"Healthy people cost less
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@argals True, also,
Healthy people are less vulnerable.
Educated people have more options.
Housed people are braver.A sick society wants its populace oppressed and fearful. They're easier to control.
Friend of mine came back from the Netherlands after visiting family, & told me about a meeting he sat in on with some of wife's colleagues & their management. Friend was boggling at how colleagues were just taking the •piss• out of mgmt for some stupid decision.
My immediate thought: "That's socialized healthcare for you."
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undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic
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"Healthy people cost less.
Educated people contribute more.
Housed people are more stable....in a healthy society there are no "undeserving".
There are just people."@argals while I fully embrace and endorse the sentiment and message from the Norwegian, I wonder if all Norwegians would be as enthusiastic about paying for public goods to support everybody in Norway if they had as ethnically diverse a populace as the US does
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"Healthy people cost less.
Educated people contribute more.
Housed people are more stable....in a healthy society there are no "undeserving".
There are just people."Was it Norway where some guy with a lot of money get a $200,000 (or similar) speeding ticket?
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"Healthy people cost less.
Educated people contribute more.
Housed people are more stable....in a healthy society there are no "undeserving".
There are just people."@argals sadly a lot of their countryfolk don't buy it. There's a big problem of right-wing thought in Norway too, with racism, misogyny and anti-state sentiment. Not too different from a lot of places really.
Not to say they're wrong or anything, and I agree. Just in case anyone comes with 😍 Norway (I married one, but they left the country, so) -
"Healthy people cost less.
Educated people contribute more.
Housed people are more stable....in a healthy society there are no "undeserving".
There are just people." -
Was it Norway where some guy with a lot of money get a $200,000 (or similar) speeding ticket?
@Wintergr33n @argals
Probably Switzerland.They may not be the only country to do it, but they are infamous for it.
As I understand, speeding fines are a percentage of the price of the car. Speeding in a Ferrari? That's going to be expensive. Speeding in a 2CV? Good luck with that.
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"Healthy people cost less.
Educated people contribute more.
Housed people are more stable....in a healthy society there are no "undeserving".
There are just people."@argals dignity is part of human rights and it must be for everyone, not only priviledged - if our societies aren't there yet, we need to work hard toward this goal! #HumanRights #Dignity
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@argals while I fully embrace and endorse the sentiment and message from the Norwegian, I wonder if all Norwegians would be as enthusiastic about paying for public goods to support everybody in Norway if they had as ethnically diverse a populace as the US does
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@Wintergr33n @argals
Probably Switzerland.They may not be the only country to do it, but they are infamous for it.
As I understand, speeding fines are a percentage of the price of the car. Speeding in a Ferrari? That's going to be expensive. Speeding in a 2CV? Good luck with that.
@leeloo @Wintergr33n @argals speeding in a 2CV, the cops are behind cheering the driver on before having a friendly word after 😋
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@Wintergr33n @argals
Probably Switzerland.They may not be the only country to do it, but they are infamous for it.
As I understand, speeding fines are a percentage of the price of the car. Speeding in a Ferrari? That's going to be expensive. Speeding in a 2CV? Good luck with that.
@leeloo @Wintergr33n @argals In Finland speeding tickets (once the speeding is severe) are calculated based on income levels based on last taxed income (and additionally based on severity).
Other countries using similar arrangements are Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Mexico and Macao (according to wikipedia): https://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/P%C3%A4iv%C3%A4sakko
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undefined filobus@sociale.network shared this topic