Americans and Europeans exchange questions for fun :)

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To American: what do you think of tipping culture? Do you see tipping as a pain in the ass or is it something you can tolerate?
As for Europeans... Hmm.... Do you guys often go to another country by car? Or do you guys prefer going by airplane?
 
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To American: what do you think of tipping culture? Do you see tipping as a pain in the ass or is it something you can tolerate?
...wait, who let the - never mind.

Tipping a server at a sit-down restaurant, or a food (pizza) delivery driver, or a bellboy or parking valet or cabbie - totally fine - I grew up with it, so it's no big deal. Literally every other setting - no. It's been absurd recently, with so many places asking for a tip. (Though it should really be phased out entirely.)
 
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As for Europeans... Hmm.... Do you guys often go to another country by car? Or do you guys prefer going by airplane?
I haven't travelled much, definitely not by car. It really depends on, many times flying to a strategic location saves a lot of time and then I move by ship, bus, train/underground or foot. About people I know, nowadays using caravans, adapted vans and long cars have become popular because if you can sleep, cook and even live in your vehicle then you can save a lot of money on accommodation during the trip.
 
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To American: what do you think of tipping culture? Do you see tipping as a pain in the ass or is it something you can tolerate?
As for Europeans... Hmm.... Do you guys often go to another country by car? Or do you guys prefer going by airplane?
Depends where I am going.
The great Russian sea is blockaded and has never been a viable route to cross into the main continent from the Nordic Isle. If I take a trip say to South Germany, yeah plane and then rental. Cheaper, simple as.
But if the point of the trip is a road trip, it'd be car on a ferry.

Most common abroads trips where I am are cruise day trips to nearby capitals anyhow.

Funnily enough the answer is very dependant on where you live. Live at the corner of the continent? Plane it is. Centre of the continent? Car.
I haven't travelled much, definitely not by car. It really depends on, many times flying to a strategic location saves a lot of time and then I move by ship, bus, train/underground or foot. About people I know, nowadays using caravans, adapted vans and long cars have become popular because if you can sleep, cook and even live in your vehicle then you can save a lot of money on accommodation during the trip.
EVERYBODY INTO THE WINNEBAGO!
Fuck caravaners. There is a special place in hell for them.
 
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Americans ; why importance of katrina Hurricane is different , relative to Other hurricanes ?
A couple reasons that add up.

The initial landfall of Katrina was in southern Florida, and while it was a hurricane at that point, it was comparatively minor and did little damage. It wasn't until it got into the Gulf of Mexico that it exploded into a Category 5 (top-tier, in terms of wind) storm, and because of the timing, New Orleans had comparatively short warning - between two and three days.

New Orleans itself is largely below sea level, and protected by a series of levees and pumps. Katrina dumped an impressive amount of rain into this basin on top of a huge tidal surge, overwhelming the ability of the system to drain the water off and causing widespread flooding (which is a larger issue with most hurricanes than wind speed). Coupled with the incomplete evacuation, there were a huge number of people who were caught in the city with no means of escape.

Also as a result of the short warning, the government response was entirely inadequate, and many people who survived the initial storm were left without access clean water for up to a week or more. Recovery of bodies was still taking place two months later in some isolated instances. The director of FEMA at the time ended up resigning over the widely criticized failure of the agency to do its job in the aftermath of the storm.

Finally, New Orleans is a decent sized city with (comparatively, for the US) a lot of history and a rich culture. An event of this scale 'touches' more people than a catastrophe of similar scale happening in, say, Minneapolis.
 
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(USA) Do school dropouts still apply for security jobs as first option like they did years ago, when almost all the young ones were? I remember one person that wanted to join a TTRPG on Roll20 because he had to "look (not watch) at a wall almost everyday with nothing happening", what I don't recall was if he wanted to play during work hours or just after.
 
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To American: what do you think of tipping culture? Do you see tipping as a pain in the ass or is it something you can tolerate?
As for Europeans... Hmm.... Do you guys often go to another country by car? Or do you guys prefer going by airplane?
I don't mind it in sit-in-restaurants, delivery services, or other similar stuff but otherwise, heck no.
 
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Americans ; why importance of katrina Hurricane is different , relative to Other hurricanes ?
Katrina was a much more severe hurricane than others before it and therefore caused more damage and deaths, so we treat it as more important though recently hurricanes have been getting worse and usurping each other for the worst hurricane title
 
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(USA) Do school dropouts still apply for security jobs as first option like they did years ago, when almost all the young ones were? I remember one person that wanted to join a TTRPG on Roll20 because he had to "look (not watch) at a wall almost everyday with nothing happening", what I don't recall was if he wanted to play during work hours or just after.
Not all of them, I think it depends on the person. My uncles went into construction and retail respectively, but I also know some people who went into security first.
 
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Greetings, Eurobros🇪🇺
how was 2️⃣0️⃣2️⃣4️⃣
compared to right now?
:wooow:

omrx3n.png

 
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As an citizen of the U.S, I want to ask about the cost of bananas in Europe, or if they're even sold in the grocery store.
My household is currently out of bananas and I am upset that I forgot to get them from the store yesterday.
(Other banana related questions) Have you ever eaten a Gros Michel? Nam Wah? Only Cavandish?
 

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