No matter how much US Republicans and trump mess things up, the USA will still be a better place to live than 90% of the planet, even for the persecuted minorities.
It's not even a better place to live than 90% of the planet now. How delusional do you have to be to think that the USA is anywhere near the best place to live 😄
Maybe they were referring to the ocean and the poles, like 90% by surface area? Maybe even by volume, as the US is better than living at the Earth's core?
Really depends on your values and desired lifestyle. I think you'd be very surprised how the rest of the world lives. It's not all terrible out there. Also very dependent on socio-economic status, there are some truly terrible living conditions in the USA for way more people than there should be.
Stroll through your nearest city "ghetto" and see first hand how some live. Or take your pick of squalor. It's not pretty and I'm not talking out my ass. I've slept in some questionable places in my life. Nothing that ever felt truly dangerous but very bad living situations.
Anyways, I'm just saying we have a lot of room for improvement.
Search for images of "favela". Tens of millions of Brazilians live in those. The better ones are built with brick, many are just scrap wood and cardboard.
Whats funny.. if youre living in poverty youre probably better off in brazil. Atleast they have healthcare as a right.
The only reason the us isnt like brazil today was because the new dealers in the 30's-50's actually had the great idea of investing in the common people and had hundreds of billions of dollars poured into communities and all the shanty towns were torn down and affordable housing was built in their place. But since the progressives lost power, the us is quickly tipping away from wealth equality, and shantytowns are making their way back. We're a single depression from having millions living in favela's.
Then I guess we should start figuring out why the rest of the planet is being exploited for our gain and maybe cut that shit out. Capital gonna capital though.
How? We can't afford healthcare or to own a home. After paying for rent and healthcare most of us make less. The inequality is heading for Saudi Arabia levels.
Upward mobility is a joke. Education requires a 20 year debt which is required for no reason even for jobs that are now educated poverty.
We are about to be led by idiots who are going to put our economy back in the toilet again. I'm only 44 and I've seen 3 major crashes and that was all in the last 25 years.
You need to actually take a look at all the QOL statistics available out there. The US is better than, say, Mexico or most 3rd world countries but almost every other Western nation is kicking their ass when it comes to most living metrics.
In this summary it gives inordinate value to purchasing power without consideration for things like needing to pay for healthcare and even still gets ranked 12th overall, and that is almost certain to change if your felon leader starts implementing tariffs for everything.
Personally I was shocked to see Canada below the US because as a Canadian I can say without a doubt that every other Canadian I've ever met would absolutely prefer to live in Canada given the choice. Housing crisis be damned.
The irony of ya'll needing a 'come to jesus' moment to realize how much of a shithole the country has become is real.
Most maybe, but not 90%. Even so, chances are depending on where you live you have a greater average lifespan and access to healthcare, your diet isn't killing you slowly, attending school doesn't put your life in jeopardy, you have more free time, and closer ties to family and community.
The US is not a leader, nor even a good representative of a 'better place to live'. Even if you are thinking about applying for asylum I strongly recommend you put the US at the bottom of your list if that is an option.
I think people tend to vastly underestimate the extreme poverty that is widespread in southern states especially. Very high homeless population with barely any services for them, people living in dilapidated buildings with slumlord landlords, no grocery stores, very high unemployment and wages well below the poverty level being the only jobs around. This is the case in parts of every inner city and many rural towns in the south.
How is it better? Several people have pointed out that standards of living in the United States are well below most developed nations. There US ranks 48th in the world in life expectancy, and 66th in the world in maternal mortality, behind Egypt, Ukraine, Lebanon, Romania, and… the Gaza Strip.
I may be a cringy idiot, but I'm an ally.
I genuinely hope you stay safe and if we ever crossed paths I would shelter you from the government without hesitation.
I'm just pointing out that most likely you will still be better in the US than in most of the planet.
I do have toilet paper and live in one of the most developed regions of my country. Even then my city only has 40% of sewage coverage.
40% of centrally treated sewage. The rest goes into domestic septic tanks.
It's not ideal, but we don't have sewage running on open air if that's what you imagined, and if you visited you wouldn't notice.
The state is Santa Catarina. As I said, it's one the most developed in the country, the living quality is similar to some European countries.
Yeah, because it feasts on the superprofits of the South through systematic underdevelopment and periodic warfare whenever they get to uppity with nationalization or promotion of domestic industry.
And is that a good standard, a bad standard, or neutral?
Like, no one in a great situation goes, "Well at least I'm not.." That's the type of thing one says when they are trying to cope with a poor situation.
And I'd also argue that the dead minorities would disagree with your assessment, give that they are.. dead.
I don't disagree, my only addition is that we should set our standards higher than that. We went from generations of "We're the best!" (whether true or not) to "Well we aren't the worst.."
I just wish more people could notice the slow changes like that which I think are indicative of a need for systemic change.
But yeah, while I don't endorse your message, you aren't wrong.