The US and Europe (with a few notable exceptions) have much in common. They hold democratic elections, fight forhuman rights, and are conscious of their carbon footprint. But at the same time, they’re an entire ocean apart and geography isn’t the only thing separating them.So we dug around the internet and found a couple of online threads (oneandtwo) where people have been sharing what they believe to be the aspects of American culture that are foreign to the Old Continent. From the popularity of university sports to free soda and coffee refills, here are the most popular submissions to the discussion.This post may includeaffiliate links.
The US and Europe (with a few notable exceptions) have much in common. They hold democratic elections, fight forhuman rights, and are conscious of their carbon footprint. But at the same time, they’re an entire ocean apart and geography isn’t the only thing separating them.
So we dug around the internet and found a couple of online threads (oneandtwo) where people have been sharing what they believe to be the aspects of American culture that are foreign to the Old Continent. From the popularity of university sports to free soda and coffee refills, here are the most popular submissions to the discussion.
This post may includeaffiliate links.
If you are an American citizen, you can choose to live in just about any climate and landscape that the Earth has to offer, and still be in the same country. Whether you like mountains, volcanoes, the beach, the desert, the arctic, the prairie, the rainforest, whatever, the US has it.
I’d say the whole system of National Parks is just amazing! Open 24/7 (unless some weather or gov’t shutdown), maps available, trails laid out, camping spots designated… It’s the most treasured and inderappreciated thing in the US, IMO.
A country that’s like 99% unwalkable. Seriously, I’ve been around the globe and every time I came I became frustrated that I can’t just walk to a corner grocery.
Expensive healthcare.
More firearms than citizens.
The endangered species act, one of the few laws in the entire world that actually enforces protections for endangered animals proactively and retroactively. You could go to prison for destroying some rare flowers. just because those flowers were rare. It’s not perfect, but the ESA is one of the most powerful environmental protection laws in the world, spanning some of the largest area, and very very few countries have something similar.
Space. I can drive 400 miles and still be in Kansas, as it’s 410 miles in width.
That’s alwys struck me as weird. We get adverts for over the counter meds, like painkillers or cold and flu medicine but the thought of seeing an advert for something you need to go to the doctors and get a prescription for like adhd meds / anti depresents / antibiotics / heart meds or blood thinners is absolitly mental to me.
I’m from the UK and it looks like the houses in the US are a million times bigger than they are here.
On the up side, amazing geographic diversity. In one country, we have mountains, deserts, tropics, sweeping plains, fertile farmland, tundra, huge beaches, and rugged coastlines.On the down side, school shootings. Mall shootings. Grocery store shootings. Church shootings. Birthday party shootings. We know another one’s coming soon - we just don’t know where.
So many extracurricular activities in schools. Playing a specific sport or being part of a team isn’t something schools offer in Europe. I have cousins who live in Texas, and the fact that their school has tennis courts and a pool blows my mind. Some schools here have small clubs like theater or choir, but the options hardly compare to those offered at schools in the States. Your high school theater plays look like professional productions sometimes.
Fast food restaurants at every intersection and an obesity epidemic.
The Pacific AND the Atlantic.
Florida Man stories. Europe just has ‘the English tourist on holiday in Ibiza.’
Garbage disposal units are installed beneath the kitchen sink.
Free refills on coffee and soda (in most restaurants).
Free public restrooms and toilet seat covers.
Diners. Fast cheap American food available at all hours. One of the best meals you will ever eat is American diner food at 2 am.
Massive student loan.
The Grand Canyon.
Giant superstores where you can buy groceries, furniture, a pet fish and a handgun
THE FKING BBQ!Thank the cosmos I live there and travel alot. States seem to have their own twists and specialities and it’s all so fking good I can’t decide what I like more.The Texas BBQ Pit I went to once was an experience.Before I came here, BBQ meant store bought frozen burgers and sausages on a grill in the garden during summer. One thing I don’t miss about the UK lol.
The 4th of July. True fact, in Europe it goes straight from the 3rd to the 5th.
Good Mexican food. It doesn’t exist in Europe. I ordered a burrito in Berlin, and it was worse than Taco Bell.
American who lived in Europe for a time. (The Balkans)Things I have here that I didn’t have there:Cheap gas (yes, it’s still quite cheap in the US)Larger appliances with words on them (my appliances there had graphics on them, the washer had a Half Mushroom Cloud setting)A zillion kinds of breakfast cereal (when I came back, I routinely got overwhelmed in the grocery store)Lol, diplomatic immunityThings I had there, that I don’t have here:There was a produce/meat market that was open every day, that I could walk to, it ruledCafe cultureThe newsstand sold lots of rowdy porn.
Turning right on a red light. I think that’s still illegal in Germany and most other European countries, isn’t it?
Single country world series.
The mountains in the Mountain West and the Red Rocks. I’ve lived next to the Red Rocks in Utah and Colorado. I grew up and worked in the Tetons. We’ve lived on the Wasatch, and super close to the Rockies. Europe is so beautiful but the Mountain West is one of the most beautiful regions on earth.
Truck NutsAt least I haven’t really seen them over here in central Europe. Then again also Pickup Trucks are a pretty rare sight in Europe.
Large meal portions.
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Ranch dressing. Believe it or not, I know Americans who have packed bottles of ranch when moving to other countries.
Corn tortillas. I’m sure they’re somewhere in Europe but not so much in Britain. Just things called corn tortillas that are 90% flour.
It’s a whole style of refrigerators – at least in French they’re widely and even officially called “frigos américains”.It’s the larger fridges with larger freezers. Usually with the two separated door sections. Often stainless steel. Even moreso with the automatic ice machine etc included.They’ve become one of the trendy things people want in a home here now - a bit like the wave of granite countertops being a big ‘must-have’ in the US a few years ago.
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24 hour access to food. The majority of the world doesn’t have late night fast food places let alone 24 hour grocery stores. In America if I need groceries, a hammock, and some engine oil at 3 am, I’ll just head over to Walmart real quick.
S’mores, southern style biscuits.
2 year long presidential campaigns.
Shame about casual nudity (I wish we didn’t have this).
Boozy Sunday brunches.The only other country I saw have these is England. Most countries are rather closed on Sundays. Not the US. Unlimited mimosas and football.
Death penalty.
Mac and cheese that comes in a box with dehydrated cheese.
Easy access to root beer.
The mind numbing hellscape known as “suburbia” and the ability to regularly set our ovens to 420°.
Massive tubs of cheap peanut butter. Its rare to find and expensive in most of Europe, sold only in small 4- to 8-ounce jars.
Easy access to isopropyl / rubbing alcohol?I remember trying to find some in Ireland. At the time you could get it in the states for well under $1. It’s great for cleaning cuts and removing water in your ears. But trying to find it in Ireland…discovered it was kept behind the pharmacy counter and was about 10 Euro a bottle. Don’t remember what it was called - mineral/essence/spirit something.
Crocodiles. Seriously, look it up.
Pecan logs, corn dogs, scrapple, Twinkies, jambalaya, etouffee, KoolWhip, direct-to-consumer corn syrup.
So much diversity when it comes to food. In most given US towns, you’ll find so many cuisines. I have a Mongolian restaurant next to a Korean BBQ restaurant next to a Hawaiian restaurant next to a Greek restaurant, etc.
Perfect conditions for road trips. Nice roads, no border control, gas stations, sights, motels. It’s perfect.
Ice in our drinks.
Netflix selection throughout Europe is pure s**t.
In my hometown we have a drive-through liquor store.
Free tap water offered to you at restaurants. In Europe, you have to specify that you want tap water — otherwise you’ll automatically be charged for a fancy bottle.
Giant superstores like Walmart where you can buy groceries, furniture, a pet fish, and new glasses all in the same place.
Las Vegas.
Whataburgar and fried pies franchises.
Imperial units instead of Metric.
There are 11 million black people in all of Europe, most of them in France and the UK. Europe has a population of almost 800 million people.
Stronger protections for speech.
Anyone can hunt if they choose.
Chick-fil-A.
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