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  3. US versus Europe

US versus Europe

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  • L Lost User

    True, in fact most of the popular evening dramas like ER, NYPD Blue, Law & Order, etc... generally have quite a bit of language that would have been banned even 5-6 years ago. What I find interesting is: Why do Europeans think swearing on TV/radio is such a wonderful thing? I'm not prudish on the subject and I can swear like a sailor when I want to but these are publicly broadcast and some of the public doesn't like the language. Mike Mullikin :beer:

    Women: You can't live with them, and you can't get them to dress up in a skimpy Nazi costume and beat you with a warm squash. - Emo Phillips

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    David Wulff
    wrote on last edited by
    #36

    Mike Mullikin wrote: What I find interesting is: Why do Europeans think swearing on TV/radio is such a wonderful thing? I think it must be more about the freedom part, coupled with the fact that very few people take any realy offence with everyday moderate swearing - it's as much as a part of real life as anything else. Obviously we don't have anythingbut the occasional shit or arse and the like before the watershed so as not to enoucrange children. I wouldn't think twice if someone said "that's fucking brilliant!" on the TV at 9pm (even on a BBC broadcast), but it would make me sit up and think "what the hell?!" if they bleeped it out. It saddens me to hear that Graham Norton's show when it is rebroadcast on BBCA has been censored. Then again, when I caught episodes of Jackass on satelite they were not censored visually, yet rebroadcast here on Channel 4 and all the dicks and arses have been blanked out. Censorship like that is so silly.


    David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

    h.a.s: 0.0.4

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    • M Marc Richarme

      Paul Watson wrote: Well I am sure many non-German Europeans will object to your last statement... I'm half Danish, half French, and was born and lived the 18 first years of my life in Luxembourg, and attendend the European School there; That doesn't make me some european superman, but I still think I know a bit more than the average guy on european cultures. :-D Obviously a lot of what is written on the page (especially the jura-related info) applies to Germany only, but what I meant with the "The web page compares many aspects of culture/lifestyle in the US with Germany (which mostly applies to the rest of Europe too)." statement is that a lot of the cultural/social/lifstyle apply (with minor modifications) to a lot of countries in Europe, and describes the general European attitudes very well.

      Cheers,
      Marc

      :beer: Click to see my *real* signature :beer:

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      David Wulff
      wrote on last edited by
      #37

      Marc Richarme wrote: was born and lived the 18 first years of my life in Luxembourg I've always wondered about Luxembourg - what is it like as a place to live or visit? It never seems to get mentioned, so is it this nice friendly little place where other Europeans go to retire, or is it just small and annoying like France's bastard son? ;P One of these days I'm going to plan some more trips around wastern Europe. I miss all the wonderful landscapes of Germany, Austria, and (I've forgotten my geography) the wine growing region of France - amazing images that you won't find down here in Hobiton. I think I'd like to go to Luxembourg, maybe Switzerland, next.


      David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

      h.a.s: 0.0.4

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      • S Stuart van Weele

        The reason teltext, ISDN, etc isn't widely available in the US because the phone and cable companies felt they couldn't make a profit off these services. If the phone and cable company is state owned profit isn't as much of an issue.

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        Marc Richarme
        wrote on last edited by
        #38

        Phone & Cable services are private in most European countries too, and they do make profit of ISDN, for example (and I think it's quite successful too). The smart thing about those services is that no phone lines / cables need to be replaced to implement them, so only a tiny investment is required compared to ADSL, for example.

        Cheers,
        Marc

        :beer: Click to see my *real* signature :beer:

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        • S Stan Shannon

          All I mean by that is, from my perspective, Europeans have never really escaped an inherently fuedalistic mindset. In other words, Marxism, Socialism and even Fascism, are variations on a basically fuedalistic theme. Instead of peasants looking to their 'lord' for their most basic needs, protection and security, you have people looking to the government for those same things, rather than wanting to take the individual responsibility to secure those things for themselves. "Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art." Charles McCabe, San Francisco Chronicle

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          brianwelsch
          wrote on last edited by
          #39

          Interesting insight. Never thought to compare feudalism and socialism. There are obvious differences of course, but the parent->child relationship remains. BW "We get general information and specific information, but none of the specific information talks about time, place or methods or means..." - Tom Ridge - US Secretary of Homeland Security

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          • S Stan Shannon

            All I mean by that is, from my perspective, Europeans have never really escaped an inherently fuedalistic mindset. In other words, Marxism, Socialism and even Fascism, are variations on a basically fuedalistic theme. Instead of peasants looking to their 'lord' for their most basic needs, protection and security, you have people looking to the government for those same things, rather than wanting to take the individual responsibility to secure those things for themselves. "Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art." Charles McCabe, San Francisco Chronicle

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            KaRl
            wrote on last edited by
            #40

            Stan Shannon wrote: you have people looking to the government for those same things, rather than wanting to take the individual responsibility to secure those things for themselves. IMO we look not to the government but to the Nation. Because we are the Nation, we are collectively and individually responsible, through a vertue called civisme("good citizenship": I can't even find a single word for this in english, what a symbol) . I know it's more and more an utopia, thanks to a globalization of the jungle rules, but I still keep this vision as an ideal.


            Angels banished from heaven have no choice but to become demons Cowboy Bebop

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            • M Marc Richarme

              http://math-www.uni-paderborn.de/~axel/us-d.html[^] The web page compares many aspects of culture/lifestyle in the US with Germany (which mostly applies to the rest of Europe too). Very interesting, IMO.

              Cheers,
              Marc

              :beer: Click to see my *real* signature :beer:

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              Jorgen Sigvardsson
              wrote on last edited by
              #41

              The jobless youth in big German cities and in the eastern part of the country however often present an aggressive nationalistic attitude, to the extent of harassing, beating and even killing foreigners with the wrong skin color. This kind of violence is unheard of in the US. Eh.. What about the KKK? -- Yeeeeehaaaaawwwwd!

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              • M Marc Richarme

                Phone & Cable services are private in most European countries too, and they do make profit of ISDN, for example (and I think it's quite successful too). The smart thing about those services is that no phone lines / cables need to be replaced to implement them, so only a tiny investment is required compared to ADSL, for example.

                Cheers,
                Marc

                :beer: Click to see my *real* signature :beer:

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                Stuart van Weele
                wrote on last edited by
                #42

                Really, I was under the impression that most TV and phone companies in europe were nationalized. Deutshe Telekom is a "private" company, but the goverment holds almost 3/4 of the shares.

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                • K KaRl

                  Stan Shannon wrote: you have people looking to the government for those same things, rather than wanting to take the individual responsibility to secure those things for themselves. IMO we look not to the government but to the Nation. Because we are the Nation, we are collectively and individually responsible, through a vertue called civisme("good citizenship": I can't even find a single word for this in english, what a symbol) . I know it's more and more an utopia, thanks to a globalization of the jungle rules, but I still keep this vision as an ideal.


                  Angels banished from heaven have no choice but to become demons Cowboy Bebop

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                  brianwelsch
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #43

                  Kaßl wrote: civisme("good citizenship": I can't even find a single word for this in english, what a symbol) . "Civic Duty" probably comes pretty close. BW "We get general information and specific information, but none of the specific information talks about time, place or methods or means..." - Tom Ridge - US Secretary of Homeland Security

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                  • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                    The jobless youth in big German cities and in the eastern part of the country however often present an aggressive nationalistic attitude, to the extent of harassing, beating and even killing foreigners with the wrong skin color. This kind of violence is unheard of in the US. Eh.. What about the KKK? -- Yeeeeehaaaaawwwwd!

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                    Stan Shannon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #44

                    The Klan has largely been defanged in the U.S. "Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art." Charles McCabe, San Francisco Chronicle

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                    • B brianwelsch

                      Kaßl wrote: civisme("good citizenship": I can't even find a single word for this in english, what a symbol) . "Civic Duty" probably comes pretty close. BW "We get general information and specific information, but none of the specific information talks about time, place or methods or means..." - Tom Ridge - US Secretary of Homeland Security

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                      KaRl
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #45

                      The french definition for civism is: Devotion of the citizen to his country, of the individual to the community. The term duty implies a constraint, when civism is more voluntarist.


                      Angels banished from heaven have no choice but to become demons Cowboy Bebop

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                      • S Stan Shannon

                        The Klan has largely been defanged in the U.S. "Any clod can have the facts, but having opinions is an art." Charles McCabe, San Francisco Chronicle

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                        KaRl
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #46

                        :cool: So the white supremacist nazi-like groups are groupuscules? I've seen some documentaries about them , but I can't evaluate the reality of such a threat.


                        Angels banished from heaven have no choice but to become demons Cowboy Bebop

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                        • K KaRl

                          The french definition for civism is: Devotion of the citizen to his country, of the individual to the community. The term duty implies a constraint, when civism is more voluntarist.


                          Angels banished from heaven have no choice but to become demons Cowboy Bebop

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                          brianwelsch
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #47

                          The term however, at least as I take it, describes an obligation one is proud to uphold. It is not something someone feels negatively about. I'm sure there is a bit of difference between the two, but at the moment I can't come up with a closer word or phrase. BW "We get general information and specific information, but none of the specific information talks about time, place or methods or means..." - Tom Ridge - US Secretary of Homeland Security

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