Very little mention (once, briefly, on the first page?) for the UK. Blighty, Limeyland, for some of you possibly where your Pilgrim ancestors came from, when they were fed up of the religious freedoms enjoyed here?
I'm not saying it's going to be brilliant. The weather can be... Well, British. (Floods and hail and stuff, the other day, meanwhile I'm just recovering from sunburn after one particular day in short-sleeves and no appropriate clothing/slap-on preparation. We actually have
more tornadoes than you do, but admittedly they're smaller fry. We're located at 50-odd degrees north of the equator, but thanks to your kind provision of the Stream from the Gulf, it doesn't tend to feel like it. Until and unless the Jet Stream wanders south and we're struck with colder weather than we expect. At which point those in London see half an inch of snow and tremble in fear at the breakdown of society, while those in the North of England and Scotland... just get on with things. Or so it seems!) The cuisine, likewise. (Really, we like importing things. Including fries. Despite having chips. Which are nothing like crisps. And what's all this "English Muffin" thing? Apart from possibly something to look for on PornTube or similar...
) A lot of the TV and an almost overwhelming majority of the films are American, so very little change there, except, of course, that we have a few originals that were so good that they took and redid in the US to... varying acclaim (Red Dwarf to Being Human being the main spectrum, by my experience... And I've seen a
single clip from the US version of Dad's Army... Woah... Anyway, these days there are often near-simultaneous releases of anything sufficiently hyped up, whether broadcast TV or film, although other things may take time to trickle across the pond.)
Our spelling is Johnson's, not Webster's (giving it our own flavour and colour, right down the centre) and our accents are many and varied probably beyond your belief. We generally don't mind you rebellious colonials too much, as long as you aren't obnoxious about it. Our politics is perhaps a tad more left wing, but our Liberals are not "Pinko Commie Stalinist Trotskyites" (and, indeed, are currently in bed with the Right Wing party), but then our Labour Party has been far from that too for the last decade and a half, at least. Oh, and our Left Wingers use the colour red, and our Right Wingers use the colour blue. None of them use pachyderm or equine symbols (lessee: a rose to the 'left'; a phoenix, I think, to the 'middle'; and... are the right using a sort of tree motif at the moment? I forget). We haven't had a black Prime Minister (and of course not Head Of State), but we had a woman as Prime Minister more than three decades ago (with varying degrees of popularity among the voting masses, but mostly due to politics, rather than chauvinism) and of course the Queen is in her 60th year of being in that position (accidents of birth, notwithstanding, most people think it's a happy accident, and Charles has a lot to live up to if/when he finally becomes (possibly) George VII). Nothing is particularly poisonous or dangerous, well, as far as wildlife is concerned, ignoring everything that's technically poisonous but that couldn't do any real thing to a human. Rogue livestock and pets are probably most of the problem, after removing the human menaces from the equation. But with guns largely a rarity, you can (except for often well-reported exceptions to this rule) generally rule out being killed by criminal, civilian or law-enforcement firearms. The most common lethal weapon in the UK (intentionally or otherwise) is probably the car.
Which leads us on to suggesting that the fuel prices are probably what you'd consider extortionate. Petrol(eum), or Gas(oline) to you, of the "Regular Unleaded" type, has recently in my area gone
down in price to 'merely' 137.9 to 139.9 pence-per-litre in most local outlets (though some are still above 140, with the obligatory ".9" ending). Let's see, if I have used the various on-line converters correctly, at the lower end that's roughly US$2.16 for slightly over a quarter of your gallons, or nearly US$8.20 for one US gallon. Randomly checking, in DC, US$3.26 to 3.33. Orange County can apparently afford to pay 3.49 to 3.53. In Anchorage it's still all less than US$4 (Mostly low to mid 3.90s). Honolulu is slightly above $4. That probably affects all forms of transport. However, while I wouldn't say our Public Transport system is brilliant (or always cheap) but, OTOH, you're pretty likely to have a route to and from your destination unless you're regularly doing a rural->city commute of some kind, if you're not going to try driving on the
rightcorrect side of the road, for a change...
There's a lot said about our Healthcare system. Especially some of the bad things being picked up by the anti-Medicare (or whatever it is) people, Stateside. But I'll give you a for-instance on this... Was chatting online with a group of people, once, and one of them complained that his nosebleed wasn't stopping. He didn't want to go to his local A&E because he was in the US and he was worried about the insurance/cost issues. I've suffered from nosebleeds a lot, and when
I had an instance where it wasn't stopping, I went to a hospital (not even my own, I was on holiday in another part of the UK) and got seen as an outpatient and treated and... well, no costs. Whatever else you might think of the welfare state system, I'm pretty thankful that I could get that sorted (never mind the other instances in my many-decade life-so-far when I've needed medical care). I have absolutely
no idea what happened with the US guy with the nosebleed. He was still prevaricating when I had to drop offline. I can only hope that he saw sense, if he didn't recover on his own, and there was no practical way to even
attempt to get back in touch.
What else... Well, I'm not sure what I can say that won't be even
more biased (towards or
against the UK) than than I already have been in some of the above. Military? Well, smaller and smaller, but my general impression is they're very professional. And when properly deployed seem to get the job done, without apparently using the US gung-hoiness we expect. (Old WW2 joke: "When the Luftwaffe planes attack, the British duck; When the RAF places attack, the Germans duck; when the USAF planes attack
everyone ducks!". Ok, it
is an old one, but...) If anyone talks about the US having to get us out of a jam in WWs 1&2, I'd riposte that they came late to the party, but I'd rather not go into that kind of mudslinging in the first place. (Besides, what won the war for the Allies was the
Godwinated one's decision to attack Russia,
far more arguably...)
So, yeah, maybe you'd like to look at this wet (or scorching, windy, becalmed, flat, hilly, friendly, insular, forward-looking, backward-thinking, properly-speaking, badly-spelling, healthcare-conscious, badly-toothy, happy, grumbling, decently well-off, taxed-to-death, left-wing, right-wing, politically-averse, war-winning, lap-dogging...) little island. We don't bite. Much.