Umm Meatball bros…? Is this true?

Swipe for story time.

Judging other ethnicities for their culture is a no no but…

by FuckRedd1tHard

25 comments
  1. I’ve heard this about Swedish people, unfortunate slags, they’re almost Dutch in their parsimony.

  2. If you come to my house AND YOU REFUSE TO EAT, you better stay 5+km away from me for the rest of your life.

  3. this whole shit is so exagerrated and savages act like we’re intentionally starving your children. of course we ask if the guest wants some food. 9 of 10 times the guest will say NO because they have food at home or they don’t want food, or their family is making them food and insisting to feed them when their own family is expecting them to come home is rude af.

    i don’t get it. you people shit on our cuisine, you shit on our use of spices, you say all we eat is rotten fish and then you complain when we don’t give you our food, like, make up your mind dumbass. do you want rotten fish guts or not?

  4. Happened to me too. Had a super German best friend and their family sent me home whenever they ate 💀

  5. That kind of shit would open the news here, and the perpetrators subjected to public shame.

  6. What the fuck is wrong with you guys? Not that I care about your food, but come on! Not even in Genova they would be so cheap (but I might be wrong about this).

  7. Honestly, my experience with PIGS wasn’t that much better

    Maybe it had to do with the economy? No idea

  8. You are late to the party, bro. This was widely discussed like 2 years ago.

    Made it to the news in Sweden, some public personalities were worried about it “messing the country’s reputation”.

    And yeah, is weird af

  9. I don’t remember if my mom ever made a stunt like this, but usually if I had a friend over she made something cheap for everyone at home. One time she said that we can’t feed my friends everyday, when my bestfriend had visited like a week straight. She didn’t mean it in like a bad way, but that was the day I decided none of my friends will be hungry when visiting, or if I ever have kids their friends are always welcome to eat at my house.

    I spent a lot of time in Spain when I was younger, Pedro has given me some influence growing up. Yes, I love siesta.

  10. This happens in England. I spent many an afternoon as a child waiting in my mates room while they have dinner downstairs. We always fed the greedy cunts.

  11. When I was a kid I went to a friend’s house on their invitation, they were Swedish but as a kid in Britain they just had funny accents.

    When dinner was ready they called for us and we sat round the table, the plates and cutlery were set out except where I was seated there was nothing.

    Then they fucking made me recite the lords prayer or some such and then told me to leave so they can eat.

    It was a sleepover. It’s assumed that the invited child is also fed.

    Hey, Swedes, the fuck?

  12. I moved in Stockholm 3 years ago and everybody treated me so nice and mostly over feed me …i can’t believe this is really happening to some people …being italian for me is CRAZY

  13. This is quite common, and a cultural thing, seemingly hard to grasp for the rest of the world.

    A lot of it boils down to the fact that the employee rate for women is very high in Sweden, in fact it is the highest in the EU and has historically been so for a long time. Combined with the statistic that women cook 9 meals per week vs men who cook 4, this means that there is simply less cooking (in minutes) going on in Sweden. Families often plan their meals days ahead, to reduce to time between work and dinner.

    This leads to a couple of consequences:
    1) Sometimes there is no extra food.
    2) The parents of the kid who is the kid who is the guest assumes 1) and basically forbids their kid to eat at their friends house.
    3) The family that hosts the dinner assumes that the guests family have planned the dinner and does not want to interfere with their plans. The dinner time has a high status in Sweden because it’s pretty much the only time when the whole family is gathered at home at the same time.

    There are also additional cultural factors playing a part such as:
    1) You don’t want to trouble others or give others more work. If someone feeds your kid, as a Swede you would be in debt to them for the trouble (even though they think nothing of it)
    2) You don’t want your kid to interfere with their family time
    3) A common understanding among parents. They know the other parents might have planned the dinner ahead, they know the other parents might be tired from work etc.
    4) Similar to 1) you don’t take anything for granted. Even though someone lives in a nice house you don’t make the assumption that they can afford feeding your kid

    Edit: As a kid I had to call home and ask if I could eat at a friends place and my mom would make sure this was a ”formal” invitation from my friends parents. I believe more people are familiar with this little ritual

  14. That’s the norm in Denmark too. But the worst part is playing with your friend while smelling dinner being prepared, and your friends mom calls his name then he comes back and hits you with the “my mom ordered burgers/pizza or made food and there isn’t enough for you. But trust me it’s not because they hate their neighbours child or anything it’s just the norm. Maybe they may or may not eat whatever is being served.

  15. This is an older generation thing, have a family member who told me this happened growing up

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