(In before "old")http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4181996n&tag=related;photovideoDenmark, a place where you get weeks of work leave at the start of your employment, a place where college is paid for by the government, a place where healthcare is free, a place where you get paid paternity leave mandated by the government, a place where the tax rate is about 50%.Clearly, many of you would say that this is a miserable place for anyone to live, but it seems that the opposite is true. Many of the people in the video were stunned to learn that we force our students to pay for their education, or that we force people to pay for their own healthcare. Maybe that's why we're so unhappy in this "greatest place on Earth?"
5/21/2010 10:52:46 AM
so according to the video, the key to happiness is having lowered expectations, then you're never disappointed.I guess thats one way to do it.[Edited on May 21, 2010 at 11:05 AM. Reason : .]
5/21/2010 11:02:32 AM
Meaning not working yourself to death in a 60hr/week middle management job thinking you're going to be a millionaire one day.
5/21/2010 11:04:16 AM
5/21/2010 11:07:52 AM
5/21/2010 11:13:58 AM
liberty and pursuit of happiness >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> [relatively] no liberty and happiness
5/21/2010 11:31:28 AM
But what are you pursuing?Do you think Danes don't have liberty and freedom?
5/21/2010 11:34:58 AM
They do until they want to draw a picture of Muhammad.
5/21/2010 11:55:15 AM
Is the Danish government forbidding the drawing of Mohammad, or is that just the fucking crazy Muslim fundamentalists?
5/21/2010 12:02:42 PM
I say move to Denmark if it sounds like Utopia. leave the rest of us alone to succeed or fail based on our own merits.
5/21/2010 12:04:47 PM
I honestly wish I could. My girlfriend and I are considering moving out of the country once we complete our education.
5/21/2010 12:07:31 PM
Please move somewhere without internet access
5/21/2010 12:08:28 PM
5/21/2010 12:09:32 PM
^I don't think that's what's happening here.
5/21/2010 12:10:18 PM
5/21/2010 12:26:02 PM
5/21/2010 12:32:52 PM
5/21/2010 12:37:56 PM
5/21/2010 12:42:25 PM
5/21/2010 12:53:09 PM
5/21/2010 12:57:29 PM
5/21/2010 1:01:22 PM
^lol^^Exactly. How can you get a decent sense of achievement in a statist utopia?"OMG, I'M SUCH A HAPPY AND SAFE COG IN THE MACHINE -- AVERAGE, JUST LIKE EVERYONE ELSE! YAY!"
5/21/2010 1:01:52 PM
You're all drinking the American Kool-aid**Registered trademark of Kraft Foods
5/21/2010 1:03:40 PM
The hypothetical is impossible because someone would desire "not to be a part of this stupid system" and it would fall apart.
5/21/2010 1:06:12 PM
Heil God!
5/21/2010 1:18:24 PM
I don't know why God or his detractors are acting like Denmark is such a departure from the United States.Its really only different by a matter of small degrees.1) God says in Denmark govt pays for college.Well, in the U.S. state and federal government also pay for college, just not as much (public universities, subsidized student loands, education grants, etc). 2) God says in Denmark, govt pays for health care.Well, in the U.S., the government also pays for health care, just not as much (medicare, medicaid, tax credits, etc). 3) God says in Denmark, govt mandates paid maternity leave.Well, in the U.S., the government also mandates up to 12 weeks of maternatity leaves, but it doesn't mandate paid maternatity leave (but that doesn't many employers don't provide it anyways).There is really nothing on this list that the U.S. doesn't already do, its just that Denmark does more of it. The only major difference is that people in Denmark actually do work much less and they have mandated vacation time while the U.S. does not. But I would personally chalk this up to cultural differences. It isn't like the Denmark government from on high and blessed its people with vacation mandates our of no where. Instead, like most of Europe, there is a strong labor movement and general preference to work less that made those mandates possible. Really, this whole thread strikes me as silly. If Denmark is utopia for the reasons listed, then the U.S. really isn't that bad by comparison. If Denmark is the reincarnation of Soviet Russia for the reasons listed, well the U.S. must be a really fucking scary place too.[Edited on May 21, 2010 at 1:35 PM. Reason : ``]
5/21/2010 1:26:16 PM
I like America. Even with all of its imperfections, it's the best.
5/21/2010 2:04:52 PM
5/21/2010 2:06:15 PM
^lol
5/21/2010 2:10:54 PM
Denmark doesn't have a huge base of extreme conservatives holding them back
5/21/2010 2:14:33 PM
how dumb is it to stay in the "homeland" when you could move to paradise? that makes no fucking sense.
5/21/2010 2:23:00 PM
``[Edited on May 21, 2010 at 2:24 PM. Reason : ``]
5/21/2010 2:23:51 PM
5/21/2010 2:28:15 PM
LOL
5/21/2010 2:28:25 PM
we ignore economies of scale ITT
5/21/2010 2:30:10 PM
we don't even have a communist politician. There is no such thing as extreme american liberals. I've never heard anyone suggest the end of private property.
5/21/2010 2:30:37 PM
^ I keep trying to respond to this, but I really have no clue what point you're trying to make[Edited on May 21, 2010 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .]
5/21/2010 2:39:38 PM
5/21/2010 2:55:59 PM
Do you work hard at your job?Why aren't you rich?
5/21/2010 2:57:14 PM
^ theres a difference between hard-working and financially responsible that I dont believe you're accounting for
5/21/2010 3:00:50 PM
Exactly.First of all, I think that saying most people "work hard at their jobs" is a stretch. 40 hours per week isn't really working yourself to the bone.Second, if you don't do the necessary things to put yourself in a position to land a halfway decent job, you can work as hard as you want at digging ditches, but you're only going to go so far in that field.
5/21/2010 3:14:34 PM
5/21/2010 3:25:51 PM
5/21/2010 5:38:25 PM
5/21/2010 6:09:40 PM
i'm curious how economies of scale matter here.(and why being a smaller (and poorer) country would make providing these services easier for denmark than america)[Edited on May 21, 2010 at 6:35 PM. Reason : .]
5/21/2010 6:34:57 PM
^The economies of scale debate is quite an interesting one, I think this video is very relevant to this part of the discussion, especially if you read the thread titlehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFPajU-d-Ek
5/21/2010 6:51:40 PM
^^^yep. in america its all about white privilege and keeping the browns out of the club.
5/21/2010 7:06:49 PM
5/21/2010 10:56:02 PM
i'm guessing you don't have kids. . . .
5/21/2010 11:39:04 PM
^^^ My comment had nothing to do with racism, mambatroll.In addition to the small population already mentioned (both by number and geographically) already mentioned, large social programs should be easier to successfully implement when nearly the entire country shares a common ancestry and specific common religion.In contrast to Denmark, the largest ancestry groups in the United States are German (17%), African American (13%), Irish (12%), and English (9%). The largest religious denominations are Catholicism (25%) and Baptist (16%).There's a reason e pluribus unum is our national motto.[Edited on May 22, 2010 at 7:30 AM. Reason : ]
5/22/2010 7:30:02 AM