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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (922793)2/23/2016 3:43:34 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1571200
 
CJ, rather than rebut your points one-by-one, I'll just present to you another viewpoint that counters the myth you are obviously trying to perpetuate. And that myth is that Scandinavia is closer to utopia than America is, and that America should try and get there:

Stop the Scandimania: Nordic nations aren’t the utopias they’re made out to be
I suspect that few Americans would truly embrace a Scandinavian-style society. The tax rates alone would likely be a sufficient deterrent. Though I’m a freelance journalist, I essentially work until Thursday lunchtime for the state. And it’s not as if the money that is left in my pocket goes all that far: These are fearfully expensive countries in which to live.
The Scandinavians’ collective modesty, distrust of boasting and self-censoring of ambitions would also be hard for Americans to comprehend, I suspect. A Danish acquaintance who lives in Washington was recently back in Copenhagen having coffee with friends. She remarked, proudly, that her son was doing especially well in math. “There was a silence, and then someone changed the conversation,” she told me. “If I had said he was great at role-playing or drawing it would have been fine, but it was totally wrong to boast about academic achievement.”
Different culture, different lifestyles. When you have the highest rates of antidepressant usage in the world, it's easy to talk about how "happy" your population really is.

Tenchusatsu

P.S. - Nokia is gone, Apple is king. 'Nuff said



To: combjelly who wrote (922793)2/23/2016 5:00:50 PM
From: i-node  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571200
 
If a person wants what Scandinavia has to offer they should, by all means, live there.

The variance in standard of living is much lower than in the United States. (Some might even see the connection with the so-called GINI coefficient).

While people complain that the US has a high GINI coefficient, the reality is it hasn't change that much over time. In the 1700s it was pretty much where it is now. Maybe it is because that is what this country is built on -- individuals enjoying the fruits of their own labor, something Adam Smith himself would have appreciated.

So, if you want to give up your right to financial success in exchange for a guaranteed minimal standard of living, go for it. That is not the lifestyle most of us want. If Americans who are supporting Sanders realize that is the trade they are making, I don't think they'll want it, either.