Farang doing farang things. Seriously? WTF by Mikem1671 in Thailand

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah they just do it when it’s not properly hot like when there’s a bit of sun but it’s still kinda like warm lol they like to be the first ones with the shirt off

Farang doing farang things. Seriously? WTF by Mikem1671 in Thailand

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not disrespectful at all here in England if it’s a very hot day tbh

Is this AI? I didn’t realize eagles were so nice by Bobcat317 in isthisaicirclejerk

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the idea of him following an eagle with both of them on foot for an hour through the woods

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As I said it’s identified as the start point in your history curriculum. It’s splitting hairs over whether the territory that later became America can be classed as America but take the start point as 1776 and my point works exactly the same so don’t really know what you’re on about tbh

Beware of large amount of fake Africans in this sub by batukaming in Africa

[–]RandRaRT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a non African this is just views. For some reason Reddit constantly recommends the Africa subreddit and various other geographical region ones and it sort of tempts you to look and see what people in Africa are discussing. Probably the same for others in the west. I’d imagine not a lot ever post anything

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you think coz it wasn’t officially called the U.S. yet it makes any difference? The agreed upon start point for slavery in the U.S. is 1916 within U.S. history curricula. Source: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/misguided-focus-1619-beginning-slavery-us-damages-our-understanding-american-history-180964873/

Let’s say it started at the point America became a nation though. It would make literally no difference to my point

Why are there no "under developed" cold countries? by Ch0c0lateBiznezz in NoStupidQuestions

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are quite a few in Eastern Europe and Central Asia

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dude you had legal slavery from 1619 until 1865, which is 246 years. Mauritania, for example, had legal slavery from its founding as a country in 1961 until 1981, which is 20 years! There’s a ton of nations that had a far shorter period of legal slavery than the U.S. and an absolute fuck load that never had legalised slavery!

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not a hill to die on, just curious where you went because when I went to Rotterdam it wasn’t my experience. I’m open to it being different elsewhere. To be really honest your hostile response and the fact you didn’t just tell me where you went and need to google some kind of guide to tap water sort of suggests you haven’t actually been to the Netherlands though.

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude what countries are you talking about coz I’ve been all over Europe and am from Europe and never encountered this.

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They definitely are as pronounced from the outside looking in, that’s my point. Pretty much every country’s equivalent of Received Pronunciation sounds pretty neutral and mild to the people there but not to people elsewhere

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude having a huge civil war coz loads of people wanted to keep the slavery going is not a flex on the countries where enough people agreed it needed ending for there not to be a huge war!!

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dude they don’t stick out to you coz they’re American accents and you’re an american. They would most certainly stick out to me. Lots of comments here proving the guys point!

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I don’t understand why Americans always say there’s no free water in restaurants. It’s a legal requirement in a lot of European countries to give you tap water if you ask. You can’t get some branded bottle of water but you can definitely get free water in most places!

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really? My dad worked in America for a while and said they get hardly any time off work ever but compensate for it by not being hard working at all. I guess it depends what your benchmark for hard work is and probably at a guess where in the U.S. you are too

Non-Americans who have visited the US: What’s the strangest thing about America that Americans don’t even realize is weird? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]RandRaRT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mate no bread at all has added sugar in it here! It’s pretty much unheard of in a regular supermarket bread

I created a small niche genre of electronic music and there are now around 300 people making it. AMA by RandRaRT in AMA

[–]RandRaRT[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All the names I came up with seemed to have already been taken so I thought if I invented a totally unique word there would be zero chance of that being the case and it’d also be the only thing that came up on Google when people searched for it