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Robertiton's avatar

In the 2000s, I lived in Canada on a working holiday visa and toward the end of a long, dark winter I got a cheap charter flight to Cancun for a week's break from the weather. This was during the Bush era, when there was talk of the "United States of Canada", a division of North America roughly into Canada and the coasts in one country and the rest in another country. So maybe I was primed to see it, but the sense of there being two types of Americans was stark. I didn't stay in Cancun itself, but did the backpacker thing around the Yucatan Peninsula where I met lots of Americans who I thought of as "normal" - basically like any of the people one meets when travelling.

Then there was another cohort whose ignorance was truly staggering. On an eco tour, I shared a canoe with a middle-aged couple who were in Mexico for the third time. We also had a local in our canoe, who was there with her five-year-old son and husband who both ended up in a different canoe. At one point the canoes were separated and came together again and the little boy started saying, "Hola!" and waving. The American woman loudly said to her husband, "What's he saying? Oh, he's so cute! What's he saying?"

The "normal" Americans didn't seem any more capable of relating to this cohort than I was. I wish I could put my finger on what it is that makes them unique. Obviously there are ignorant people in Australia and the UK, but there's something about the assertiveness of American ignorance that is remarkable. Maybe it's a demographic thing, in that there are large areas where "normal" people are in the minority while the ignorant dominate. That leads to a pandering to the kind of attitudes and behaviours that are marginalised in Australia.

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Charles Powell's avatar

In 1992 when I became an Australian citizen there were 70,000 Yanks here [AUS population 17M]

Today there are 26M Australians with only 30,000 more Americans!

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