So instead of doing some schoolwork due Tuesday I decided to spend my night
reading this.
Oh dear lord.
Some of my favorites:
"I cannot imagine why nobody yet mentioned root beer. From a German perspective, that is the single weirdest thing to learn about, tightly followed by the taste of "grape" juice."
"4700 kinds of toothpaste."
"I was startled to
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Considering most Americans don't travel to a foreign country I can totally believe that. Most people haven't traveled out of their own state much, much less to another country. Having a passport in Europe seems like a necessity.
The customer service thing...that's just rude. It's pretty damn great to be able to take something back after you've open and used it.
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Come to think of it, I've never seen anything about school children in school buses in Europe. How else would kids get to school? Maybe they're not necessary there?
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I guess school children in other countries could take public transportation (city buses, subways, trains, etc), but what about field trips? Wouldn't schools need to provide transportation for those?
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Having said that, I do think the America love can be overdone, but I think that it has more to do with rhetoric (people saying that America is the best country and no other country can be better, etc), not flags and songs at sporting events.
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And there's a difference between doing it on Veteran's Day and doing it all year round. I get why, I just don't like how crazy it can be.
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I do understand what you are saying and your reasons, but I guess those songs just don't bother me at sporting events, especially things like baseball and football since they are so American. *shrug*
I think that in general Americans are more vocal and visual with regard to things they love (country, sports teams, etc), and I don't know if I would want it any other way, but I do get that we have differing opinions on that and that's fine with me.
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Mostly, kids just go to school in their own or neigboring towns, so they can walk/ride their bike/take public transport, or if they go to school in a different city/district altogether, it's mostly public transport or your parents driving you, though the latter is very rare.
And hee, I actually do not currently have a passport (expired recently), but I still get to travel within all of the EU. ;) But yeah, we still usually have passports.
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And yeah, population density is much higher here, so we have schools in pretty much every town. Sadly, mine was ~30 miles from where I lived. I was pretty sure going to school in my own town would've been better, but the parents wanted me to go to the other school; what can you do when you're 10? ;)
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Since most schools don't use school buses, how do you guys do transportation for field trips? Just curious.
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And field trips were also done using public transport, or on rare occasions they'd just charter a bus, but that was maybe once every 5 years or so...
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Okay. We don't really even have public transportation where I live. Most of the field trips I went on were in elementary school, and I can't really picture a teacher and a couple of parents being able to take kids on public transit and not have problems (lose a kid, etc), but I guess it would be easier if the kids were used to taking public transportation. Sort of related, did you ever see the show Magic School Bus? When I think about field trips, I always think about that show. ;)
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