Questions from [livejournal.com profile] puddingcat

18 Aug 2003 11:17 pm
karohemd: by LJ user gothindulgence (Default)
[personal profile] karohemd
Same rules as before



1. Which charities do you support, & why?

I don't, regularly at least. As sometimes I'm an impulsive buyer, I'm also an impulsive donator. It's a case of, oh, this sounds interesting, they could do with some of my extra cash. Sadly, I don't have much of that at the moment.

2. All other things being equal, would you rather settle permanently here or in Germany? Why?

Germany, definitely. While I'm not a patriot or particularly proud of my home country, I'm still German and always will be.
I have found a number of very good friends here but I still don't get the majority of the populace in certain situations.

To look at it realistically:
There's a certain imbalance where I live at the moment. I make a reasonable amount of money (the net salary in a similar job back in Germany wouldn't be much different) but I live in a tiny rented studio flat with no room to move. In a city like Nuremberg I would get a flat three times the size of this for the same rent. Not to mention costs of food, drink and other commodities. A good bottle of beer from a German supermarket would cost me 40p max, so less than half the price here.
Quality of housing: It's quite simply appalling here. To get the level of quality I'd consider standard in Germany, you would have to go to the high end here. I'm not talking about luxuries, I'm talking about good windows, a decent bathroom and kitchen. We'll not talk about food, especially bread.
Next, welfare/health care. It's going downhill in Germany as well but the quality is still better. The horror stories I've witnessed here from colleagues or friends suffering from NHS treatment makes me want to get a helicopter to Germany should I get really sick/have a horrible accident, even if I have to pay for the transfer myself.
If I stayed and worked here until the end of my days, I would not be able to live off the poor state pension.

I (and pretty much every continental European I've spoken to) sometimes feel like I'm in the 19th century...

I guess the ideal situation would be to do both. Live permanently in Germany but come back regularly to visit my friends here.

3. One thing / law / idea from Germany you'd bring to the UK? And the reverse?

A bit of the repeat from the above.

From Germany: Quality of housing
To Germany: Two major things I'll miss when going back. Takeaways and films in the original language on TV and at the cinema.

4. If you had the resources to go back to university / college etc, what would you study & why?

More languages because they fascinate me. My Tremere is essentially the ultimate linguist I'll never be.

5. Long one, this! If you could have no ill effects whatsoever from one particular substance (e.g. wine, beer, tobacco, specific illegal substances, caffeine etc), but all the others became completely intolerable to you, which would you choose to keep? This means you could (say) smoke without getting wrinkles, cancer, etc, drink like a fish without cirrhosis, take crack without getting addicted, sleep soundly after a strong coffee...

Hm, I drink not because of the alcohol but because I like the taste of a good wine or Malt and as with anything good, moderation is the key because if you could have it all the time, the nicety/luxury factor would soon wear off. I don't smoke, not because it's unhealthy but because it doesn't give me anything and smoke is simply disgusting and makes everything smell bad. I haven't tried illegal substances except dope which is sort of cool but linked to smoking so no to that as well.
What remains is coffee, and yes, I'd like to be able drink as much coffee as I used to 10 years ago, especially since discovering Blue Mountain. Now I have to be careful that my stomach doesn't play up and of course there's the not being able to sleep thing.
Caffeine it is, then.

Date: 18/8/03 03:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] toxicpixie.livejournal.com
I (and pretty much every continental European I've spoken to) sometimes feel like I'm in the 19th century...


Huzzah for Thatcher, Victorian Values and being the most competetive country in Europe.

We can do the last one due to having the populace most willing to mistake exploitation for life.

Nathan, The Toxic Pixie

Date: 18/8/03 03:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skinny-cartman.livejournal.com
House prices here are just plain stupid, renting or buying, probably because for some utter pointless reason brits think owning your own house is some desperate need, if that decreased then house prices would be lower and hence so would rent as really thats mainly used to cover the landlord's mortgages on the property plus a bit extra.
oh and if you fancy it ask away on the question thing

Date: 18/8/03 04:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com
A recently published study found that the average rent is a fifth of the net income in Germany. For me, it's a third...

It's one of those things I don't get here, pretty much everyon is in debt and people prefer being in debt for several decades (mortgage) rather than rent. Same goes for cars. I sometimes wonder how people can cope with it all.
What was the figure they published a couple of weeks ago? The average Brit owes about 2,200, that's quite scary.

Right, questions:

1 - What would be your ideal job? I'm not talking fantasy like chocolate taster or condom tester but a real job.

2 - Disregarding the ludicrous prices, how does Cambridge compare to other places you lived, in terms of people, things to do etc.?

3 - As a follow-up from 2, where would you like to live if you had the choice and wouldn't have to worry about job, rent and such things?

4 - How did you get into roleplaying and subsequently into the Cam?

5 - Just because it's popular, your three desert island discs.

Date: 19/8/03 12:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whiskeylover.livejournal.com
I would not be able to live off the poor state pension.
Well, the way things are going, that's not going to be much different in Germany soon.

Date: 19/8/03 01:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com
*nods*
It'll still be (hopefully) a percentage of your salary and not some arbitrary sum.

Date: 19/8/03 02:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whiskeylover.livejournal.com
Well, that remains to be seen- and it also depends on which salary you refer to? the salaray of your last job? the average salary of your working life? As it is no longer customary to remain with the same employer for the whole of your working life, the whole concept of a percentage of your salary is a little odd. Now they are really pushing private contributions, i.e. forget the state, go and arrange your own pension. I think the way forward is to make so much money that you don't need a state pension anyway... ideally by the time your thirty :)

Date: 19/8/03 05:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com
Then I'm over three years past the deadline...

Date: 19/8/03 05:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whiskeylover.livejournal.com
I should strt playing the lottery- retire at thirty, enjoy life for the next 60 or 70 years...

Sounds good to me

Date: 20/8/03 01:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] littlecat.livejournal.com
*bounces up and down waving hands in the air*

Interview me, interview me!!!

Ermm, please?

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