You alright Portugal?
48ReplyOh Portugal's feeling alriiight
26Reply"mmm, medicine, my favourite..."
12ReplyPortugal (and Switzerland, I think?) had a heroin problem in the 2000s. They decriminalized it and it was a major success.
10ReplyBC needs to do the same. But instead we’re criminalizing open use which increases the likelihood of death for those doing drugs alone. 🤦♀️
1Reply
Bóbr 🦫
36Replykurva anyád bóber
8ReplyJakie bydle!
7Reply
Poo innit
33ReplyProbably talking about the weather or the food
18ReplyShite
5ReplyFookin shoite m8
6Reply
👍
28ReplyGerman efficiency
24Reply🍺
1Reply
Germany: Great!
Italy: Hurray!
France: Love!
Austria: 😐 26ReplyUK: crap
Swiss: missing 1Reply
Uh, Turkey, we need to talk...
20ReplyThe one thing that comes to mind for wolves and Turkey is the Grey Wolves, I wonder if it's related
9ReplyExactly.
6Reply
Let them cook, we need more programmers.
3Replyit's not furries dawg, it's Asena, turkish myth
2Reply
2Reply
Bóbr kurwa
16Replyja pierdolę jakie bydlę
4Reply
Give us a Guinness pint emoji ffs
Nobody using that is off to drink German-style Steiners
10Reply🍻 I am not surprised.
9ReplySame, Austria, same.
9ReplyIs there a source for this data?
8ReplyNorway has tacos?
8ReplyYep it's kind of a thing. Any Friday can be tacofredag in Norway.
https://thenorwayguide.com/taco-friday/
https://livingwithnorwegians.com/taco-friday-in-norway-fredagstaco/
https://theculturetrip.com/europe/norway/articles/how-taco-tuesday-became-taco-friday-in-norway
12Reply
Britain’s just talking about water conditions at the local beach
8ReplyBelgium has waffles? C'mon.
6ReplyYeah I feel like that one has to be trolling them
4Reply
Hinga dinga durgen, IT'S TACO DAY
5ReplyOK, so Turkey is fascist and Portugal has a needle
as its most used emoji?? And what does the polish beaver stand for? 4ReplyBobr!
3Reply
seems like a strange definition of europe?
3ReplyWhy is Russia shaped so weird?
2ReplyThey wanted to use the geographical definition of Europe, so they cut off everything beyond the Ural mountains and Caspian sea.
9ReplyEurasia gang
1Reply
You say european but mean the EU. There's a slight difference.
0ReplyRussia is not part of Europe.
-9ReplyIt is. Europe is commonly defined all the way to the Ural mountains, which are located somewhere in the middle of Russia. Most of russian population lives in Europe.
22ReplyAnd 'continents' are just arbitrary conventions. Where they begin/end can't be settled by anything objective. There are several models for delineating them.
11ReplyCulturally I'd also put that part of Russia closer to the Slavic countries than to any fully Asian country.
4ReplyBut why would the other countries, like Switzerland would be excluded then?
Edit: I'm asking in the context of the Russia is/is not in Europe conundrum.
1Reply