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Europe has many countries and those have many regions. Some are more developed than others, but I would say save the poorest areas of Eastern Europe, even the poor areas are better off than the poor areas of the US.
The higher developed areas of Europe seem light years ahead of the US, despite the fact that they didn’t need AC until recently (and therefore don’t have it). |
| Europe is much more in north than the US. My Europe doesn't need AC; we need heat and we have it. We also have one of the fastest Internets in the world and it is free. Food and gas is expensive but that's the 1st world, not Venezuela. |
| Europe allied with the US against USSR after WWII, so it is 1st World. |
Air conditioning is rare in Washington state. Everything is expensive because the economy is strong. |
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We lived in Germany for three years, so I can speak on the AC thing. Germans generally believe AC is unhealthy. They are also very environmentally conscious.
I don't know what you mean about the water. We never had issues with running water whenever we wanted when we lived in Germany. And the tap water was clean and tasted good. "Everything" in Germany is not super expensive. Some things, like electronics/computers, are more expensive. I found that groceries were NOT more expensive, and produce and meat were of a very high quality, so no idea what you mean by this. We were thrilled with the quality of life in Germany, actually. Were you there for, what, two days in a hotel? Maybe you just picked a bad hotel for your trip. |
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OP a hint - it is so not about AC and you may be viewing cost all wrong too.
Keep traveling and gaining perspective though. It’s a great big beautiful world. |
| Clearly OP has never been to a “third world” (that is NOT the correct term we use now!) country. If you have, you’d understand why. |
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A lot elementary schools in the U.S. didn't have AC. Mine didn't in the Midwest. We weren't in the building in the summer. My grandparents didn't have AC.
To me, it's an indication of how safe the neighborhood is, that you can leave door screens and windows open at night. I loved when we had the windows open. When the AC is on, no windows are open. |
| San Francisco and San Diego homes generally don’t have a/c. And super expensive. |
This. We spent a few weeks in "summer" not far from Frankfurt some years back. It was COLD, cloudy, and rainy. In late July. |
| New England is hit/miss with AC. I’ve had well running water issues in the States in Virginia and plenty of residents across the country have no health insurance. |
| It depends on where you are. There are parts of Italy that definitely feel third world and come with the corruption and high crime to boot. |