A Conversation for Ask h2g2
Tips for a curious american
Steerpike369 Started conversation Jun 3, 2005
OK... i am and American. and though i am not often happy with my country and all that it does i am proud to be one. I recently went out of the country and found that as soon as i opend my mouth i was treated as though i were an idiot. now i understand most americans ARE a bit on the foolish side, (i know i live with a few of them) i do not wish to have this last unpleasant experiance jade me on further travels around the world. so what i am asking is... what types of things to avoid doing, what ways i can make the relations more pleasant, and things that others have noticed "stupid americans" do that were funny (just to lighten it up a bit).
one good thing i heard... somewhere is "say your canadian, it helps"
Tips for a curious american
Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride Posted Jun 3, 2005
If in the UK don't ask us if we know the Queen and Prince Charles, or if it rains everyday, and we don't wear bowler hats and carry umbrellas anymore.
Tips for a curious american
Bobaah - MxLxHxC Posted Jun 3, 2005
Unfortunately some people see Dubbya and tar all americans with the same brush.
Tips for a curious american
Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride Posted Jun 3, 2005
don't buy a camera with a big lens on it it will only get stolen
Tips for a curious american
Otto Fisch ("Stop analysing Strava.... and cut your hedge") Posted Jun 3, 2005
I'm sorry you had that experience - there's really no excuse for treating you like that.
I think the main tip I would give to any American visiting the UK (and this probably goes for other places too) is to speak at about 1/2 of your usual volume in public places. The British in particular are softly spoken compared to most Americans. I was on a train in London a few months ago, and a small group of American visitors were talking so loudly that the whole train could hear them. In public, talk at such a volume that the people you're talking to can hear you, but no-one else.
The second tip for anyone visiting anywhere is to do your homework about the place and its customs and learn a few words of the local language if you don't already speak it. A couple of friends of mine went to Canada and didn't realise that drinkers were expected to tip the barman - that virtually never happens in the UK. As a result, they got bad service everywhere they went and couldn't understand why. When I was in Thailand, I got much better service and more respect just for knowing how to greet people properly and to say a few words.
If you're interested in how Americans are perceived abroad, you might want to have a look at this international survey:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/flash/0,5860,1327656,00.html
Tips for a curious american
Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride Posted Jun 3, 2005
Well I like Americans if you ever came to the UK I would treat you the same as any other human being.
Tips for a curious american
Steve K. Posted Jun 3, 2005
That international survey of attitudes toward Americans is interesting, I think the Spanish writer from El Pais summed it up well:
QUOTE
Friday October 15, 2004
Over the past three years, to judge by these polls, the Bush administration has squandered a huge wealth of global goodwill towards America - a moral, political and social asset as necessary to managing the world as money or military power.
Rarely has an administration been as isolated as this one is after the situation it has created in Iraq.
In the end, however, whether it is Bush or Kerry who wins, the US will need some international help if it is to escape the quicksand it has fallen into through recklessnes, ideology and incompetence.
That wealth of sympathy was never so great as in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. Yet three years later, mostly because of the war against Iraq, the perception of the US and of its administration among citizens in the countries included in the poll, from Japan to Mexico, lies at almost dangerous levels ...
END QUOTE
I think I'll keep my personal politics out of this, but just mention that more than 50% of Americans currently disapprove of the Bush administration (including me, and I live in Texas ... no, I don't have a horse ...)
Tips for a curious american
KB Posted Jun 3, 2005
There's one thing I would say - and it goes for some people from Britain and Ireland (and no doubt some people from every country) - Don't expect everything to be the same as it is back home.
The number of times I see people on holiday complaining because they can't get a certain foodstuff, or because there is a different way of doing things - it makes me want to smack them one to be honest!
If you want somewhere just like home, stay at home!
Tips for a curious american
Steerpike369 Posted Jun 3, 2005
I lost a VERY good friend to that foolishness! i will leave it at that...
to those lost to others blindness
Key: Complain about this post
Tips for a curious american
- 1: Steerpike369 (Jun 3, 2005)
- 2: Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride (Jun 3, 2005)
- 3: Bobaah - MxLxHxC (Jun 3, 2005)
- 4: Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride (Jun 3, 2005)
- 5: Otto Fisch ("Stop analysing Strava.... and cut your hedge") (Jun 3, 2005)
- 6: Steerpike369 (Jun 3, 2005)
- 7: Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride (Jun 3, 2005)
- 8: Steve K. (Jun 3, 2005)
- 9: KB (Jun 3, 2005)
- 10: Steerpike369 (Jun 3, 2005)
- 11: Lord Wolfden - Howl with Pride (Jun 4, 2005)
More Conversations for Ask h2g2
- What can we blame 2legs for? [19024]
2 Days Ago - Radio Paradise introduces a Rule 42 based channel [1]
2 Days Ago - For those who have been shut out of h2g2 and managed to get back in again [26]
5 Days Ago - What did you learn today? (TIL) [274]
2 Weeks Ago - What scams have you encountered lately? [10]
Sep 2, 2024
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."