Five Things That Shock Me Every Time I Visit America as a European

I spent the recent winter holiday with part of my family that lives in the US.
And although I’ve been coming there — for both personal and professional reasons — for almost a decade now, every time I visit, I can’t help but feel… slightly shocked.
You’d think that since I was born and raised in a post-Soviet country, lived in several Western European countries, and visited most continents on this planet, nothing can truly surprise me anymore. But not really.
While I’m no stranger to cultural shocks, there are many things about American life and how this country is organised that I don’t think will ever cease to astound me.
(Unless they might change one day, of course.)
Here are some of them:

The amount of pro-American propaganda​

When my partner and I were waiting in line to go through US customs a few weeks ago, we noticed that right in front of us was a giant screen playing what can be best described as an advertisement for America.
I’m afraid I don’t recall it word-for-word — I saw it right after coming off a near-11 hours long flight from London — but it went more or less like this:
Come to America. We’re the greatest country in the world. Everyone wants to live here, and everyone is welcome. We’re great at accepting foreigners. You should move here, too. Just imagine how great your life would be if you were American.
It clearly wasn’t one of those tourism campaign videos some countries do to promote their natural resources, culture, heritage etc. and convince people to spend their hard-earned vacation money there. No, it felt much more like a piece of North Korea-inspired propaganda.
And a rather terrible one at that as well.
But while I wasn’t expecting to see that video there, I know it’s a common belief — especially among certain groups of Americans — to consider America as a ‘great’ and ‘free’ country.
This also explains another unusual thing: Americans’ obsession with displaying American flags everywhere. True, Europeans do it sometimes and on special occasions — like independence day or other national celebrations — but not every day.
And we don’t require kids to pledge ‘alliance’ to it, either. Or regularly sing the national anthem in schools.
So call me crazy, but if you have to actively indoctrinate children into having an extreme — and honestly quite scary — level of national pride, then perhaps your country is not really that ‘great’ or ‘free,’ is it?

Religious extremism​

The first time I’ve ever seen people praying together in public before eating a meal was in the US, during my first trip there.
And mind you, I grew up in what’s considered to be one of the most religious countries in Europe — Poland. Still, apart from occasional Catholic celebrations or events, you don’t see frequent displays of religiosity. At least not in public and not in big cities.
But that doesn’t seem to be the case in quite a few places around America.
And the fact that it’s the only wealthy country with so many people still identifying as religious makes it something of an anomaly in today’s world.
In particular, considering that while some developed countries are now finally moving towards suppressing harmful religious groups — like Norway recently did with the Jehovah’s Witnesses — the US seems to be going in the exact opposite direction. And it’s no secret that they don’t exactly keep religion — of the fundamentalist, Christian type — separate from government policies.
Because that always turns out just fantastic, doesn’t it?
What also baffles me is that the Christian denominations most commonly present in the US — like the Evangelicals — are much less like actual religious groups and more like cults. Plus, they treat religion as yet another product to be shoved down gullible American’s throats for the financial benefit of a few white men with a superiority complex.
Some time ago, I even went to a Christian ‘megachurch’ to see if it’s really as ridiculous as it seems. It was much worse than that.
Depending on the state in which you are, it’s also not that uncommon to see ad campaigns for… Jesus. And God. And all these ‘churches’ that hope to brainwash as many people as possible.
When I was there recently, I even got a few ads like that on my Instagram account, out of all places.
And no, that never happened anywhere else I’ve travelled to.

The car is the star​

Apart from some big American cities like New York, public transportation in the US is almost non-existent.
And it’s nearly impossible to move around unless you know how to drive and have a car.
As someone who never got their driving licence — simply because at no point in my life I needed to have it — I find it quite troublesome. You can’t just catch a bus or get the tube or a tram; you have to get a taxi or depend on someone to drive you instead.
It’s also not easy to do the former, even in the cities that technically offer some public transport, as it’s often poorly connected and organised. And it’s treated more like a ‘poor people’ thing, rather than what it really is, or rather should be: a vital public good, which could easily be founded if, you know, America stopped spending so much money on killing people.
But it’s not like you can just walk places, either.
I made that mistake quite a few times — yup, I’m one of those ‘crazy’ people who enjoy walking everywhere — and either ended up somewhere where there was no more sidewalk, and I had to go back or accidentally walked in on people shooting heroin in the middle of the day.
(And that’s yet another thing I’ve never seen happen anywhere else on this planet.)
But considering the amount of car-related fatalities, pollution it causes, energy waste, and exorbitant costs of ownership, I fail to understand Americans’ stubborn attachment to this archaic and inefficient transportation mode.
It just doesn’t make any sense.

Everything and anything costs money​

I honestly wouldn’t be surprised if I’d be forced to pay for just breathing the next time I visit the US.
Even some parks, including the regular kind, charge you to enter them. Yup, parks. You know, the nice places with trees and bushes and greedy squirrels that allow people living in urban areas to access some nature from time to time.
But if you’re broke and unlucky to live close to one that happens to be run by people wanting to capitalise on every single thing imaginable, you don’t get to go there.
How lovely.
And although I’m not that shocked that museums and other cultural venues have entrance fees too — usually quite high in comparison to Europe — that’s still somewhat disappointing. In London, where I live, you can visit the city by taking a double-decker bus ride and go to some of the world’s most renewed museums, all for a little over ten pounds.
In other European cities, that would cost you even less, possibly even nothing at all, since not all of them charge fees for public transport.
I’m not going to try to estimate how much it costs to visit a big American city for a day. But it surely is way more than just ten pounds.
It shouldn’t be controversial, though, to suggest that countries as developed and as rich as the US should provide their citizens with easy and free — or at the very least, cheap — access to green and cultural spaces and the most important historical venues.
That’s how you make your society healthier, happier, and more educated.
But it seems like most American politicians definitely don’t want that to happen.

Excess and lack​

Whether you’re in an American mall, a supermarket, or any other public space, it feels like everything is organised around encouraging people to engage in a constant orgy of reckless consumption.
Grocery stores have so many options for a single product type they sometimes barely fit into one aisle. Pharmacies sell everything from foodstuffs to tobacco products. Some people have not one or two, but multiple heavily polluting, gigantic vehicles. And boats. And motorcycles.
Everything seems larger than life and utterly excessive.
But then that excess is sharply contrasted with lack.
While the first impression many Europeans have when they visit the US for the first time is that it’s indeed a rich country, it actually has one of the highest wealth inequality rates among all developed countries.
If you have money, you have access to many things that probably don’t even exist anywhere else, and you can happily consume yourself into oblivion. But the rest of the people are just trying to survive.
And that becomes pretty clear when you ‘stray’ from typically touristy places or meet Americans who aren’t lucky to be of the privileged kind and lack the most basic of things, like housing and food.
I once even saw an ad campaign in Germany that encouraged support for hungry… American children.
Well. If a foreign country has to start raising money to feed your kids because you’re unable to, then you’re likely doing something really, really wrong.

Obviously, the above isn’t an exhaustive list of things that shock me about the US.
Lack of affordable healthcare, fair workplace practices and gun control, the existence of for-profit prisons, systemic lack of respect and care for women and LGBTQ+ people, and many other issues shock me, too.
And I do realise that some Americans are acutely aware of it all. More than any of us, shocked foreigners, could ever be. But then, some others seem to be living in an entirely different reality.
One where their country remains the ‘greatest’ in the world, and it’s a place of prosperity, happiness and godliness and not poverty, heedless excess and lunacy.
As George Carlin once said:
It’s called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.

 
Euros are so full of shit sometimes.

They are propagandized like mad, everything costs money in Europe too, religious extremism is just the Durka Durka flavor. They love excess just look at all the drunks after every soccer game, look at how much they are willing to spend on cuisine. The only thing that stands out about Europe in terms of consumption is that all the stairs were steep, the halls narrow, and all the bathrooms were small... that doesn't make you better, it makes you cramped.

Also cars are great, cope and sneed.
 
I can safely say "What American food?" Americans are so fat because every place has a tasty regional specialty. The South has more fried foods than Scotland, the Northeast is a mix of literally every European culture, Southwest gets you something -Mex and the coasts gets you Asian food in the mix. The only really American food is grilled meat on a plate in some form, and even then you have Southern barbecue (and I'm sure a Southerner will come in tell me how their state's barbecue is better than the next state over), Texan barbecue, hardwood grilling in the West...
Hell, you don't even need to leave the state you're in down south to have significant barbecue variations. It's been a while since I've lived down south, but there were at least 3 major and distinct types just in my state.
 
Obviously, the above isn’t an exhaustive list of things that shock me about the US.
Lack of... gun control
Lol. If you think America doesn't have gun control, you're a fucking idiot.

Also, you're a fucking idiot for implying that gun control is a good thing. First of all, imagine thinking having the ability to own cool tech, defend yourself from criminals, and overthrow a tyrannical government is a bad thing. Second, statistically speaking, the places with the most gun crime are the places with the strictest gun laws, I.E. big cities run by Democrats. So gun control actually does nothing to stop gun crime. Almost like criminals don't actually give a shit about the law in the first place, huh?
 
What is it with Europeans getting aroused by their lack of freedom?
I guess like with American SJWs, European SJWs are more conditioned to accept the "New World Order" of being like the Borg IRL.

There are Europeans who value freedom and are critical of the woke cult, but they may lack the freedom to express such views...
 
I've always wondered what foreigners with an open mind think about American food that they've actually eaten, like if it's too sweet, too spicy, etc.
It’s very variable which is the same as in Europe. I had some food in Louisiana that was just amazing. Shrimp Luanne or something? And cajun food. Fab stuff. could have sat and eaten my own body weight in it. Plus really good polite service and being called ma’am. I really liked Louisiana. You’re nice people
Places like Colorado and Texas - The steaks were huge and fantastic, couldnt finish any of it, but it was great. Used to laugh when I got given the steak, it could feed me for a week but it was delicious.
The supermarkets I found odd because of the variety and volume of processed stuff - like whole aisles of milk in every flavour on earth but nothing that resembled just actual milk (I could have been just looking wrongly kind.) whereas here you’ll get skimmed, semi skimmed and while and maybe UHT and that’s your lot. The yoghurt wasn’t very nice, too sweet. Quite a lot of stuff like that has huge amounts of sugar in it.
Your processed food is an abomination, and on a scale we don’t have here. But we do have processed slop as well. Your ‘good’ food is pretty good. Which honestly, is quite similar to Europe - you can eat fresh stuff from the farmers market or you eat chicken fired in goodness knows what and greggs and pop tarts. I never went anywhere where the tap water tasted good but I guess that’s regional.
I think we have some stricter regs on hormones and stuff in meat.
Fat people are fatter on a scale that’s noticeable as well, but again we are getting there too.
 
the US seems to be going in the exact opposite direction. And it’s no secret that they don’t exactly keep religion — of the fundamentalist, Christian type — separate from government policies.
Because that always turns out just fantastic, doesn’t it?
What a loser. The precise reason America is in the shape it is, is because Godly laws are constantly being replaced with specifically Godless court rulings and anti-Christian lawmakers making foolish laws.
 
I've always wondered what foreigners with an open mind think about American food that they've actually eaten, like if it's too sweet, too spicy, etc.
Way too sweet. Every bit of bread I ate tasted like it was loaded with sugar - and no, I'm not talking about wonderbread. Actual seeded batch loaves, white bread, brown bread, all the bread I ate in the US tasted like sugar. The only exceptions were bagels and pretzels. Every meal I ate tasted sweet. I've had honey glazed, roasted ham that was less sugary. Steak tasted sweet.

I also have trouble with the idea of burgers that are anything but fully cooked. A rare burger sounds like a food-poisoning disaster waiting to happen.

Now, I'll grant you, the only places I've been are New York, some place in Colorado that I can't remember the name of (I think it was near Colorado Springs), and Baltimore, so it's possible I just had really bad luck in food terms. My brother has been to Florida and came back recommending alligator steaks, which is apparently a thing down there. I've also had American guests making a few of what they consider signature foods, which were rather good (though I could pass on grits), and I spent a couple of months learning how to make cornbread because it is simply the best.

But overall, too sweet. Guess they really do put that HFCS in everything.
 
I have my own list...
1. Fat people, lol there are so many and they are extremly fat, also it seems like its normal in the US when in europe you still see people making fun of fat people to their face.

2. Regulations. you have to drive like grandma on the highway, no smoking anywhere, no alcohol in some places, you need a license for everything, HOAs. Land of the free my ass, its easyer and cheaper to shot a machine gun for fun in eastern europe.

3. Crime. why isnt the police doing anything about people stealing from supermarkets?

4. softdrinks. how can you people drink Coke in the US? it tastes like shit and its real bad for you, who buys that stuff?

5. Ads, what the fuck is wrong with americans, are you gus so stupid or why does any company think spending so much on ads makes sense?
 
Oh chocolate. American chocolate, at least the the mass produced stuff, tastes like sick. Hersheys and that kind of thing. But again I did have good chocolate as well, it was just expensive.
Agree that the bread is sweet.
I mean I live somewhere where a restaurant had deep fried butter on the menu, and you can get deep fried pizza down the chippy so I can’t cast the first stone here. Also no roundabouts, which I found odd but then maybe they’re a uniquely strange form of euro driving hell?
Anyone got a recipe for shrimp Luanne? That stuff was GOOD.
 
Oh chocolate. American chocolate, at least the the mass produced stuff, tastes like sick. Hersheys and that kind of thing. But again I did have good chocolate as well, it was just expensive.
Agree that the bread is sweet.
I mean I live somewhere where a restaurant had deep fried butter on the menu, and you can get deep fried pizza down the chippy so I can’t cast the first stone here. Also no roundabouts, which I found odd but then maybe they’re a uniquely strange form of euro driving hell?
Anyone got a recipe for shrimp Luanne? That stuff was GOOD.
Roundabouts are becoming more commonplace, I'm of mixed opinion about them. Mostly against.

And all our chocolate is crap, especially the Nestle type (it's pure wax, I swear).

Can't say I've ever noticed bread being sweet, the only sugar in bread is generally just there to feed the yeast. Maybe European bread is all flat and chewy? Or did you have Hawaiian Bread rolls? Those are sweet, but that's kind of a special case, they add pineapple juice to the mix.

Never had Shrimp Luan specifically, but I do make a good Low Country Boil every summer during 4th of July.

ShrimpLuan.jpg
 
1. Americans have made europeans their bitches after ww2, so any form of pro-national propaganda is only allowed for americans. Eurpoeans have been programmed for aversion to any national unity or pride.
2. Define "extrimism". But I know the answer- anyone who isnt woke enough is an extrimism, its an old song by now.
He basically calls for the legislative ban and witchhunt on all christians in USA, regardless of the movements ideals.
Its a safe bet that by "harmful" they mean ((transophobic)) or ((influenced by russia)) or something else wich fits the current political agenda.
Also the religious freedom is a corner-stone of american fridums
And you dont even need to be living in USA to realise no one is "shoving religion down the throat".
3. This one is classic.
In his head car is the "devil". The cause of so many problems.
Car is a capsule of your own space. When you make it impossible to use cars you deprive people of that.
In my opinion this statement of his is in the same vein as "ubranist" fags- get rid of the cars, make everyone take the bus. It's clrealy for the benefit of the ruling politiciatins- off course THEY will keep they cars and their drivers. And besides all that- has this nigger ever tried waiting for the bus when its -20c outside? He should try it, its wonderful.
4. Oh yeah, public services work so great in EU. When parents don't have a choice but to send their child into a school which is overflowing with literal african niggers and turks.
And puclic heathsystem is a joke. But I guess its the same joke as the american paid insurance system.
also CAPITALISM BAD
5. "Excess" and "lack" in this instance are his subjective terms. Judging by what this fucker is writing owning A car is an "excess". As for the "lack"- why dont he as fat ass white trash and ghetto nigs why do they spend their welfare on junk food and don't do anything. Im not denying there is poverty in USA, Im denying the right of this faggot to judge it because he has an agenda.
 
Way too sweet. Every bit of bread I ate tasted like it was loaded with sugar - and no, I'm not talking about wonderbread. Actual seeded batch loaves, white bread, brown bread, all the bread I ate in the US tasted like sugar. The only exceptions were bagels and pretzels. Every meal I ate tasted sweet. I've had honey glazed, roasted ham that was less sugary. Steak tasted sweet.

I also have trouble with the idea of burgers that are anything but fully cooked. A rare burger sounds like a food-poisoning disaster waiting to happen.

Now, I'll grant you, the only places I've been are New York, some place in Colorado that I can't remember the name of (I think it was near Colorado Springs), and Baltimore, so it's possible I just had really bad luck in food terms. My brother has been to Florida and came back recommending alligator steaks, which is apparently a thing down there. I've also had American guests making a few of what they consider signature foods, which were rather good (though I could pass on grits), and I spent a couple of months learning how to make cornbread because it is simply the best.

But overall, too sweet. Guess they really do put that HFCS in everything.

Kieser rolls aren't sweet either but they are an East Coast thing.

Medium rare/medium is a how a man eats his burger, same as a steak. Just like you guys trust your cheese not to need pasteurization to high hell (we don't unfortunately) we trust our beef.

Baltimore? Why did you go to the single worst place in the entire country?

Alligator tastes like chicken and chews like steak, would recommend w/ cajun seasoning.

Grits need lots of melty american cheese (which isn't actually cheese but is good for this application) and butter. + salt

I have my own list...
1. Fat people, lol there are so many and they are extremly fat, also it seems like its normal in the US when in europe you still see people making fun of fat people to their face.

2. Regulations. you have to drive like grandma on the highway, no smoking anywhere, no alcohol in some places, you need a license for everything, HOAs. Land of the free my ass, its easyer and cheaper to shot a machine gun for fun in eastern europe.

3. Crime. why isnt the police doing anything about people stealing from supermarkets?

4. softdrinks. how can you people drink Coke in the US? it tastes like shit and its real bad for you, who buys that stuff?

5. Ads, what the fuck is wrong with americans, are you gus so stupid or why does any company think spending so much on ads makes sense?

Driving depends on the state, most of us do over the posted limits on the highway. Fuck HOAs, loicenses of all kinds and gun grabbers.

Re: crime *sigh* niggs

Re: soda *sigh* niggs

Ad campaigns are often national in scope so they have to go big or go unnoticed and they put a lot of money in and want to get the most out of it with coverage. I do fucking hate it though, especially in the ESG era.

Oh chocolate. American chocolate, at least the the mass produced stuff, tastes like sick. Hersheys and that kind of thing. But again I did have good chocolate as well, it was just expensive.
Agree that the bread is sweet.
I mean I live somewhere where a restaurant had deep fried butter on the menu, and you can get deep fried pizza down the chippy so I can’t cast the first stone here. Also no roundabouts, which I found odd but then maybe they’re a uniquely strange form of euro driving hell?
Anyone got a recipe for shrimp Luanne? That stuff was GOOD.

Hershey's is just sugar and milk and garbage. We do have good chocolate but it's branded European (Godiva, Lindnt, Roche, etc.)

We are getting more roundabouts... they are good for the more rural areas where lights just slow everyone down, I don't care for the multi-lane/congested ones though, just a blind spot nightmare.

This?
Screenshot 2023-01-23 064254.png

Sounds kinda olive-garden-y but with some cajun spice.
 
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Baltimore? Why did you go to the single worst place in the entire country?
Conference, back when I used to actually go to those things. I was told, as long as I didn't go north of west lombard, or cross martin luther boulevard, I'd be reasonably safe. The navy museum and the aquarium were decent enough.
 
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