Debate user 'Null' if America has Cheese, Meat, and Bread.

Status
Not open for further replies.
I am an American.
I have made cheese (Indian Paneer) at home.
I have eaten meat that was running around in the forest just a day or two prior (deer & bear)
I fish.
I make bread at home.
I make prison wine ("pruno") under my kitchen sink.
I grow veggies AND GRAINS.

Stop buying your goyslop from the (((grocery store))), my nigger.
 
What would a fair price for traveling from Atlanta to say Los Angeles via high speed train? If said system existed.
There are too many potential nodes required to create something like that in the US, all spread out over the nation, it would be a financial black hole and even then most people wouldn't even want to use it. It'd be a slower version of air travel, and already in the US many people prefer driving to that.
 
FfMrZNQUAAIswmS.jpeg

This is literally the entire thread.
 
You wanted Chinese food? you went to china town.
You wanted Polish? You went to the polish town.
You wanted Italian, off to the Italian... And so forth.
You could get any of the shit if you were willing to drive or travel to those areas.
The City versions are all but gone now for the most part. If you're more rural you still got areas you can go and visit to get stuff but its not what it was 30 years ago even 20.
So Null is right with some aspects.

How about fresh fish? Can the coasts at least get fresh fish?
And they all had festivals that were always great to go to each regions different festivities. Now everyone is just mixed up together and even the local traveling amusement park days end up with savages coming into town and starting fights. A local church held a "fun fest" every year for 50 years where a traveling circus type things would come in, setup a few rides and games and be gone after a weekend. They had to cancel it the last 5 years due to fights and shootings from people coming from black towns. I fucking hate them all.

I never lived on a coast but from what people I know say, they can get fish straight off the boat at any number of restaurants. When I travel there, I usually end up at recommended restaurants and don't know for sure where it came from but it is always better than in the Midwest.
 
This is also true when it comes to restaurants. Because Europeans cook way more often, not only is the availability of fresh and quality ingredients way higher, but restaurants also have to compete to serve a commercial demographic already capable of cooking. As a result, food served is much better and also more affordable.
I found this very true, this is why as an American you should always sample foreign franchises of American brands like Burger King, their local menu items are very excellent, not only that but they rotate the menu items on a regular basis, unlike the American menus which have been stagnant for years and years.

Like when was the last time McDonalds or Burger King had any actual notable new menu items? Burger King USA occasionally does pretty shit whopper variants that add one single thing to the burger like the latest ghost pepper whopper is just a bacon king with nacho cheese and meme ghost pepper cheese added.

In Spain I went to Burger King, the burger they had, Angus Original Mediterranea, was a whopper with sun dried tomatos, gouda cheese, arugula, and some very excellent sauce. and what's better is it actually looked like the fucking photo on the menu.
image.jpeg
Also they had beer

In France, Burger King had the Master Forestier, it had arugula, emmental cheese, roasted mushrooms, wholegrain mustard, and chrispy onion flakes, on a broiche bun.
hq720.jpg
Also they too had beer

Far superior than any of the goyslop in America, the only place where I was disappointed was the UK, for most part, beyond McDonalds still having snack wraps and tendies, the UK menus were the same identical goyslop to the US menus, then again this is a fucking island where putting mashed peas on fries is considered a pinnacle of crusine

Seriously British crusine is the epitome of #whitepeoplefood memes

Beyond that living in Morocco for most of a year, the local Burger King and McDonalds didn't really have much unique, they just had the basic menu items on France plus a couple of local items, and oddly enough, the only place I saw in all of Europe or Africa that had donuts, but I noticed that their food was far more fulfilling in Europe and Morocco than America, like I struggle to finish a quarter pounder meal there despite it alot more flavorful and their 'large' being equivalent to a 'regular' in the US, in America, even if I order a fucking large quarter pounder meal, it always leaves me hungry.

Also something else I noticed was a how rare some things were, that being salad dressing and, with the exception of France, mustard, in Europe they just eat their salads with just olive oil and vinegar, the only time you can get dressing is if you go to the grocery store and buy it. Also Pickles were uncommon too, the only pickles I could find in markets were baby pickles.

Oh and hotdogs came in fucking jars in the UK.

Also something else suprising to me was how their product selection is a lot smaller, and this also comes down to the fact their grocery stores have to fit into 5% of the footprint of your American grocery store since nothing is free standing, everything is just them making do with prexisting buildings, like this one near my apartment in Catalona, a independent grocery store, boy you see alot of those in Europe, anyway, it snaked though the ground floor of the building like a overview of a half-life map.
 
I've been saying this. He makes fun of Sargon a few weeks back for smugly declaring American food is all slop and touting the qualities of British beans on toast, and yet here he is echoing the doofus and almost matching the intensity of his smugness.
At least sargon has the built in excuse of actually being an anglo
 
  • Thunk-Provoking
Reactions: AwfulWillow
Less than a hundred bux
Japan's Shinkansen from Tokyo to Osaka is $100. It's about 300 miles. So across the US would not come in anywhere below $500.
California's price target for their imaginary SF to LA train is $86 at around 350 miles. And this was proposed years ago, if it ever happens it's going to be FAR higher.
 
Less than a hundred bux
You are an absolute retard. Even a higher speed train than regular in German for Berlin to Dusseldorf a 6 hour drive, which is done in 4 hours costs $116. Absolutely delusional if you think a fair price is under $100 for a 2 day straight drive across the country.
There are too many potential nodes required to create something like that in the US, all spread out over the nation, it would be a financial black hole and even then most people wouldn't even want to use it. It'd be a slower version of air travel, and already in the US many people prefer driving to that.
I'm well aware, just wanted to see what the retard though was a fair price. I've been on long distance train rides in the US and would much rather drive than fly or hop on a train.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back