• @Haagel
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    809 months ago

    I’ve got a friend from Uruguay who lives in Finland (very similar standard of living compared with Norway) and who recently visited me in America. I can confirm that this article is not satire. He was absolutely shocked to see the amount of homelessness and poverty in New York city and he tried very hard not to talk about the rock-solid financial security available to every citizen in Finland.

    • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The famous science fiction author Robert Heinlein wanted to tour the world with his wife Virginia. They had no interest in the northern hemisphere, they wanted to see the southern half.

      Everywhere they went Robert wanted to get eyeballs on the economy, see what was really going on. He would always ask the cab drivers to take him to the worst part of town, where the poorest of the poor lived.

      In Uruguay the driver took him to a modest neighborhood. The houses were very tiny, but well built, well taken care of. Flower beds out front, all that. Heinlein was a bit upset.

      “I clearly asked you to take me to the poorest neighborhoods.”

      “Oh no senior! These are the poorest people! They are on government welfare and are very ashamed to live like this.”

      That was in the 80’s. Imagine that.

    • @Klanky@sopuli.xyz
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      129 months ago

      As an American who has visited Finland and has Finnish friends, I wish we could live there so bad. We just felt like we fit in with culture better too.

      • @VelvetStorm@lemmy.world
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        39 months ago

        I would kill to live there. I feel like I would get long well with the culture there, but I am uneducated and an unskilled laborer, so they definitely don’t want me.

    • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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      19 months ago

      As a child, I remember seeing Uruguay after most of South America. We had just gone through Argentina and Brazil, and then we saw this huge hydro-dam. It apparently supplies a big chunk of the county, and I just remember it being so clean. It wasn’t quite as advanced as Brazil (I don’t know why their traffic lights with a countdown aren’t everywhere), but it seemed so nice and well thought out, if small. It was modest and well maintained… Not primitive in any way, clean and basic, but well cared for