The Holocaust was the ONLY thing I learned about WW2...every. single. fucking. year. I'm not saying it's not important, but good lord, didn't anything else happen in the world ever?!I was taught a quick and sanatized version of WW2 (war began in 1941 when aggressor nations attacked Pearl Harbor) and there was no mention of the holocaust, just that the Nazis mindlessly slaughtered civilian populations and that they were very bad people.
Korea was an attempt to stop communism from spreading and since we saved South Korea we were the winners fair and square.
Never learned about Vietnam.
Geography was mostly "learn the fifty states and the provinces of Canada for extra credit."
A lot of people I know learned a song for the states, but I must have missed that class. Just like I never learned how to play the recorder.True. I can if I look at a map, but I couldn't list all 50 off the top of my head. There's always one or two I'd forget...usually Delaware.Like Chicago? Seriously. Many Americans can't name all of the fifty states.
Seriously, though, I don't know if other schools are different, but I never really learned any kind of geography beyond the continents, oceans, and the states. I never even had to learn the capitals.
I can list the whole 50 in alphabetical order but that is only because I am a bit of a trivia buff.
When I was a tennager we had to be able to draw free-hand maps of the world, of Great Britain, and of Australia and we were expected to know where the 'major' countries in the world were.
and the provinces of Canada for extra credit.
I would also like to mention that the only thing that happened in the American Revolution was that a bunch of people dumped tea into Boston Harbor. And Paul Revere rode a horse and yelled a lot.
The abridged version of history is occasionally hilarious.
What's not hilarious is that abridged version of history is the only history I was ever taught.
I've heard of people who think Canada is a state...
The only people who have, online, ever asked me where Tasmania is have all been Americans.
However this could be a result of people from other countries refusing to admit ignorance. Maybe they Google Tasmania instead of asking 'where's that'.
The only people who have, online, ever asked me where Tasmania is have all been Americans.
However this could be a result of people from other countries refusing to admit ignorance. Maybe they Google Tasmania instead of asking 'where's that'.
I bet you the vast majority of Americans have no clue as to where Tasmania is. Sadly though, they would recognize the name because of the Tasmanian Devil from Looney Tunes.
Tasmania, that's in New Zealand, right?
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I knew it was all in that general area. That's something, right?Tasmania, that's in New Zealand, right?
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Yep, which is all a part of Australia.
Tasmania, that's in New Zealand, right?
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Yep, which is all a part of Australia.
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