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Fuck Europe! Thread


               
2024 Sep 19, 3:08pm   11,117 views  261 comments

by MolotovCocktail   follow (4)  

Some data to use when some European bitches about America.


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212   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 12, 9:56am  

The euro being less likely than even BRICS imaginary money to challenge the dollar has got to be humiliating.

They think it's bad now. Just wait until US stable coins are used to buy oil internationally.



https://www.politico.eu/article/lagardes-euro-moment-busted-by-stablecoins/
215   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 17, 4:55pm  

Rape stats: 2000 v 2023


216   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 18, 1:18pm  

Picture of the year:


217   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Aug 18, 1:55pm  

Great Thread about the European Primitive Superstitions about Air Conditioning
Even window or portable ones used just for a few days.

"Every French person has the same story of how they got deathly ill from Air Conditioning in the USA"
"They believe that a few days of Air Conditioning is especially damaging for Global Warming, while using Electric or Gas Heat 6 months of the year"
"Air Conditioning changes your body's polarity"
222   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Aug 26, 3:36pm  

DemoralizerOfPanicans says


Great Thread about the European Primitive Superstitions about Air Conditioning
Even window or portable ones used just for a few days.

"Every French person has the same story of how they got deathly ill from Air Conditioning in the USA"
"They believe that a few days of Air Conditioning is especially damaging for Global Warming, while using Electric or Gas Heat 6 months of the year"
"Air Conditioning changes your body's polarity"

One thing I noticed from European A/C Fear stories, from Older 55+ Europeans, is they seem to have confused Legionaire's Disease with Air Conditioning in General.

Another big one is connecting Air Conditioning to "Liver Disease" (?!?!?!)
223   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 27, 9:17am  

This is extraordinary. For the many of you who wonder how the EU could agree to such a humiliating "deal" with Trump, wonder no more.


We have an unusually straightforward answer directly from the horse's mouth: Sabine Weyand, who's the Directorate-General for Trade at the EU commission.


As she puts its:
- "If you didn't hear me say the word 'negotiation' – that's because there wasn't one." => the U.S. dictated the terms
- "From the Commission's perspective, this was a strategic compromise, not an ideal economic solution" => they're aware this completely f*cks the EU economically
- "The European side was under massive pressure to find a quick solution to stabilize transatlantic relations – especially with regard to security guarantees" => the EU agreed to the "deal" under a protection racket
- "We have a land war on the European continent. And we are completely dependent on the United States. The member states were not prepared to take the risk of further escalation – that would have been the consequence of European countermeasures." => Europe acted out of fear, choosing economic submission because of its total dependence on the U.S. (which ironically will only worsen the dependence)


There you have it, she said the quiet part out loud: the EU is in such a terrible strategic situation and EU leaders have so little courage that they're unable and unwilling to say 'no' to even the most humiliating demands.



https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1960603151154790469
226   Ceffer   2025 Sep 7, 9:58am  

DemoralizerOfPanicans says


Great Thread about the European Primitive Superstitions about Air Conditioning

Legionnaire's disease was a DARPA experiment to use the public as guinea pigs to test using ventilation systems to spread disease entities/poisons (like you see in the movies). A guy in Santa Cruz lost his wife and children after going to a movie downtown, but he survived. Bay Area was targeted.

The notion of air conditioning spreading disease isn't such a stretch, because the drippings and moisture pulled out of the air can grow molds and even amoebas (brain eaters) that can be spread by the blowers in poorly maintained older systems. However, it is grossly exaggerated. Systems that adequately divert the moistures won't be a problem.

When I was in the south, there were old window units that definitely were mold blasters. You could smell it when you turned them on. However, sweltering in the humidity was the only other option.

https://youtu.be/ySgdcE9NyA0?si=gJO5Q922AVAYQESt




229   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 16, 3:10pm  

Look at this one closely:


230   stereotomy   2025 Sep 17, 9:38am  

MolotovCocktail says


Look at this one closely:



Since the mean is always greater than the median for any right skewed distibution (such as income), what is the median Dutch income? I bet, comparing apples to apples, it's lower than that of the US.

AI statistics FAIL.
231   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 17, 8:43pm  

stereotomy says

MolotovCocktail says



Look at this one closely:



Since the mean is always greater than the median for any right skewed distibution (such as income), what is the median Dutch income? I bet, comparing apples to apples, it's lower than that of the US.

AI statistics FAIL.


You found it.
232   Patrick   2025 Sep 17, 9:00pm  

Grok says it's false:


To provide the median and average annual gross salaries for the Netherlands and the United States in U.S. dollars (USD), I’ll convert the Netherlands’ figures from euros (€) to USD using the exchange rate of 1 EUR = 1.18 USD (as you specified for September 17, 2025). The figures are for full-time workers, pre-tax, sourced from Centraal Planbureau (CPB) for the Netherlands and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) for the U.S.

Netherlands
Median: €46,500 × 1.18 = $54,870
Average: €46,500 × 1.18 = $54,870 (mean aligns with median per CPB data)

United States
Median: $62,088
Average: $66,622

Using 1 EUR = 1.18 USD, reflecting today’s rate (September 17, 2025).
Context: The higher exchange rate increases the Netherlands’ salaries in USD compared to the prior 1.11 rate, though U.S. salaries remain higher due to market differences.
Sources: CPB for Netherlands (2025 estimates); BLS for U.S. (2024 data, adjusted for 2025).


Not only are salaries lower over there, taxes are way higher.
233   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 17, 9:08pm  

Patrick says

Grok says it's false:


It's false because you can't compare median to average, which they are purposely doing disingenuously.
234   Misc   2025 Sep 17, 9:52pm  

It's not so much the taxes you pay...it's what you get for the taxes.
235   mell   2025 Sep 17, 10:34pm  

Misc says


It's not so much the taxes you pay...it's what you get for the taxes.

Agreed, in some European countries you get net more because as a taxpayer you get to enjoy all of the services, no matter how rich you are.

People crow about how high taxes are over there but given roughly the same salary you would come out far ahead for example in Germany with a family of four. Close to free childcare, schools, Universities, groceries at least 40% cheaper etc. Also Germany has flat 25% cap gains, not that shit that taxes you at the income tax rate for short term gains, and Switzerland has no capital gains tax.

Of course in many industries (e.g. tech) the salaries are lower, but this bullshit about how the US has such low taxes simply doesn't hold true as soon as you factor in benefits and cost of living. Especially since the leftoids ratcheted up the progressive tax rates, federally and in the states, but cut everyone making over $150k off from almost any benefit is just crap and Trump hasn't done enough yet to revert it, although he is moving in the right direction.

I'd argue that on many levels the US tax system of progessively taxing you the richer you are while cutting off almost all benefits at a relatively low income threshold is more socialist/communist than in some European countries.
236   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 17, 10:40pm  

mell says

Close to free childcare, schools, Universities, groceries at least 40% cheaper etc


There's nothing 'free' on that list. And the more the consumer is divorced from paying a true price for something, the more warped supply will be.
237   mell   2025 Sep 17, 10:46pm  

MolotovCocktail says


mell says


Close to free childcare, schools, Universities, groceries at least 40% cheaper etc


There's nothing 'free' on that list. And the more the consumer is divorced from paying a true price for something, the more warped supply will be.


They aren't divorced from it, they are paying via taxes. You can always pay for a private institution as well. The supply is extremely ample and schools are much better on average, don't kid yourself. Europe has many problems such as mass immgration, but quality of education and childcare ain't one of them. Of course there are differnces by country, but Germany and Switzerland beat the US in that department by miles. The US is great for singles advancing their careers, working and playing hard and building their fortunes/nest eggs early on. For families, meh
238   REpro   2025 Sep 17, 11:25pm  

mell says

They aren't divorced from it, they are paying via taxes. You can always pay for a private institution as well. The supply is extremely ample and schools are much better on average, don't kid yourself. Europe has many problems such as mass immgration, but quality of education and childcare ain't one of them. Of course there are differnces by country, but Germany and Switzerland beat the US in that department by miles. The US is great for singles advancing their careers, working and playing hard and building their fortunes/nest eggs early on. For families, meh


What happen with education quality in US? Europe won't be immune. Do you think all African emigrants' children attending nonpublic school? Teachers' demographics will change as well. Just few more years.
239   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 17, 11:36pm  

mell says


They aren't divorced from it, they are paying via taxes


You said 'close to free', not me.
241   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 17, 11:43pm  

REpro says


The US is great for singles advancing their careers, working and playing hard and building their fortunes/nest eggs early on. For families, meh


What families? Europeans have less brats than we do. So much for their system is better for families.

And why should I pay for someone else's brats?

Fuck schools! Fuck childcare!

You want those things, YOU pay for them.

What's next? Free or subsidized housing? Free phones? Oh wait!

Fuck socialism. Fuck Europe fluffers on ParNet pushing this bullshit, too.
242   mell   2025 Sep 18, 7:35am  

REpro says

What happen with education quality in US? Europe won't be immune. Do you think all African emigrants' children attending nonpublic school? Teachers' demographics will change as well. Just few more years.

You are correct, the quality has been declining everywhere due to mass immigration and this needs to be reversed. However schools in the US are are worse than in Europe and that includes most private institutions as well due to the massive grift and woke shit that took place in the past decades. You are better off attending school in Europe these days imo and save the tuition.
243   mell   2025 Sep 18, 7:37am  

MolotovCocktail says

Fuck socialism. Fuck Europe fluffers on ParNet pushing this bullshit, too.

The American tax system is more socialist than the tax system of many European countries because it does not allow those who pay the brunt of the taxes (the producing earners) to access most of its benefits.
244   WookieMan   2025 Sep 18, 7:57am  

mell says

You are better off attending school in Europe these days imo and save the tuition.

Take blacks out of the mix. Some hispanics as well. Our education system looks much better than you'd think. 50% of inner city blacks likely won't graduate high school. 25% of hispanics won't.

Also truancy for all kids is a problem. My son has told me there are kids that have already missed 2 weeks of school this year, mid September. Women.... Younger moms will just do a sob story with the school office and keep the kid home because Billy doesn't feel well and has a doctor that can write a note.

I get along great with my kids but if they're not puking or shitting their pants (they don't) you're going to school. Consistency is key. I'll give them medicine for a fever of 100-102ºF, but until it gets above that, you're going to school. Drink water and just tell the PE teacher you're a bit under the weather. Sit in your classes and get it done. We need to bank absences for vacation which usually is somewhat education with excursions and stuff anyway. So we avoid the "I don't feel good" absences.
245   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 18, 8:54am  

mell says


The American tax system is more socialist than the tax system of many European countries because it does not allow those who pay the brunt of the taxes (the producing earners) to access most of its benefits.


No. That is not the definition of socialism.
246   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 25, 10:16am  


The fall of Rome was caused by an INTERNAL demographic crisis.

What is happening to Western Europe with Africa is EXACTLY what once happened to the Roman Empire when it integrated barbarian populations to solve its labour shortages.

The late Roman Empire faced a demographic and military challenge that it could not solve internally. Falling birth rates among Roman citizens, coupled with endless wars and epidemics, created a chronic shortage of manpower. To compensate, Rome began to settle Germanic and other barbarian tribes inside its frontiers.

At first, these groups were supposed to provide soldiers and farmers under imperial control. In practice, however, they retained their own identities, their own leaders, and their own laws. Rome, desperate for labor and troops, compromised its own cohesion in order to survive.

The parallels with Western Europe today are striking. Europe faces demographic decline, with fertility rates well below replacement levels. To sustain economies, fill jobs, and maintain welfare systems, European governments have turned to large-scale immigration from Africa and the Middle East.

Like the barbarians in Rome, these newcomers are expected to integrate into the host societies, adopt the culture, and contribute to the state. But in many cases, they maintain distinct identities, religious practices, and loyalties. Instead of assimilation, Europe sees the growth of parallel societies.

History shows the risks of such policies. The settlement of the Visigoths inside the Roman Empire in 376 was initially justified as a pragmatic solution: cheap soldiers in exchange for land. Yet within two years, the Visigoths rebelled and annihilated a Roman army at Adrianople in 378, a disaster from which the Empire never fully recovered.

Later, the empire relied on federated barbarian kingdoms to police its borders, but these became independent powers, carving out realms in Spain, Gaul, and Italy itself. The empire had not been destroyed by external invasion, but by its inability to control the peoples it had admitted.

Western Europe risks repeating this mistake. By importing populations on a massive scale without the cultural infrastructure to assimilate them, it creates conditions where newcomers live by their own norms rather than those of the host nation. The result is cultural fragmentation, rising insecurity, and the erosion of shared identity.

Rome discovered too late that its attempt to integrate foreign peoples had fatally weakened its cohesion. Europe may be heading down the same path, driven by the same illusion: that demographics and labor shortages can be solved by mass importation, without consequence for the survival of the civilization itself.

Civilizations do not fall overnight. Rome took centuries to collapse, but its decline began with demographic exhaustion and reliance on outsiders. Europe, by turning to Africa as a solution to its own decline, is repeating the same trajectory — not through conquest from without, but through disintegration from within.


https://x.com/Arrogance_0024/status/1971205325903577480
247   REpro   2025 Sep 25, 11:43pm  

MolotovCocktail says

mell says



The American tax system is more socialist than the tax system of many European countries because it does not allow those who pay the brunt of the taxes (the producing earners) to access most of its benefits.


No. That is not the definition of socialism.

In Norway you can access tax return of all your neighbors on the street. Police give a fine based on your income.
That closer to socialism.
248   MolotovCocktail   2025 Oct 6, 10:15pm  

It's not Trumpism when we do it


250   MolotovCocktail   2025 Nov 28, 11:04am  




Awesome troll account!

Check out his pinned post: https://x.com/eurofounder/status/1993748588707664325

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