Impressions of America
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Impressions of America
As most know, I have lived in S. Korea for 17 years.
I am in transition back to the U.S.
Since going to S. Korea in 2006, I have been back to the U.S. a handful of times -- usually for not longer than a month.
I am currently in Houston, and have been in the States since the middle of September.
I paln to remain in the U.S. until March, and intend to then go back to S. Korea for a few months, before finally settling back here in Babylon for good later in 2024.
When you live in a place (America) for a long time, you very much tend to become assimilated to it. Y'all are assimilated to life here.
But when you came into a place from outside (S. Korea), your view is much different.
I am not assimilated to America.
Here are some of my impressions of America...
1. People are generally very unhealthy.
Obesity, obvious lack of exercise or physical fitness, limps, bad skin, stress, glazed eyes.
It is rare to look around and see a person who is very fit, at least here in H-town, and also in Brooklyn, NY.
Brooklyn is a cesspool, btw.
2. The cell phone culture is not progress. It is a pain in the @ss.
Cell phones are supposedly making our lives easier, but the opposite is true.
It has become difficult to live in Amerika without owning a cell phone, but if it was up to me alone, I would still not own one. Being married means I do not have the freedom to operate in ways that only satisfy myself.
Seems like everything you do requires some sort of code, verification, text confirmation, PIN #, or other such bullsheet.
Phone is beeping all through the day, phone must be with you when you go to a store, phone is your god.
Lose your phone and you're fvcked.
Do your own check out job at the grocery store, bag your own goods, etc...
Use to be nice, back in the day, when you could roll into a store, get your item, pay your cash, and be out the door in no time.
3. The cost of living is very high now.
A person can live MUCH cheaper in S. Korea, and health care is also MUCH cheaper and convenient.
No comparison.
You can also live without a car in S. Korea, if you live in the northern half of the country, which most do.
Excellent, and clean, subway system.
The subways in NY are a filthy rat hole by comparison.
4. Beautiful women?
Are they here in the States?
Don't seen many AT ALL in Brooklyn or in Houston.
In S. Korea, there are lovelies ALL OVER THE PLACE.
Virtually every time you venture out in S. Korea, you encounter attractive women.
5. People are struggling.
People are struggling in S. Korea, too. I think most everywhere now.
We are in very bad economic times.
In America, people are wandering around inside of the their own demise, and they seem mostly oblivious to their enslavement.
It is like that to an extent in S. Korea, also, but it is... different.
S. Korea is about 20 or 30 years behind America as far as cultural degradation.
There is more, but that is enough for now.
I am in transition back to the U.S.
Since going to S. Korea in 2006, I have been back to the U.S. a handful of times -- usually for not longer than a month.
I am currently in Houston, and have been in the States since the middle of September.
I paln to remain in the U.S. until March, and intend to then go back to S. Korea for a few months, before finally settling back here in Babylon for good later in 2024.
When you live in a place (America) for a long time, you very much tend to become assimilated to it. Y'all are assimilated to life here.
But when you came into a place from outside (S. Korea), your view is much different.
I am not assimilated to America.
Here are some of my impressions of America...
1. People are generally very unhealthy.
Obesity, obvious lack of exercise or physical fitness, limps, bad skin, stress, glazed eyes.
It is rare to look around and see a person who is very fit, at least here in H-town, and also in Brooklyn, NY.
Brooklyn is a cesspool, btw.
2. The cell phone culture is not progress. It is a pain in the @ss.
Cell phones are supposedly making our lives easier, but the opposite is true.
It has become difficult to live in Amerika without owning a cell phone, but if it was up to me alone, I would still not own one. Being married means I do not have the freedom to operate in ways that only satisfy myself.
Seems like everything you do requires some sort of code, verification, text confirmation, PIN #, or other such bullsheet.
Phone is beeping all through the day, phone must be with you when you go to a store, phone is your god.
Lose your phone and you're fvcked.
Do your own check out job at the grocery store, bag your own goods, etc...
Use to be nice, back in the day, when you could roll into a store, get your item, pay your cash, and be out the door in no time.
3. The cost of living is very high now.
A person can live MUCH cheaper in S. Korea, and health care is also MUCH cheaper and convenient.
No comparison.
You can also live without a car in S. Korea, if you live in the northern half of the country, which most do.
Excellent, and clean, subway system.
The subways in NY are a filthy rat hole by comparison.
4. Beautiful women?
Are they here in the States?
Don't seen many AT ALL in Brooklyn or in Houston.
In S. Korea, there are lovelies ALL OVER THE PLACE.
Virtually every time you venture out in S. Korea, you encounter attractive women.
5. People are struggling.
People are struggling in S. Korea, too. I think most everywhere now.
We are in very bad economic times.
In America, people are wandering around inside of the their own demise, and they seem mostly oblivious to their enslavement.
It is like that to an extent in S. Korea, also, but it is... different.
S. Korea is about 20 or 30 years behind America as far as cultural degradation.
There is more, but that is enough for now.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
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Re: Impressions of America
My South Korean friends, even having lived here for years, are dumbstruck by so many Americans’ lack of interest in getting an education and improving their lot in life.
They’re also disgusted by our littering.
They’re also disgusted by our littering.
Re: Impressions of America
What about body odors and cleanliness? I have heard it said we "occidentals" stink to the nose of an asian, maybe due to a red meat diet.
And in SoKorea is canibus legalized in any way or what level of criminality does having it carry.
And in SoKorea is canibus legalized in any way or what level of criminality does having it carry.
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Re: Impressions of America
I haven't heard about the odor thing, Roach.
Cannabis is legal nowhere in Korea.
I am not sure what the penalties are.
S. Korean society is very conservative and repressed compared to American society.
Family is still emphasized, kids are required to wear uniforms to public school, and p0rn is illegal.
P0rn sites are blocked in S. Korea, and other "racy" sites are blocked.
Cruising around on the internet, I would occasionally go to a site that I found was -----> blocked.
If you go to a blocked site, a police warning comes up on your computer.
Cannabis is legal nowhere in Korea.
I am not sure what the penalties are.
S. Korean society is very conservative and repressed compared to American society.
Family is still emphasized, kids are required to wear uniforms to public school, and p0rn is illegal.
P0rn sites are blocked in S. Korea, and other "racy" sites are blocked.
Cruising around on the internet, I would occasionally go to a site that I found was -----> blocked.
If you go to a blocked site, a police warning comes up on your computer.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
Re: Impressions of America
What you described sounds a lot like Athens.
Except the women here are hot and we can get porn.
Except the women here are hot and we can get porn.
JPGettysburg wrote: ↑Fri Jul 19, 2024 8:57 pm In prison, full moon nights have a kind of brutal sodomy that can't fully be described with mere words.
Re: Impressions of America
You need a good whiff of Kimchi breath coming at you.
What happens when you get the multi-billion dollar corporations - Big Tech, Big Pharma, foreign money, etc., able to form collaboration with politicians susceptible to corruption via payouts and power with the media which controls the messaging to the population of the country?
Re: Impressions of America
Softball Bat wrote: ↑Wed Oct 25, 2023 8:54 pm
You can also live without a car in S. Korea, if you live in the northern half of the country, which most do.
Excellent, and clean, subway system.
Probably a good idea to minimize DRIVING in that country, especially by the women....
4. Beautiful women?
Are they here in the States?
Don't seen many AT ALL in Brooklyn or in Houston.
In S. Korea, there are lovelies ALL OVER THE PLACE.
Virtually every time you venture out in S. Korea, you encounter attractive women.
You'd almost have to TRY to avoid seeing hotties in the states...and Brooklyn & Houston wouldn't be my first choices for fox hunting.
No question there are hot women in Korea, like everywhere else, but the panorama of physical traits is a lot more limited than a melting pot country.
What happens when you get the multi-billion dollar corporations - Big Tech, Big Pharma, foreign money, etc., able to form collaboration with politicians susceptible to corruption via payouts and power with the media which controls the messaging to the population of the country?
Re: Impressions of America
“Probably a good idea to minimize DRIVING in that country, especially by the women....”
You are the laziest POS here. Could you at least TRY and post something more substantial than “Asian women no drive good” please?
You are the laziest POS here. Could you at least TRY and post something more substantial than “Asian women no drive good” please?
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Re: Impressions of America
There is an extreme "education" culture in Korea, and it is intense.Sudden Sam wrote: ↑Wed Oct 25, 2023 9:00 pmMy South Korean friends, even having lived here for years, are dumbstruck by so many Americans’ lack of interest in getting an education and improving their lot in life.
There is also an intense "work" culture.
Leisure is not valued that much.
School was 6 days a week (well, every other Saturday was off) for the first few years I was in Korea.
Opportunities are much more limited in S. Korea than in America, and if a kid falls behind, he will end up in an undesirable life position.
Kids face a lot of pressure from parents.
They are in school for long hours. Most kids attend an "academy" after school, where they focus on a specialty or two.
It is very common for a Korean kid to be in school/Academy from 8:30 am to 8 pm or later.
The suicide rate is high in S. Korea, in part due to this extreme work and education culture, and in part due to the fact that Koreans tend to be very high strung.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
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Re: Impressions of America
The Seer wrote:No question there are hot women in Korea, like everywhere else, but the panorama of physical traits is a lot more limited than a melting pot country.
True.
Maybe Houston and Brooklyn are not the places to be looking for hot women, as you note.
But, I am just giving you the impressions that I have at this point.
Walk out in Korea and there are many lovelies to be seen.
Almost none here (Brooklyn, Houston), at least that I have seen.
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Re: Impressions of America
Oh please. You're gonna tell us with a straight face that a borough with 2.7 million people doesn't have very many hot babes? You're gonna tell us that Houston, a giant city with TONS of hot babes of Mexican and Latin descent, doesn't have many hot babes? I wouldn't want to live in Houston but if you had to, it would be for the babes. And the food.Softball Bat wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 5:01 pm Maybe Houston and Brooklyn are not the places to be looking for hot women, as you note.
But, I am just giving you the impressions that I have at this point.
Walk out in Korea and there are many lovelies to be seen.
Almost none here (Brooklyn, Houston), at least that I have seen.
I think you are making shit up.
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Re: Impressions of America
So I take it they don't have full time "tennis school" in South Korea?Softball Bat wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 4:56 pm There is an extreme "education" culture in Korea, and it is intense.
There is also an intense "work" culture.
Leisure is not valued that much.
School was 6 days a week (well, every other Saturday was off) for the first few years I was in Korea.
Opportunities are much more limited in S. Korea than in America, and if a kid falls behind, he will end up in an undesirable life position.
Kids face a lot of pressure from parents.
They are in school for long hours. Most kids attend an "academy" after school, where they focus on a specialty or two.
It is very common for a Korean kid to be in school/Academy from 8:30 am to 8 pm or later.
The suicide rate is high in S. Korea, in part due to this extreme work and education culture, and in part due to the fact that Koreans tend to be very high strung.
Re: Impressions of America
I need to know how do you set the odds on how many are half or quarter breeds?
\sig
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Re: Impressions of America
Sounds similar to the work environment known in Japan as "karoshi."Softball Bat wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 4:56 pmThere is an extreme "education" culture in Korea, and it is intense.Sudden Sam wrote: ↑Wed Oct 25, 2023 9:00 pmMy South Korean friends, even having lived here for years, are dumbstruck by so many Americans’ lack of interest in getting an education and improving their lot in life.
There is also an intense "work" culture.
Leisure is not valued that much.
School was 6 days a week (well, every other Saturday was off) for the first few years I was in Korea.
Opportunities are much more limited in S. Korea than in America, and if a kid falls behind, he will end up in an undesirable life position.
Kids face a lot of pressure from parents.
They are in school for long hours. Most kids attend an "academy" after school, where they focus on a specialty or two.
It is very common for a Korean kid to be in school/Academy from 8:30 am to 8 pm or later.
The suicide rate is high in S. Korea, in part due to this extreme work and education culture, and in part due to the fact that Koreans tend to be very high strung.
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
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Re: Impressions of America
I am sure there are some.SM wrote:Oh please. You're gonna tell us with a straight face that a borough with 2.7 million people doesn't have very many hot babes?
In fact, I saw one attractive young lady when I was walking outside in Brooklyn, and it startled me.
Totally unexpected, based on what I was encountering every day I was there.
In Korea, if I walk outside to the bus, take the bus to the subway, and take the subway for 6 or 7 stops, it is a GIVEN that I encounter a half dozen pretties.
Every time.
Similarly in Brooklyn, I rode the subway most days, and was out and about, and I saw almost NONE.
Take a visit to South Korea, SM.
Go to Seoul for a week and see if I am lying.
Now, part of this is also cultural.
Koreans don't go out of the house looking ratty.
If someone goes outside, they dress "up" (at least slightly). So, women attempt to present themselves well in public, and this helps the appearance.
But it is more than that.
There is not a severe obesity problem in Korea, and as I said, the culture is 20-30 years behind America as far as cultural degradation.
Looking good matters in Korea.
And there is also not an extreme "feminist" culture there.
In public, women want to look like women, and women want to look appealing.
It is what it is.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
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Re: Impressions of America
Good luck!SM wrote:I wouldn't want to live in Houston but if you had to, it would be for the babes.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
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Re: Impressions of America
Not that I am aware of.SM wrote:So I take it they don't have full time "tennis school" in South Korea?
But I was not involved at all with tennis in Korea.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
Re: Impressions of America
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Re: Impressions of America
kcdave wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 12:14 amHaving traveled this road, I will guarantee you that quarter breed mexi puss
is much better than quarter breed filipina puss.
Kierland, upon seeing this post!
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
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Re: Impressions of America
Well, I am gnu in America, and in Korea I never had to touch my clock.
We never fiddled around with the time over there.
I heard we are supposed to do something with our clock this weekend.
What day?
What time?
What do I do with my clock?
Thank you for your help and consideration!
We never fiddled around with the time over there.
I heard we are supposed to do something with our clock this weekend.
What day?
What time?
What do I do with my clock?
Thank you for your help and consideration!
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is
Re: Impressions of America
Zack, where ya at bro?
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Re: Impressions of America
There's an area of Indiana that doesn't adjust their clocks.Softball Bat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 03, 2023 2:58 am Well, I am gnu in America, and in Korea I never had to touch my clock.
We never fiddled around with the time over there.
I heard we are supposed to do something with our clock this weekend.
What day?
What time?
What do I do with my clock?
Thank you for your help and consideration!
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
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Re: Impressions of America
What kind of clock do you have?Softball Bat wrote: ↑Fri Nov 03, 2023 2:58 am Well, I am gnu in America, and in Korea I never had to touch my clock.
We never fiddled around with the time over there.
I heard we are supposed to do something with our clock this weekend.
What day?
What time?
What do I do with my clock?
Thank you for your help and consideration!
Many people don’t need to do anything!
Re: Impressions of America
There are plenty of places in Brooklyn to get your bifocals reframed, Bat.
As for a “hot girls per square foot” metric, I’m not sure you’re gonna compete with NYC, at least in the US. There might be more hot chicks in Houston, but you’d have to get into your car and drive an extra mile to see each one. In NYC, just take a leisurely stroll to the next avenue, they’re walking all over the place. If not Brooklyn, Astoria Queens or Central Park. Plenty of variety. Get those bifocal checked.
As for a “hot girls per square foot” metric, I’m not sure you’re gonna compete with NYC, at least in the US. There might be more hot chicks in Houston, but you’d have to get into your car and drive an extra mile to see each one. In NYC, just take a leisurely stroll to the next avenue, they’re walking all over the place. If not Brooklyn, Astoria Queens or Central Park. Plenty of variety. Get those bifocal checked.
“My dentist, that’s another beauty, my dentist, you kiddin’ me. It cost me five thousand dollars to have all new teeth put in. Now he tells me I need braces!” —Rodney Dangerfield
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Re: Impressions of America
Cultural degradation.poptart wrote:In America, people are wandering around inside of the their own demise, and they seem mostly oblivious to their enslavement.
It is like that to an extent in S. Korea, also, but it is... different.
S. Korea is about 20 or 30 years behind America as far as cultural degradation.
A former president, and current presidential candidate, who has now been indicted multiple times, speaks at a rally in Iowa.
He decides that it is a good idea to start describing golden showers.
88 wrote:I have no idea who Weaselberg is