Really? Why ever would you want to do that?
Why not?
Really? Why ever would you want to do that?
That's the USA that has lost 100,000 jobs so far this month? And it's only the 12th. One chief economist is predicting 550,000-600,000 jobs lost per MONTH for the next few months. Which will go up substantially if any of the big 3 car manufacturers goes belly up. The same USA that is expecting 10% unemployment in 2010? The same USA that is worried it might be heading for another great depression?
If so, I'd hardly call it Utopia.
er yes, thats called a recession. They like the UK had one in the early 80's, thats because of the business cycles and other factors. Try to take a longer view. Oh and I said there wasn't any Utopia.
stop trying to project your leftwing fantacies of what you beleive are rightwing views.
Looney has suggested USA that's fine with me, I am seeking options.
Loony, is ther any particular state there or city, which you think has got the balance right between the "strenghths" you highlight and a good welfare?
As a note, are you right about its having the highest GDP per head?
Stop trying to project your fantasies on reality. This is a bit more than just a recession.
Anyhow I look for a nation where the rivers run really blue.
Greece is pretty damn good! Wonderful Mediterranean climate, amazing beaches, never rains in the summer, lots of cheap, fresh food, minimal crime rates, incredibly friendly people, wide open roads, good and affordable healthcare system...
...er, everyone smokes, Byzantine bureaucracy, strict job demarcation, old-fashioned retailing, shocking customer service, strikes, the occasional riot...
Blink and you could imagine it was Britain in the 1970s...
Apart from Obamaville and Canada - i never really did get an alternative to the nordic social economies
For their part, Rwanda has been quietly building a quite dynamic state post genocide. One of the largest female to male members of parliment ratios
I went to Sweden many years ago for 6 weeks and the place was amazing a slightly left Labour government and a really good NHS copied from ours only better
yes very Utopian but there were only 9 million people living there, we had at the time I think about 58 million in a smaller country and a huge Commonwealth to look after Wars to win or lose (I think the last war Sweden were involved in was against San Marino)
nevertheless a great place and nice people who for some reason love the British
Also, NONE of them are fat and pretty much ALL the women are HOT
In short then, Sweden and Denmark get my vote as the closest to Utopia as you'll find on this planet. If only other countries followed suit
Also, NONE of them are fat and pretty much ALL the women are HOT
It's because there aren't any good right wing equivalents. I think the nearest you get are some of the shady tax havens like the Cayman Islands where nobody pays any tax so you have to be wealthy to look after yourself.
It is no coincidence that the happiest nations on Earth are those with predominantly left wing governments. As mentioned originally in this thread there is a lot to be said for the Scandinavian countries, of which I'd probably choose Denmark myself. Sweden is a very well run country but the price of beer makes me lean towards Denmark. Norway is even more expensive on the booze and Finland is just that bit too close to Russia. However they are all lovely countries with a very high standard of living.
My sister and brother in law emigrated to Sweden about three years ago and it's embarrassing how much greater their quality of life is. Lovely big homes for a fraction of what we have to pay and the utility bills are minuscule compared with ours.
I have a TINY one bedroom flat in Brighton that costs me more than my sister and her husband pay for a large, modern three bedroom flat in Skane. The gas and electricity are included in the rent which means in winter they can easily leave the heating on all the time to combat the chilly outside (when I last visited it was minus 25 out) AND they don't even need to feel guilty about wasting resources as most of the country's energy needs are met by renewable sources (predominantly hydro power).
I'm not so blinkered as to assume Sweden and the other Scandinavian countries don't have their share of problems but when you compare them with our problems, we lose, badly. Excellent healthcare puts our NHS to shame, the railways are a model of efficiency (in conditions far more extreme than you'll ever see in Britain), your rights as an employee are many and generous and when it comes to unemployment benefits you won't find a better deal anywhere else in the world. Essentially the Swedes just know how to look after their people. Yes it gets very cold, your taxes are generally higher than we are used to and it is not cheap to go out for food and drink BUT they've got their priorities right. Your basic cost of living is reasonable and affordable, in stark contrast to life in the UK where vast swathes of people don't earn anywhere near enough to live even a meagre lifestyle.
It's a model that works, and whilst Greece, Ireland, Portugal and (soon) Spain go bankrupt there are NO signs that the strong Scandinavian economies are about to saddle the EU with more problems (although obviously Norway wouldn't anyway, not being a member). In short they're doing it right and I just don't understand why more countries (like ourselves) don't vote to emulate their success. The disgusting way in which the tax evading rich are rewarded whilst the majority live in squalor in this country makes me sick. The model is there for us to follow and yet we just find ourselves getting further and further away from a fair and just society.
I'm very seriously considering learning Danish so that I may one day emigrate to Denmark in order to live more comfortably, but I would miss the Albion. I think that's it though. Even their national team has enjoyed success in my lifetime (unlike our piss poor representatives).
In short then, Sweden and Denmark get my vote as the closest to Utopia as you'll find on this planet. If only other countries followed suit