Liste des Groupes | Revenir à rb tech |
On 4/9/2025 9:10 PM, John B. wrote:On Wed, 9 Apr 2025 11:56:07 -0400, Zen Cycle <funkmaster@hotmail.com>>
wrote:
On 4/9/2025 7:50 AM, John B. wrote:On Wed, 9 Apr 2025 06:23:45 -0400, zen cycle>
<funkmasterxx@hotmail.com> wrote:
>On 4/8/2025 9:22 PM, John B. wrote:>On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 10:22:13 -0400, Zen Cycle <funkmaster@hotmail.com>>
wrote:
>On 4/8/2025 10:05 AM, John B. wrote:>On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 08:59:52 -0400, Zen Cycle <funkmaster@hotmail.com>>
wrote:
>On 4/8/2025 8:21 AM, John B. wrote:>On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 05:54:43 -0400, zen cycle>
<funkmasterxx@hotmail.com> wrote:
>On 4/8/2025 5:48 AM, John B. wrote:>On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 05:19:27 -0400, zen cycle>
<funkmasterxx@hotmail.com> wrote:
>On 4/7/2025 8:09 PM, AMuzi wrote:I looked up how they rated "happiness"and it seems to be based on, GDPOn 4/7/2025 5:52 PM, floriduh dumbass wrote:https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/happiest-countries-in-the-world>>>
People who don't like 'things as they are' include communist
idealists, Libertarians and jihadis. Over to you.
But where are the people who are happy with "convention?"
>
--
C'est bon
Soloman
>
>
>
per capita, social support, healthy life expectancy, freedom,
generosity, and corruption.
>
From, reading their site
https://worldhappiness.report/faq/
>
it seems to be more of a level of satisfaction of citizens who have
never lived in foreign countries and thus are not capable of comparing
life here wit life over there.
>
I don't know where you got that, I don't see any reference to 'people
who have never lived in other countries'. If it's there and I missed it,
please post the reference.
>
Be that as it may, it isn't really relevant. If you're happy, your
happy. whether you've lived somewhere else really doesn't factor into it.
Poor wording.
Second try: the level of satisfaction of citizens who have no other
experiences which they can use to evaluate their present life.
>
And where did you get the information that they had no other life
experiences?>
It's pretty obvious. Just look at the average U.S, tourist. They
arrive knowing nothing about the country and leave knowing no more
then when they arrived.
Not obvious at all.
Not obvious? Even a simple thing like not wearing your shoes in a
Temple is beyond them. My wife and I visited the Wat Pho temple and
there must have been 50 pairs of shoes at the entrance and an American
girl was asking her mother, "Do I have to take my shoes off?"
>
Now I do understand that taking ones shoes off to enter a religious
place is perhaps unique to some places in Asia but the 50 pairs of
shoes at the entrance might have been a clue that something is
different here. Or not?
That has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not people are happy
in their home land.
>
As above. " Second try: the level of satisfaction of citizens who
have no other experiences which they can use to evaluate their present
life."
Your example directly contradicts that.
>
You're using an example od tourists in your country not being savvy
enough to understand local customs, then stating the respondents to the
survey "have no other experiences which they can use to evaluate their
present life"
>
The two literally contradict each other.
Tell me, if you were to approach a building in a strange country that
had 50 or 60 pairs of shoes in front of the only entrance you can see
would you ask someone, "do I have to take my shoes off ?"
Or, assuming you are a brilliant thinker, to ask "why"?
Which has literally nothing to do with whether your happy in your own
country.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.