Other American things annoy me as well, not just spellings.

That's including ESRB, a system that gives video games labels of suitability. But not about that, it's the way their labels always get used and shown more for games than PEGI does on the internet these days, like commonly the "E" one (meaning "Everyone"). To be quite frank, I get very annoyed even occasionally or rarely seeing their labels 95% of the time, rather than naturally coming across PEGI labels like "3" that I'm much more used to and comfortable with. Why doesn't anyone else find this a problem as well? Why is it always me suffering mentally from this and being ruined on things I otherwise like? Why does America try to make everything their way? -_-

I had to make this topic and share the issue because...it really got to me in upset right now, forcing me to utter my own feelings out. I've been unintendedly receiving inward jolts from this issue so many times in my life. Please don't try to make me any worse if you have something to say. I mean it well, and no joke either. Understand?

Parents
  • LIght sigh... I have no idea what specifically you're referring to. But "America" has a long-standing history of doing what they want regardless of who it impacts. Being originally raised there, I can tell you a good deal of people might do the work to extract themselves from this insular thinking. And many won't. 

    Most of it seems - not quite driven by, so much as further provoked by corporate branding, psychologically bent to hack into the Neurotypical need to be unique - even at the cost of being correct.

Reply
  • LIght sigh... I have no idea what specifically you're referring to. But "America" has a long-standing history of doing what they want regardless of who it impacts. Being originally raised there, I can tell you a good deal of people might do the work to extract themselves from this insular thinking. And many won't. 

    Most of it seems - not quite driven by, so much as further provoked by corporate branding, psychologically bent to hack into the Neurotypical need to be unique - even at the cost of being correct.

Children