# Lessons in the US of A Recently I made the mistake of living in the US of A, the paramount capitalist hell of the modern world. As a consequence, I had to relearn some facts, because everything works different here. ## August 2023: Moving in ### The good - They put free pads and tampons even in the men's bathroom - I can ride the bus for free with my student card - By custom I should greet the bus driver, who will greet back - Food comes in absolutely gigantic portions - Central campus is much more walkable than I thought - A French press is very easy to use and much cheaper than a coffee machine - To request a stop on a bus you just pull the rope-y thing - You can take all the time you need to get off the bus. No pressure to stand up in advance. - Pedestrians have absolute right of way, I hypothesize you could even cross the street blindfolded and not get hit by a car ### The bad - Power outages happen every year and somehow people are okay with it and do nothing to improve the infrastructure - Toilet paper comes in single ply by default - Apartments don't have ceiling lights and rely on floor lamps. There is a dedicated outlet wired to a light switch which I found by poking with a multimeter - Everything in the supermarket seems reasonably priced as long as you don't convert it to your home currency - The washing machine isn't working?? - Power failure?? In IKEA??? - The carpet makes my desk jiggly - Drinks are most often cold, even chilled. Even chocolate. - Internet failure?? In a university??? ### The neither - Kroger closes at 10 pm - The cord to a power strip is very, _very_ thicc - My apartment has a coaxial port for internet which I've never seen in my life - Michigan law does not require you to have a front license plate