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Alex Lekas's avatar

"People need healthcare. People need income security. People need education. People need housing."

This statement carries an underlying implication: the people who "need" these things expect to have them at someone else's expense. If someone wants the US to behave like, say, Norway, then show me the plan to 1) tax the US like Norway and 2) make it look like Norway. Those countries are very homogeneous culturally, there is a high level of trust in societies because people see themselves as Norwegians period, not as hyphenated people, and there is an understanding that the ship only moves if everyone grabs an oar.

We are nothing like that. Whatever shared American experience existed is barely hanging on today. The people who used to wax on about multiculturalism are the first to accuse someone of "appropriation" as if that's an outlier event. No, appropriation is a feature of a multi-culti society, not a bug. How can it be anything else? When people from other cultures introduce interesting things, imitation is a form of accepting those things, of saying "hey, that's pretty cool. I want to try that food/art/clothing style/etc."

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CC's avatar

When I hear that Glenn's wife, the Bernie Socialist, wants to see a social safety net as good as the Europeans have it, two things come to mind. The first is that Americans have an unrealistic viewpoint of what is offered in various European countries. Sweden has been generous in its benefits but over time has amended them to keep people motivated to work and participate in society. As of late, aspects of Sweden's welfare state, as well as Denmark & Norway are being challenged by immigration, rising crime, sluggish economic growth, and, perhaps surprisingly, the welfare model itself.

The second point is that of immigration. Northern European welfare states, like Sweden, Norway & Denmark, worked well because up until recently their societies were homogenous, Swedes lived in Sweden, Danes in Denmark, etc. There seemed to be an implicit societal contract of how to behave and what was expected of citizens; Everyone could identify with everyone else, ie they were all in it together, working together. Recent immigration from the Middle East and Africa and even Eastern Europe has changed that. New arrivals have not only placed financial pressure on these countries but increased and even disrupted the local way of life. Some question whether they should supporting new arrivals many who don't have the skills or desire to work (women in societies where they are expected to remain at home).

In the USA, over the past decade, there have been record numbers of refugees & migrants (legal & illegal) that exceed the highpoint of 1915 immigration levels as well. One could argue there are pluses to this vast new numbers arriving, but on the other than hand it also makes for torn and disassembled communities, so much so, that it can be hard to argue for a greater safety net because it would demand much higher taxes. It's not clear Americans want to pay for more immigration - to pay for someone they don't really know; as it is we've been told that it already costs about $100K to sustain each new arrival. In fact, polls show that Americans are not prepared to pay the high levels of taxes that European countries do to continue supporting this burden beyond the initial arrival costs. And finally, the development of welfare states in Northern Europe had a lot to do their Protestantism, much like early days in the USA. However, as Protestantism abates in the USA and is even reviled by a growing socialist contingent, it's not clear what ethos is going to replace moral guidance going forward.

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