Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The taxation has killed the economies. Too many socialist at the voting booths. The same trend the US in on.
How are the poorest people in each country faring daily and when they face a crisis? The US does not do well in this measure. Countries with stronger social safety nets do very well. Our success should always be measured by the health and security of "the least of our brothers."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want to watch that stupid YouTube video — can someone summarize?
A guy doing man in the street interviews in London. One American, the rest British. All expressing surprise as most thought the UK would be in the top ten if it were a state. One women guessed the bottom 25% and said Americans like working more than the British.
The average European is fed anti-American news stories nonstop. Even if it is better here, they will never come to that conclusion.
I had six month maternity leave but European friends don’t believe me. It simply isn’t possible. Same with me going on a long vacation.
I told them my salary (around $300k) when they weirdly asked me, and their response was that healthcare is surely making up the difference. As if a healthy 40 year old woman pays $150k per year in healthcare. They had never even known someone making that much money and these are people with advanced degrees.
#tonedeaf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Norway, Finland and Denmark are also socialist countries with higher standards of living that the US.
This is a very often quoted falsity. Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden are not socialist countries. They are free market economies with many social programs. They also have small very homogeneous populations but that is slowly changing for the worse.
😳😳😳
God forbid the gene pool be polluted, right pp?
Anonymous wrote:The taxation has killed the economies. Too many socialist at the voting booths. The same trend the US in on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So basically, Europeans are "poorer" on average according to per capita GDP numbers, yet have nearly a decade higher life expectancy than the poorest states in the USA, higher literacy, and much more leisure time.
I think a lot of us would rather be "poor" Europeans by these standards.
I don’t think taxing us more and chilling our innovative ecosystem is going to make us happy. But I think it’s inevitable that we’re going to give it a try. We’ll see how it goes.
Do we actually have an “innovative” ecosystem? A tiny handful of companies control almost everything in this country, from what we eat to where we shop to what we watch on tv.
If I go to Europe or almost any other country there are actual small shops on almost every corner instead of mega chains like what we have here.
Only 46 companies have driven the vast majority of stock growth over the last 100 years. I am not sure if that counts as proof of an innovative ecosystem or not. We are just a bigger market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Norway, Finland and Denmark are also socialist countries with higher standards of living that the US.
This is a very often quoted falsity. Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden are not socialist countries. They are free market economies with many social programs. They also have small very homogeneous populations but that is slowly changing for the worse.
😳😳😳
God forbid the gene pool be polluted, right pp?
Do you have any stats that says things are moving in the right direction?
Yes I’m sure statistics support your desire for “homogenous” Scandinavian countries, right pp?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So basically, Europeans are "poorer" on average according to per capita GDP numbers, yet have nearly a decade higher life expectancy than the poorest states in the USA, higher literacy, and much more leisure time.
I think a lot of us would rather be "poor" Europeans by these standards.
I don’t think taxing us more and chilling our innovative ecosystem is going to make us happy. But I think it’s inevitable that we’re going to give it a try. We’ll see how it goes.
Do we actually have an “innovative” ecosystem? A tiny handful of companies control almost everything in this country, from what we eat to where we shop to what we watch on tv.
If I go to Europe or almost any other country there are actual small shops on almost every corner instead of mega chains like what we have here.
Only 46 companies have driven the vast majority of stock growth over the last 100 years. I am not sure if that counts as proof of an innovative ecosystem or not. We are just a bigger market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You have to look at the wealth gap as well. The distribution of wealth matters.
This is correct. I am not going to look up the stats for EU member states, Canada has a similar issue compared to the U.S.
The top 20% of Americans has an higher average income than the top 20% of Canadians. But the bottom 80% of Canadians has a higher average income than the bottom 80% of Americans. Plus the govt services and work culture are far more generous to Canadian workers than American workers. I think you will find EU countries often have a similar situation.
On the whole it is much hard being in the bottom 80% of Americans than the bottom 80% of the countries shown in the video.
I'm familiar enough with these creative "stats." Whoever came up with this one is playing a game by jumping one demographic that is definitely poor in the US, the poor, with fewer benefits etc compared to most western countries, and excluding the rich to make it seem like the middle class is richer in Canada. It's not quite the truthful picture. Median salary (meaning 50% make more, 50% make less) in the US is $64,000. In Canada it is $46,000. This gives you a more accurate picture.
As for Euros, outside places like Switzerland, most people do have lower incomes compared to American peers. Material wealth is higher in the US. Quality of life is subjective. I love Europe, but most people do live modest lives in small apartments. It's not all historic urban centers but plenty of grimy suburbs and tower blocks.
As the middle class in America is stretched more and more Europe looks better and better. If education, housing, and healthcare are unaffordable to the median income person making $64k, that “extra” 18k in income matters less and less, doesn’t it? Would you rather make 46k with health insurance or 64k without it?
64k without. I'd rather live a shorter life spending my money the way I want to. Health insurance will let me live longer, but why would I want to?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Norway, Finland and Denmark are also socialist countries with higher standards of living that the US.
This is a very often quoted falsity. Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden are not socialist countries. They are free market economies with many social programs. They also have small very homogeneous populations but that is slowly changing for the worse.
😳😳😳
God forbid the gene pool be polluted, right pp?
Do you have any stats that says things are moving in the right direction?
Yes I’m sure statistics support your desire for “homogenous” Scandinavian countries, right pp?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You have to look at the wealth gap as well. The distribution of wealth matters.
This is correct. I am not going to look up the stats for EU member states, Canada has a similar issue compared to the U.S.
The top 20% of Americans has an higher average income than the top 20% of Canadians. But the bottom 80% of Canadians has a higher average income than the bottom 80% of Americans. Plus the govt services and work culture are far more generous to Canadian workers than American workers. I think you will find EU countries often have a similar situation.
On the whole it is much hard being in the bottom 80% of Americans than the bottom 80% of the countries shown in the video.
I'm familiar enough with these creative "stats." Whoever came up with this one is playing a game by jumping one demographic that is definitely poor in the US, the poor, with fewer benefits etc compared to most western countries, and excluding the rich to make it seem like the middle class is richer in Canada. It's not quite the truthful picture. Median salary (meaning 50% make more, 50% make less) in the US is $64,000. In Canada it is $46,000. This gives you a more accurate picture.
As for Euros, outside places like Switzerland, most people do have lower incomes compared to American peers. Material wealth is higher in the US. Quality of life is subjective. I love Europe, but most people do live modest lives in small apartments. It's not all historic urban centers but plenty of grimy suburbs and tower blocks.
As the middle class in America is stretched more and more Europe looks better and better. If education, housing, and healthcare are unaffordable to the median income person making $64k, that “extra” 18k in income matters less and less, doesn’t it? Would you rather make 46k with health insurance or 64k without it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I travel around Europe, the biggest safety issue I have to worry about is pickpockets. When I travel in the US, or just live here, the biggest safety issue I have to worry about is shootings.
I'll take pickpockets over shootings.
Disagree. Shootings are so rare but pickpockets are endemic in Europe. And cops don’t seem to care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I travel around Europe, the biggest safety issue I have to worry about is pickpockets. When I travel in the US, or just live here, the biggest safety issue I have to worry about is shootings.
I'll take pickpockets over shootings.
I guess you're not a woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t want to watch that stupid YouTube video — can someone summarize?
A guy doing man in the street interviews in London. One American, the rest British. All expressing surprise as most thought the UK would be in the top ten if it were a state. One women guessed the bottom 25% and said Americans like working more than the British.
The average European is fed anti-American news stories nonstop. Even if it is better here, they will never come to that conclusion.
I had six month maternity leave but European friends don’t believe me. It simply isn’t possible. Same with me going on a long vacation.
I told them my salary (around $300k) when they weirdly asked me, and their response was that healthcare is surely making up the difference. As if a healthy 40 year old woman pays $150k per year in healthcare. They had never even known someone making that much money and these are people with advanced degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So basically, Europeans are "poorer" on average according to per capita GDP numbers, yet have nearly a decade higher life expectancy than the poorest states in the USA, higher literacy, and much more leisure time.
I think a lot of us would rather be "poor" Europeans by these standards.
I don’t think taxing us more and chilling our innovative ecosystem is going to make us happy. But I think it’s inevitable that we’re going to give it a try. We’ll see how it goes.
Do we actually have an “innovative” ecosystem? A tiny handful of companies control almost everything in this country, from what we eat to where we shop to what we watch on tv.
If I go to Europe or almost any other country there are actual small shops on almost every corner instead of mega chains like what we have here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So basically, Europeans are "poorer" on average according to per capita GDP numbers, yet have nearly a decade higher life expectancy than the poorest states in the USA, higher literacy, and much more leisure time.
I think a lot of us would rather be "poor" Europeans by these standards.
I don’t think taxing us more and chilling our innovative ecosystem is going to make us happy. But I think it’s inevitable that we’re going to give it a try. We’ll see how it goes.
Do we actually have an “innovative” ecosystem? A tiny handful of companies control almost everything in this country, from what we eat to where we shop to what we watch on tv.
If I go to Europe or almost any other country there are actual small shops on almost every corner instead of mega chains like what we have here.