It seems not, although there are opinions about the nipponese that they are highly polite and e.g. to stand in line for a bus or museum can be learned from them.
However – for any reason – guests are expected at least respectable local customs. But what if guests are told to stay at home? possibly it's a courtesy thing to say, but are they willing to believe it?
It was like this. In the parking lot at the “gallery” crowded so that the cars were waiting for a woman in the BMW colour shiny tombaku politely waited for individual to get in and leave.
However, it turned out that a large supply of shoes or rudeness simply, allowed a fast turn of the young sage Ukrainian with a platinum blonde in another BMW for over half a million and park.
Polka left and demanded that he leave the place she was waiting for. He laughed in her face – he's so clever...; he got himself a getaway before the war and a parking spot.
She tried to endanger him with the Border defender (because you are surely illegal here), but he besides knows that illegals are brought to the SG by Germans and politely admitted.
And erstwhile he was leaving for his well-deserved shopping, the woman in a rage of powerlessness ripped off his green plate and took it to the car. So loud he came back. He sat her in a car with another Ukrainians increasing out of the ground, and you politely gave her the plate and drove away.
Conclusion. We added to our local rudeness the arrogant, rich Ukrainians who feel – even though behind the Sanu line – like waiting for the losers who stayed in Ukraine to end the war so that they could return and enjoy life there.
This is the most optimistic version of events.
And yet “from the West” comes engineers and doctors...
Wojciech Popiela