ldsfaqs wrote:The worst country's in the world are ran by liberal ideology, the best country's in the world are ran by conservative ideology, including capitalism.
So, are you telling us that Iran is better than the Netherlands?
ldsfaqs wrote:The worst country's in the world are ran by liberal ideology, the best country's in the world are ran by conservative ideology, including capitalism.
Dr. Shades wrote:ldsfaqs wrote:The worst country's in the world are ran by liberal ideology, the best country's in the world are ran by conservative ideology, including capitalism.
So, are you telling us that Iran is better than the Netherlands?
ldsfaqs wrote:...Capitalism has "equalized" the differences between the rich and the poor more than any system. It has given a higher quality of life for ALL citizens than any system ever tried. Liberalism however destroys quality of life. Every country that follows it in whatever degree be it socialism, communism, marxism etc., is much less quality of life for all than America.
...The worst country's (sic) in the world are ran by liberal ideology, the best country's (sic)in the world are ran by conservative ideology, including capitalism.
ldsfaqs wrote:...What do you think one of the main reasons third world country's exist??? It's because a small few wicked horde the money for themselves, and it's not distributed to the people.
ldsfaqs wrote:Further, we already have socialized health care. The poor get the same care as anyone else. No one is turned away.
ldsfaqs wrote:MONEY is not the problem Kerry..... Character is. Throwing money at things don't fix things. It takes charactered (sic) individuals in a community that create a community, and create quality of life.
ldsfaqs wrote:...Capitalism has "equalized" the differences between the rich and the poor more than any system. It has given a higher quality of life for ALL citizens than any system ever tried. Liberalism however destroys quality of life. Every country that follows it in whatever degree be it socialism, communism, marxism etc., is much less quality of life for all than America.
...The worst country's (sic) in the world are ran by liberal ideology, the best country's (sic)in the world are ran by conservative ideology, including capitalism.
ldsfaqs wrote:...What do you think one of the main reasons third world country's exist??? It's because a small few wicked horde the money for themselves, and it's not distributed to the people.
ldsfaqs wrote:Further, we already have socialized health care. The poor get the same care as anyone else. No one is turned away.
ldsfaqs wrote:MONEY is not the problem Kerry..... Character is. Throwing money at things don't fix things. It takes charactered (sic) individuals in a community that create a community, and create quality of life.
Economic mobility is regressing in the United States. The United States has less economic mobility than Denmark, Canada, Finland, Norway, France, Germany and Sweden.
ajax18 wrote:Economic mobility is regressing in the United States. The United States has less economic mobility than Denmark, Canada, Finland, Norway, France, Germany and Sweden.
So why doesn't everyone emigrate to these countries if they're so great?
Why Germany Has It So Good – and Why America Is Going Down the Drain
Germans have six weeks of federally mandated vacation, free university tuition, and nursing care. Why the US pales in comparison.
October 14, 2010 | While the bad news of the Euro crisis makes headlines in the US, we hear next to nothing about a quiet revolution in Europe. The European Union, 27 member nations with a half billion people, has become the largest, wealthiest trading bloc in the world, producing nearly a third of the world’s economy — nearly as large as the US and China combined. Europe has more Fortune 500 companies than either the US, China or Japan.
European nations spend far less than the United States for universal healthcare rated by the World Health Organization as the best in the world, even as U.S. health care is ranked 37th. Europe leads in confronting global climate change with renewable energy technologies, creating hundreds of thousands of new jobs in the process. Europe is twice as energy efficient as the US and their ecological “footprint” (the amount of the earth’s capacity that a population consumes) is about half that of the United States for the same standard of living.
Unemployment in the US is widespread and becoming chronic, but when Americans have jobs, we work much longer hours than our peers in Europe. Before the recession, Americans were working 1,804 hours per year versus 1,436 hours for Germans — the equivalent of nine extra 40-hour weeks per year.
In his new book, Were You Born on the Wrong Continent?, Thomas Geoghegan makes a strong case that European social democracies — particularly Germany — have some lessons and models that might make life a lot more livable. Germans have six weeks of federally mandated vacation, free university tuition, and nursing care. But you’ve heard the arguments for years about how those wussy Europeans can’t compete in a global economy. You’ve heard that so many times, you might believe it. But like so many things, the media repeats endlessly, it’s just not true.
According to Geoghegan, “Since 2003, it’s not China but Germany, that colossus of European socialism, that has either led the world in export sales or at least been tied for first. Even as we in the United States fall more deeply into the clutches of our foreign creditors — China foremost among them — Germany has somehow managed to create a high-wage, unionized economy without shipping all its jobs abroad or creating a massive trade deficit, or any trade deficit at all. And even as the Germans outsell the United States, they manage to take six weeks of vacation every year. They’re beating us with one hand tied behind their back.”
Thomas Geoghegan, a graduate of Harvard and Harvard Law School, is a labor lawyer with Despres, Schwartz and Geoghegan in Chicago. He has been a staff writer and contributing writer to The New Republic, and his work has appeared in many other journals. Geoghagen ran unsuccessfully in the Democratic Congressional primary to succeed Rahm Emanuel, and is the author of six books including Whose Side Are You on, The Secret Lives of Citizens, and, most recently, Were You Born on the Wrong Continent?
ajax18 wrote:Economic mobility is regressing in the United States. The United States has less economic mobility than Denmark, Canada, Finland, Norway, France, Germany and Sweden.
So why doesn't everyone emigrate to these countries if they're so great?