Perceptions of Other Countries

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French-American here — spent 20 yrs in France, 13 in the US. Let me speak to this.

I think the only reason Europoors tolerate their miserable existence is because they tell themselves lies about what the rest of the world is like. They eat gruel in their AC-less social housing while the most awesome party in history is being thrown just next door.

If you hang out in France, you’ll routinely hear them say things like: “in the US, people die in front of hospitals” (they literally believe this to be the case) or “our social system is the envy of the world.”

Their image of the US is completely delusional, and they are often shocked to discover that when they visit here. Their Marxist media brainwashed them into thinking America is some Dickensian horror, with Monopoly-style fat capitalists running around with their top hats and monocles, exploiting dirt poor workers.

Now, how do Americans perceive the French (and Europeans at large)?

Well, the tragic reality is that they really, truly don’t think of them. They may cross their minds once a month, at most. Why would they think of that irrelevant backwater of a continent?

The few times they do come to mind, it is, at best, as a quaint vacation spot. A nice place to sip espresso and spend their American dollars — which go such a long way in these third world countries! The closest comparison is how Europeans think of Thailand or Cambodia.

That’s at best. At worst, they think they’re a lazy, entitled, smug, snobbish, rude people with a bright future behind them, who confuse regulation for progress, don’t realize their economies were left in the dust a very long time ago, simply stopped innovating because they’ve lost the will, ability, or both, and who would rather brag about their 60%(!!) public spending to GDP ratio than fix their communist shit hole of a system.

Nice wine though.

Flo Crivello @Altimor
Posted on X, November 26, 2025

I am reminding of something told to me by a person raised in China:

… the schools in China taught that in the U.S. there was lots of food but only the rich could afford it. And rather than let the poor people have food for an affordable price the rich would dump the excess food in the ocean. The fact that food is so plentiful and cheap that poor people in this country are obese apparently didn’t make it through the censors.

I am also reminded of something the President of a small company (about $25 million a year in the mid 1980s) told a small group of us once. Paraphrasing some, “People in other countries have no idea what it is like to live in the most powerful country in the world. Someone in a country that is number five or seven, might be able to come close to imagining what it is like living in a number two or three country. But even the number two country doesn’t know what it is like living in the number one country. And living in the number one country, we have no idea what it is living like in even the number two country.”

I didn’t really understand that then. I understand a little bit now. I have no reason to believe it is wrong.

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3 thoughts on “Perceptions of Other Countries

  1. Those of us who have been to a lot of those other countries know exactly what it’s like to live in the(still) most powerful country in the world – in spite of the commie-crats in congress and elsewhere doing their damn-ist to destroy it.
    (Used up 5 passports in my travels as a field engineer)

  2. Being stationed in the UK by the USAF as my first tour of duty was instructive. Yes, the dollar went far, the history was delightful, and the dating was on easy mode if you steered clear of the other Americans for that purpose.

    Being stationed in Boston for my second was horrifying. Beautiful place (whole region, in fact), lots of history, ruined by the people that live there and their Euro-wannabe tendencies.

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