2021-07-22
47 分钟According to a decades-long research project, the U.S. is not only the most individualistic country on earth; we’re also high on indulgence, short-term thinking, and masculinity (but low on “uncertainty avoidance,” if that makes you feel better). We look at how these traits affect our daily lives and why we couldn’t change them even if we wanted to.
In our previous episode, we made what may sound like a bold claim.
We said that a lot of good ideas and policies that work elsewhere in the world can't work in the US because our culture is just different.
Not necessarily better or worse, but very different.
That was our hypothesis, at least.
And we did find a number of learned people who had data to back up the hypothesis.
The people that came to New York early on, and they were from all sorts of different cultural backgrounds.
And that's helped produce the looseness that exists to this day.
Americans and westerners more generally are psychologically unusual from a global perspective.
In societies that are tighter, people are willing to call out rule violators.
Here in the US, it's actually a rule violation to call out people who are violating norms.
You want to be the same self regardless of who you're talking to or what context you're in.
In other places, they don't think it's a smart idea to be consistent.
Some of the measurable differences were a bit odd.
Apparently over 50% of cats and dogs in the US are obese.
The focus of that episode was american culture.
And how are we defining culture?
None of it is intentional.
It is what we got fed with our mother's milk and the porridge that our dad gave us.
That is one of the main guests in today's episode.
My name is Gert Jan Hofsteide.