RE: Connecticut school shooting 12-15-2012, 12:44 PM
#31
America, as a nation, is a fine nation. Complete freedom of speech, none of this hate-speech bans to prevent offending people crap. It truly is the land of opportunity. Unfortunately, a strong part of the nation's citizens are pretty stuck up, notably peoples from south US.
I don't recall where, but there was some study that when Americans traveling abroad were asked where they were from, a strong percentage replied with their state, as if everyone should know the US states. In my own experience(I live in a tourist city), Americans talk to people really slowly in English. If we speak English, we speak it, we don't have impediments.
My bit on patriotism may have been misconstrued as an attack on beliefs, which it wasn't designed to be. I was raising the point, which I hadn't thought of before, that I've only heard Americans refer to themselves as patriotic, whereas a European loyal to their country is referred to as a nationalist, if not just by their nationality(German, Spanish, etc). Part of this terminology is likely a toss to the term being used to describe American revolutionaries, and how Americans, while they love their country just as much as a Frenchman, have violence, and guns, more deeply ingrained into their culture than Europeans.
I've watched a few movies American movies rated for 13 year olds, and the amount of violence in them is staggering. I heard from a neighbor who lived in America for the past few years that nudity and sex are viewed as more obscene then violence, and I'd have to agree, your movie ratings being a prime example. If the word "fuck" occurs more than 5 times in a movie, more than likely it receives an adults-only rating. But a movie with some pretty graphics deaths, such as "The Ring", only gathers a teen rating.
Now, I realize not all Americans are like this. But sadly, enough are of the "we luv gunz we luv violence lets go kill people" crowd that it reflects upon the entirety.
I don't recall where, but there was some study that when Americans traveling abroad were asked where they were from, a strong percentage replied with their state, as if everyone should know the US states. In my own experience(I live in a tourist city), Americans talk to people really slowly in English. If we speak English, we speak it, we don't have impediments.
My bit on patriotism may have been misconstrued as an attack on beliefs, which it wasn't designed to be. I was raising the point, which I hadn't thought of before, that I've only heard Americans refer to themselves as patriotic, whereas a European loyal to their country is referred to as a nationalist, if not just by their nationality(German, Spanish, etc). Part of this terminology is likely a toss to the term being used to describe American revolutionaries, and how Americans, while they love their country just as much as a Frenchman, have violence, and guns, more deeply ingrained into their culture than Europeans.
I've watched a few movies American movies rated for 13 year olds, and the amount of violence in them is staggering. I heard from a neighbor who lived in America for the past few years that nudity and sex are viewed as more obscene then violence, and I'd have to agree, your movie ratings being a prime example. If the word "fuck" occurs more than 5 times in a movie, more than likely it receives an adults-only rating. But a movie with some pretty graphics deaths, such as "The Ring", only gathers a teen rating.
Now, I realize not all Americans are like this. But sadly, enough are of the "we luv gunz we luv violence lets go kill people" crowd that it reflects upon the entirety.