luchog
Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
It's far more feasible for a Working Joe in the UK to holiday on the continent than it is for one in the US to travel to Europe or Asia.You wouldn't expect the average UK working Joe (that would be Jack) to be able to travel, either.
Not really. Since the two most common destinations for vacationers outside the US are Canada and Mexico, and neither require a passport to travel to.I think a good way of comparing is the share of people who have passports. That's your "ticket" to travelling anyway.
When you live in a country larger than Europe, with more geographical diversity, there really isn't much of an impetus to do so.This goes against what drkitten argues: That things abroad isn't a big interest to Americans. It is also my experience, I'm afraid.
Wrong.Certainly. But you don't get different cultures, different languages. It's like going to Disneyland, where you get all kinds of rides, but you basically stay in the same spot.
Different languages is a red herring, since no one aside from linguistics and literature students travel to another country primarily for the language.
As for different cultures, it's quite clear that you know far less about US culture than you try to claim. The US is one of the most culturally diverse nations in the world. The cultural difference between western Washington State and southern British Columbia just to the north in Canada is negligible when compared to the difference between western Washington and, say, southern Texas, or the Louisiana Bayou. Same thing with southern Texas or Arizona, and northern Mexico or Baha California; compared to, say, Northern California or Maine.
There is more cultural diversity between many regions of the US than there is between, say France and Belgium, Austria and Germany; or even Italy and Greece.
A lot of modern medicine, and other technology, says otherwise. Trial-and-error and serendipidy are still very popular.This is not enough in today's world. We can't tinker with things until they work, while not understanding what we are doing.
Look at how science works: Science doesn't work with The Lone Scientist Working In Solitude. Science is very much a global communal endeavour.
Having more time to travel isn't a decisive factor? What colour is the sky on your planet? Is it blue like on Earth?We do have more vacation time than Americans, but we don't spend all of it travelling. We spend maybe a week or two vacationing, and then spend it at home with the family. I don't think it is a decisive factor.
Time is probably the second most important factor, after expense.
And while it's easy for Europeans to grab a train off to Deutschland for the weekend; it's not quite so simple to do that for Americans.Americans take time off, too. Especially on Fridays, after 1pm....
Not as Pricey for Americans.Heck, it is also pricey to visit France, but we still go.
Here's a question for you. What is the primary impetus for recreational travel? It's to experience something different than you're used to. Different nature, different cultures, etc. When one can experience such a dramatic difference between regions in their own nation, why expend the considerable additional effort and expense to travel outside it? Particularly when you add in the fact that the impetus for travel is slightly different for Americans. Americans travel for natural diversity more often than cultural diversity; exactly the opposite of Europeans (but similar to the Japanese) IME. And there's far more of that in the US than in Europe.