• PierceTheBubble@lemmy.ml
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    When some of them have the audacity, to arrogantly correct non-English speakers’ language, when it isn’t even their first language; hell it isn’t even my second, it’s my third. How’s your Dutch motherfucker? I guess this isn’t exactly restricted to Americans, but still…

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      They said QUIETLY annoying. Things you wouldn’t speak up about. I feel like kidnapping world leaders doesn’t qualify as that. I’m American, and it’s been about a full day now, and it’s just now setting in just how insane it is that we just kidnapped a world leader. Just…took him. Meanwhile, here in the states, we’re also kidnapping random people off the street in unmarked cars for committing the crime of being not white.

      These are things that should be screamed about, not silent.

      • cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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        4 days ago

        Some people are screaming. Most are not. And the words, from those screaming, are cheap. The silence of actions continues to be, and likely will continue to be, deafening.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        4 days ago

        Alright, here’s another one. Americans bragging about their democracy until all of a sudden it’s more convenient to blame the politicians for bad behaviour rather than the electorate that put them in power.

        Take some responsibility for your government, does it represent you or not?

        • rhymeswithduck@sh.itjust.works
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          4 days ago

          Do you understand how voting works? Each person gets one vote. Do you think I, or anyone else, could have somehow forced the 30% who didn’t vote to vote, and not only that but to vote the way we wanted them to? How am I responsible for the choices of people 2,000 miles across the country that I’ve never interacted with? Do I have any control over the propaganda these people are exposed to?

          At any given time, only 30-40% of the US is actually represented by the government. At least 30% of us directly voted against all this. Comments like yours make me feel like you’re trying to erase our existence… but I’m sure that’s helpful for somebody.

  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    The assumption that the American legal, political, and cultural context is the “default.” They say “X is illegal” without specifying jurisdiction. They assume a “right wing” or “left wing” party must be like their Republicans or Democrats. And so forth.

    • RisingSwell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 days ago

      It’s funny hearing Americans say they hate liberals, and me being able to agree except meaning the exact opposite. Liberal party is right wing for me lol

      • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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        4 days ago

        …cue the argument about what liberal, libertarian, and liberalism really mean. Hell, Americans even (re)define terms to suit their pov, like adding “social liberalism” to make it clear that their definition is correcct. Or my favorite, “Larger Middle East”.

    • Thorry@feddit.org
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      Yes, this is also very noticeable in media. They can have some kind of aliens in a future sci-fi universe that somehow have a legal process and trial that exactly mirrors the American way of doing things. For Americans that’s just normal, not realising this is absolutely not the norm in the rest of the world. Same thing with malls, hospitals, roads and many more things.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        3 days ago

        And unfortunately due to the prevalence of American media it “leaks” into other cultures as well. I’m Canadian and it’s not uncommon to hear about people being arrested or whatever and claiming that their “first amendment” rights were being violated, or “taking the fifth” (ie, the fifth amendment’s right to remain silent). We actually do have somewhat analogous laws for those things but of course they only know about the American ones and often get the details wrong as a result.

    • Honytawk@feddit.nl
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      4 days ago

      Oh how I love these messages about American companies doing illegal stuff and think they can get away with it just because it isn’t illegal in the US, only for the government to come down hard on them.

      Even more funny if they have to leave Europe afterwards.

      Sorry you can’t bust unions over here.

  • ThunderLegend@sh.itjust.works
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    Saying the state or city they’re from when asked where they are from…like the world should know what a Jackson is.

  • kluczyczka (she/her)@discuss.tchncs.de
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    their obsession with genome analysis / where one of their great-great-grandfathers came from.

    “i am italian, german, polish, chinese and cree!” “no, you are us-citizen and don’t speak any language but english.”

    • ViperActual@sh.itjust.works
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      The whole ethnic identity is mostly to identify where in the world you ethnically originated from to other Americans. Because almost every single person in the US is either an immigrant, or a descendent of one. So we identify to each other where we came from as Americans.

      Where people go wrong with this is if they happen to be traveling internationally and take this US centric identity with them. If traveling internationally, you could be ethnically from the place you are traveling. But in that context, you’d be American. This is a part of that whole well traveled awareness thing.

      The genealogy thing is their curiosity in tracing that ethnic origin with greater detail. I personally don’t find it too interesting myself, but different strokes.

      Edit: I’d like to add, this is mostly in case other people reading this thread are wondering why this is even a thing. It’s truly an annoying behavior.

      • blarghly@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Really, I think a far more charitable (and common) instance of this is an american, say, travelling to Ireland and noting that they actually have Irish heritage. And then some nice local appreciates their interest and they have something to talk about. American tourists these days don’t seem any more annoying or tone deaf than, say German, Israeli, or UK tourists. If you encounter a tourist off the beaten path, then they are almost always polite, curious, and a very nice person. And if you are hanging out where the big bus tourists congregate… well, what did you expect? They are dumbasses fishing for selfies - the lowest common denominator doesnt differentiate based on nationality.

    • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 days ago

      You’re not wrong, this is totally a thing. I’m a euro mutt (I coin for myself) and I can trace some lines.

      It’s because were all immigrants in a young country. Even the census we take asks where we hail from. I’ve maked “American” on it the last two times. It is a deal here, and yes it can be annoying especially when you get the tropes going. “Oh my family is Italian we like big families” mean while I’m fourth gen Italian (mixed obvs) and like what, are you inbreeding to stay Italian? Your husbands last name is “smith” like, fuck off. My full first gen Italian great grandmother married a first gen polack and had one kid. One. Fuck off with your stereotypes. This bitch I’m thinking of feed her kids all the american processed foods, give no fucks about the quality of her food ingredients or where they come from, just fuck off “were Italian” bitch shut up.

      • Yep. And so many white people here claim native ancestry. “I’m 1/16th Cherokee” they’ll say. Usually it is Cherokee because that’s the group their parents or grandparents had heard of and told them. I think it comes from trying to absolve the guilty feelings of what the settlers did to the natives.

        The genealogy conversations are just tiring and predictable.

        • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          So many! I think it was possibly, a almost pop culture trend in the 70s to claim native history tbh. So many folks I met who do this would have been teens/young adults in that time. But you’re probably right, it’s some warped cope for the atrocities committed against native people. Fucking warped.

    • jaycifer@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Potentially annoying American here with a point of clarification: is it annoying just to be interested in one’s heritage, or is it Americans that make that heritage their entire personality?

      • kluczyczka (she/her)@discuss.tchncs.de
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        the identity thing. as far as i see it’s usually white people who do this. to gain ethnic distinction?

        sure its fun to find out more abt what your granparents did (unless you are german).

        • jaycifer@lemmy.world
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          I think a lot of it stems from living in a relatively young, immigration heavy, multicultural country and the little conversations that arise from that.

          At least in the city I grew up and still live in I have met a lot of people who either immigrated or whose parents immigrated from other countries. In high school human geography I learned it takes a couple generations for an immigrant family to fully assimilate into a new culture, so a lot of these first/second generation immigrants still have connections and traditions from their family’s old country. The history of those countries (or at least the regions modern countries occupy) stretch back hundreds to thousands of years. I think many caucasian Americans, often raised to be competitive, want that sense of history when comparing to their own family but American culture has “only” developed over the past 300-400 years. To get an older/deeper sense of heritage they have to ask where their ancestors that immigrated to the US immigrated from, and because a sense of superiority is at least some part of American culture that older heritage has to be better than the other older heritages and therefore something to be loud and proud about. Even if it isn’t actually a big part of one’s life.

          All that to say yes I think you’re right about it being a matter of ethnic distinction, which I think is brought about by the circumstances of US history. I definitely get how it’s annoying.

      • Styxia@lemmy.world
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        I’m an immigrant in the U.S. When my accent gives me away, I’m often asked where I’m from, which somehow leads to the discovery that the other person is also Irish. Or Scottish. Usually Irish.

        I’m not offended so much as confused. “I am Irish” carries an expectation of shared culture and experience. When that’s clearly not what’s being offered, it lands less as connection and more hollow. Offense arises when clichés or affected accents appear. That’s no longer about identity; it’s just being an eejit.

    • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I’ve always understood it to be a remnant of a culture that de-emphasized genealogy and family pedigree, and had a lot more cultural and ethnic mixing in marriages at an earlier era. In Europe, it seems like there are a lot more family crests and aristocratic titles, from centuries of families maneuvering for political power through strategic marriages and what not, and stronger cultural taboos against marrying and having children outside of one’s ethnic group (and religion), at least up until maybe World War II.

      So if there’s just less to learn from DNA testing (a person who happens to already have records of all 16 of their great-great-grandparents, who all lived in the same geographical area), I’d expect there not to be much demand for that kind of analysis.

      Or maybe I’m wrong to focus on the gentry and aristocratic families, and have a misplaced view of how long that kind of stuff culturally persisted in Europe.

        • “germans”, “french”, “danes” weren’t a thing. up until recently. they are genetically diverse groups.

        • euros aren’t all nobles. i don’t know my grandmas maiden names.

        • there was a lot of movement (read: fucking around) in europe. what do these tests even mean by “dutch”?

        • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          • “germans”, “french”, “danes” weren’t a thing. up until recently. they are genetically diverse groups.

          I was under the impression that the DNA kits described actual ethnic groups and showed a map of the distribution of those groups overlaid on modern political borders or region names. Here’s the page on 23 and Me’s reports, which have a lot more granular detail, mapped onto modern political borders for reference, but where any listed nation or territory may have up to dozens of different sub-groups listed.

    • Doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca
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      4 days ago

      “English, Scotch, Welch and Irish” always drives me nuts. You can’t even pronounce one of them correctly; how is that honouring your “heritage”?

      • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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        And I also wonder how the machines that create these results even manage to distinguish between, say, English and Welsh “genes”. I mean sure, there’s some science behind it. 0.1% to be precise.

    • maybe clearing this up: germany has a hereditary citizenship. i. e. children of germans can get a german passport.

      being “german” means owning german citizenship (or citizenship of the one of the former constructs the federal republic sees as its precursors), not owning a set of genes. you can have no ‘distinct european genes’ (e.g. be ainu?) at all and get citizenship for your kids, as long as you have it. you can be “genetically german” and still don’t have a passport.

      jus sanguinis usually isn’t genetically defined

    • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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      If it means we can get citizenship somewhere else and get out… you’re offended by us figuring out our options? Oh how inconsiderate of us

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        It typically doesn’t. Most countries don’t care about where your ancestors came from. Being fluent in the local language and culture will generally give you a leg up if you already qualify for immigration so I hope your family kept those alive (and not Americanized versions like Irish-Americans wearing green on St. Patrick’s Day). But your ancestry is usually completely irrelevant.

        Those genetic test results absolutely don’t mean anything. If you’re culturally American with an American passport, you’re American and that’s it.

        • Fondots@lemmy.world
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          Kind of funny you specifically call out Irish-Americans, because Ireland does actually have some options for citizenship-by-descent. It’s not quite as simple as anyone with Irish ancestry can become a citizen, but it is a thing.

          If you have a grandparent who was born in Ireland you’re eligible

          Or if your parent was an Irish citizen at the time of your birth

          So hypothetically if you have a great grandparent born in Ireland, your parent could apply for Irish citizenship, even though their parents (your grandparents) weren’t citizens and had never set foot in Ireland

          And if they did that before you were born you would also be eligible

          And so on down the line to your children, and their children, etc. if everyone keeps on top of it.

          There’s actually a decent handful of countries with some sort of citizenship-by-descent, not a majority by a longshot, and of course every country that does offer it has different requirements and restrictions, but for some people it can potentially be a viable pathway to another citizenship.

          • 14th_cylon@lemmy.zip
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            i am not going to verify what you said, but regardless of if it is true, if your grandparents have the citizenship, you probably don’t need dna test to find that out…

            • Fondots@lemmy.world
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              It’s absolutely an edge case, but there are still a lot of wonky family situations out there, people who are estranged from their family for any number of reasons, adoption, people raised by their grandparents under the impression that they were their parents to hide the fact that their sister is really their mom and they were hiding a teen pregnancy, your mom cheated and your dad isn’t actually your father, etc.

              And sometimes that all stays under wraps until someone in the family takes a DNA test.

              I have a friend with a big family who just recently discovered that most of her aunts and uncles aren’t actually her grandfather’s biological children. She and her siblings haven’t done a test themselves and her father’s dead so the jury is still out on whether she’s blood related to him or not.

              But if she’s not, and she finds out who her actual biological grandfather is, it’s not impossible that that may open up a new pathway to citizenship through him.

              And laws change, as a hypothetical, let’s say Poland starts getting antsy (well, antsyer) about Russia doing Russia stuff and really wants more people to feed the war machine in case of WWII breaking out, they already have a citizenship by descent option but the proper documentation to qualify can be tricky, but if they decide they really want to increase immigration I don’t think it would be out of the question for them to open up a pathway for someone who can show a DNA test with X% polish ancestry. In that hypothetical it might be kind of an out-of-the-frying-pan-into-the-fire situation, but maybe it would still be preferable to the situation in someone’s home country.

              It’s just one more tool in the box that can open up new avenues for people to explore. It may not pan out for everyone or even most people who look into it, but in some small handful of cases it may save their lives.

              • 14th_cylon@lemmy.zip
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                3 days ago

                but in some small handful of cases it may save their lives.

                in some small number of cases you may get hit by a meteorite during that search, so be careful.

                • Fondots@lemmy.world
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                  In some small number of cases you may die in a house fire, and I’ll bet you have smoke detectors and fire extinguishers around just in case

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        We’re not talking to you in this thread, we’re talking about you. You don’t need to jump in with “but that’s not annoying!” After people answer the question OP posed, that’s not useful.

        This is ironically another annoying behaviour.

        • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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          This is ironically another annoying behaviour.

          Unable to resist a challenge. But it’s usually the doubling- and tripling down that makes it really funny.

        • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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          Oh, pardon me, I forgot you’re allowed to find someone seeking a path forward in life as dreadfully inconvenient, because where you were born grants you superiority, m’lord

          • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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            Yes, we see it, you can stop demonstrating the annoying behaviour now.

      • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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        Aww Cheesus that’s funny. I hope you weren’t serious. As if “having Italian genes” makes you eligible for a residence permit.

      • Honytawk@feddit.nl
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        You don’t get citizenship just because you had ancestors there once.

        Otherwise everyone is an African citizen.

      • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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        There is only one country that gives a flying shit about where your great-grandma allegedly came from, and that’s Israel. For every other country you’re not figuring out any options, you’re cosplaying.

        • AbsolutelyClawless@piefed.social
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          It’s not quite the same, but I know someone who acquired Italian citizenship because their grandparents were Italian/had Italian citizenship. They don’t even speak Italian.

          • Spitefire@lemmy.world
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            Italy has recently changed their requirements and now language proficiency and residency are required. But yes, up until very recently heritage was mostly enough.

          • Honytawk@feddit.nl
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            They did not get citizenship because of their grandparents.

            They got a foot in the door because they knew someone living in Italy (if that even is the case), and then went through everything a normal migrant needs to go through.

            You don’t need to have ancestors there in order to live somewhere.

            • AbsolutelyClawless@piefed.social
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              What are you even talking about? They both acquired it over Jure Sanguinis, both of them barely understand any Italian. They have dual Italian citizenship.

              Nobody said anything about needing ancestors to live somewhere else.

        • drev@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          This is not true. I personally acquired citizenship of Lithuania for example, solely because my grandmother was born there and left during Soviet occupation (as many did). I speak no Lithuanian, have no other connection to the country, and have never even been there.

  • deafboy@lemmy.world
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    new account - check

    zero comments - check

    inflammatory post - check.

    deleted account - TBD…

  • just_an_average_joe@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Invading other countries, ignoring international law, supporting palestinian genocide, toppling foreign governments… i find them kinda annoying you know?

  • brap@lemmy.world
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    Saying “I could care less” instead of “I couldn’t care less”. Annoyingly incorrect but not exactly a critical issue.

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    Thinking cheaper automatically means you’re getting more value out of something, (example: I got this whole cake that can feed 10 people for $15 bucks!) ignoring the quality of that thing.

    Thinking something expensive automatically means you’re getting something of better quality (example: This bottle of wine is over $100. It’s definitely better than one that uses much better methods of wine production that only costs $20).

    Basically, my beef is with Americans having little sense of discernment and/or lack of good taste.

    • 3abas@lemmy.world
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      I reject the assertion that this is an American thing… I’ve been in enough other countries and they’re all mostly consumerist cultures that care more about perceived social value than actual quality.

      • SLVRDRGN@lemmy.world
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        Perhaps, but America is known to export their “culture”, including consumerism. Maybe it’s tainting the world at large…