Thank you JOG.
I admit it is difficult to set oneself free of stereotypes, and I do admit I feel offended by what I read, sometimes.
Most of the time I just shrug and pass to the next thread, sometimes I do not.
Although I still feel "American" in many many ways, because of my childhood (and even this is difficult to acknowledge by some Forum members) I have learned to refrain from discussions which address purely domestic issues.
However, when "world trends" are discussed, I feel I am entitled as anyone else.
Going back to the "stereotype" with which I opened my post, I have found Northern Europe still entertains many stereotypes on Southern Europe, most of which are over 100 years old.
Unfortunately, the same applies to what many people in the US believe.
Once I was browsing through the computer section at Walmarts in Portsmouth, Va., and a lady asked : "
really? you have internet in Italy?"
to which I replied : "
No, I have to truck it up to Switzerland and ask somebody to lend me their PC"

How many of you knew the very first programmable electronic calculator was designed in Italy by Olivetti ?

De facto, the very first desktop PC ? in 1964 ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olivetti_Programma_10110 of these were bought by NASA for the Apollo Project

Anybody who was aircrew on a USAF B-52 knew them well

Unfortunately, Olivetti's founder and CEO insisted "we produce typewriters, not electronic gimmicks" and sold the blueprints and lot to IBM.
In fact, if you look at the Programma_101 and at IBM's 5100 10 years later, you can clearly see the timeline

It was copied by Hewlett-Packard and sold as the HP-1000
Other stereotypes ?
Hollywood blockbuster productions such as "
Troy" (with a blond and clean-shaven Achilles")
or "
300" (with a clean shaven and pierced King Xerxes - when only
slaves were pierced and/or clean shaven)
or "
Gladiator", where "evil" Emperor Commodus was actually a very reasonable man, and certainly did NOT murder his father!
or "
Braveheart", where hero William Wallace is depicted as a fiery yet hillbilly rebel, when he was actually a learned aristocrat...
...or the nickname "Braveheart" itself, which did not belong to Wallace but to his counterpart Robert the Bruce
or "
10.000BC", where effemminated Egyptian sorcerer-priests had trained mammooths...

Mammooths?

In Egypt? Hellooo?
Gotta go now. I have to discipline a few snotty-nosed, garlic eating Frenchmen...