LOL at this thread!
A good many Americans who haven't ever traveled outside the US seem to have the notion that people in other countries lack morals, eat out of cans, live in substandard conditions and wish they could live here.
When we came back to the States after the war, I remember being questioned a lot about what we wore, what we ate, whether we lived in grass shacks, what the "natives" were like, whether anybody spoke English...it struck me as odd even back then when I was only about six years old. The men didn't wear loin cloths, the women didn't wear grass skirts, we didn't live on a diet of poi, and it was rare to meet someone who didn't speak English with the exception of elderly native Hawaiians. We lived in Quonset huts provided by the US military that were thrown up in a hurry so had electricity but not running water (which came from long rows of "bath" houses, one for each two rows of Quonset huts). It was wartime, after all, so we did have to make do! The general population lived in houses or apartments with running water, flush toilets and electricity. Imagine that
Those people at home felt sorry for me, "the little Filipino girl", although we lived in Hawaii. They were as well informed about geography as about how people not in the US lived.
Fast forward 40 years when I lived in Germany...you would be surprised how many Germans had their own provincial ideas about how Americans lived...no morals, eating out of cans but living in splendor out West where there were cowboys.
As far as I know, nobody I knew in Germany had a burning desire to leave hearth and home and rush off to America, nor did anybody I met in the UK, the Netherlands or anywhere else I've lived.
And nobody at home after the war had the smallest inclination to go to Hawaii and live in "primitive" conditions.