How I See American "Freedom" After Living In Europe

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Passport Two

Passport Two

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 764
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for watching, guys! If you enjoyed this video, you’ll like these as well! 😃 German Police vs American Police - kzbin.info/www/bejne/nWW2hGarir-nbMk My American Family’s First Time In Germany 🇩🇪 - What Shocked Them The Most - kzbin.info/www/bejne/p6qwmIKFrdl3gJo 5 Genius GERMAN Life Hacks Americans Have Never Seen Before & You NEED To Know! 🇩🇪 - kzbin.info/www/bejne/q2TZc4CDnL99ftU 100 SHOCKING Differences Between Germany and America! 🇩🇪 - kzbin.info/www/bejne/iYeWgYGvfal6hrs
@TheSylfaein
@TheSylfaein 11 ай бұрын
RQotW: Chess i'd say. Not that i would watch it, though. 😅 Cool thing that you mentioned the "current illegality" of using mary j for recreational purposes. That shows you being interested in and learning about this country's politics. 👍
@katrinsarascholz
@katrinsarascholz 29 күн бұрын
hi, east german here: cnn brings up connections where - lol - really aren't some. (let's not debate if the gdr was "communist" or not - by definition it was not. not even reached socialism - ist was a state capitalist country). gdr wasn't full of uniforms, marches etc etc all the time, so you "had to flee" from this. FKK (Freikörperkultur = free body culture) was part of recreation and enjoying the vacation time in the east. and no party or whatsoever could have suppressed it XD btw: yes there was a wall, yes there were uniforms, yes there was a strict traveling restriction (but WAY NOT for everyone), yes there was some ideology, but there was ALWAYS a way around this all - AND having no problems to pay any bills with even the "lowest" of jobs. no homelessness, good healthcare, very good education system (scandinavian countrys even copied some of the gdr system and being happy with it until today). what we have in the US right now? a wall, no fly lists for ex marihuana smokers (aka "terrorists") and ideological noncompliants, corruption, so much homelessness that some states make it illegal to be homeless (= putting people in prison), while still renting and buying houses/flats is expensive, education system for the rich or later debt slaves, healthcare system = same, AND shitty. criminality rates gruesome. is the prison system still a cheap labour selling scheme in the US? what difference is it to labour camps? in comparison to that the gdr had a ridiculously low incarceration rate. there are so many ways you can bring yourself "freely" onto the debt slavery road in the US, there was literally more freedom in the gdr than is in the us right now.
@Klaffify
@Klaffify 11 ай бұрын
About freedom: when I listen to Americans, I often hear "MY fredom", while my fellow Germans often talk of "OUR freedom": For me, that is an important difference, because for me there is no freedom, when my freedom influences the freedom of another person.
@lifth13
@lifth13 11 ай бұрын
Thats exactly the point. And because of that i'm totally fine giving up on things. I don't want to wonder all the time if people around me are armed - so i'm not. And i'm happy with that (otherwise it would literaly end in an arms race). I don't want to get woken up by a lawnmower - so i make an effort to not bother others as well. I haven't been to the US, so i can't really compare first hand. But since i'm happy here in germany that doesn't really matter. But: It's not perfect here either. Allthough i like the push for collective over individual freedom there are some aspects where we could use a little more individuality. In the labour market for example.
@ChrisGrump
@ChrisGrump 10 ай бұрын
Well said.
@z3lop59
@z3lop59 10 ай бұрын
Die Freiheit des Einzelnen endet dort, wo die Freiheit des Anderen beginnt. The freedom of the individual ends where the freedom of others begins.
@linkinparkroxx
@linkinparkroxx 9 ай бұрын
So real freedom vs communist freedom. Got it.
@lifth13
@lifth13 9 ай бұрын
@@linkinparkroxx Wrong audience. Nobody in the comments is from the US. Save your efforts. We dont care about how you call it, we're not competing in your polarizing political nonsense...
@jameswallace3963
@jameswallace3963 11 ай бұрын
I watched your video. I understand you. As an American, ex- military from the cold-war years of 75-85, living in Germany since. Married to a German 2x. Divorced 2x. 6 children, 6,1/2 grand children (!)... I speak, read and write, German. I taught my children english. Read them children books, from the states sent me by my family there. They have dual citizenships. I however have no intent to return to the US. My home is where my family is. You made Freedom the subject here. Freedom is MORE than just what my RIGHTS are. Freedom also has to do with DUTY. The biggest difference I find between the US and Germany lies therein. It is the DUTY of the German government to govern and protect the Citizens and it is the 1st Law in the German Constitution which puts this into focus. The Grundgesetz Article 1, Human DIGNITY -Human Rights- shall be inviolable.. To respect and protect it shall be the duty of all state authority. Articles 2-Personal freedoms Article 3 Equality before the Law Artikel 4 Freedom of Faith and Conscience Artikel 5 Freedom of expression, arts and sciences Artikel 6 Marriage Family Children 7- School system 8- Freedom of assembly 9- Freedom of assembly 10- Privacy,correspondence Post 11- Fredom of movement 12-Occupational Freedom and so forth... Freedom is always an Article. Duty is always the other side of the coin. German Social Rights are embedded in the Grundgesetz. Workers rights and everything else all the way to rights of being health insured . But it also the DUTY of every tax payer to pay their fair share in the collective system which....creates freedom. For ALL. These Duties will not be found in the Americans Constitution. Workers rights (and duties) Health Care. Unemployment. Rehabilitation. Retirement. Always being covered regardless of economic standings. I am Free and secure in Germany. No guns fireing here. No fear. No military like police. No Traffic cops chaseing me. No problem with fences. Etc... 47 years of Germany. America should start to learn from European countries. You can always make things better. When did this stop, in the US.
@lhpl
@lhpl 11 ай бұрын
I'm Danish, I grew up close to Germany, have never visited USA (and never will), but I do find it an interesting country to study, both as it is in the present, and how it has evolved historically. As I understand it, F. D. Roosevelt proposed the "Second Bill of Rights", which would have given Americans many of the rights you mention. I think it would have aligned USA a lot more with western Europe.
@lhpl
@lhpl 11 ай бұрын
Oh, btw I just noted your name - do you have any relation to Henry Wallace?
@eisenprinzpl9114
@eisenprinzpl9114 11 ай бұрын
Danke. Leider vergessen in Deutschland inzwischen zu viele "Meckerer" diese nicht selbstverständlichen und gelebten Grundrechte eines freiheitlich orientierten Landes.
@mike_maple
@mike_maple 11 ай бұрын
Well said!
@875ma
@875ma 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for appreciating our Grundgesetzt.❤
@Pewtah
@Pewtah 11 ай бұрын
The more I live without fear, the more I feel free. That is why I prefer Germany over the USA. BTW: The line “the land of the free and the home of the brave” was written in 1814 when slavery in the USA was running. For me that is a paradoxon.
@leonperler9619
@leonperler9619 11 ай бұрын
Ancient Athens -cradle of Western democracy- was in fact a slave society
@BobTheTrueCactus
@BobTheTrueCactus 11 ай бұрын
I am pretty sure that they didn't regard the land as being owned by the slaves. It was the land of those who weren't slaves - the slaves were simply commodities.
@tinoj9661
@tinoj9661 11 ай бұрын
I see it more as an oxymoron. Emphesis on moron.
@Oroberus
@Oroberus 11 ай бұрын
Nah bruh, that's not a paradoxon, that's just pure american hybris and bigottery and it's just as much alive in the US today as it was 190 years ago
@vophatechnicus
@vophatechnicus 11 ай бұрын
In fact most of the things americans are "proud" of and believe they are their god given rights came from that time period ... guys, its time to get modern ;) 19th century is over ...
@Saylor28
@Saylor28 11 ай бұрын
I've never felt free living in America. I've felt like a slave to my employment, forced to drive because everything is so far away, and no voice to change any of it because our so called democracy has been bought and paid for decades ago.
@freyjav6055
@freyjav6055 11 ай бұрын
THIS
@martinconnelly1473
@martinconnelly1473 11 ай бұрын
As someone from outside of the USA I think the slave owner mentality from before the civil war has never gone away. Workers are still treated like slaves by whoever is their overseer. If a child in the USA thinks they are free they should try not pledging allegiance to a flag, see what happens. That act alone seems very creepy to most other countries, it looks very similar to what you would have expected in Nazi Germany.
@freyjav6055
@freyjav6055 11 ай бұрын
@@martinconnelly1473 I don't pledge allegiance and I refuse to stand during the national anthem. People give me looks but I don't care.
@leonperler9619
@leonperler9619 11 ай бұрын
Other than during state ceremonies and sports events displays of patriotism are generally frowned upon in Germany -outside of conservative/right wing people-. It seems weird and outdated to me to expect a pledge of allegiance from someone who does not hold an office in government. Pure cringe. I guess we already tried nationalism in Germany and it didn‘t turn out well…
@freyjav6055
@freyjav6055 11 ай бұрын
@@leonperler9619 Yeah exactly, because it IS weird as hell. We've got plenty of nationalism over here and people who blindly follow the flag/country no matter how many wrongs it commits/has committed, no matter how crappy it treats its people, no matter how many things are fundamentally broken here lol. It's insanity to me.
@petraw9792
@petraw9792 11 ай бұрын
Just to add to children walking to school. Even when less children in Germany walk to school, they are still independent. They take the bus. The public bus, not a school bus. Which means when they want to hang out with their friends after school they can just take a later bus home. Or they go to the city center or swimming pool or wherever they want to go. It's not like they are stranded somewhere and have to wait for mommy or daddy to pick them up.
@gubsak55
@gubsak55 11 ай бұрын
In rural Germany, you are more or less stranded with often poor public transport (ÖPNV). So the kids have to use their bicycles and later mopeds to get around. On the other hand, which German kid hasn't got a bicycle 😊
@vladibaby79
@vladibaby79 11 ай бұрын
I am Greek. When I went to Germany for studying, I just was told that it is just important to be on time. And then in Germany there were just a few restrictions for me in doing what I wanted to do. This was a very affordable price for having so much better organisation than in Greece. When I visited to USA some years ago, an american friend gave me a whole lecture about so called dont's. And most of them was about how not to speak and what not to say to whom. And by the way, I don't have an "unwashed mouth", I am a mannered guy. Of course I understand, that every society has it's code of speech, but I think in USA there is less tolerance if you are not familiar whith. And you can't just say anything if you are in contact whith the police (for instance when you enter the country), you can be very soon a suspect person. In Germany I spoke as I was thinking and feeling and almost nobody was offended or thought bad of me. So, freedom of speech dosn't seem to be the most characteristic for USA. Oh, by the way, the person who gave me the lecture was a person of color. I think that says a lot about freedom in general in USA.
@Eysenbeiss
@Eysenbeiss 10 ай бұрын
Let me quote the great Ice-T "Freedom of speech. That's some motherfucking bullshit. You say the wrong thing, they lock your ass up quick". There is another Video on here, where a Brit and US-American explain the differences of "freedom of speech" and "freedom of expression". Tcalss: Your freedom if speech ends, where my freedom starts and your freedom of speech does not give you the right to intimidate or insult other people. I spend half of the year in Los Angeles and usually, I am a more distant guy, but sometimes, things got heated, cause if someone exploits his rights to hurt other people, I can get very, very angry ...
@davesaunders7080
@davesaunders7080 11 ай бұрын
Freedom to raise a family without major worry. Schools that are not prisons with metal detectors and armed intruder drills. Kid's can walk to school and back and take public transit. Kid's in Germany have more freedom to enjoy life.
@arno_nuehm_1
@arno_nuehm_1 11 ай бұрын
Kids
@theuncalledfor
@theuncalledfor 11 ай бұрын
@@arno_nuehm_1 Adults, too.
@alis49281
@alis49281 11 ай бұрын
Hey mom, van I visit my friend (who lives 15 minutes by bike away)? In Germany the kid just rides there, in the US it is by car everywhere. I wonder how the parents are not annoyed or stressed being a constant Taxi for their kids?
@fjoergyn
@fjoergyn 11 ай бұрын
you only see the one side^^ propably actually now the stats about kids killing kids rise like a skyrocket.
@annonuhm8400
@annonuhm8400 11 ай бұрын
+ free universities 🎉
@andreasfischer3054
@andreasfischer3054 11 ай бұрын
What is missing is that in Germany you have legally granted PTO of minimum 20 working days for recreational purposes for all employees. Another aspect of the german healthcare insurance, yes the socialistic forced one, is that in case of a doctor testifys you sick, you are getting your full salary upto six weeks. After the six week period the insurance takes over 67% from your salary.
@gundleyG
@gundleyG 11 ай бұрын
Die Freiheit des Einzelnen hat seine Grenze an den Freiheitsrechten von anderen.
@nevadawn7527
@nevadawn7527 11 ай бұрын
That!
@Alexx120493
@Alexx120493 10 ай бұрын
Yup, und damit hat jeder so wenig Freiheit wie nur irgendwie möglich.
@gundleyG
@gundleyG 10 ай бұрын
@@Alexx120493 Alle haben so viel Freiheit wie möglich. Klar, einige egoistische Idioten maulen, wenn sie ihre Ideen nicht anderen aufzwingen dürfen.
@Deus_Ubique
@Deus_Ubique 9 ай бұрын
@@Alexx120493 it's the other way around. the maximum possible, with a red line where your personal freedom harms others.
@EinFelsbrocken
@EinFelsbrocken 4 ай бұрын
​@@Alexx120493 Ach Alex, wen möchtest du denn offiziell verfolgt und der Freiheit beraubt haben? Komm, rücks raus 😊 Die Homos? Die Transen? Oder vielleicht die Juden? Mann o mann, immer diese FRIEHEITSBESCHRÄNKUNG durch andere Existenzen!!!1! 😂
@AlbandAquino
@AlbandAquino 11 ай бұрын
I'm married to an American woman. She moved to France in December of 2016. I'll let you do the math about why she decided to move... Her first word once she had spent a couple of days in France were: "I've never felt so much at Home.".
@supahotfire9176
@supahotfire9176 11 ай бұрын
Thats because France is beautiful and the people (outside of paris maybe) are really nice. Visiting Lyon and Strassbourg were one of the best trips of my live.
@Oroberus
@Oroberus 11 ай бұрын
1:33 Well ... yey ... yes indeed ... there are several ... 1. In Germany you got the freedom to not constantly live in fear of getting shot by a stranger 2. In Germany you got the freedom to not be incarcerated for several dozens of years for a misdemeanor just because you're not white 3. In Germany you got the freedom to not get unknowingly used for some unlicensed field study of the next random iteration of any medication to prevent the loss of exclusivty 4. In Germany you got the freedom to get an education without paying more for that education up front then you'll ever be able to make after you got your degrees 5. In Germany you got the freedom to not automatically become homeless because the trip to the ER might have saved your life but cost you several hundred grand 6. In Germany you got the freedom to not be forced to bare the child of your rapist 7. In Germany you got the freedom to not be forced to bare a child while pregnancy might actually kill you and your child 8. In Germany you got the freedom to not depend on a legislation that is set up on a precedent and therefor can overturned at any moment, meaning that you're not actually aever know if you're right or wrong in a legal battle until the verdict, no matter if your action were actually illegal while committing them 8. Shall I go on? There's at least another 50 things
@KJ-md2wj
@KJ-md2wj Ай бұрын
In Germany you now have to expect getting knifed at a public event.
@Oroberus
@Oroberus Ай бұрын
@@KJ-md2wj Oh yay I found a far-right-russia-troll ... No, no you don't
@katrinsarascholz
@katrinsarascholz 29 күн бұрын
@@KJ-md2wj knife incidents are not happening as often as gun incidents (like school shootings, police killings etc.) in germany your passport is not stained with the mention of your "ethnicity" aka skin colour for over 75 years now. in germany you have the freedom to be homeless without worrying being incarcerated and forced to work (look it up... US states do that stuff) - i won't mention another germany where there was no homelessness at all. yeah you could go on and on why life is better here than in the empire that wants us to prepare to tear it all down and fight a war for it.
@MyriamSchweingruber
@MyriamSchweingruber 11 ай бұрын
There is a saying: your personal freedom stops where it limits other people's freedom, meaning in a society people should be respectful to others, as simple as that. There is sadly a growing tendency of disrespect to other people even in Germany, where sadly there are far too many people who only think about their own needs and wishes. And this growing egoism is causing most of the problems in society. The most boring sport to watch is probably angling, although golf is a close second.
@wora1111
@wora1111 11 ай бұрын
I very much agree with your first sentence, although I might phrase it a bit different: Germans are taught about their obligations towards their peers , Americans are taught about their rights over their peers.
@lennat24
@lennat24 11 ай бұрын
Immanuel Kant
@MyriamSchweingruber
@MyriamSchweingruber 11 ай бұрын
@@wora1111 wow, didn't know it goes that far: are you really telling us that the people in the USA are taught to be egoists without a shred of respect for the other fellow humans? I somehow doubt that. What certainly is there is the glorification of such heartless egoists
@wora1111
@wora1111 11 ай бұрын
@@MyriamSchweingruber You are exaggerating even more than I did. ;-) But there is some truth to it. The picture of the USA we were given in our youth and what we see now has changed a lot. Some changes were minor, but the way media are used to influence people and "make up their mind" really bothers me because the USA are a big (not great) part of the world we live in.
@House_of_Caine
@House_of_Caine 11 ай бұрын
@@MyriamSchweingruber But that is exactly what is going on in the US, they are taught that they have all these RIGHTS without any responsibility whatsoever, literally god-given BS.
@RustyDust101
@RustyDust101 11 ай бұрын
Question one: I feel a lot more free in Germany than I would in the USA. I've visited the USA multiple times, once for more than two months in one stretch. While that isn't really 'living' in the USA it does give some better insights into everyday life than just a two week trip or so. The freedoms I would have in the USA that I wouldn't have in Germany and vice versa are definitely only a very personal opinion. However what I have seen back then, and now, I wouldn't trade the many freedoms I have here in Germany for the few other freedoms in the USA. Not on any count. Random question of the week: Ice curling.
@henriettelinkshanderin1449
@henriettelinkshanderin1449 11 ай бұрын
As a German I would not feel safe in the USA because of the risk to be arrested and sentenced to death only for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. I know that this depends on the state but I find it really disturbing. In Germany we don't have the death sentence. And I think our legal system is better. Plus the risk that everyone might carry a gun and shoot me. Maybe I just walk across their front yard parallel to the road and I think it is a public space and they threaten me with their gun, I would have a heart attack. No thanks.
@JayMalcom-e1l
@JayMalcom-e1l 6 ай бұрын
The problem, in my understanding, is that americans tend to see "freedom" as as an absolut, e.g. "I have rights and can do whaever I want". GErmas on the other hand tend more to a "Kantian approach": Kant said that “Die Freiheit des Einzelnen endet dort, wo die Freiheit des Anderen beginnt.” (Individual freedom ends, where the freedom of the next individual begins).
@NeferuBanokborn
@NeferuBanokborn 10 ай бұрын
As a small addition and from my own experience: I paid €100 per semester when I was studying in northern Germany (this varies from state to state - we have 16 federal states after all). However, this payment also gives you a semester ticket and you can use the bus and train for free. If you don't have enough money, the state also gives you a student grant of around €600 a month. Half of this is an interest-free loan, the other half is a gift. Our rent as a student (if you don't want to stay with your parents) cost about €300 - divided by 3, as we lived in a shared flat (which is common here), not in a student hall of residence, and we lived within 7 minutes walking distance of the university.
@hba5417
@hba5417 11 ай бұрын
The question of where one has more freedom depends to a large extent on personal needs. And also on cultural differences. In Germany, the concept of freedom is more oriented toward the general public, in the U.S. more toward the individual. Everyone has to decide for themselves what they think is better.
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Totally agree!
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 11 ай бұрын
I'd also argue that the individual freedom that people in the U.S. value comes from two things: The first settlers in those territories ever, were mostly people that were non-conformists in some way shape or form. Some wanted to live out their fringe group form of protestantism, others simply didn't feel like adapting. That kind of mindset is met with vast spaces where you can settle without ever being bothered by anyone. Their own little kingdoms. And they inherited that kind of mindset to their children and drew others who thought the same way to "go west". You see this also in the lack of freedom to roam in the U.S. Private property means: No access to the public at all if the owner doesn't want it. Again: Vast spaces inhabited by people who never wanted to make an effort to get along with others. That is the root of the american freedom. Is that better? Depends. For densily populated places, probably not at all.
@papaya8634
@papaya8634 11 ай бұрын
Honestly I (German) don't feel like my freedom is about the general public, but about the individual too. It's all about me: almost free education for me, freedom to receive medical treatment as much as I need it, freedom of noise at sundays ... me, me, me :D
@AdZS848
@AdZS848 11 ай бұрын
​@@PassportTwoI disagree. Where is the individual freedom in not being able to take time off to recover when you're sick? Or to nurse your newborn baby and raise them until they can walk? Or to disagree with your boss without fear of being fired? Or to send your child to college? Or to walk through the countryside? These are all individual freedoms Americans don't have.
@chavbristol2793
@chavbristol2793 11 ай бұрын
"Freedom" is a cultural entity. In the USA, of all places, I am always amazed at the countless "Do not ..." signs and the countless uniformed, mostly incompetent and least qualified people who can be found everywhere: in museums, in front of doors of buildings, in the parks.... And they have nothing to do but post their "Do not ...". For Europeans, this is very strange. Overall, I feel much "freer" in Europe than in other countries, including the USA. For me, this freedom also includes the feeling of general security, which is elementary. In the USA, I turn back at the latest when I come to an area where there are more than three junk cars in the front yards. I find such things to be a very strong restriction. Furthermore, I find the often rigid behavior of police officers, the latent threat of firearms in private hands and, last but not least, the threat of the death penalty alone as a restriction of my freedom, which I find unacceptable. I love my freedom in Europe and would never, ever, ever want to trade.
@MarkusWitthaut
@MarkusWitthaut 11 ай бұрын
Nice video and always refreshing to listen to a perspective on Germany from someone that has not been grown-up here! For the most boring spectator sport I nominate Angling or Fishing tournaments.
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed 😊
@charlesunderwood6334
@charlesunderwood6334 11 ай бұрын
Without getting into all the "freedom to do" (US) or "freedom to be"(Europe), one difference is the difference between free speech and free expression. In most of Europe there are laws restricting some speech where it could cause harm to others (such as hate speech and inciting violence), but in most of Europe freedom of expression allows far more use of swearing, sex, blasphemy and other expression not only in speech but also in art, film, theatre and TV. I think most people in Europe would prefer the greater freedom of expression if it means having less freedom to be insulting.
@espneindanke9172
@espneindanke9172 11 ай бұрын
Absolutely! We (in the EU) have to get "creative" on some issues. Like back then in the GDR. You have to rewrite things, use synonyms or package the whole thing as "satire.
@elab.1413
@elab.1413 11 ай бұрын
👍🏼
@LarsPW
@LarsPW 11 ай бұрын
German employees enjoy much more freedom in the company they are employed by. Angloamerican stance on this type of treaty seems to be some sort of commercial slavery. The German employer does not get the right to injure the dignity of his employees while his American counterpart does. I have learned that drinking alkohol in public apart of any restaurant or bar is rather bad behaviour. Drinking in public might be allowed only to stay hydrated when visiting famous places, but in this case usually water is consumed.
@klarasee806
@klarasee806 11 ай бұрын
I think that you must have lived in a country to know how free living feels there for you. Since I have never lived in the USA, I can‘t compare. On my trips to the USA, however, I did not feel as free as in Germany - simply because a) I did not feel as safe as in Germany, especially at night, and b) it was often almost impossible to get from A to B without a car (or Uber, taxi,…). When in New York City, I walk and use public transport a lot at daytime, but as a single woman, I don‘t really like to do these things at night - whereas in Germany I walk, bike and use public transport (almost) everywhere at any given time. I also did not allow my kids to take little walks without me anywhere in the US, simply because I never saw other kids walking around alone there. I‘m sure kids do walk around alone in the suburbs, but we usually stay in the cities. They did (little!) walks (with me always being in the near and available on the phone) alone in big European cities like Paris, Barcelona, Berlin of course,… from a quite young age, because they just love to do it and I wanted to give them this… well, freedom. They did not have this freedom in the USA. That being said, I did not let them walk alone in Cape Town, too, so I‘m not saying that only in the USA my kids were not free 😁 Either way, compared to Germany and many other European countries, I feel that not only my own kids, but kids in general are less free in the USA. Above that, I don‘t quite understand which freedoms Americans have that I don‘t have (and would want to have) in Germany. Guns? Freedom of speech? Freedom of having no health insurance or being underensured? No, thank you. If I had a fancy business idea, I‘d probably feel more free to risk it in the USA. But this greater freedom would go hand in hand with higher risks. Generally, I am not a big fan of freedom at all costs. I would have loved to hear your reasons for feeling more free in the USA, Donnie!
@adrianaloborec2205
@adrianaloborec2205 9 ай бұрын
Freedom of hate speech, l might add. Because apart of hate speech and slander, there is no other freedom of speech that would be lacking in EU.
@christiankastorf4836
@christiankastorf4836 11 ай бұрын
The decline of the number of children and youngsters who walk or cycle to school is partly due to the fact that many smaller local schools have been closed and greater school-centers have replaced them. In former times more youngsters left school after grade nine or ten and then took up an apprenticeship, especially in villages and smaller communities.. Nowadays more take secondary education and have to go to the next town for another three years.
@annikan2420
@annikan2420 11 ай бұрын
8:19 also walkable distance is considered way higher in germany than in the US. In germany if its less than 1km you normally always walk and up to 4km most people walk or take their bike. In the US I have seen people driving the 200m distance to visit their friends/neighbours cause "Its too far away to walk"
@mcharlton3
@mcharlton3 11 ай бұрын
As an older retired guy, for me, the freedom to exist without the expense of car payments, insurance and maintenance costs, and fuel costs, not to mention the freedom to drive on quality roads without dealing with hyper-agressive and poorly trained self-centered "'drivers" in the USA is a huge plus. Most boring sport is a toss up between golf, bowling, poker, or corn hole.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 11 ай бұрын
Now imagien the Freedom in the Netherlands, where you have the freedom to choose even your mode of transportation! Freedom from cars!!
@Salzbuckel
@Salzbuckel 11 ай бұрын
The lacks of freedom in Germany, compared to the US: You don't have the right to force your employees to work, when sick, or not give them the adequate time of free days , meaning holidays., or call them in out of duty time, or mail them something to react to. You don't have the right, to shoot them after firing them, when they after that trespass your business- or private property. You don't have the freedom to bill them with costs as high as several 100s times or even 1000% higher for any kind of medical treatment, examination, care , medication or supplies, than in any other highly civilized country, just four financial benefits. As a doctor, you do not have the freedom to financially benefit from the treatment you prescribe to your patient, or advertise your medical offerings , abilities or treatments, luring patients into your business. You do not have the freedom to roam around armed like a soldier on a battlefield. You do not have the freedom to incarcerate people for minimal suspicions or law violations as a police man. You would not have the freedom to name yourself "police officer", when you have just bare minimum of police education. Officers here are always people with the highest university like educations. You do not have the freedom claim such titles for yourself without any proven and achieved testifying. As a landlord, you are not free to throw your people out of their homes without substantial reasons by law and reasonable times by law for them to find new homes.You don't have the freedom here, to harm or insult people, or publish lies about other people. You do not have the freedom to consume any music, films or other creative contents, that are published in technical ways, that can and do avoid the financial benefits, belonging to the creators. You do not have the freedom to advertise any medical or lawyer business, luring people into your business, as bay law those "business" fields are primarily operating to give people in need the needed help, and only secondary to earn money.
@twofinedays
@twofinedays 11 ай бұрын
A lot of things you call 'freedom' is actually more 'right'. A right to grow up, get education, start a family, live a healthy life, and in general lead a humane enough standard of life under a relatively safe and supportive environment regardless of your background, condition and level of wealth. That's basically what a welfare society is. Just as any freedom, those rights were fought for and won over a long period of time and struggle, and so just as valuable.
@gerdahessel2268
@gerdahessel2268 11 ай бұрын
Agree!
@Melisendre
@Melisendre 11 ай бұрын
It's hard to compare the different kinds of freedom. I personally prefer the german and european way. For your question: Golf was the first sports I had in my mind even if there could be others.
@ohauss
@ohauss 11 ай бұрын
I mean, my experience with baseball games is that if something ever happens, it's when you go to the restroom or the food stalls....Though at least there's more show and spectacle around it than in its parent, cricket
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
That's been my experience with soccer 😂
@holger_p
@holger_p 11 ай бұрын
Freedom is mutual. Giving away freedom can be your own profit, and it's fair, if everybody is giving it away. You have to say "you cannot make loud noise", and on the other day, you enjoy the quiet, given by others to you. You are always on both sides of the game - just not on the same day. That's a major concept.
@FruehKay
@FruehKay 11 ай бұрын
A really nice video - I liked it - and it made me think: The word freedom is a very positive word and it sounds like it would be a good thing to strive for a maximum amount of freedom. However - after thinking about it - something like 100% freedom would be devastating for a country, for we are all egoistic human beings and we all need restrictions so that our egoism doesn't harm us / our neighbor. My conclusion: It is not the freedom, but the restrictions / regulations that protect our health, wealth and freedom 😉
@HurdygurdyJoe
@HurdygurdyJoe 11 ай бұрын
Hey have you ever played with the idea of making a vacation somewhere in Europe (or anywhere else) and share your thougts and differences your experienced? I love your videos, but it gets kind of repetitive after a while only to see the US and Germany compared. Thank you for the videos you make! :)
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
If you look deeper on our channel you'll see videos and playlists from roughly 27 different countries actually 😃 However, I will admit that we go on vacation and travel around Europe frequently, but don't make videos about them like we used to because to be honest, "nobody" watches those videos. We only get views on videos about Germany so I stick to those 😊 Thanks for your comment and for watching!
@jps7184
@jps7184 11 ай бұрын
freedom is about tearing down walls not building them
@hansjanko7966
@hansjanko7966 11 ай бұрын
When i can be shot, just because i walk to the wrong door, i'm not free.
@phueal
@phueal 11 ай бұрын
People always talk about freedom as if it’s an absolute: as if every public policy has the “free” option and the “autocratic” option or something. But actually almost every public policy in the West is about balancing two people’s freedom, especially the “freedom to” with the “freedom from”. This is equally true in the US and Germany. Is my freedom to be nude more important than your freedom from seeing nude people? Is my freedom to drive at whatever speed I want more important than your freedom from encountering dangerous drivers? Is my freedom to say whatever I want more important than your freedom from demagoguery and malicious lies? Is my freedom to roam the countryside more important than your freedom to enjoy exclusive use of your property? Is my freedom to spend my money however I choose more important than your freedom to obtain an education or healthcare? And of course: is my freedom to carry around a gun more important than your freedom from gun violence?
@andreasbrandt1082
@andreasbrandt1082 11 ай бұрын
In the perception of a German, freedom is self-limiting. If every person shall be free, individual freedom is limited at the point where the exercise of individual freedom infringes upon the freedom of others. An example would be the midday rest: You are not allowed to exercise your individual "freedom" (right would be the better word here) of using loud machinery outside during certain hours of the day as this would infringe upon the right of others to maybe take a nap. So German freedom is largely based on a weighing of intersts: The noise of a machine might disturb the rest of many. The question is: Is it necessary to use the machine during lunchtime? Or is it reasonable to ask the individual to be considerate and use the machine either in the morning or the afternoon? We largely accept the Kantian concept of freedom, thus, the German concept of freedom is universal.
@christianschweis8335
@christianschweis8335 9 ай бұрын
In my opinion, there is a significant difference in freedom in Europe compared to the USA, you can easily internalize it with the following rule of thumb: "My freedom ends where my neighbor's begins and vice versa"
@franki1651
@franki1651 9 ай бұрын
-Makes a video, explaining, how Germany is more free than the US -Proceeds to say he feels more free in the US anyway Thats America for y'all
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 9 ай бұрын
Whoops, somebody misunderstood the points made in the video even though it was clearly stated multiple times in the video. 😅 Maybe this will help (although I did clearly say this multiple times in the video)? I mention how the U.S. is often portrayed as "the most free nation in the world" and how "one has the most freedoms possible in the U.S. compared to any other country." So, I wanted to show a few freedoms that Germans have that Americans don't have. Not stating that Germany is "more free" as you seem to have misunderstood 😂 Simply, that. Germany does have some freedoms that the U.S. doesn't have (I also stated this goes the other way as well. The U.S. definitely has freedoms that Germans don't have as well, but that wasn't the point of the video so I didn't address those directly). Then at the end I said, that although Germany has these few freedoms that should put the U.S. a little in check that they don't simply have more freedom than any other country in the world, that I do, yes, generally still feel a little more free in the U.S. I also explained that not everybody would feel that way in both countries. Maybe it was a language issue that you didn't pick up on the point of the video. Nonetheless, I appreciate the view 👍🏻😃
@cyberslim7955
@cyberslim7955 11 ай бұрын
Put my kid in a big German city in a public school. Second question of the admin teacher: Where do you live? He was very specific about it, so the small kid can walk/bike to school. They really don't want car traffic near the school in the middle of a residential area... On the first day, they also made it clear in the assembly, not to bring the kids to school with the car: Walk, Bike or public transport with some walking...
@helenzilwick6179
@helenzilwick6179 11 ай бұрын
Tolles video :) Danke
@mathiasstielzchen2227
@mathiasstielzchen2227 2 ай бұрын
Just want to point out, that in Austria I can put as many shoulder stocks on my pistol as I can dream of. Not that I care about that, just wanted to share this piece of information :)
@Why-D
@Why-D 11 ай бұрын
Those 40% are those who walk to school, additionally about 20% go by bike. It is just about 25% who were driven by car. Boring sport ...tennis?
@Powermongur
@Powermongur 11 ай бұрын
I just saw a video where a woman got arrested for wearing a thong and exposing her buttocks. The police was called on her and she got arrested and handcuffed wtf
@r000ty
@r000ty 11 ай бұрын
I think rural Germany is amongst the safest and most free places on earth. Don't care much about the bigger cities though.
@hermannh.k.hunzinger6280
@hermannh.k.hunzinger6280 11 ай бұрын
good ,very good comparisons,,, we lived in both countries...
@extremorosis
@extremorosis 10 ай бұрын
There is another country in Germany called East Frisia and it is located on the North Sea. The East Frisians are very nice and courteous people. Otto Walkes, a famous comedian, comes from East Frisia (he comes from Emden). There are a lot of jokes told about the East Frisians, they don't hold grudges and laugh about it themselves. An example: why does the East Frisian always take a stone and matches to bed with him? He uses the stone to extinguish the light and uses the matches to check whether it is also out. They are a very friendly people whose language is Low German, although it must be said that every village has its own dialect. Even though the villages are right next to each other. When written it looks like this: Well, does the door always seem so skittish? German, Who always makes it so terribly wet? But as I said, things are written and spoken differently everywhere, but people still get along really well everywhere here. Just search for East Frisia on the internet, you'll definitely like it. That's enough, just take a look for yourself. In this sense.
@inigoromon1937
@inigoromon1937 11 ай бұрын
More freedom for everything without fear but still feel more free in the USA. Ok, chap. You get It.
@Harrington2323
@Harrington2323 9 ай бұрын
Free, I don´t know, but I would say that you can feel safer in Germany.
@andreaskolbrink1308
@andreaskolbrink1308 10 ай бұрын
Am I wrong when I say that the freedom mentioned in the national anthem of the USA has nothing to do with the freedom of life in the country? [The Star-Spangled Banner has been the official national anthem of the United States of America (USA) since March 3, 1931. The text was written by Francis Scott Key in 1814. He wanted to express his joy at America's victory over the British, who had heavily bombarded Fort McHenry near Baltimore with their warships that night during the War of 1812. The reason for his reverence for the United States flag (the “Star-Spangled Banner”) was his relief that it was still flying over the fort the day after the British attacks.]wikipedia So please stop being confused by the Anthem`s line "Land of the free" .
@billcipher1212
@billcipher1212 5 ай бұрын
13:06 you might want to change that example
@papaya8634
@papaya8634 11 ай бұрын
Actually I would like to learn about the US-american 'freedom' that everyone is talking about and that you didn't really give a lot of examples in this video. What is this freedom? Making noise at sundays, and what else? Noone is really specifying that and I would like to know. I wouldn't even necessarily let 'less bureaucracy' count to that, because that is just the level of how complicated paper work is and doesn't really have too much do with freedom. Freedom is what you are allowed to do, bureaucracy is just one aspect of the way how to do what you are allowed to do. Also if we talk about freedom we should talk about safety and quality of life, too. If everyone has the freedom (=is allowed to) to kill everyone whenever they want, that is the maximal freedom and you can say 'wow, so much more freedom here than in other countries with all their rules'. This would be a correct statement at first (even though, of course, everyone's freedom to roam and to be alive would be very inflicted) but it doesn't put the level of freedom into perspective and can lead people to false conclusions. Especially in a less extreme case as in this video.
@sbDEU2023
@sbDEU2023 11 ай бұрын
I am an American living in Germany and I do not think there are as many individual freedoms in Germany- there are SO many rules- quiet hours, store hours controlled by the government, the number of hours a person can work is controlled by the German government, rules about when trucks can drive are just a few. But life in Germany is wonderful but it’s not home and I will go back to the US.
@annamc3947
@annamc3947 11 ай бұрын
Golf, baseball, swimming.
@DailyDamage
@DailyDamage 11 ай бұрын
In America: the right to bear arms. In Germany: the dignity of the individual is inviolable. (That means the right to self expression and the search for happiness without the fear of violence and oppression. Don’t know about you… but the German one sounds a little less hostile.
@qobide
@qobide 11 ай бұрын
I'm still puzzled about HOAs. Why do they even exist in the land of the free?
@johnveerkamp1501
@johnveerkamp1501 11 ай бұрын
In Europa natuurlijk. Dat is zo duidelijk.
@Jacob_._Roberts
@Jacob_._Roberts 11 ай бұрын
I find all sports boring.
@dreiineinemboot
@dreiineinemboot 4 ай бұрын
I read that parents have to be visible if their kids play outside till age 12, and have to be with on some festivals even if they are 16. Even in the own backyard parents have to be visible and kids can not run arou d naked in the US, while you can see little ones naked playing at water playgrounds and backyards in Germany. Not to recommend with all the phone cameras around- Feeling more free means to less fear, in the US companies tend to raise prices on services fast, like TV, internet, trash pick up....we had a year trash pick up was raised 60 dollars! Who can keep up with that?We felt under stress a lot.
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 4 ай бұрын
Are you saying those laws you read about 12 and 16 are US or German laws? If you mean US, that’s definitely not the case. Also the running around naked in backyards also isn’t the case. Kids do that in the U.S. as well. I will admit that we do see children naked more in Germany in public spaces than in the U.S. for sure, but kids in their own yards is another thing. If you have sources for hat you have seen or read, I would love to see those though! 😅
@dreiineinemboot
@dreiineinemboot 4 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo Read the Law: Md. Code, Family Law § 5-801 this is in MD - in Germany you can leave a 7 year old two hours all alone in your house. You can see the school age kids - 7 years and older often alone on nearby playgrounds, going to stores in the neighborhood or playing outside alone. My experience in the US Maryland: My neighbor told me they will call the Child Service on me, if I am not visible when the kids play outside (front or backyard), no matter if I can see them from the kitchen window - they will call the child service when the kids (4 and 7) play naked in the sprinkler in the back yard too! The museum park had a sign at the entry that kids, even with 16 have to be with their parents and can't go there alone. So even if it might not be "the law" as parent you might have trouble you do not want or maybe better avoid. I felt my kids can not even do what they want at home. It is probably different in each state -
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 4 ай бұрын
Gotcha! So that law is different than what you initially commented and like you said, specific to just Maryland. But also, sounds like a crazy neighbor to be honest 😅 And you can't base an entire country's "rules" on what one crazy neighbor says 😅 Children for sure are allowed to play outside alone without supervision and nobody (well, apparently at least one neighbor in Maryland) will call child protective services. Kids for sure are allowed to play in the sprinkler in the backyard naked as well. That is not a problem and if this neighbor would call CPS, there are no grounds for anything to be done. As you can see from the law. CPS in the US isn't in the business of stopping children from playing because one neighbor doesn't like what they are doing, especially when no laws are stopping it. And the museum park you mentioned, again, I don't know it so I can't speak to why they might have this 16-year rule, but that is not a standard rule for parks in the U.S. Again, sounds like an Ausnahme. Also, I found this in Germany. As you said, although it is not "the law" in Germany, it is recommended that children starting at 7 can stay alone at home for a maximum of 2 hours. So, not so different. Source: www.brisant.de/lifestyle/family/ab-wann-kinder-alleine-lassen-174.html
@dreiineinemboot
@dreiineinemboot 4 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo beside all this - what do you think how the rest of the neighbors with kids do, if police and Child Service (they habe to go after each call) is in your home? Do you think they let their kids play with yours after that? In our neighborhood my kids were the only ones playing in the front of the house or were to hear when they played in the backyard. I was the only one to walk with them to the nearby park, I never saw the same parents there like in Germany - like it was a bad thing to always go the the same place, to meet the same kids to make friends. Over all the feeling was nobody trust anybody, specially not, if you are not born and raised there, not even if the husband is born and raised there. Why is it, that in the US in the neighborhoods it is always looking like nobody is home but they are?
@dreiineinemboot
@dreiineinemboot 4 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo I felt not free there - I felt scared about this, bills, neighbors, others unsupervised dogs, weather, there was no calm, easy life over there, it felt very stressful, not to mention how the work is - most only work, almost or not payed vacation, no you are sick as long as you are sick, no you have to EARN sick days! Germany is a lot less stress on us.
@esonon5210
@esonon5210 9 ай бұрын
I think the comparison of freedom between both countries is silly because rights aren't really that different. All it is is a dick measuring contest to make nationalists on both sides feel better about themselves. This video has shown how subjective freedom is and what people need to do is live in a country that aligns with their values instead of posing them onto other people.
@clastos
@clastos Ай бұрын
Is not "land of the free", is the "land of the fee". Also, is not "and the home of the Brave", but "and the home of the Greed"
@HenriStosch
@HenriStosch 11 ай бұрын
Also consider the different approaches to free speech. While in the US you can't say bad words on TV and blasphemous things, this is absolute acceptable in Germany. No beeping, no cut scenes here. It switchescwhen it comes to denying the Holocaust. Here in Germany it is a crime, while the US is fine with it
@Boeri86
@Boeri86 11 ай бұрын
For me personally, I always wanted to live in the US. However, since getting older and being 30+ my view has changed and also my values. For me basically it is the freedom from fears that makes Germany/Europe the obvious choice as a "freer" option than the US. I dont fear sending my kids to school and being shoot, I don't fear getting unemployed, I dont fear getting sick and amount huge amounts of debt, I dont fear being stuck in one place I can move/live arounde Europe as I wish, I dont fear people who should not have guns have guns as the laws restrict the access where it has to be restricted. But I also have to say the US has changed a lot in the past 15 years and I really hope this time the world will not follow the US. Btw cricket is the most boring sports to watch on TV.
@lbergen001
@lbergen001 11 ай бұрын
I translate 'freedom' in US to 'you are on your own'. No support in any serious way. In US you have to create your own possibilities wha in EU the possibilities are there to take.
@dertv-gucker3316
@dertv-gucker3316 8 ай бұрын
SO MUCH is forbidden in the U.S.A. what is normal for us Germans. And I don't speak about alcohol.
@SkeeveTVR
@SkeeveTVR 11 ай бұрын
Freedom in germany? u can do a prison break without any trouble (as long u didn't do other crimes). .. bnecause freedom is a human right.
@bibliopolist
@bibliopolist 11 ай бұрын
The US have always made the impression of a police state to me when I was there. People in all kinds of uniforms everywhere, and you are constantly monitored by those people in uniform plus video cameras everywehre. I have never felt a bit of freedom there, and I'm white and male, so I can only image how much worse it must be for those who aren't. Most boring sports to watch: everything where there is no actual competition in real time (ski racing etc.) but the outcome is determined afterwards, with milliseconds to decide. Next are cricket and baseball, followed by American football.
@catriamflockentanz
@catriamflockentanz 11 ай бұрын
I am surprised that you didn't bring up Jaywalking. Because the whole concept just doesn't exist in Germany. (Or Europe in general.)
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Technically also don’t have the freedom to do that in the U.S. even though we do it 😅
@grahvis
@grahvis 11 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo . In the comments on a video talking about being a pedestrian in the US, someone told how one objection to a city putting side walks in a suburban area, was that they didn't want poor people walking in front of their house. Presumably, they took the view that people would only walk if they couldn't afford a car.
@renesalinas9491
@renesalinas9491 6 ай бұрын
visa free now by 194 countrys
@shannonbriggs4102
@shannonbriggs4102 11 ай бұрын
Live in germany. When I was 19 I had a girlfriend which was 17. No problem at all. To think about that I would go to jail in the US for the same thing gives me chills
@fionafiona1146
@fionafiona1146 11 ай бұрын
Especially when that two years age difference occurs in the same cohort at academic institutions! Age restrictions on dating are most appropriate to avoid abuses of power being in class together can often avoid
@shannonbriggs4102
@shannonbriggs4102 11 ай бұрын
@@fionafiona1146 well, she was 1 grade below me at the time. But what triggers me the most is... Am I considered a pedophile in the States now?
@ppckrtt
@ppckrtt 11 ай бұрын
The US glorifies itself with freedoms such as speech, guns and a huge army enabling it to gave a say anywhere in the world. From young age this is engraved into the heads of it‘s population so that they learn to look down at all other nations from the self created pedestal - and unfortunately often from the prospective of their utter ignorance. I think it is great that you belong to a minority who has experienced the (not so inferior) standards of a foreign country and thereby lowered your prejudices and expanded your intellectual horizon. It is very nice to have you here!
@realulli
@realulli 11 ай бұрын
In theory, running around topless in public is legal everywhere in Germany (at least everywhere swimwear is allowed). The German constitution (Grundgesetz) gives everyone protection from discrimination for gender, age, skin color or religious beliefs. Someone noticed that the regulation that women have to cover their boobs violates that and challenged it at Germany's highest court. He won, since requiring women to cover their breasts while men don't have to violates the freedom from discrimination due to gender.
@infinite_hyperspace
@infinite_hyperspace 11 ай бұрын
Ja, das ist aber eher kulturell bedingt
@andreascammin5619
@andreascammin5619 10 ай бұрын
most boring sports to watch is snooker, followed by curling.
@pamka200
@pamka200 11 ай бұрын
I'd be curious about what freedoms of the USA you miss in Germany. There must be things you think "oh, I wish I was in the USA, that would be so much easier". It just seems to me that Americans are constantly living in fear and this to me seems like the opposite of feeling free. Like, they're afraid of loud noises because it could be a shooting, they're afraid of going to a doctor or calling the ambulance because it might cost so much, they're afraid of having their homes seem like no one's there because someone might break in, they're afraid of being robbed at home so they have guns, they're afraid of being robbed outside so they don't carry cash, they're afraid being ill because they can be fired any day, they're afraid of the government taking their guns from them, they're afraid of letting their kids go someplace alone because they could be kidnapped.... The list goes on. So yeah - what is it actually that Americans do have more freedom in?
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
I obviously can’t speak for everybody, but not all of those things we do are out of fear or out of the fears you described. For example, we don’t carry cash because cards are more widely accepted in the U.S. and are more convenient to use than cash. Same reason Sweden has basically moved to a cashless society. Also, I showed in this video the number one reasons for not having children walk alone to places is purely distance because the U.S. is simply built and developed differently. Sure, you’re right about some thing, but other things I would just be careful about generalizing or believing too many stereotypes without looking into it more 😊 Thanks for watching and commenting!! 😃
@pamka200
@pamka200 11 ай бұрын
PS: I think car or bike racing is really boring. It's just goring round the same track over and over again.
@pamka200
@pamka200 11 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo Ah, fair enough, that was very generalizing. (I got the cash thing from another video from an American, btw - it would have been the last reason I'd have thought up, and I was really surprised about the reasoning. It's good to hear that this was more a personal than a general fear.) But maybe for another video: what freedoms do you really miss? Like, I can imagine building a house over here is a hassle with a lot more regulations compared to the USA. But there must be other things I can't think of.
@eisikater1584
@eisikater1584 11 ай бұрын
Random question: To me, ALL sports are boring to watch. No exception.
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Now I feel oddly challenged to find ONE sport, no matter how obscure, that you might enjoy watching 😂
@SCARAMOUSXL5
@SCARAMOUSXL5 12 күн бұрын
IN USA FREEDOM IS TO BUY GUNS NOT ALCOHOL!!!😮
@AcidMettSpeck
@AcidMettSpeck 7 ай бұрын
America is free? USA hasn't even invented Sidewalks yet xD
@macdieter23558
@macdieter23558 4 ай бұрын
So they are free from sidewalks!
@was2keta3ab37
@was2keta3ab37 9 ай бұрын
Are you italian?
@frankgunold268
@frankgunold268 8 ай бұрын
9:40 Es gab sogar mal einen der über 410 km/h auf der Autobahn fuhr ! Radim Passer mit seinem Bugatti: Sind 400 km/h auf deutscher Autobahn legal? | WDR Aktuelle Stunde kzbin.info/www/bejne/bHuWYqdmpLmorbc
@ooNemoO71
@ooNemoO71 11 ай бұрын
You say "we" Donnie but we have not seen Aubrey for quite some time. Show us your basement Donnie.
@ooNemoO71
@ooNemoO71 11 ай бұрын
and it's baseball on the level with criket.
@migmit
@migmit 8 ай бұрын
You mean, there are sports that aren't completely boring?
@WereDictionary
@WereDictionary 11 ай бұрын
If you can afford your citizens to be free you dont need to indoctrinate them about how free they are. The USA and Germany just have different interpretations of freedom. I personally feel safer with the german interpretation and on that end, the american proclamation of them being the "free-est country" kinda rubs me the wrong way but thats just me. I just think that freedom is an all-encompassing word so if there are aspects where the USA is more restrictive than other countries, the claim of being the country with the most freedoms kinda rings hollow to me.
@Kelsea-2002
@Kelsea-2002 11 ай бұрын
Definitely American football - extremely slow, more interruptions than playing time... and why the hell is it called football? That's handball with an egg! And let's be honest; any NFL pro would drop dead after 5 minutes in a real football game. *Forza F C K* 👹
@lindamaes6454
@lindamaes6454 11 ай бұрын
It's some kind of slow pased, padded rugby. Watching paint dry is more interesting.
@Kelsea-2002
@Kelsea-2002 11 ай бұрын
@@lindamaes6454 Why do Americans say about an egg ball?🤔 Maybe I really should have gone to college to understand this logic.
@gerdforster883
@gerdforster883 11 ай бұрын
I spent a year as an exchange student in 11th grade in the US. I lived in a small town. The school bus was so inconvenient that I walked to school most days (it was a twenty minute walk compared to a forty minute bus ride). The first ten minutes I had to walk on a road that had no sidewalks. I was sixteen, and at that age you don't really consider things like your own mortality, but nowadays, I realise how dangerous that really was. Oh, and I got stopped by cops twice, asking me if something was wrong. After that, everyone at the tiny police department probably knew about the weird german guy walking everywhere.
@brucebanner3566
@brucebanner3566 10 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear about your experience. Not everyone is that bad in America. It sounds like you were in a small town.
@LucMarcelle
@LucMarcelle 10 ай бұрын
@@brucebanner3566 lol dude literally said he lived in a small town.
@nickulity
@nickulity 9 ай бұрын
That’s funny I did an exchange year in a small town too and walked to school. I got so many weird looks because everyone would just drive, doesn’t matter how far.
@lyreamonara7133
@lyreamonara7133 5 ай бұрын
Its so weird to me.. i am german and it was totaly normal to me to walk to school for over 7 years. Everyday to 30-40 minutes in the morning to school and the same back. It dosnt matter how the weather was. Rain, snow, storm, ice or 36 degrees. I alway walked. I cant imagine living in a land you cant walk (because of missing infrastructure) or drive everytime something is more than five minutes away. I could never do that.
@KJ-md2wj
@KJ-md2wj Ай бұрын
I had a GF here in Germany. She wanted to be driven to the store only abt. 200 m away.
@peterfiedler9085
@peterfiedler9085 11 ай бұрын
For me it is simple and very clear. In Germany cities and villages are communities, in US the freedom only means EGOISM. Greetings from California..
@Kay_McKay
@Kay_McKay 11 ай бұрын
As someone married to an American person of colour, we both feel more free in Germany/Europe than the United States. Not even close. Make of that what you will.
@PassportTwo
@PassportTwo 11 ай бұрын
Appreciate your take and comment 😊
@Kay_McKay
@Kay_McKay 11 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo And I appreciate your understanding ☺
@jennyh4025
@jennyh4025 11 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Thank you! I rarely thought about this (as a German).
@vrenak
@vrenak 11 ай бұрын
@HayleyAlexis Has an incredibly good dive into a big reason for why this is in one of her videos.
@gloofisearch
@gloofisearch 11 ай бұрын
Yep, in the same boat here.
@moinmoinrhabarber969
@moinmoinrhabarber969 6 ай бұрын
That's why it's called "The American dream" and not "The American reality"
@charlesshelton7989
@charlesshelton7989 2 ай бұрын
*hallucination
@666LonesomeSailor
@666LonesomeSailor 24 күн бұрын
The american dream - you have to be asleep to belive in it! :D
@Legendary_Starlight
@Legendary_Starlight 3 күн бұрын
@@charlesshelton7989 LMFAOOOO
@icerepublic
@icerepublic 11 ай бұрын
Whenever I'm on vacation in the US, I find it really weird that I cannot buy my usual daily contact lenses over there without seeing a doctor and getting a prescription. But I could buy an automatic rifle. Weird concept of freedom. I don't want a rifle. I want to see something 😂 I'm now always making absolutely sure I bring enough of them from Europe.
@udosteger
@udosteger 11 ай бұрын
And at the same time, in Germany you need to go to the pharmacy or even need a prescription in order to be able to buy common drugs which in the USA are sold in drugstores. Or take a look at Italy, where pharmacies are the first form of medical support people seek out, even before seeing a doctor. And each legal system (federal or state) has good reasons why things are as they are.
@icerepublic
@icerepublic 11 ай бұрын
@@udosteger Absolutely. But it's the US that's constantly claiming to be the land of the free and citing freedom as the main driving force behind many political decisions like e.g. the liberal gun laws. In fact it's just another country that's allowing certain things and disallowing certain things.
@LANCELOT1911
@LANCELOT1911 10 ай бұрын
Once you have a prescription from an optometrist, you can simply order more contacts from your doctor's office, no appointment needed. As for automatic weapons, you cannot simply walk in and out with one on the same day, you have to be legally eligible to purchase one and there's a lengthy background check to get one. Mind you, there are also 13 states where you cannot legally possess or purchase/sell an automatic weapon, including DC.
@Eysenbeiss
@Eysenbeiss 10 ай бұрын
@@udosteger Und das ist nun ein Nachteil? Wohl kaum, denn in beiden Staaten ist der Medikamentenmissbrauch bzw. die Abhängigkeit von solchen Substanzen um ein Vielfaches höher.
@Eysenbeiss
@Eysenbeiss 10 ай бұрын
​@@LANCELOT1911 Correct - just imagine NYC and people legally owning weapons .... people in Europe have seen too many bullshit movies, thinking, that things are reall like that. They don't know, that you first have to register to get a general permit for handguns and then have to proove your knowledge about heavy weapons, including said background check, that can take up to several month. Only exception being hunting permits, but for those, you had to to a check-up earlier as well.
@MarijnvdSterre
@MarijnvdSterre 11 ай бұрын
A very intelligent person doesn't need to call him/herself smart. A great leader doesn't have to say he is a great leader. If you are really free, you don't have to constantly say you are free. To me America's freedom comes over as the "person" that keeps insisting, because deep down they know they aren't.
@Tommusix
@Tommusix 11 ай бұрын
Well said. A good worker doesn't need to tell everytime what a good worker he is.
@lukassimontm3546
@lukassimontm3546 21 күн бұрын
On point! That's exactly how I feel about it.
@Megans358
@Megans358 11 ай бұрын
This is going to trigger some but here in Germany we have the freedom from every day gun violence, going bankrupt from getting sick/injured, student loans, out of control lobbying destroying democracy etc. In the US, people focus on “freedom to” versus Europe you have “freedom from”. The US is home to me but I’m grateful for the advancements here to protect society.
@Nordlicht05
@Nordlicht05 11 ай бұрын
Only my impression from the USA is that some part of the freedom is when you fail it is and will be only your problem not the problem of other people. Everyone is responsible for themselves (in a more clearly manner) . It is not intended to sound positive 😅
@lennat24
@lennat24 11 ай бұрын
???
@lhpl
@lhpl 11 ай бұрын
Except, as the video shows, there are many "freedoms _to_ something" that are not found in the US.
@Megans358
@Megans358 11 ай бұрын
@@lhpl of course, every country will have them. As I said above, the US population tends to focus on what they have the freedom to do. They do so with complete disregard for the negative outcomes of those “freedoms”.
@lhpl
@lhpl 11 ай бұрын
@@Megans358 My point is that Americans may very likely be focused on _some_ freedoms (or rights) "to", like the right to bear arms, while not caring at all about others, like the freedom to drink in public. There are many things the authorities interfere with in the US, which - seen from Europe - would be unacceptable restrictions on our freedom "to something".
@katharinawessels5176
@katharinawessels5176 11 ай бұрын
Considering the property-law in the US: we had a 15-year-old boy in the neighbourhood in Hamburg, Germany, who went for an exchange year to the US. In the school he befriended some boys and amongst the teens there was a game popular in which they snuck onto the property of other people, trying to steel a beer out of the garage. So he did this as well - unfortunatly the owner of the garage heard him and shot him to death. And because of these property-laws he was not arrested or punished. He killed a stupid boy for a beer. That is why i would not let my teenage boys go to America by themselves.
@eltrem2708
@eltrem2708 11 ай бұрын
😮
@jameswallace3963
@jameswallace3963 11 ай бұрын
He HAS been punished now.
@lhpl
@lhpl 10 ай бұрын
@@jameswallace3963 well Rod**y Pea**s hasn't, he was found not guilty. He was found liable in civil court, and was to pay some money in damages, probably hasn't been able to pay that. In 1992 he killed Yoshihiro Hattori, a 16 year old Japanese exchange student. In 1992 I decided to never set a foot on US soil, and I have advised my kids to not go there ever. And oh, speaking of freedoms, my first comment disappeared in thin air, I guess I must have used language unfit for sensitive American minds. Freedom of speech up yours! (Of course not you personally, James Wallace, I'm a big fan of your namesake Henry, btw.)
@Eysenbeiss
@Eysenbeiss 10 ай бұрын
Stupid and blatant lie, except for Tennesee, cause in every other state, you WILL get punished for doing so and that's a fact. You are only allowed to DEFEND yourself and property and shooting an UNARMED civilian for "trespassing" is NOT covered by law. I heard that crap over and over again, but in NO case at all, someone was able to produce evidence, name the town, county or court ...
@RaimoHöft
@RaimoHöft 10 ай бұрын
He got arrested for big time... because the turkish community in Turkey and in the turkish colony Germany, from where the turkish brat was, went bat crap crazy and threatened to become very violent. Je suis Markus Kaarma... he did nothing wrong... the criminal turk Diren Dede did! It was a political show process and sentence... like the one concerning Fentanyl-George. Hence... Je suis Derek Chauvin.
@sharonsteedly1950
@sharonsteedly1950 11 ай бұрын
I felt more free while living in Germany and Malta. The transition back to the US full time has been difficult. I truly miss the freedom of living in Europe.
@petermuller7079
@petermuller7079 11 ай бұрын
The "right to protect yourself" is also law in Germany - but the threat must be much more "physical", "real" than by the "Stand your ground" laws in the US. Just "feeling threatened" (by mere physical presence) isn't considered a reason for self-defence. As long as you (and any other person) can flee the scene, you are expected to do that.
@timokarff6162
@timokarff6162 10 ай бұрын
And there even is a limit to what you can do to protect yourself in the case of "Bagatellangriffe" (very minor threats/attacks). In Germany, Notwehr does allow you to respond to a significant attack, e.g. robbery or major assault, even with lethal force if this is the "mildest option" (mildestes Mittel). But against a minor threat/attack, e.g. trespassing or - this example is commonly used in law studies - stealing cherries - you are not allowed to defend yourself out of proportion.
@horstomat
@horstomat 6 ай бұрын
The equivalent to "Stand your ground" in german jurisdiction is "Das Recht muss dem Unrecht nicht weichen", what also mans, that you don't need to run away to avoid a confrontation but can stand and defend your ground.
@petermuller7079
@petermuller7079 6 ай бұрын
@@horstomat Es hebt aber die Pflicht zur Angemessenheit nicht auf. ... und "Rache" wird ebenfalls nicht darunter verstanden.
@clauschrist2791
@clauschrist2791 11 ай бұрын
I think you can be "more free" in the US If you can afford it that is. In Germany it's more about giving freedom not to an individual but to as many people as possible to the highest degree possible. To sum it up: I personally prefer Germany
@michaausleipzig
@michaausleipzig 11 ай бұрын
I remember back in high school a girl hurt her neck during p.e. She was actually picked up by an ambulance helicopter that landed in our rather tiny inner city school yard with tress and buildings all around. Pretty impressive, of course everyone watched and the teachers had a hard time to keep everyone at a safe distance. But turns out is wasn't even bad, she was back the next day. Guess they just wanted to be extra carefull with a possible neck injury and considered air transport to be smoother and thus safer.
@anjin-san
@anjin-san 11 ай бұрын
Sturz und Nackenverletzungen werden, sofern möglich, zwingend mit dem Hubschrauber erledigt, weil es besonders wichtig ist, daß der Verletzte schnellstmöglich in spezielle Kliniken kommt, wegen eventueller Schäden an der Wirbelsäule (drohende Querschnittslämung).
@robopecha
@robopecha 10 ай бұрын
i think people in the US have more psychological trauma and burdens, that we in germany mostly don't have. i am thinking of struggling with student loans, loans because you needed surgery (i was never in any debt in my life), having a sick family member at home you have to take care of and that maybe dies in front of you because there is no health insurance or insurance does not cover things. people you know in general dying because of health reasons or violence (no one i know died yet except my 90yo grandma). childhood trauma you can't afford therapy for, so you get addicted to medication or alcohol instead. in germany i am struggling with things too, but it is never about survival. even if i don't have a job, i will always have money to buy food and the rent will be paid and my insurance is covered. i never worry about any of those things. that is real freedom! it's just an endless list. every person i meet from the US has some kind of severe struggle i would not have here. i feel so bad for them. ps: tennis.
@juricarmichael2534
@juricarmichael2534 11 ай бұрын
Where does the personal freedom depend on the thickness of your wallet or color of your credit card? I think we all know.......
@trassentante
@trassentante 11 ай бұрын
The difference is in the constitution. US constitution is 200 yrs older than ours and is about personal freedom. But we learned over the centuries, there's more than personal freedom. So the first article in the German constitution is about dignity. That means the personal freedom can not cut others freedom. When you're allowed to kill people just for walking over your property you're hurting the dignity of that person and that's not freedom. It's just selfish. It's "fuck your freedom and die". Unhuman, unfree.
@charlesunderwood6334
@charlesunderwood6334 11 ай бұрын
The UK does not have (or need) a written constitution, but the core of it is at least 900 years old, and it seems to work.
@lennat24
@lennat24 11 ай бұрын
@@charlesunderwood6334 She didn‘t talk about the UK. But your system semms to work fine.
@terryhunt2659
@terryhunt2659 11 ай бұрын
@@charlesunderwood6334 The UK does have a written constitution, but it's distributed over many different documents and legal rulings introduced over a long span of history, rather than being collected and summarised in one.
@fumble_brewski5410
@fumble_brewski5410 11 ай бұрын
Whoa!...nowhere in the U.S. is it legal to "kill people just for walking over your property." Do so and you'll be charged with a capital crime, with the possibility of spending life in prison. Willful trespassing is certainly illegal, but the only lawful recourse is to file a complaint with the police against the alleged trespasser. And I doubt that you've "learned over the centuries" as you insist. The years 1933 - 1945 proved that you haven't, and that it took the total devastation of your country to finally bring you people to your senses. And the fact that the U.S. constitution is 200 years old (actually it's 234) is irrelevant. It contains timeless principles to which most civilized nations aspire even today. Have you even read it? I'd bet not. Certainly there is crime in America (some places worse than others), as in most Western nations, but don't blame that on the constitution. Blame it on criminals, and the lack of support for law enforcement in certain areas of the country. The whole purpose of the U.S. constitution is to delineate certain inalienable human rights, and to limit the power of the government to certain specified functions. Just ask anyone still alive in your country that remembers how living without a constitution (during the 1930's & 40's) worked out for you people.
@Dat_Sushi
@Dat_Sushi 11 ай бұрын
@@fumble_brewski5410 OP stated that the US consitution is "200 years OLDER than ours", not that it's only 200 years old. Although technically it isn't because our constitution was declared 23.05.1949, so do the math yourself. WE learned our lesson from our past. Hence the freedom for oneself ends where it does others harm. Has your country learned it's lessons from the past (Native Americans, Slavery, Apartheid)? Ido hope so because we all can learn from the past to never ever let those thimgs happen again. Sidenote: The idiot who started the whole N*zi Sh*tshow was not even a German himself and looked eeriely similar to the "enemy picture" he created (at least I think so). Sorry for the rant, but your education system should not let the history classes end at the year 1945 😮
@lebenindenusa
@lebenindenusa 11 ай бұрын
I am a German living in the US. I never understand how Americans think they have the most free country. After Roe vs. Wade was overturend, its so free as Germany was in 1935.
@helene4397
@helene4397 11 ай бұрын
That is dangerous to every woman and girl, basically to any one with functioning ovaries and uterus.
@totalwar008
@totalwar008 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, freedom to murder is really important to you, it seems.
@Catzee
@Catzee 11 ай бұрын
well, North Koreans also think they have the freeest country in the world. They can't know any better. Same with americans, just they don't want to know any better. Let them live in their bubble over there.
@lillia5333
@lillia5333 11 ай бұрын
​@@totalwar008removing a cluster of cells is not murder. You are showing your lack of education, another usian freedumb. But killing doctors at abortian clinics is murder. Like when George Tiller was murdered.
@lebenindenusa
@lebenindenusa 11 ай бұрын
. @totalwar008 you have no idea what you are talking about. The most abortions are for medical reasons and even this are banned in some states. They are now trying to ban birth controll also. In some states in some clinics the let women bleed out till they are on the brink of death till they are helping them. But a clumb of cells is more important for you. Sure when live is so importand for you, you vote for gun controll, food assistans, for asyl seekers to come in ... ??? No? than you are not pro live, you are pro controll! Btw. Roe vs Waide is not about abortion, that was only the first thing they did, the next are the trans, and lgbtq than the adhd and authists, depressivs, leftis, immigrants. It will never stop. And in Alabama 3 clinics stop birth controll because the medical stuff for this does not want to participate in torchering women. The new house speeker, said once, every woman owns the country to birth one able body WORKER. Does not sound like freedom to me, sounds more like Handmaidstale.
@Kay_McKay
@Kay_McKay 11 ай бұрын
It occurs to me that one common misunderstanding comes from the question whether you are free TO do something, or the freedom FROM something. For example, I'd rather be free from the dangers of overzealous property owners than be free to lethally respond to a perceived slight or invasion.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 11 ай бұрын
That is my impression, too. To use the example from the video: In the US you are free to make noise on sunday, while in Germany you have the freedom from noise on Sunday.
@utha2665
@utha2665 11 ай бұрын
And, I just don't get the fascination with their guns. One only needs to look at the events of the last few days to understand just how warped their sense of freedom is.
@holger_p
@holger_p 11 ай бұрын
That's called security, not freedom
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 11 ай бұрын
@@holger_p No. The concept is positive and negative freedom is not the concept of freedom and security.
@holger_p
@holger_p 11 ай бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 this makes freedom completly meaningless, if you can define hunger is beeing free of food, and not having hunger is free of hunger. That's permanent enduring freedom on everything you have or you miss.
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