🐱 ‘We’re No. 28! And Dropping!’

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CatParty


This should be a wake-up call: New data suggest that the United States is one of just a few countries worldwide that is slipping backward.

The newest Social Progress Index, shared with me before its official release Thursday morning, finds that out of 163 countries assessed worldwide, the United States, Brazil and Hungary are the only ones in which people are worse off than when the index began in 2011. And the declines in Brazil and Hungary were smaller than America’s.

“The data paint an alarming picture of the state of our nation, and we hope it will be a call to action,” Michael Porter, a Harvard Business School professor and the chair of the advisory panel for the Social Progress Index, told me. “It’s like we’re a developing country.”


The index, inspired by research of Nobel-winning economists, collects 50 metrics of well-being — nutrition, safety, freedom, the environment, health, education and more — to measure quality of life. Norway comes out on top in the 2020 edition, followed by Denmark, Finland and New Zealand. South Sudan is at the bottom, with Chad, Central African Republic and Eritrea just behind.

The United States, despite its immense wealth, military power and cultural influence, ranks 28th — having slipped from 19th in 2011. The index now puts the United States behind significantly poorer countries, including Estonia, Czech Republic, Cyprus and Greece.
“We are no longer the country we like to think we are,” said Porter.
The United States ranks No. 1 in the world in quality of universities, but No. 91 in access to quality basic education. The U.S. leads the world in medical technology, yet we are No. 97 in access to quality health care.

The Social Progress Index finds that Americans have health statistics similar to those of people in Chile, Jordan and Albania, while kids in the United States get an education roughly on par with what children get in Uzbekistan and Mongolia. A majority of countries have lower homicide rates, and most other advanced countries have lower traffic fatality rates and better sanitation and internet access.


The United States has high levels of early marriage — most states still allow child marriage in some circumstances — and lags in sharing political power equally among all citizens. America ranks a shameful No. 100 in discrimination against minorities.
The data for the latest index predates Covid-19, which has had a disproportionate impact on the United States and seems likely to exacerbate the slide in America’s standing. One new study suggests that in the United States, symptoms of depression have risen threefold since the pandemic began — and poor mental health is associated with other risk factors for well-being.
Michael Green, the C.E.O. of the group that puts out the Social Progress Index, notes that the coronavirus will affect health, longevity and education, with the impact particularly large in both the United States and Brazil. The equity and inclusiveness measured by the index seem to help protect societies from the virus, he said.
“Societies that are inclusive, tolerant and better educated are better able to manage the pandemic,” Green said.
The decline of the United States over the last decade in this index — more than any country in the world — is a reminder that we Americans face structural problems that predate President Trump and that festered under leaders of both parties. Trump is a symptom of this larger malaise, and also a cause of its acceleration.
David G. Blanchflower, a Dartmouth economist, has new research showing that the share of Americans reporting in effect that every day is a bad mental health day has doubled over 25 years. “Rising distress and despair are largely American phenomenon not observed in other advanced countries,” Blanchflower told me.
This decline is deeply personal for me: As I’ve written, a quarter of the kids on my old No. 6 school bus in rural Oregon are now dead from drugs, alcohol and suicide — what are called “deaths of despair.” I lost one friend to a heroin overdose this spring and have had more friends incarcerated than I could possibly count; the problems are now self-replicating in the next generation because of the dysfunction in some homes.
You as taxpayers paid huge sums to imprison my old friends; the money would have been far better invested educating them, honing their job skills or treating their addictions.

That’s why this is an election like that of 1932. That was the year American voters decisively rejected Herbert Hoover’s passivity and gave Franklin Roosevelt an electoral mandate — including a flipped Senate — that laid the groundwork for the New Deal and the modern middle class. But first we need to acknowledge the reality that we are on the wrong track.

We Americans like to say “We’re No. 1.” But the new data suggest that we should be chanting, “We’re No. 28! And dropping!”
Let’s wake up, for we are no longer the country we think we are.
 
This decline is deeply personal for me: As I’ve written, a quarter of the kids on my old No. 6 school bus in rural Oregon are now dead from drugs, alcohol and suicide — what are called “deaths of despair.” I lost one friend to a heroin overdose this spring and have had more friends incarcerated than I could possibly count; the problems are now self-replicating in the next generation because of the dysfunction in some homes.
You as taxpayers paid huge sums to imprison my old friends; the money would have been far better invested educating them, honing their job skills or treating their addictions.
Well, here’s a thought, maybe they should have spent the time being educated and honing their job skills, rather than wasting their life drinking and getting high? I’m sympathetic to people with addictions. I have a family member who owns multiple drug rehab clinics.

That said, I can count 2 people I know personally who’ve been incarcerated, and I wouldn’t call either of them friends so much as acquantences. I feel like anyone who has that many friends going to jail for substance abuse isn’t a good judge of character and probably doesn’t have great skills at assessing blame. If you can’t handle being arrested for doing something stupid, don’t do something stupid,
 
Well, here’s a thought, maybe they should have spent the time being educated and honing their job skills, rather than wasting their life drinking and getting high? I’m sympathetic to people with addictions. I have a family member who owns multiple drug rehab clinics.

That said, I can count 2 people I know personally who’ve been incarcerated, and I wouldn’t call either of them friends so much as acquantences. I feel like anyone who has that many friends going to jail for substance abuse isn’t a good judge of character and probably doesn’t have great skills at assessing blame. If you can’t handle being arrested for doing something stupid, don’t do something stupid,
I agree with you. Many of my relatives did the hustle, were not responsible for their actions and paid the price with their lives. I have little to no sympathies with that kind of people as I know that kind of life style. The seduction of fast women, fast money and the status of being a top dog in your neighbor hood always comes with a price. The world that I grew up was a very, very ugly place so yes I have seen the shot go down.

Dying is easy... Living is hard. You are given the tools in life to succeed but it does come down to working hard and making the right decisions.

You only have one life to live so make the best with what you have.
 
Western countries always look worse on these things than they actually are because of all the third-world immigrants.

"Oh, look at all these sickly black people you've got, America!"
"But they just got here . . . "
"Shame on you for having niggers of such poor health!"

"Canada, why is your literacy rate only 95%?"
"Immigrants from shitty countries have to be taught literacy when they get here . . . "
"Shame on you for failing to educate your arabs better!"

And once one of these metrics is discovered, it is exploited by Globohomo in all the other categories to make the west look even worse.

"Gee, all these black and arab refugees can't read and came over with poor health? Guess you fail at racial equality, education AND healthcare!"
 
So the US is going down while it gets more brown. sounds about right...

The US is just Superior to the rest of the western world in 3 Things... free speech, right to defend and right to a Jury trial.
so beeing 28 in a study that doesnt cares about this because its made by marxists isnt bad.

Just an aside, but I feel the U.S. fucked itself over initially by not blocking immigration from every country except the Nordics. Oh, and allowing the slave trade. Your predecessors will thank you for picking your own tobacco and cotton.
 
Just an aside, but I feel the U.S. fucked itself over initially by not blocking immigration from every country except the Nordics. Oh, and allowing the slave trade. Your predecessors will thank you for picking your own tobacco and cotton.
Agree with everything except for wanting Nords. Scandinavians are the absolute worst.
 
Well, here’s a thought, maybe they should have spent the time being educated and honing their job skills, rather than wasting their life drinking and getting high? I’m sympathetic to people with addictions. I have a family member who owns multiple drug rehab clinics.

That said, I can count 2 people I know personally who’ve been incarcerated, and I wouldn’t call either of them friends so much as acquantences. I feel like anyone who has that many friends going to jail for substance abuse isn’t a good judge of character and probably doesn’t have great skills at assessing blame. If you can’t handle being arrested for doing something stupid, don’t do something stupid,
It's like when a feminist says they have 17 close friends who've been raped multiple times. It just doesn't add up mathematically. Either they're lying or they go out of their way to make friends with sketchy people for whatever reason. I mean, a quarter of your old bus? Even when combining all those causes of death, that's over ten times the national average for lifetime odds, and unless this author is well over 70 those odds are much lower. What the fuck was going on in that bus?

Not to mention you don't go to jail for just doing drugs. You go to jail for getting caught with drugs after numerous warnings, or getting caught while on parole, or having thousands of dollars worth of drugs in convenient single serving bags. This myth of the curious but otherwise law abiding youth who smoked one joint and went to prison for 20 years is one of the dumbest, most easily disproven things I've heard.
 
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