Are they non-countries?
>>72000777
Yes.
>>72000777
>says mini-norway
>>72000777
Trips confirm, ausfags and leafs BTFO.
>>72000815
You fucking wish
>>72000815
Sweden is bigger than Norway, nigger
>>72000777
Yes. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_cringe
>>72000777
>Canada
yes. it´s just there and exists
>Australia
Is an interesting country with funny people and fascinating wildlife
>>72000880
KEK
an actual wiki article
>>72002255
you know it's a public thing and literally anyone can create them, right?
>>72000777
Yes, no point moving here Ahmed
>>72002330
WOA
>>72000880
>many Australians with convict ancestors are now more comfortable investigating and discussing their past, wearing their forebears status almost as a badge of pride. Colloquially, attempts by non-Australians to negatively connote convict pasts are laughed off by Australians, who are now more inclined to associate criminal forebears as evidence for the possession of more positively perceived Australian attributes such as anti-authoritarianism
>>72000777
Definitely. No real history, ass ends of the world, nothing important ever happened there, small population.
>>72000880
>Many cultural commentators in Canada[22] have suggested that a similar process also operates in that country. The specific phrase "cultural cringe" is not widely used to label the phenomenon in Canada, although it has been used in isolated instances; more typically, Canadian cultural commentators speak of a "Canadian inferiority complex"[23] or label specific instances of the phenomenon with satirical terms such as beaver hour.
>Prior to the 1970s, Canadian radio stations gave almost no airtime to Canadian music, and apart from CBC Television, Canadian television stations spent very little money on Canadian-produced programming; in response the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) developed Canadian content requirements for radio and broadcasters. Whether these 'Cancon' rules are necessary remains controversial.