in Europe, are much higher. Despite what Americans are taught, people in Europe have the freedoms you do and often more so. Variety in supermarkets? You have 50 brands of the same thing. There is nothing like the variety that is available in the UK, except in low quality pasta sauces, Mexican food, and coffee. There is a lot of fast food in the US but a lot of what you sell as food would often be illegal to sell to humans in Europe. Actually some American foods would be illegal to sell as animal feed in Europe. The quality of food both in restaurants and grocery stores in Europe is of a much better order. It is also cheaper to buy groceries in the UK and I am sure in many other parts of Europe though I do not know about all of them.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
salaries in tech industry really are much higher in usa, but in general the salaries are higher . except maybe in the london finance district. but as you noticed the higher salary in Dallas or San Jose don't mean anything if your housing, car and health also cost double that of a Europe living
@madmark1957
@madmark1957 Ай бұрын
You are talking about regional differences and in certain industries. That works both ways. According to various sources average pay in the USA is only marginally higher than that in many European countries bearing in mind that a minority of Americans work in finance or tech industries just like everywhere else. By the time the expenses associated with living in the states are taken into account many Americans live in poverty. I felt the guy who made the video was very careful and diplomatic when talking about the USA. @@Blackadder75
@rtyria
@rtyria 28 күн бұрын
I am old enough to remember when American food tasted better and didn't come preloaded with crap. People were skinner back then too. They generally seemed healthier as well. If I were less cynical I'd be surprised people haven't drawn a connection and stopped packing the food full of crap.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 27 күн бұрын
@@rtyria I am sure there is plenty of excellent food in the US, but it's very expensive, while the fast food and industrial food options are cheap This was already happening 20 years ago, when I visited California I could find decent european style restaurants (lower priced) The only choice was endless amounts of fast food chains OR top end $$$ high cuisine (which we also have in europe, but people only go there on special occasions, like family anniversaries )| normal people can't go there every week.
@shelleyphilcox4743
@shelleyphilcox4743 17 күн бұрын
If comparing the UK to EU for food, the UK is relatively inexpensive, ranking somewhere in the low mid ground. However...housing in the UK is very expensive, particularly in the south/ south east of England, which suffers from being London adjacent pushing up property prices to the point that ots incredibly difficult to buy a 3 bed family home on two median salaries.
@Dutch-linux
@Dutch-linux Ай бұрын
I have lived in the USA 8 years long in Lima OH... but I just could not get happy in the states got in a deep depression and home sick I had to go back home back to the netherlands back to my culrure away from the violence and the money driven society now back home I am happy I feel way more free here then i ever felt in the usa .
@thomasscheicher9779
@thomasscheicher9779 Ай бұрын
10 years NYC, back to Austria years ago, and happy and better off today ...
@captain_context9991
@captain_context9991 Ай бұрын
I used to travel and write, and Im a decent photographer. Thats what I did in my 20s. Every time I went to the US, I was always the windswept and interesting foreigner in a social setting. And people used to always come up to me and tell me their life story. "Whats your story" they would say. Because everybody has a story, it seems. As if they are rehearsing to play the lead actor in the story about their own lives. And then they would proceed to usually all tell me the exact same story. Of how they clawed themselves out of poverty. Without access to decent housing, real education, or proper healthcare. -And now I make six figures, they would say. Always the same line. Then a pause, and then SIX FIGURES!! And then a long part about how blessed they were. And how "ONLY IN AMERICA could my journey be possible" I used to cut in and say thats not really how a civilized, modern country should work. But I quickly learned to just let them carry on and not interrupt or question it. Never get between an american and his flagwaving opportunity. Things havent really changed a lot since then. Some, but not a lot.
@fliplefrog8843
@fliplefrog8843 Ай бұрын
@work-life-balance: I work in Denmark. Because of some service on machines from external personal, I've got 6h overtime that day. There were absolutely no discussions with my boss, having freetime the next friday and stay at home! Because he knows, if its neccesary, I would stay the whole night. This is respekt on both sides, and makes life so much easier. US haven't got the idea behind this. For me, this is modern sl@very over there!
@CamaroMann
@CamaroMann Ай бұрын
This. I work in Medical practice management, and at the beginning of each quarter I regularly have to work overtime (because of the doctors' invoicing to the health insurance companies), and often also at weekends for maintenance work on technical equipment (ultrasound machines etc). I do this without flinching because I know it's necessary - and in return my boss doesn't flinch when I tell her on Mondays that I'll be away for the next three days. We take each other into consideration and benefit from each other at the same time. I can hardly imagine that it could work any other way.
@Thenoobestgirl
@Thenoobestgirl Ай бұрын
Speaking of Denmark, I had to go to the emergency room on my Copenhagen vacation a few years ago and the tests and medications I got were so cheap, I ended up not bothering with my insurance.
@hansemannluchter643
@hansemannluchter643 Ай бұрын
​@@ThenoobestgirlSo, you are not a EU-citizen? Had you been, the ER-visit itself would have cost you NOTHING. Medical "drugs" do cost money, but are heavily subsidised by the various tax-funded health-authorities, so you won't have to take out a new mortage in your house just to pay for pills..
@Celisar1
@Celisar1 Ай бұрын
I live in Germany. We are expected to work overtime without payment. And if we work unpaid overtime due to staff shortage we even get criticised because being understaffed is obviously not a factor but us being not fast enough. PS working at a big hospital but it was the same in other medical institutions.
@hansemannluchter643
@hansemannluchter643 Ай бұрын
@@Celisar1 Don't you have trade-unions in Germany? This would never happen in Denmark!
@lolofantje11
@lolofantje11 Ай бұрын
i have 8 weeks vacation and it makes me more productive and happy when i ḿ at work.
@loruamasouza2699
@loruamasouza2699 22 күн бұрын
What country do you live in?
@t.a.k.palfrey3882
@t.a.k.palfrey3882 Ай бұрын
You should seriously consider spending at least a few years living/working/studying overseas after you graduate, Joel. Five of my six children have studied abroad, and three are now settled with their own families, in 🇨🇦🇦🇺🇬🇧. Their lives, and the lives of all my grandsons, have benefited greatly from the interchange their kids have with cousins across the globe.
@francescathomas3502
@francescathomas3502 Ай бұрын
CAAUGB - Canada, Australia & Great Britain...
@AfricatwinJK
@AfricatwinJK Ай бұрын
This is probably exactly the point: be open to other countries - not everything is comparable and should also not be done in the same way. That is exactly what makes it interesting. I was born in the Netherlands, lived for a while in the UK and pay my taxes in 6 countries. The EU offers a variety of different approaches to things like health care, way of living etc. and I fella enjoy that I can choose between different options and cultures. However, for many years people in Europe thought everything way great in the US. This has dramatically changed and the US has lost its nimbus of freedom. They are at least as bureaucratic than we are in Germany, they do not have the technical advantages anymore, their houses are not higher than in the US and they do not drive larger cars. In reality the average person in the US lives from my perspective on a lower standard than in Europe and when I see the results of the education system in the US I fear it will become worse.
@lesleycarney8868
@lesleycarney8868 Ай бұрын
In the UK ( or where i live now in Spain ) no matter what someone job was, if it came up in conversation, you would find something positive to say. " So John what do you do for a living ?" John: " I'm a road sweeper " me : " wow, i bet that keeps you fit and it's such a valuable job "
@PedroConejo1939
@PedroConejo1939 Ай бұрын
I worked in state schools in Spain for some years and what impressed me most was the head teacher sitting under the stairs in the cleaners' cupboard, sharing coffee with them. I now work in state a state school in England (things hit our island badly during the crisis, so we had to move), and our head and SLT wouldn't even sit with the teaching staff, let alone the cleaners. The difference in mood at the schools is palpable.
@lesleycarney8868
@lesleycarney8868 Ай бұрын
@@PedroConejo1939 Yes Pedro there are snobs in all Countries but give me the cleaning cupboard under the stairs any day especially if they had good coffee. Here where i now live in the Yecla campo ( real campo lolll ) i have a 96 year old neighbour who is our nearest but 1k away who still farms the land. He can not read or write but runs a successful business with plenty of land and a few furniture factories. I know some people would loose interest in a friendship because of his literacy but he is great ,i love him and his stories.
@connyc.5346
@connyc.5346 Ай бұрын
I'm a cleaner for the council, and I'm damn proud of it 😊 This is what I tell everyone but sometimes you get the odd people who will then look down on you. 😅
@lesleycarney8868
@lesleycarney8868 Ай бұрын
@@connyc.5346 Good for you Conny. I was a " shop girl " all my working life and loved it but i would of loved a cleaning job as it's so satisfying , for me anyway.
@connyc.5346
@connyc.5346 Ай бұрын
@@lesleycarney8868 It is highly satisfying I must say. At the moment I am working within retirement housing with a warden daily. I just love the people there and they're so damn grateful that I clean. 😭 Seriously one of the best jobs you can do. There is nothing to be ashamed of, we also have a fancy job title for it: City Council Facility Assistant 😄
@nellitheretrogamer8666
@nellitheretrogamer8666 Ай бұрын
That difference about how people talk about education is interesting. Americans very often say where they studied, but don't necessarily say what subjects they studied and what degree they got. Here in Finland, it is the other way around. If someone asks me about my education, I say that I have a Master's degree and then they usually want to know what subjects I studied. But it is very rare that people would ask which university I went to, because here it doesn't matter. A Master's degree is a Master's degree, it doesn't matter where it is from. IF people ask me where I studied, then it usually is because they are interested if they know anyone from there, if we maybe have some common friends or acquaintancies.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
@@MO_2023_ silly, shallow, superficial, you forgot the 4th S, sad
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. Ай бұрын
I think Joel would be a great fit for Europe. Also, I want to vicariously live through vlogs
@johnp8131
@johnp8131 Ай бұрын
I went to the US for about a month with the British forces in the seventies. Had a great time and the people were excellent too, if a little overly inquisative. I went back with the RAF ten years later and noticed a change for the worse, mainly with their uneducated attitude towards some foreign visitors. Would I go back now? No, I think I'd be even more disappointed?
@juwen7908
@juwen7908 Ай бұрын
I've rewatched Blue Bloods yesterday and, I think it was ep. 1 at the graduation scene when Tom Selleck said something like " You've earned the distinction of being the best trained police officers in the world." At this scene I had to laugh soo hard, but really it is very sad. Not only is it soo rude against every other country in the world. But the fact that something like this is been told in reality over there and the young people believe it. That's absolutely a shame. If there would be a ranking about policemens education, the US would rank way way down, when even basic stuff like de-escalation isn't part it. Greetings from Berlin 😎
@lynnm6413
@lynnm6413 Ай бұрын
Agreed…it‘s never the US championships, no, it‘s the world‘s best….with only Americans competing…and no one even questions it….
@ichmeiner4531
@ichmeiner4531 Ай бұрын
I like our German police. Usually they are pretty chill, nice and will try to help you out with stuff outside of their normal job, like giving directions or taking a picture of you. When I drove to visit a friend (6 hour drive) and my phone died mid travel, I just went into the police station in the next town and asked if I could charge my battery. They gave me a charger so that I didn't have to unpack my bag to search for mine, offered me coffee and a snack (it was around Christmas time, so they had a bunch of cookies and stuff) and, just to be sure, printed the directions to my friends house (from Google maps). Never had an unpleasant interaction with them and never had anyone I know tell me about one either (I have a couple of friends with an immigration background, they were never treated differently). Sure, that's not how police is everywhere in Germany, but overall we can't complain much about them.
@leaderofthegang3771
@leaderofthegang3771 Ай бұрын
👍🏻 „World Series“ als Bezeichnung für das Finale der US-amerikanischen Baseball-Profiligen. Geht es auch kleiner? Es ist so unfassbar überheblich.
@user-jx8ji9cz3m
@user-jx8ji9cz3m Ай бұрын
I am sure that "basic stuff like de-escalation" is the ONLY part of "policemens education" in Berlin. THIS makes me laugh so hard. Greetings from Bavaria.
@leaderofthegang3771
@leaderofthegang3771 Ай бұрын
@@user-jx8ji9cz3m Hauptsache die Einsatzwagen tragen die Regenbogenflagge und die Deutschlandfahne ist zur EM verboten 😁 ich verstehe was er sagen will, aber Berlin als Beispiel ist schon echt schräg (woke) 😎
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. Ай бұрын
5:19 Yes, nothing like attaching your self-worth and personality by working under punishing standards.
@cathykem
@cathykem Ай бұрын
My friend and I visited the US in October for a month. We couldn’t believe how bad the food was. It was a standing joke for the month. We are from Australia - food is great, we have free health and have 4 weeks annual paid vacation leave
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 11 күн бұрын
@cathykem - I visited Australia. Guess what I remember about the food. Absolutely nothing.
@cathykem
@cathykem 7 күн бұрын
@@reindeer7752 then you don’t understand good food or went to foodchains
@ChrisR395
@ChrisR395 7 күн бұрын
@@reindeer7752 Australian food is excellent. American food is packed full of sugar and fat - just like the people ;)
@simonottomusblinkinsob94
@simonottomusblinkinsob94 4 сағат бұрын
@@ChrisR395 Is there an obesity epidemic in the Commonwealth of Australia?
@user-xz6qk9wf9j
@user-xz6qk9wf9j Ай бұрын
The one thing I've noticed as a difference between Americans and Europeans is that Americans seem to have less empathy for their fellow man. It's a generalisation and possibly unfounded, but it's my opinion. I found that people especially from MAGA and National Evangelicals types, seem to have no empathy at all, except for people exactly the same as them. The more right-wing politically and the more zealous religiously, the less and less empathy they have. I've met many religious Americans who are less Christian than me, and I'm an atheist, but I have compassion and empathy for my fellow man.
@andrewyoung5126
@andrewyoung5126 Ай бұрын
To be fair, there is a large Costco near me in England. We also have problems with homelessness. Having spent a lot of time in the US, there does seem to be an imbalance with work and home life. I'm always amazed at how a 20 minute walk is a welcome thing that we all do in Europe but Americans will drive to a shop half a mile away. One thing is for sure, there's pros and cons to living in any country.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
UK is halfway between USA and EU, both in location and in culture.... (good and bad)
@teresadeacon7667
@teresadeacon7667 Ай бұрын
In my case I can't find one pro for America never have. Always thought I was strange as everyone else seemed to think the US was wonderful. How times have changed unless people have family there not many seems to go there anymore. On the whole Americans think their country is years ahead of the rest of the world in everything. Usually they have never been anywhere out of their bubble.
@gabzie1668
@gabzie1668 Ай бұрын
I know everyone is commenting that you should move, but I'm going to be honest with you. Moving across the world is extremely difficult. I moved to the UK at 23. I'm extremely close to my family, and it was so hard not being able to get into a car and visit them whenever I felt like it. Also, people never talk about how difficult it is to make friends in your 20s. You're no longer at school or Uni to meet people. Also, my first time shopping for groceries was overwhelming, I didn't know any brands, and everything felt so unfamiliar. Everything is unfamiliar; renting, tax, etc. It's a lot to get used to. It takes time... loads of time to get used to missing your family, being comfortably on your own, making friends, and settling in. I'm very happy now and I'm so glad I didn't give up. I had friends that stayed for 2 years but missed home too much and left. If you're thinking of moving, definitely decide on the 'why' and make sure that why is strong enough... because it'll be lonely for a while, and you'll need something to keep you going.
@speleokeir
@speleokeir Ай бұрын
Good video. I've got a lot of friends who have lived abroad in various places and others who moved to Britain from abroad. Some have stayed, some have returned home. Here are some things to consider: 1) It doesn't have to be for ever. Consider living abroad for say 12 months and see how you get on. Then you can consider if you want to stay, try another country, go home, etc. I once met a guy with a dual British/Australian passport. He spent 6 months in Europe* and then 6 months in Australia. Basically he lived in perpetual summer!😀 *That was pre-Brexit so he had EU status then. 2) Remember nowhere's perfect. Everywhere has it's up and down sides - Write a list of pros and cons and decide which are most important to you. e.g. - Average wage vs average cost of living. That can vary in the county. Many have a north/south divide and capital cities tend to have the highest wages, but higher costs. - Health care. - Education. - Safety/gun laws/police. - Food. Particularly food safety/healthiness. Also animal welfare if you eat meat, variety. - Culture/history. - How different is the language/culture to your own? The closer it is to the US the quicker you're likely to adapt. Obviously in time you'll want to know the local language and culture, but the transition may be easier in a country where English is the first language and the culture closest to the US. e.g. The UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Or where English is common as as second language. Many northern Europeans speak very good English, e.g. Switzerland, the Scandinavian countries, Germany, Netherlands, etc, especially the younger generation. In Southern Europe it's more hit and miss, especially outside the big cities and the older generation. And somewhere like Japan you'll be instantly illiterate outside the tourist areas. Outside of Europe English is more common in places which were once part of the British Empire e.g. Singapore, India, etc. - Transport/ease of getting around. e.g. Do you need a car? Is there good and affordable public transport? - Long term what are job prospects like? - Work/life balance. - Workers rights. e.g. Average days holiday/yr, sick pay, what protections do workers have? etc. - What do you like doing? What activities entertainments are there on offer locally? Do you like the outdoors, et? Is it a place you can use as a base to easily explore both that country and others nearby? - What's the current political scene? There's a lot of growth in the far right in many western countries with threats to democracy. In the US too. Putin has stirred up a lot of this as he knows division in NATO countries is good for him. This was his speciality when he was in the KGB, making close links with the German far right groups to stir up trouble. Almost every far right group in the western world has links with Putin. - lastly how close are you to your family? This is a big one. You will make new friends when you move, but people who are close to their family often miss not being able to easily see them. Those who are less close to their family find it easier to move in my experience. Finally you're right in saying happiness is the most important thing of all, so what makes you happy? There's no getting away from the fact that you need money for life's essentials: Accommodation, food, clothes, utility bills, etc. My personal view is that once you earn enough to cover those and are no longer stressing about money other things become much more important: Friends, family, hobbies and most of all TIME to enjoy them away from work. Anything that increases stress in your life is bad, things that ease it are good.
@davidanderson6736
@davidanderson6736 Ай бұрын
Thank you for an honest, open reaction. I just returned to the US after living in Europe for 21 years, so this certainly hit home. I wish more people took the opportunity to experience living in other cultures. One thing: "defund the police" is poorly worded, but a good idea. It's not about not having police when we need them, but rather not expecting the police to solve all of society's problems. Our police spend a large fraction of their time dealing with homelessness, drug addiction, domestic violence, mental illness, etc, and they often lack the training to do so. Instead of giving the police more funding to "reduce crime", let's spend the money on hiring trained professionals who are better equipped to give people the help they really need.
@L0CkEyE
@L0CkEyE Ай бұрын
Can i ASK you why you regurned to the us after 21 years?
@davidanderson6736
@davidanderson6736 Ай бұрын
@@L0CkEyE To be closer to family.
@L0CkEyE
@L0CkEyE Ай бұрын
@@davidanderson6736 this make sense, i Hope you enjoy your time Back in the us, Wish you a great time with your family
@SuperSupermanpunch
@SuperSupermanpunch Ай бұрын
I'm Swedish and have never understood that menatlity. We should not look down on our fellow human beings and judge someone based on job and education, no one is better than anyone else because of that!
@rickmason8159
@rickmason8159 25 күн бұрын
Good on you , I'm English and agree 100 percent. We all end up the same never understood the divide. I'm 62 it's always been the same. Thing is bias is taught it's not natural.
@QuantumS1ngularity
@QuantumS1ngularity Ай бұрын
When i was visit the USA for the first time, I asked that same question "but are you happy" to a guy who i knew through a game we played together. He was talking about all the promotions he got, all the good credit score he accumulated, how he does better than his coworkers... none of it was about life itself, no actual passionate hobbies, so i asked him "but are you happy with your life". Dude said he would have time to be happy once he retires, no he has to focus on earning as much as possible. Died in a car crash not even 2 years after that convo. Really changed my view on life, i quit a well payed manager position and got a far more life-friendly job. Doesn't pay as much, but the free time is 10 times more and the stress is 100000 times less.
@Piasecznik72
@Piasecznik72 Ай бұрын
Selection in US is illusory. You might have 15 different brands but are they selling different toilet paper? There was shot of shelf full of sausages - this is my personal experience: I live in Poland and was on business trip to NY. I went to Target to buy some food. I decided to go and buy sausage. To my surprise I found whole wall full of Polish Sausage, some of them labeled as Polska Kielbasa, some even including polish special character - Polska Kiełbasa. Great!!! Unfortunately when I started to read ingredients list every single of them contained corn syrup. I can assure you, we never ever use corn syrup to make sausage in Poland. We hardly use corn syrup at all. In US it is in everything (no supprise as US is biggest corn producer in the world). Our sausages is protein and fat with trace amounts of carbs. US version of sausage is mainly carbs. Another example - Oldspice. I like one particular aroma - namely Wolfthorn and I thought it would be easy to get in US but no, not as easy as in EU. It was present but not in all products. US has very good craft beer and small breweries there are excellent. But beer selection in supermarkets is garbage.
@andyheritage
@andyheritage Ай бұрын
In the US you have the illusion of choices but if you really do your research...you have no choices at all since all products are owned by the top 3 companies.
@OhArchie
@OhArchie Ай бұрын
Even if that were true, how does it change the number of choices available? (Hint: it doesn’t)
@marcossonicracer
@marcossonicracer Ай бұрын
same products with different packaging and some are overpiced. it is literally the same here in Brazil. take bottled water for example, here we NEED it, because our faucets doesn't dispense drinkable water (you can still shower and wash your clothes but it is a VERY BAD IDEA drinking it/cooking with it without at least boiling it or using a purifier. talking purely via personal experience), anyway, we got the very expensive european brands of water, the middle range national ones and the regional ones, and if you look at them very closely, you will notice that most if not all of them come form the same regional spring site, even with the same characteristics like PH, minerals and spring temperature. it is literally you buying a pretty package. and lots of stuff that you guys take from granted like electronics and electrodomestics, cost a fortune here on top of that because of ultra high taxation. we do have better in other regards than the U.S. (medicine is not super-overpriced, since our government is super happy on breaking abusive patents, and altough we got a universal healthcare system it is not as good as a the european ones. don't get me wrong, you will get treatment there eventually, and it is free, but you better not be in a hurry or your condition require immediate treatment, because the lines are huge and you can very easly die before geting the treatment. there is private insurance which altough much much better than public system, still got a lot of problems and gremlins to solve). another thing to notice is that Brazil has some good constitutional protections if you got a formal job: 30 Day paid leave, at least 4 weekends (or 8 days) with a guarantee of at least one sunday off by law, salary is paid by month and not by hour, so you have no pressure watsoever on immediate results, once your boss decides to lay you off you get a 90 Day job guarantee before you get fired, and the retirement funds are public, retirement money is deposited by the employer (it does not make a part of your liquid income), and does not rely on companies doing good or bad (there is private retirement plans too, but if you want them, you gotta pay both and you'll be entitled to both). also, since we produce a lot of the food the world eats, food tends to be cheaper than in the U.S. or Europe, i mean, don't get me wrong, it is still expensive, but cheaper than in the nothern hemisphere.
@frankmitchell3594
@frankmitchell3594 Ай бұрын
In Europe you have time. Shorter working week, more paid days off and no worries about health costs. In the US you have space. Larger houses, cities are not cramped together, national parks are huge. That is where you notice the difference. Of course in Australia you could have both.
@budapestkeleti6404
@budapestkeleti6404 Ай бұрын
If you look at the EU it is small in size and has 1.5 times more population than the US. Everything is cramped here
@kenyup7936
@kenyup7936 Ай бұрын
⁠@@budapestkeleti6404hi I’m learning English now, sorry for interrupting, what does cramped mean?
@ShabanAjeti
@ShabanAjeti Ай бұрын
​@@budapestkeleti6404 The EU is not europ.
@budapestkeleti6404
@budapestkeleti6404 Ай бұрын
@@ShabanAjeti EU=Europe
@alanmon2690
@alanmon2690 Ай бұрын
@@budapestkeleti6404 Name all the countries in Europe and all the countries in the European Union...
@lubicafreeman4932
@lubicafreeman4932 23 күн бұрын
when I relocated to Europe, it took me about 5 years to "accept" that the job comes after the family. In a nutshell, the attitude towards work is very different. You dont need to be totally stressed out while at work, there is a way to fit in 2 breaks and a hot lunch and still get your work done ... and go home on time.
@christianvonhout997
@christianvonhout997 Ай бұрын
Fun fact, I saw Peets coffee in the video, the founder was Alfred Peet, a dutchman from Alkmaar in the Netherlands , he emigrated to the US, he was the man who brought gourmet coffee to the US
@helenooft9664
@helenooft9664 Ай бұрын
I love David, he is so honest and completly himself, i am from the Netherlands.
@jannetteberends8730
@jannetteberends8730 Ай бұрын
He also does a lot of research for most of his videos, that’s what I like about him.
@helenooft9664
@helenooft9664 Ай бұрын
that's @@jannetteberends8730
@rosemiller2990
@rosemiller2990 17 күн бұрын
My son landed a great job in the Netherlands. He had completed a post doc in the southern part of France along Côte d’Azur, and fell in love with a work life balance of the Europeans. He really misses family and friends a lot, but said to me and his father, that he was so much happier living in Europe. He said life is more simple and there wasn’t such an emphasis on money and status. Very doubtful that he will return, but we do see one another often and we talk every day. Warms my heart that he is happy.
@user-qt7wl2wt5g
@user-qt7wl2wt5g 6 күн бұрын
I would highly recommend you visit him one day. Hearing it or seeing it in videos is one thing, but experiencing it gives you a completly new level of understanding. Just come over for a couple of days and inhale the atmosphere!
@peterweiss123
@peterweiss123 Ай бұрын
Just love your way of thinking! Pls more of stuff like this!
@HippAnimates
@HippAnimates Ай бұрын
Hey, I've been watching your videos lately and I really liked them. I love how open minded you're and how the comments aren't overtaking the video and still being relevant. If you would ever consider coming to Switzerland (Geneva), I would gladly make you visit. Thanks for the vid ✊🏻
@lachlanmain6004
@lachlanmain6004 Ай бұрын
Enjoyed that video. It explains something I've noticed when I've met American tourists here in the UK. The amount they cram in to a relatively short visit and the age groups, either young pre uni/uni backpacking or older retired types. I suppose this will be the case if your working life is dominated by work and holidays/ time off is already in short supply. And in it's turn this situation is hampered by the culture and presumption that taking a break you're entitled to is a sign of weakness. It dosen't sound like a satisfying lifestyle, all work and no play etc. Working to give yourself a comfortable lifestyle either for yourself or yourself and family is a fine thing but it's a finely balanced thing. Thanks for the video Joel, this guy looks to be worth following up.
@markwalker5231
@markwalker5231 Ай бұрын
Interesting vid, I come from Australia so there are similarities with the US but a different mindset, Australians are a lot more relaxed and don’t work as many hrs as you guys. The average hrs worked for those on a minimum wage are 38, obviously a lot work longer but it’s all based on a 38 hr week. Minimum holidays are 4 weeks paid per year, with 10 days paid sick leave and paid parental leave. Hospital care is generally free, for instance I had heart surgery and was in hospital for 3 weeks, no charge. There is elective surgery which would cost but no where near as much as the US. Housing is expensive and the cost of living is higher than the US but I own my own 4 bed 2 bath home with swimming pool and my kids kids are all buying there own homes, so it can be done. There’s not as much crime as you have and the gun laws are in place to protect the population. You can buy a gun but you just can’t walk into a store like Kmart and buy one, you have to have a good reason to own one. Sydney is the biggest city, but I wouldn’t recommend living there, Perth is better or Hobart, or Melbourne. Anyway love your vids, keep at it. Cheers mate 👍
@jurgenolivieira1878
@jurgenolivieira1878 Ай бұрын
Great ending monologue very insightful. Thanks for the video!
@juliehilton1701
@juliehilton1701 Ай бұрын
I love your presentation style ❤❤
@samuelbhend2521
@samuelbhend2521 Ай бұрын
The thing about the Police, as a outsider, never been to the us and never will go. correct me if i'm wrong: Police in Europe: Proper Education from the Beginning, must have a Proffession, in some Countries also done your Military Service, must complete a quite heavy Entrytest to get 4 Years of proper Apprenticeship to become a Policeman/-women. And then only ever work in Pairs, single cops on their own aren't allowed to take action, must be two together at least to ensure neutrality and proper ettiquette. every year Courses to further develope/not forget like 1st Aid, driving in Rain/Ice/Night, Psychology, Handycapped People handling etc... Police in the US: drop out of a really bad "School"-System with 100'000s debt, join army some time, get uniform and car and hey presto you go.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
So Police Quest (old MS DOS game serie) was another lie? 😪
@bastian6625
@bastian6625 Ай бұрын
I also don't think Americans are overall more ambitious. How would you measure that? By working hours, or by how importannt their work is within their life, or that they do not take their holidays and work instead? Not really with this point as it is proven that in many positions it is not about how many hours you work, but how productive!
@claudiakarl7888
@claudiakarl7888 Ай бұрын
There are researches that show American workers are often less productive than Europeans although they work longer.
@jurgen_haan
@jurgen_haan Ай бұрын
Depends on what you count as 'ambition'. Most people would say that my intention to have as many good times with friends and my family is all but ambitious. Then what would be ambitious? Earning lots of money? Being "employee of the month"? Having a bigger house/car/BBQ than my neighbor? To what end? I know what choice I would enjoy most when looking back at the end of my life.
@sweetaznspice1
@sweetaznspice1 Ай бұрын
The reality is that the vast majority of working Americans are not "ambitious" at all. That Asian guy referenced represents a very narrow minority of people engaged in tech and other highly paid professions.
@twofarg0ne763
@twofarg0ne763 18 сағат бұрын
I lived in the US, built an IT business, and worked 10-12 hours a day for 35 years until I sold my business. The last 5 years of my career I worked as an IT consultant for a Global company with 40 offices in the EU. Even though I worked out of an office in France, I spent 2 or 3 weeks every month traveling around to various plants in other parts of Europe and the UK upgrading their computer networks. In France, everyone is entitled to 5 weeks vacation, and if you work in a manufacturing plant and that plant closes in August for 2 weeks, those weeks don't count as vacation. The work week is 35 hours. Your boss cannot call you after hours or on weekends, unless it is an emergency. Everyone gets 10 legal holidays and 7 sick days. You cannot be fired while on leave or on vacation. If a company does let you go, they have to pay you TWO YEARS of severance pay. I love the work life balance in Europe. As a retired person, I now see that never taking vacations only helps the company, it never helps the employee. Americans live to work. Europeans work to live. I stayed in France when I retired. I don't watch the news. I buy all my food fresh at the farmers market or my local butcher shop. I've lost 85 pounds since I left the US. I have free healthcare. I can take university classes for around $150 a class to pass my time. I don't plan on going back to the states, except to see my kids. Once you experience real living in Europe the US only seems like a giant step backwards. Just my 2 cents.
@jericoba
@jericoba 4 күн бұрын
You are open-minded, thoughtful, and interested in the world. I love to see this. I hope you find your place in Europe that suits you. Good videos!
@CallousCoder
@CallousCoder Ай бұрын
This is something I like about the Zoomers, they understand that you just need enough to live comfortably and enjoy life. You don't need lots of money or a big house or big cars. I am 50 I still live in a small flat and everybody here in NL goes like: "Why don't you buy?" Why don't you move to bigger. I am like: "a little bit bigger would be nice but I don't need much. If anything I have too much already." And I realise how well I have it! And appreciate it and in America that is pretty rare. People going out to dinner or buying idiotically prices Starbucks is seen as normal. It is not that is sheer fucking luxury! And that's why you shouldn't do it everyday because it becomes common, when it is not. When I now go out for dinner it's a treat to myself and my friend(s) that join me.
@dudoklasovity2093
@dudoklasovity2093 Ай бұрын
we have a saying in Czech republic: "A coffin does not have pockets". What is the money good for when one cannot enjoy it due to failing mental and physical health? And why to wait for retirement, when one can have good life/work balance and enjoy life still while still young? I have been working in USA for past 5 years, both jobs in corporate companies, and it's terrible how they treat employees. I am moving back to Prague this year :-)
@Therealgdog
@Therealgdog Күн бұрын
I can GUARANTEE you that moving to europe would make you so much happier and healthier. You might not even realize the sheer difference.
@LadyMurasaki44
@LadyMurasaki44 6 күн бұрын
I am Polish About 20 years ago me and my friend were students. I remember our other friend brought to meeting his cousin and his friend. They were from USA. Her cousin was a Polish emigrant who left Poland as a teenager. When he came again to visit his motherland he was in his 30`s. He and his family in the USA were economically very successful. So whole meeting was him being very vocal about how very developed and successful America is, how he is as well, and being very surprised that in Poland things are not about success and money. After 2 h of that we were so mentally exhausted. Me and my friend really couldn`t stand him. We felt like he didn`t respect our country and he tried to show us how we are underdeveloped in comparision to USA. After years I see that we might to overreact and I know from our other friend, his cousin, that he didn`t mean nothing bad. It was just that cultural difference in mentality. Don`t get me wrong, here in Poland Poles work a lot. And we are ambitious country. We want to be better and better. But not at all cost. After hard days at work we want to be with families, doing small things after work for the rest of the day, we want to visit other countries etc. We work for that. We deserve free time. It`s our right.
@larah9870
@larah9870 Ай бұрын
USA have beautiful nature, mountains and desert and beautiful cities too. I’m west European and I envy some of the American landscapes. Americans tend also to be very friendly and warmer than average Europeans! Each continent has it ups and downs !
@simonottomusblinkinsob94
@simonottomusblinkinsob94 3 сағат бұрын
I certainly agree, each place has its ups and downs! We do have beautiful landscapes - I enjoy driving on the wide roads.
@user-de1zf7mx4e
@user-de1zf7mx4e Ай бұрын
The problem with the american thinking is that work has to be "lots of work hours" because quantity must beat quality, right? Not! Imagine that the Nordic countries work hard when working and their work-life-style produce extraordinary well,...but not because they must put in 60 hours per week and take no vacation. To the contrary, their work-balance make sure that the hours at work is effecient and the output is of high quality. Also less injuries and burn outs (which occur as well ofc) from and at work is the result which means that you dont have as many people who are gone from work, or stay at work sick as in the US. The quality time they spend outside work with family, friends etc makes them more productive when at work and more happy outside work. Its a human system that allows both those employed and e.g. the owners of a company to gain from the way of working and thinking etc. Balance of life! And of course there is competition and you can grow from there, an din addition the school system is way better than the us so you get in general a high average level of education among the population.
@sandyyoung9582
@sandyyoung9582 19 күн бұрын
As Americans work so many hours, how on earth can they be there for their children, it is do sad. I couldnt imagine not having been there when my kids came out of school in the afternoons etc and having the weekends off to be a family, quality time x
@MegaJJ1968
@MegaJJ1968 Ай бұрын
Very good video. I noticed those differences. And I met so many good people after 8 years in Chicago. Best greets from Cologne, Germany
@monacophotographyevents2384
@monacophotographyevents2384 Ай бұрын
All citizens in Europe are entitled to the health care system here, no matter their financial status, or if they are unemployed or even homeless. The health care system, along with the insane gun laws and lack of employee protection (amongst other things) in America is disgusting. No one in Europe has to worry about being able to afford health care. We do, of course, have our problems in Europe, but by and large, Europe takes care of its citizens, better than America does.'
@djwroodbwoy
@djwroodbwoy Ай бұрын
With your way of thinking, you would fit in better in Germany, Denmark or the Netherlands. You only have one life and the time we have in this world is short. Make your decision while you still can.
@johnfisher9816
@johnfisher9816 Ай бұрын
Really informative video, Joel. Good choice and reaction. Being in Canada, it feels like have a foot in both systems - some things are very much like America, other things more more like Europe. Health and happiness is tops! John in Canada
@PencilaPaper
@PencilaPaper 15 күн бұрын
In Sweden 🇸🇪 some companies are testing a new idea, that a person isn’t productive for 8 hours a day, so they will only need to work 6 hours per day.
@ganymedes62
@ganymedes62 Ай бұрын
There once was a Dutch comedian that said: "Money doesn't make you happy, but it happily makes you rich!" "Geld maakt niet gelukkig, maar gelukkig wel rijk!"
@MYoung-mq2by
@MYoung-mq2by 8 күн бұрын
😇 I interpret it differently. "Geld maakt niet gelukkig" = money doesn't make happy. "maar gelukkig wel rijk" = but happy does make rich.
@jackjames3190
@jackjames3190 Ай бұрын
Wow wise words from an old soul in young sneakers - VERY impressed, in London x
@benjamindejonge3624
@benjamindejonge3624 Ай бұрын
Love that you working for KZbin, hilarious
@klausn9369
@klausn9369 Ай бұрын
Great Vid bro 👍 You are always welcome in Austria 🇦🇹🙌
@gtd65
@gtd65 Ай бұрын
The main thing, is to get out there and see the world with your own eyes and not simply take it for granted that third party opinions are objective. I'm Scottish and have also lived and worked in the USA previously. It used to be a great opportunity and a low cost of living but viewing from afar, during the past few years, it doesn't appear to be a particularly attractive place to be right now. One thing I will say, based on my time in the USA, is that it's the most paranoid society I ever lived in. One of my American pals, is always worried about going overseas, as he firmly believes the locals would be out to get him! Edit: The news channels make me laugh, back in the day Fox news was laughably biased but CNN seem to have taken that challenge up and surpassed the levels of bias that Fox used.
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 Ай бұрын
yeah I noticed the paranoia, I guess gun society is a reason, any madman could have a gun. an outdoors yt guy I watch is always afraid somebody will steal his stuff, in the middle of nowhere.... meanwhile here I sometimes forget to lock my car in the city and nothing has ever been stolen. ( note DO lock you car, I am just stupid to forget it it, but I bring it upto show theft is rare)
@gtd65
@gtd65 Ай бұрын
@@Blackadder75 I was working in California number of years back and one of my co-workers was a keen photographer. He was out in the middle of nowhere, taking photos, when some guys approached him, with a view to committing a crime against him (stealing his equipment). They soon backed off when he let them know he was prepared. I guess in that particular scenario, it was certainly a good idea to be armed. Despite being a British Army veteran, I'm not particularly pro gun but I do believe that you should have the ability to protect yourself, as and when required to do so. My car locks automatically, so never really need to worry about locking it but I lock it as a matter of habit, more than anything else.
@LLCoolT1994
@LLCoolT1994 Ай бұрын
Come to Germany! We welcome you with open arms 😊
@PotsdamSenior
@PotsdamSenior Ай бұрын
And we have way more choice when it comes to sausages!
@peterm.2385
@peterm.2385 Ай бұрын
I second this. Open minded people like you are very welcome!
@lbergen001
@lbergen001 Ай бұрын
​@@PotsdamSenior ...and beer
@leniobarcelos1770
@leniobarcelos1770 Ай бұрын
​@@PotsdamSeniorA few hours ago I saw a Conan O'brien video of him in Germany learning to make your sausages. lol
@mr.inaktiv3818
@mr.inaktiv3818 Ай бұрын
@@PotsdamSeniorAnd gras!
@BobbysWorld_of_Art
@BobbysWorld_of_Art Ай бұрын
Exactly!!! I’ve been in Norway for 20 years and now I walk into Walmart and I’m overwhelmed!!
@lottie2525
@lottie2525 Ай бұрын
"The real question is, are you happy?" Perfect response, very perceptive. Nice 😍
@bertoverweel6588
@bertoverweel6588 Ай бұрын
Right lets see who is most important in a company, when a CEO is going on vacation for 3 weeks the company is still running, when the employees are going on vacation for 3 weeks everyting stops, so who is most important?
@sueKay
@sueKay Ай бұрын
I agree with you on everything apart from your very last point. As someone who's gone hungry in the past despite working full time...more money does not cause me problems, it actively resolves them! I'm in a much better paid job these days but it's still not enough to get a deposit together and get out of a rather horrid rented apartment (because of airbnb there's no decent rental options left where I am), so I would gladly take a pay rise to get a deposit together! Also, being poor cost me friendships because I had to continually turn friends down when I was invited out to things. Eventually a lot of them just stopped bothering. But yes I will always work to live. I will never live to work.
@JeremyParker072
@JeremyParker072 Ай бұрын
Really great video - it seemed quite balanced in his view about living in the US/ California.
@ralfpimpernel7031
@ralfpimpernel7031 Ай бұрын
Welkom in Europe ... You are just on your place here... Greetings from Belgium 🖤💛❤
@billmmckelvie5188
@billmmckelvie5188 Ай бұрын
The best thing to do is to come to the U.K.for a 3 month trial period, where we really test you, drive on the correct side of the road, stick shift. British sarcasm and cynical humour. Experience our great weather, four seasons in one day. Visit one of our 900 offshore islands, whose pace is slower than the mainland. Then wash it all down with one of our British beers! You dont have to go to the continent to hear foreign languages. We have Scots Gaelic, Welsh, Cornish, Manx and Jersey French. Then top it all off we have the local dialect some which sound as though they're being sung so if you haven't got the musical score you've had it.
@fredshred5194
@fredshred5194 Ай бұрын
British beer is shite, Ale on the other hand is great. But then I suppose if you compare it Bud Lite it's great.
@billmmckelvie5188
@billmmckelvie5188 Ай бұрын
@@fredshred5194Oh dear! Each to their own, I was using the term to cover Beer, Ale, Stout including those produced by Micro Breweries.
@olgahein4384
@olgahein4384 Ай бұрын
You nearly had me convinced to try and move to the UK, but then you mentioned beer. I think i'm fine staying here in Germany.
@billmmckelvie5188
@billmmckelvie5188 Ай бұрын
@@olgahein4384 I'll be mischievous here and say don't you Germans only drink Pilsner topped with shaving foam? Only kidding 🤣
@fredshred5194
@fredshred5194 Ай бұрын
@@olgahein4384 lol, you can't compare German beer to UK beer. German beer is natural no chems or other crap. Brits make good ale but it's a different vibe. And mostly not more than 5% . They have lager but it's mostly trying to copy European lager and they usually fail. Not as bad as USA beer but that means nothing. Even if they brew European labels under license it doesn't taste the same as the water is different, so then they add shit to try get the it the same taste . But you can buy popular brands in supermarkets ect... Becks, Leffe ...... There are certain pubs that import but costs more. However Micro breweries have upped the game a bit. I type this while drinking Duvel, but then again I live in France.
@touzalin22
@touzalin22 Ай бұрын
I have you watched the KZbinr Evan Edinger. He's an American who has lived in the UK for a long time and now has British citizenship
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 11 күн бұрын
@touzalin22 - Have you watched, Lost in the Pond? The host is from Britain and now lives in the USA. He has dual citizenship.
@brenstratters2026
@brenstratters2026 Ай бұрын
Superb and intelligent comparison.
@Fuxy22
@Fuxy22 Ай бұрын
The food options are there in Europe too actually it's just that regular corner shops will only ever stock 2 or 3 popular ones. If you want something less popular you're gonna need to order online and have it delivered instead. It's still available you just need to get it delivered from a warehouse instead of a shop. There's not that much space to waste here on less popular items.
@irminschembri8263
@irminschembri8263 Ай бұрын
Ah, the guy who claims that there are only two kinds of toilet paper in the Netherlands !! Maybe in his tiny village shop but NOT in a normal supermarket !! :))
@sedmidivka
@sedmidivka Ай бұрын
what people glued to their car seat seem to not comprehend is that me on a bike = you with much more space on the road AND parking lots. I have a car too! but I chose to use a bike! the more of us the less cars the more space for you! if you make people on bikes feel safe, they will use the bikes more. you will benefit greatly from that. but I doubt those dummies will be in this comment section :) but if they were, try to think about it
@k4ndypaint
@k4ndypaint 21 күн бұрын
14:00 this can be dangerous. man i love you Jps. Greetz!!
@annaolsson5441
@annaolsson5441 Ай бұрын
Sweden here we have 25 vacation days plus holidays ( sickdays are separate 6 months if you can change work but up to a year in sequence, if you try to work in between and make it for a week your sickdays are restored)
@alainmellaerts8926
@alainmellaerts8926 Ай бұрын
I think of what I would regret on my last day on Earth. I am sure I will not think I worked too little or made not enough money. It wil be experiences I missed, friends and family neglected, places not visited, … I never had a credit card. In Europe, you can pay everywhere with your debit card and you have a good idea what money you can spend and don’t pay interest.
@ShabanAjeti
@ShabanAjeti Ай бұрын
You pay a Fee for the Debit card too.
@alainmellaerts8926
@alainmellaerts8926 Ай бұрын
@@ShabanAjeti 3,50€ a month. In Belgium use in shops is free but in France some shops for small amounts charge extra.
@paradox9369
@paradox9369 11 күн бұрын
​@@ShabanAjetiit depends on the bank. I don't pay any fees for my debit card, especially since I get my salary on it and use it routinely. I however pay a fee for the debit cards I have in different currencies.
@tonnymiller123
@tonnymiller123 Ай бұрын
when I was a kid 40 years ago in Denmark, there was a thing called "the american dream"..this is now the american nightmare.
@HelenEk7
@HelenEk7 4 күн бұрын
My husband was visiting some friends in the US, and wanted to make them a homecooked meal as a thank you gift. So the host took him grocery shopping in a nearby regular supermarket. But it was impossible to find just regular wholefoods, wheat flour with nothing added for instance. So they ended up driving to a organic speciality shop, where my husband were able to find what he needed. And he says the only shop that looked like a European shop was the organic speciality shop. Which is rather mind blowing.
@Burnman83
@Burnman83 5 күн бұрын
As a European that travels to the US quite frequently for work I can totally relate to a lot of what the protagonist is stating. I used to work work for a big 4 company, too and no working at a more delicate field of IT security certifications. That put me into a place where I a) almost never was in a situation where an American asked me what I do and looked down on me when I told him, but I saw in their eyes that deep insecurity and sadness if they could not keep up to this with their own job. When I then told them that if I knew everything I know today and could start over, I'd quit school way earlier, not go to university and rather get into carpentry, they most of the times looked at me with a mixture of irritation "wtf are you even talking about?!". b) I was quite often in the lucky situation to work with colleagues and customers from the US on common projects, and I loved it. The reason is, because Europeans and Americans combined a quite a force when working, BECAUSE of these differences in mindset. Generally speaking, Americans have MUCH longer working hours per week and dedicate much more more into their careers, but that is all just dust in the wind. My experience with peer and near peer American co-workers is, that given the additional time they work, they do not create a single cent more value for the project in that additional time. I'm not 100% sure what they do make their work less efficient, but I constantly felt like my fellow colleague from the UK, Netherlands, Germany or France produced just the same amount and quality of output than our US colleagues did, using 50% more time for it, which lead me to the point where I though they must be using that additional 50% more time for what - especially highly educated - Americans seem to do a lot and like a lot: Telling everybody what they did and how that helped x, y and z, what and where they studied and what additional certification they are going for next while they stopped sleeping entirely now. Just... wtf... why...? Why it is so amazing to work with Americans is that the moment they understand that Europeans are optimized to use as little time as possible to output the best possible labour and chose to NOT look down on them for that, the extreme time structure the Americans typically drives perfectly adds into European style labour force and creates the perfect machinery. I just feel so sad for everybody having to work in such an environment. When I worked for Big4, it was a very US-style driven business with constant self-evaluation, performance measure, KPIs, etc. ... phrases such as "do good things and talk about it" have been celebrated on a daily basis. Sorry, but f**k that. Just no. It is the job of your boss to know and see what you are doing and how good you do that. If he does not know, he failed. If I had to tell everybody what good thing I just did for the company, I'd feel like a complete prick... and in all honesty I'd be a complete prick, because this is just stupid self-praising, because you are freaking employed and paid for to do your work to the best of what you can achieve. I have had an American style boss that did not pay attention to what I did and because I never self-advertised it, he always kept me short. The solution is quite simple. I talked to him, he was not impressed, so I went to his boss and said: "Guys, I know I am important for the department, and you know that, too, however my line manager seems to ignore that and pushes me down all the time. Do something against it or I will." My line manager was replaced and I got a raise. Performance is not the same thing as the name of a university, the time you spend in the company, or talking about performance. Performance is performance. I hope that at some point the Americans will be able to finally understand this whole Asian "face time" way of giving your entire life to the job is just ridiculous and sad and will just make them old, grumpy people that never had a real life apart from work.
How Do Europe & The United States Compare? (American Reacts)
17:57
European vs. American suburbs.. (American Reacts)
13:45
MoreJps
Рет қаралды 85 М.
Godzilla Attacks Brawl Stars!!!
00:39
Brawl Stars
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН
Эта Мама Испортила Гендер-Пати 😂
00:40
Глеб Рандалайнен
Рет қаралды 2,3 МЛН
小路飞第二集:小路飞很听话#海贼王  #路飞
00:48
路飞与唐舞桐
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
5 Years in The Netherlands (An Honest Review from an American)
14:52
American Reacts to 8 Things That Happen Only in Germany
15:01
American Reacts to Why McDonalds is Better in Europe
18:09
MoreJps
Рет қаралды 42 М.
American Reacts to 15 Most Gorgeous European Fairytale Towns
27:20
American was Shocked by The Things That Only European Knows!!
22:00
World Friends
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
American reacts to Why Europe Is Insanely Well Designed
15:18
Ryan Wuzer
Рет қаралды 970 М.