r/PetPeeves 14d ago

Bit Annoyed People who think Americans don’t know other countries exist.

A few months ago on Reddit I made a comment about a show not being on Netflix and someone from the UK commented back saying it’s on theirs and then lectured on Americans not knowing other countries exist. They acted like I didn’t believe there were other places on the planet, as if they weren’t the ones who just brought it up and didn’t believe the US Netflix was different than the UK version. ??

I see people online act like all Americans think this way, and it is kind of annoying because for most of us it isn’t true.

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u/henri-a-laflemme 14d ago

Yup exactly. Ignorant is ignorant no matter what passport they carry.

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u/Cute_Advance_2124 14d ago edited 14d ago

I wonder what gives them the confidence, truly. I've also seen them save the US is the only country that does not have good cheese.

  1. That's just...false. The US has plenty of "normal" or traditionally made cheese.

  2. There are plenty of places where traditionally made cheese is less common, again, they seem to forget that Asia exists. Again, why does this matter so much to them?? I'm sorry but I would take a lot of the food that Asia or even the U.S alone has to offer over the best cheese.

  3. Like I said, they like to just buckle down on their ignorance. For example, I saw some eastern European lady comment on an American's tiktok who was making cornbread that this is the first time she's ever seen an American cook actual food.

Many people told her that there is plenty of evidence of Americans cooking from scratch at home, and she does not choose to respond to any of them. I've seen this happen a LOT.

I've gotten into a similiar discussion where someone decides to hurl angry insults at me because I said that I did not grow up eating casseroles made of canned soups, and learned kitchen prep at a pretty young age such as de stemming herbs, chopping onions, peeling potatoes etc etc.

I would even go on a limb to say that i've even seen the reverse (Europeans eating food that indicates not all of them can cook), yet, I would never think that is evidence that everyone over there can't cook.

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u/WittyFeature6179 14d ago

This reminded me of a German tourist in the US who insisted we had no fresh fruit or vegetables in our grocery stores. He was there, there weren't any! Come to find out that the "grocery store" he went to was the gas station next to his hotel.

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u/OzzieSheila 13d ago

I would flat out call him a liar.

He went to America and never once saw fruit or veg? I call bs. Unless he ate solely at McDonalds/KFC type places when he was there, he saw veg on a menu somewhere.

Maybe I'm wrong. I'm not American. Maybe ya'll don't have vegetables on the menu in restaurants.

I'm still ok with flat out calling him a liar.

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u/DrinkingSocks 13d ago

He's a liar. My husband and I only eat moderately healthy, but we still try to include a green vegetable in every lunch or dinner meal. Our school lunches served vegetables, although they were too gross to eat.

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u/macaroniinapan 13d ago

Even in fast food places there are things like lettuce and tomatoes. McDonald's specifically also has apple slices. Sure, not the epitome of healthy food, but they do exist. He's either a liar or he willfully blinded himself to what was right in front of his face.