Perceptions about USA from non-Americans that Americans might be surprised to learn

I remember the first time I went abroad, to England. You never even noticed the American tourists. It was the Germans who were insanely loud and pushy.

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The reason I ask is because a lot of people (Americans included) seem to think Texas is a heat inferno all year.
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Back in 2004 or 2005 I was caught in an ice storm just outside Dallas, one of astounding suddenness and ferocity. I got off the freeway maybe five minutes after it started and had it taken seven I don’t know if it would have been possible. You could have skated on the roads. It was nasty as hell, and I know my ice storms.

Ah yes. Forming pyramids and frightening the children.

After losing two world wars to the British? Unimaginable.

What does that mean? Is there no sectarian voting in Northern Ireland? French Reformed Protestants don’t vote solidly left-wing out of anticlerical traditions? German Catholics aren’t more likely to support the Christian Democratic parties compared to their Protestant counterparts?

I think Penfeather meant that the passion and rancor between American liberals and conservatives has an almost religious fervor. I take his point.

Yeah, it’s not like the British lost two wars to the Americans… wait…:stuck_out_tongue:

The War of 1812 is generally considered a tie.

The British burned Washington. :dubious:

The Canadians think they did it. They weren’t even there.

Canadians would never be that rude.

Only for very loose definitions of tie. The US got its ass kicked.

Great Britain was a world power at the time, if not THE world power. The US was a newly fledged nation of nowhere near that level of power and importance. Of course the Brits like to spin it as a tie.

It costs both nations a lot of money in trade, and it was generally agreed that the war was a bad idea.

SWMBO did her junior year of college abroad in Germany. She’s refused to drink American beer since then. American beer is loaded with preservatives to extend shelf life and they adversely affect the flavor. German beer, by law, can contain only “Barley, Hops and Water”, and apparently this law goes back hundreds of years. She says the difference is like drinking vintage wine vs. vinegar.

Well, the Canadians are still pissed that the U.S. invaded their country, so let’s let them think they’re the ones who burned Washington.

I just remembered that “pissed” means something else overseas. I meant that they’re still angry, although they might be pissed as well.

Fair enough.

We were also kind of preoccupied by stuff elsewhere. Stuff that was ever so slightly closer to home.

Speaking as Brit, I find German beer to be somewhat lacking in variety.

Indeed.