Halifax Tar
Army.ca Fixture
- Reaction score
- 11,390
- Points
- 1,260
Pieman said:I got to work closely with some American troops overseas. I recall they started graphing the number of times I said 'Eh?' in a conversations. Other than that there was little difference between us. We worked really well together, no issues. I found them nothing like the American stereotypes I heard growing up. I now work with American civilians and find the same thing.
I've also worked with Europeans, and their cultural differences are more blatant (not just language issues) and you have to be mindful of it. It can get ugly fast...especially with Germans, ha.
I've come to really dislike the way Canadians will point out how they are different from Americans as a way of identifying themselves. Little of it is actually true, and I've come to find it an embarrassing way to portray ourselves. When Americans ask me what Canadians are like I just tell them there is very little difference. Except Canada seems to think it can do everything their big brother USA can do, despite our much smaller population. I'm finding it's one of our major short comings as a country.
I fully agree with you.
At the PDC we had a Brit FP organization and a Yank signals det. The yanks had a great work ethic and seemed to mesh with us perfectly and I would love to work with them again.
The Brits I found to be very lazy and had a over inflated sense of entitlement. I used to purposely call a Brit staff sgt corporal because he was such a douche bag and it drove him crazy. It got so bad our cooks shut down their flying kitchen and told them to eat ration packs.
I would say not allot separates us from Yanks. They say ya'll as much as we eh lol