So having that happen up until the 70s proves that somehow the Swedes arent as healthy and living as long of lives today? Funny how O'Rourke is quoted, as he seemed to be quite complemental to the system there, even though he is a self-proclaimed "republican reptile".Sweden is (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden#International_rankings):#5 in the Human Development Index#3 in Global Competitiveness#1 in the State of the World's Mother's report: http://www.savethechildren.org/publications/mothers/2004/SOWM_2004_final.pdf#5 in the Worldwide Quality of Life Index (which combines economic & quality of life ratings): http://www.economist.com/media/pdf/QUALITY_OF_LIFE.pdfNoone's saying the US isn't a great place to live, it is, most definately. There just happens to be other nations which, while smaller and thus more able to be receptive to the myriad of issues that face a nation, are very successful and nice places to live as well despite there adherence to something you hate (apparently illogically, based on your weak argument).WEAKSAUCE.[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 4:13 PM. Reason : .]
12/6/2006 4:09:56 PM
Pink, you're correct in that there are plenty of other "nice" places to live. Sweden is one of them. Is it because of their socialist system or in spite of it? Well that's obviously really hard to say. I, however, wouldn't like to live there because I get utility out of living in a more capitalist country. Thus, I'm willing to have a little shorter lifespan, deal with more crime, and work a little more. That's why I think the U.S. is better than Sweden. Of course, I haven't lived there so I can't say that I wouldn't like it just as much in the end, but given my aversion to socialism, I think I'd dislike it even if my lifestyle seemed very similar.
12/6/2006 4:55:24 PM
^^Is that because Sweden doesn't have any mexicans or blacks?
12/6/2006 4:56:43 PM
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?SID=mail&articleID=000AF3D5-6DC9-152E-A9F183414B7F0000&chanID=sa006I would say that it's definately what has brought about their high standard of health and low amount of poverty. is this required in order to bring these things about? absolutely not, but there are plenty of examples out there of highly successful economies with such things in place, and not just in this part of the world. We know about the health systems of successful economies in Scandinavia, the UK, and Canada, but few realize that Taiwan, a very successful Asian economy, has a universal system as well. Likewise, there are plenty of successful nations that don't have such a system, but typically their health ratings are lower. Even still, you have cases like Cuba where people are healthy and the country blows, but that's moreso their overall structure and non-adherence to a market economy. There is no set prescription for success in the world. For instance, countries with rigid labor laws might boom (Japan, where the lifetime contract is an institution), stagnate (France), or bust (Cuba). The same can be said of many features of successful nations. High taxes and social welfare do not break a country, and many countries succeed with them in place, contrary to the beliefs of many conservatives, who would rather just blow rhetorc about "nanny states" out their asses than actually dig into the numbers. What we can all agree on, however, is that a country must accept a market economy and modernization in order to be successful.[Edited on December 6, 2006 at 7:31 PM. Reason : of course, this has nothing to do w/ the thread, but i might as well post it here anyway]
12/6/2006 7:28:21 PM
12/6/2006 8:15:40 PM
Radley Balko gives us the skinny on Sweden...
12/7/2006 12:18:07 AM
Ace Of Base kicks ass
12/7/2006 12:43:48 AM
first off, i'm referring to the present-day. everything I've presented on the quality of life has been from the past couple years. secondly, i'm going to assume you wrote that yourself under a pseudonym, seeing as you didnt cite anything. come to think of it, you didnt cite your first article either. i sure hope you never actually had to do any sort of real research.
12/7/2006 12:49:10 AM
12/7/2006 1:52:40 AM
Pink, I think what his point was is that even if raising taxes marginally won't ruin a country, Sweden isn't the perfect picture of that working out. Taxes are tending downward in Sweden, so it would be a better example of how lowering taxes and government interference can stimulate an economy.
12/7/2006 7:35:52 AM
maybe i should have said "existance of extensive social welfare" instead of "higher taxes", b/c that's the most important thing I'm getting at anyway.however they do it, it works. whether or not you like the rheoric in the article i posted or not, the statistics still speak for themselves.
12/7/2006 11:35:53 AM
I will say that you're on the right track there, but you should probably read the book"How to Lie with Statistics" (I would assume you already have)Statistics on there own have absolutely nothing to say about causation. What the statistics show is that it is possible to have high social welfare programs and prosperity economically at the same time. It says nothing about whether one causes the other or even how long the two can coexist (which could very well be forever).
12/7/2006 12:59:54 PM
12/7/2006 1:41:59 PM
Everyone? Where did all the children come from?
12/7/2006 2:05:47 PM
i didn't mean everyone as in everyone, but everyone as in people in every segment of the population, not just criminals.
12/7/2006 3:02:11 PM
12/7/2006 3:17:01 PM
12/7/2006 7:41:10 PM
12/7/2006 8:47:23 PM
at least salisburyboy cites his sources
12/7/2006 10:33:15 PM