Whenever you hear a snotty (and frustrated) European middlebrow presenting his stereotypes about Americans, he will often describe them as “uncultured,” “unintellectual,” and “poor in math” because, unlike his peers, Americans are not into equation drills and the constructions middlebrows call “high culture”—like knowledge of Goethe’s inspirational (and central) trip to Italy, or familiarity with the Delft school of painting. Yet the person making these statements is likely to be addicted to his iPod, wear blue jeans, and use Microsoft Word to jot down his “cultural” statements on his PC, with some Google searches here and there interrupting his composition. Well, it so happens that America is currently far, far more creative than these nations of museumgoers and equation solvers. It is also far more tolerant of bottom-up tinkering and undirected trial and error.
Wow look at all the europoors seething
What prompt did you insert into Chat GPT for this low-effort rant?
Btw, you have never, ever heard a European say Americans are “poor in math”. For starters “Math” is an Americanism (in the rest of the ango world it’s ‘Maths’).
iPod? How old is this copy pasta.
iPod? What year is it
2007