. . . expect us to understand them?
I recently got into quite a heated discussion at work with a Frenchwoman who called New Yorkers rude and said Southerners were uncultured. When I gently tried to point out to her that her attitude was a bit arrogant/insular and that maybe she found them that way because they were different from her fellow Frenchmen and her, she got quite angry and said I was the arrogant one.
It got me to thinking. I know that Rick is quite big on Americans travelling to Europe with an open mind and not expecting everything to be as it is back home, but do Europeans strive to understand us and how different we are from them? Do Europeans understand that "being American" doesn't mean "being wrong or being inferior" but that it simply means that we have a different way of doing things?
I used to work in the tourist industry and Europeans have a strong reputation for being extremely difficult tourists: they don't understand our drinking laws, they don't learn our tipping customs, they don't usually travel to "Real America" but head to tourist traps instead, etc.
I'd really like to hear from people who have experience dealing with Europeans on a personal basis to see if they want to understand us or if I just have a really rude coworker who happens to be French.