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Sweden Is Closing Many Prisons Due to Lack of Prisoners

rtoz writes "Sweden is taking steps to close many prisons due to lack of prisoners. This year alone, four prisons and a detention center got closed in Sweden. The percentage of the population in Sweden prison is significantly lower than in most other countries. ... Though the Swedish Government is taking steps to close the prisons, the crime rate in Sweden has increased slightly. It seems they are planning to take steps for preventing crime rather than focusing on jailing people involved in criminal activities."

752 comments

  1. can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    be outsourced? This is EXACTLY what USA need.

    1. Re:can they by teg · · Score: 2

      be outsourced? This is EXACTLY what USA need.

      Not likely an attractive option:

      • Sweden is a rather expensive country - the standard of living, cost level etc. are higher than in the US
      • Sweden focuses on treatment to avoid relapse into crime, rather than punishment for its own sake. Thus, the prisoners would be treated far too well for US' tastes.
      • I'm sure Sweden would like to avoid any chance of US criminals ending up living in Sweden afterwards...
    2. Re:can they by GaryWheatley · · Score: 1

      The point of outsourcing is to save up on cost; the point of prison is to discourage the occurrence of crime. I hear the prisons in Bangladesh could be convinced, at a much cheaper amount, to hold a few more Americans despite them being overcrowded. I know some of you may argue about prison being a place to rehabilitate offenders and I agree with you there. Just send the rapists and the mass murderers to rot in the crowded tropical jails in that case.

    3. Re:can they by rvw · · Score: 1

      be outsourced? This is EXACTLY what USA need.

      Of course. I heard the CIA has done this before, so the experience is right there.

      Another option would be prison by proxy. This is already happening, coincidentally with Sweden. Of of the US biggest thugs is now effectively under house arrest in London because of an extradition treaty with the US. The recepy is simple: threaten with the possibility of serving lifetime, and then let them escape to an embassy with only limited space.

    4. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wouldn't work because the concept of outsourcing is that you outsource to a shitter country than your own, not the other way around.

      For example. Canada to the US. US to Mexico. Mexico to India. India to Pakistan.

      You couldn't have a US to Sweden scenario. Such a thing is about as despicable as having Mexicans immigrate to the US.

    5. Re:can they by dbIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem of the US prisons is pretty well exactly that of England before the American Revolution - private prisons that make a profit out of a government that they ask, with inducements, to send a lot of people their way for minor crimes. The only real difference is the US taxpayer is supplying the profits instead of the prisoners paying a lot of it.

    6. Re:can they by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When you grow up things should be a little more clear to you. If not your education has failed you.

    7. Re: can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you are older, you will realize that common sense has little influence in court. If you have sex with even a mildly drunk woman, you already have one foot in jail if she decides she was "raped" afterwards.

    8. Re:can they by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sad thing is the whole 'treatment over punishment' thing was originally an American system that other countries copied because it was working fairly well, but then the US abandoned it favor of righteous suffering.

    9. Re:can they by minchazo · · Score: 1

      I'm sure Sweden would like to avoid any chance of US criminals ending up living in Sweden afterwards...

      Bull. This is the WHOLE POINT of "avoiding relapse into crime." Once they're out of prison, they're welcomed back into society.

    10. Re: can they by jythie · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, you are not. That myth exists mostly on TV and internet forums. In the real world rape trials are notoriously difficult to prosecute with an extremely high chance of failure... in no small part due to these myths and juries believing them.

    11. Re:can they by dj245 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem of the US prisons is pretty well exactly that of England before the American Revolution - private prisons that make a profit out of a government that they ask, with inducements, to send a lot of people their way for minor crimes. The only real difference is the US taxpayer is supplying the profits instead of the prisoners paying a lot of it.

      This is a problem, but the bigger problem is that the US system is focused on punishment rather than rehabilitation. Rather than trying to bring these people back into society and make them productive and upstanding citizens, we push them to the margins. We make finding a job after prison exceedingly difficult and only the most menial and low-class jobs will accept former criminals. We strip citizens of the right to vote, which devalues them. We have very lengthy sentences (To punish those evildoers!) for fairly harmless crimes, which is devastating to families and pushes people into poverty needlessly. Depending on the crime, we put them on lists and track them for life which makes their post-prison lives difficult.

      Sweden, on the other hand, focuses on bringing people who have strayed from the path back into society. Their methods work. However, if anyone in the US wants to employ their methods, they are seen as "soft on crime" at worst. At best, they can't get the funding needed to enact meaningful rehabilitation programs. It is far cheaper (in the short term) and easier to put people in cages compared to education and rehabilitation.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    12. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The legal standard here is the ability to give consent. Consuming alcohol does not automatically make you unable to give consent. Judges and juries understand that people drink and have sex and are unlikely to convict unless the victim is proven to have obvious signs of not being capable of consent, such as being passed out, on the verge of passing out, unable to stand, etc, rather than merely having been drunk at the time.

    13. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the US needs more people in prisons. Particularly greedy business owners.

    14. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just do like Sweden did and make crime legal for minorities and our prisons will run empty pretty fast too.

      There are literally signs in third world countries inducing young men to move to Sweden because they can rape the women there without consequence. This is largely true.

    15. Re: can they by amRadioHed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Isn't it more likely prosecution is difficult because there is frequently no evidence and no eyewitnesses, just one persons word against another? In those circumstances it *should* be hard to get a conviction.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    16. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is cheapest to not make people want to commit crimes. No need to do them if you have a work and feel part of the society.

    17. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the US needs more people in prisons. Particularly greedy business owners.

      No, the thieves and those who advocate stealing from people who are productive in order to "redistribute the wealth" are the ones who belong in prison.

    18. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why? They import Somalis by the thousands. The way many of them are acting, and considering you have no way to verify they weren't raging criminals in Somalia, reformed American prisoners cant be any worse. Sweden is the rape capitol of Europe now you know.

    19. Re:can they by operagost · · Score: 2

      The "Wars" on drugs and poverty assured that.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    20. Re:can they by jythie · · Score: 1

      Eh, it was before that even. One thing the Quakers learned the hard way is that once they allowed other faiths to immigrate and vote they were pushed out of office in favor of candidates that were more willing to give the voters blood.

    21. Re:can they by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Funny

      They may not still be criminals, but there's a pretty high chance that they'll still be Americans...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    22. Re:can they by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      If you really want to trace back the punishment versus rehabilitation argument you have to go all the way back to John Calvin and his contemporaries.

      In my opinion it makes ZERO sense to warehouse people for what are largely petty crimes and to punish them with meager conditions, etc. Without rehabilitation the recidivism rate rises too.

    23. Re:can they by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      When was this?

    24. Re:can they by freezin+fat+guy · · Score: 1

      +1 my friend.

      People don't feel the need to commit crimes since they are already living in the prison of universal health care.

    25. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sweden is the rape capitol of Europe now you know.

      Isn't that because in Sweden it's considered rape to have sex without a condom?

    26. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=lead+and+crime

    27. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, so you mean the CEO's, then ? ? ?
      *snicker*

    28. Re:can they by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      No, the thieves and those who advocate stealing from people who are productive in order to "redistribute the wealth" are the ones who belong in prison.

      So....politicians and CEOs then, right? :)

    29. Re:can they by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 3, Informative

      When was this?

      Well, it never really worked in the U.S. You can read about the various attempts at prison reform in the U.S. over the centuries here.

      Basically, from the late 1700s through at least much of the 1800s, the U.S. had a number of trends in prison structure and style that were intended to "reform" or "rehabilitate" inmates, rather than just to punish them. We can see this in the names of institutions and departments that predate the modern trend toward euphemisms: "reformatory" (where you were "reformed), "penitentiary" (where you learn penitence and experience personal guilt for what you did), "Department of Corrections" or "correctional facilities" (where your deviant behavior or defects are corrected), etc.

      Basically, all of this was a reaction to the idea of public punishments -- often fairly horrific -- that tended to be the norm in the 1700s and earlier.

      However, all of the attempts at prison reform tended to go in other extremes, which often weren't effective either -- and sometimes made inmates worse. For example, the early "penitentiary" system in U.S. was based on the idea that prisoners would live in complete isolation, only interacting with guards when masked. Guards would never talk to them, and even in some cases would wear cloth on their shoes so prisoners would never even be aware of their presence. The idea was supposedly that the prisoner in complete isolation would be forced to contemplate his crimes (without any other contact with anything else), and thereby gradually realize the error of his ways.

      Of course, putting human beings in complete isolation for years often tends to drive them to forms of insanity. So, this system often failed.

      There was a parade of other types of reforms, all generally well-meaning, and attempting to put an end to corporal punishment. But the reality was that they often made prisoners suffer severe psychological damage in other ways, and in many cases the guards would still beat and abused them anyway....

      Eventually, you also had the segregation of "insane" criminals from the rest, which led to further attempts at "curing" those who had "mental defects," in extreme cases resulting in surgeries and other craziness.

      So, I'm not really sure about what the GP is talking about, except that there was a general trend toward (supposedly) non-violent punishment beginning soon after the American Revolution in the U.S. And a lot of reformers wanted to find ways to "fix" prisoners, rather than just punishing them.

      In practice, I'm not sure any of those systems ever really worked well. But the ideas were influential in other countries.

    30. Re:can they by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      You mean deterence?

    31. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what countries would those be? Do you have citations, photos, a pamphlet, anything?

    32. Re: can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn you Autocorrect, I meant CONSENT!

    33. Re:can they by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your reply. It's ironic that other countries took our idea and ran with it, although I can think of plenty of ideas we took from other countries and further developed. Mainly commerce practices and war technologies though. ;)

    34. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sad thing is the whole 'treatment over punishment' thing was originally an American system that other countries copied because it was working fairly well, but then the US abandoned it favor of instiutionalized homosexual rape.

      There, fixed that for you.

    35. Re: can they by almechist · · Score: 1

      Isn't it more likely prosecution is difficult because there is frequently no evidence and no eyewitnesses, just one persons word against another? In those circumstances it *should* be hard to get a conviction.

      I absolutely agree, it should be hard, but prosecutors all over the US have proven that with the right kind of defendant it's not that hard at all to get a conviction based on nothing but the word of a single other person. You'd be amazed at how many black men are doing hard time for murder and other crimes based solely on the testimony of a single, often extremely unreliable eyewitness. Reading about some of these cases is scary, how utterly easy it is to wind up behind bars once the state has decided that's where you belong, and this can be especially true for heinous crimes like murder or rape.

    36. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mexican prisons are closer and we could repatriate some of their citizens that are taking up space in US prisons.

    37. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Treatment not punishment" is an ideal that goes right back to the invention of modern prisons, in the Netherlands in the early 18th century. It was popularised by Jeremy Bentham (a British liberal), and picked up by the US from him, but it was never an American invention.

    38. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, where can I sign up as a tenant? Am I too late? I swear I'll pay whatever greasing the wheels need if they'll just let me out of this fucking shithole country.

    39. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a problem, but the bigger problem is that the US system is focused on punishment rather than rehabilitation.

      Uh, progressives in the US invented rehabilitative justice. That was actually the whole point of locking people up vs. floggings or the stocks.

    40. Re: can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and Obama still can't close Gitmo!

    41. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Treatment doesn't work. The problem is that in America we give criminals probation or life sentences for crimes that previously rightly deserved capital punishment. Now it's considered an inhumane way to die to simply receive anesthesia plus a large dose of potassium.

    42. Re: can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he meant outsource to the US.

    43. Re:can they by doccus · · Score: 1

      Problem hee is that everybody's forgotten what prisons were for. Not rehabilitation. That can be accomplished better and cheaper other ways. Renmember how much the US spends per prisoner. much more per person than welfare payments. In fact if they used that money for that instead, then onlky hardened criminals, Besides, sending someone to crime school isn't ther best rehab anyways. Well, the, Punishment? Or protecting society? The US model is based on punishment, with only a token nod to "protecting society". There's way better ways to punish criminals though, and if the prisons were used exclusively to protect society, we could tear the other half of them down. This is, in fact what they were originally for. To keep them away from society for safety's sake. The US model is based on punishment though, and creates a revolving door because of poorly drafted laws and kneejerk reactionismn on "getting tough on crime". Making more acts criminal isn't "getting tough on crime" however, but rather the opposite, and anyone who believes that has absolutely no education or understanding at all . Whatever. It's too late anyways. You make your bed you have to sleep in it.

    44. Re: can they by GoogleShill · · Score: 1

      Tell that to a guy I know who is doing 6-to-life for fingering a flirty, but drunk girl at a party. In all probability, he turned into an asshole towards her afterwards because she wouldn't to sleep with him, so she wanted revenge and called the cops. Thinking that what he did was was fairly innocent, he admitted to what transpired.... Case closed as far as the prosecution goes.

      Even if he gets out, which he probably will at some point, he will be on lifetime parole, will have the penalty of returning to prison for even as much as having a drink, must sign up on the sex-offender list and knock on neighbor's doors to tell them he's been convicted of sexual assault... For the rest of his life.

    45. Re:can they by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2

      Sad thing is the whole 'treatment over punishment' thing was originally an American system that other countries copied because it was working fairly well, but then the US abandoned it favor of righteous suffering.

      Because it was found that running prisons for profit was a fine free market idea.

      The only problem of course, is that for profit institutions must service the stockholders. This means that there must be an increase in profit every quarter.

      This means that you have to regularly find ways to put more people in prison.

      The amazing thing is that what I wrote is completely batshit insane, that there is a model that demands more people be declared criminals in order to service a company.

      Insane, yes, but here is just one example:

      http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/02/23/pennsylvania.corrupt.judges/index.html?_s=PM:CRIME

      These fine upstanding Judges recieved kickbacks fro sending as many young people to juvie as possible, for crimes that would have normally ended up with a warning, or at worst some public service.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    46. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You misspelled "profit"

    47. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sad thing is the whole 'treatment over punishment' thing was originally an American system that other countries copied because it was working fairly well, but then the US abandoned it favor of instiutionalized homosexual rape.

      There, fixed that for you.

      You're right, having been there. I watched 9 other guys in another cell hold down an 18 year old while each took their turn. You could tell it was the first time for some, but if they didn't go along they would have been next. Most of them were into it and were there for violent offenses drunkeness in public, drugs; the two running the show,, one of which was in on manslaughter charges.

      The guard was a friend of one of them and helped to set up the conditions by having his trustee transfer the 18 year old shoplifter to their cell. (I was charged for trespassing on a university campus due to not being a student). A couple of days later he committed suicide. The two guys (weightlifters) laughingly bragged about what happened and celebrated by going hardcore gay in front of everyone else.

    48. Re:can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a bunch of horse crap! You pseudo-intellectuals on /. spout off all the time on crap you know next to nothing about! Every single prison in the US has education, recovery, faith, and social programs. The problem is that either the violent gang-bangers won't participate, or if they do, they get out and go right back to what they are doing. We have a culture here that glorifies violence. We have a lot of uneducated dumbasses, raising even more uneducated dumbasses. Many of these people don't "stray" they don't actually know any better. I live and work in the ghetto and you can't expect a child to grow up into a productive human being if his mother is a crack whore that cusses him and kicks him down the stairs. This happens everyday here and every charity group in town has been here (always with government grant money) trying to get these ignorant fools up on their feet. They refuse, because the United States taxpayers have given them a complete free ride. Why work? I have section 8 free housing, food stamps, medicaid, utility allowance, clothes and food from every church in town, and all the free needles and condoms I want. Push some ass and sell some dope and I get the liquor and dope money they need. It's not the "system." Well, maybe it is for all these damned entitlements for the lazy. Entitlements for people that work or educate themselves, I am all for. Just not for those who have never done, nor ever will do, a days' work.

    49. Re: can they by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Readers, take these "friend of a guy I met somewhere" urban myths with a truckload of salt. Even that guy that kept those girls locked up for years would try that "they was asking for it" thing if he could have gotten away with it.

    50. Re: can they by GoogleShill · · Score: 1

      Readers, take these "I don't believe true stories because they don't fit with my own preconceptions of the world" responses with a grain of salt. As we all know, the holocaust never happened either, right?

      Things like this happen all the time, if you choose not to believe it, then that's your problem.

    51. Re: can they by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Zero to Godwin in three seconds! We both know that shows you have nothing, give it up and let the grown ups discuss these things without your high school virgin stories about how girls are scary.

    52. Re: can they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's hard because rather than going to the police immediately, women wait around for a couple of weeks or months.
      Then they decide yeah fuck this it was rape.
      By then all the signs of rape are gone. No more DNA, no more bruises, and it's just he said she said.

    53. Re:can they by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Sweden's culture is also a good part of it. Over 3/4s of the population is Swedish. I mean Swedish going back centuries. The largest immigrant community is Finnish. A stable cultural base tends to make for among other things less crime. You can even see it in US. Areas with long term stable populations tend to have lower rates of crime. North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire all have very low rates of crime per population.
      This is not even about immigrants from other counties but move-ins from other states. You will find that on the whole crime is lower and education is better in the states where people do not tend to move in a lot or move out a lot. It would seem that a common sense of community identity reduces social problems.
      The problem is you can not really just create that.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    54. Re:can they by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Problem hee is that everybody's forgotten what prisons were for. Not rehabilitation. That can be accomplished better and cheaper other ways. Renmember how much the US spends per prisoner. much more per person than welfare payments. In fact if they used that money for that instead, then onlky hardened criminals, Besides, sending someone to crime school isn't ther best rehab anyways. Well, the, Punishment? Or protecting society? The US model is based on punishment, with only a token nod to "protecting society". There's way better ways to punish criminals though, and if the prisons were used exclusively to protect society, we could tear the other half of them down. This is, in fact what they were originally for. To keep them away from society for safety's sake. The US model is based on punishment though, and creates a revolving door because of poorly drafted laws and kneejerk reactionismn on "getting tough on crime". Making more acts criminal isn't "getting tough on crime" however, but rather the opposite, and anyone who believes that has absolutely no education or understanding at all . Whatever. It's too late anyways. You make your bed you have to sleep in it.

      Add to that the problem that the prison systems have lobbyists lobbying for mandatory sentences for non-violent crimes which is basically just free
      money for them. I don't agree that it's too late though but I think the first step is to get rid of the lobbyists and/or change the incentives. For instance
      instead of paying a prison just per head maybe give the prisons bonuses at the 1, 5, and 10 year mark for prisoners that stay out of the system. I read
      a report by a professor that showed that you could greatly reduce the number of people in prison by doing whole family intervention with juveniles. It's
      the classic dilbert problem though. It doubles the cost of Juvenile Hall in the short term and the savings don't show up for 5-10 years and when they do
      they show up in a different department so although society overall benefits, it's hard to get something like this approved as it doesn't benefit Juvenile Hall
      and it really doesn't benefit the prison system either as they actually lose prisoners so someone has to connect the dots and convince taxpayers to bite
      the bullet and pay more now for a payoff in a completely different area later.

    55. Re: can they by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Readers, take these "friend of a guy I met somewhere" urban myths with a truckload of salt. Even that guy that kept those girls locked up for years would try that "they was asking for it" thing if he could have gotten away with it.

      He didn't day "friend of a friend", he was somewhat specific. I'll be even more specific. My friend in college who worked parttime at Denny's
      and slept with a coworker there who already had a baby from another guy. He was 22 and she was 17. The grandmother turned them in and
      he's now on the sexual offender's list for life. He also lost his main job as IT at the sheriff's office because of it. It was consentual sex and
      she had a fricken baby but it's still listed as rape and he's on the same sexual predator's list with 50 year old men going after 12 year olds.

  2. Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    California has a problem with overcrowded prisons. Sweden has a problem with prisons being unoccupied.

    I sense an opportunity for a good capitalist.

    1. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by EdIII · · Score: 5, Funny

      Swedish Prison?

      That sounds better at this point than trying to survive in the US economy with fuckwits running the show....

      (I mean all of them, not one side)

    2. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by SlovakWakko · · Score: 0

      (I mean all of them, not one side)

      Thanks for being politically correct. We wouldn't want to label politicians "good" and "bad" :)

    3. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      California has a problem with overcrowded prisons. Sweden has a problem with prisons being unoccupied.

      I sense an opportunity for a good capitalist.

      No, keep your filth right where it is.
      What the US should be doing is disarming its law ENFORCEMENT agency and let it become again a police force.
      What the US should be doing is let less and less people go to prison. And those that go, shoudl go to be rehabilitated into civil society. In other words the US should be inspired by european moral values and not the shitty "eye for eye, tooth for tooth" bullshit ideology that underlies its entire judicial system. Designed only to put people into prison for minor deeds.

    4. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by davester666 · · Score: 2

      And a good catapultist.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    5. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by mendax · · Score: 2

      I doubt California could afford it. What Sweden spends per prisoner is probably double what California does. I suspect a Swedish dungeon affords better conditions than a California one.

      --
      It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.
    6. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      politically correct

      I see what you did there.

    7. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Dionysus · · Score: 2, Informative

      What the US should be doing is disarming its law ENFORCEMENT agency and let it become again a police force.

      But according to Fox News, how can you be a democracy if the police is unarmed?

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
    8. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Mitsoid · · Score: 1

      I see the kinda words you're flinging around.. And I approve!

    9. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just label 'em "bad" and let $deity sort it out.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    10. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California can't afford the prisoners they have now.

    11. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by crutchy · · Score: 5, Funny

      sudo rm politicians

    12. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by crutchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      there is a difference between a police officer with a ford sedan, a pistol or 2 with a couple of extra clips, taser, baton, pepper spray and bullet-proof vest, and a police officer with an armoured personnel carrier, machine gun, hand grenades and storm trooper outfit

    13. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by geogob · · Score: 1

      No. We just want to label them "bad".

    14. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Noughmad · · Score: 4, Funny

      sudo killall politicians

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
    15. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      commit a crime!
      learn a language!
      see the world!

    16. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      But according to Fox News, how can you be a democracy if the police is unarmed?

      Oh, dear ... I didn't know it had got to that stage yet.

      --
      No sig today...
    17. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I can see you didn't bother listening to your clip or even bothered to hear what was said. If you did, you never would have posted that.

      She says not having gun does not neccesarily mean _it_is_ a democracy. Go ahead, listen to it again.

      So you have a constitutional monarchy(Norway), that is conducting a trial in secrete, a guy from some org for the defense of democracy claiming norway is one and that the criminal exploited democracy (he dressed as a cop and shot the cops that confronted him), and the fox babe sets up a question prefacing it with cops not being armed doesn't make the country a democracy.

      That is completely different than what you tried to claim.

    18. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Some figures from http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/norway

      Civilian guns on Norway: 1,320,000 (1 in three people)
      Government guns in Norway: 80,000

      The Government is outgunned by 16:1

      (Which is as it should be)

      --
      No sig today...
    19. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "eye for eye, tooth for tooth" bullshit ideology that underlies its entire judicial system.

      I am pretty sure they think the second half of the bible is part of the Apocrypha and non canon.

    20. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by WWJohnBrowningDo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Noughmad is not in the plutocrat file. This incident will be reported.

    21. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by btv_bk · · Score: 0

      good

    22. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt California could afford it. What Sweden spends per prisoner is probably double what California does. I suspect a Swedish dungeon affords better conditions than a California one.

      A swedish dungeon cell has better internet connection, better quality food and cleaner air. Not to mention as polite as you can get guards to keep you inside. The prisons can also survive severe weather and earthquakes. If California moved its entire population to swedish prisons custom build on their soil it might improve living conditions.

      (To sent someone into jail is sometimes called 'to sent them behind swedish curtains'. Swedish curtains being synonym for barred windows.)

    23. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok. they're all bad. But the cluck of cuckoos wanting to fill their ranks is even more fucked up.

    24. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You know, people have been calling politicians fuckwits since time immemorial. Read ancients text from thousands of years ago. People have always despised politicians. It's fascinating when you think about it. The sentiments are nearly identical, only the words change. (Interestingly, atheists have always existed, too, with Plato characterizing them as young and naive.)

      And yet... here we are. Calling politicians fuckwits is like saying the sky is blue--it's not clever, it's not a unique or novel sentiment, and it's entirely pointless. Because other people have felt _exactly_ as you do yesterday, 1 year go, 10 years ago, 100 years ago, 1000 years ago, and presumably 10,000 years ago, what exactly is the purpose of venting your generalized frustration in a public forum?

      You might as well masturbate on camera. That will at least titillate somebody.

    25. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by WWJohnBrowningDo · · Score: 2

      Scandalous! Whoever is responsible for this mess should go to jail!

    26. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by i+ate+my+neighbour · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's fine as long as they have stormtrooper accuracy.

    27. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by isorox · · Score: 4, Funny

      sudo killall politicians

      You realise GCHQ monitor slashdot?

      sudo praise all politicians and their masters

    28. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California has a problem with overcrowded prisons. Sweden has a problem with prisons being unoccupied.

      I sense an opportunity for a good capitalist.

      No, keep your filth right where it is.
      What the US should be doing is disarming its law ENFORCEMENT agency and let it become again a police force.
      What the US should be doing is let less and less people go to prison. And those that go, shoudl go to be rehabilitated into civil society. In other words the US should be inspired by european moral values and not the shitty "eye for eye, tooth for tooth" bullshit ideology that underlies its entire judicial system. Designed only to put people into prison for minor deeds.

      You don't understand, all that stuff is just the reason presented on the face of things. The actual reason is because blacks and hispanics need to be kept out of the voting booths and away from money. And the best way to do that is make everything a "crime" and three minor crimes into a "felony", and boom! no vote, no decent jobs, and no legal weapon ownership if they start getting uppity about it.

      On a slightly more serious note, Sweden has an advantage in that the country is genetically and socially homogenous. You don't get nearly as much bullshit in the law when most of your society has the same background and agrees on damn near everything. This allows the cops to focus on actual crime, instead of spending time looking for reasons to lock up "undesirables".

    29. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by jandersen · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The Government is outgunned by 16:1

      However, in Norway the population is, by and large, loyal to the government, believe it or not. In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK. Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them.

      I remember a story from when I went to school in Denmark (too many years ago): The Czar of Russia came on a state visit to Denmark, and was shown some of the sights in Copenhagen, modest as they are. Among other things, they climbed up a famous church tower, "The Round Tower"; and the Czar, whose czarina was a Danish princess, wanted to impress his in-law with his immense power, so he called over one of his young officers and told him to throw himself from the tower. The officer dared not disobey, said his last prayers and started to climb over the railings - but the king stopped him and has the czar what this was about. The czar ansewred: "See, this is how powerful I am. Nobody can resist me". And the king looked at him and said - "My power if different - I can go out to even the poorest farm in my country, unarmed and alone, and ask for shelter; and the farmer will guard me with his life."

      The American way is not the only way.

    30. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Sweden != Norway

      Well, duh.

      You know how I know you didn't watch the video you're responding to?

      --
      No sig today...
    31. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by should_be_linear · · Score: 1, Troll

      It made some sense to compare civilian to government guns until like 1930. Governments have all those airplanes, hellicopters, NSAs, prisons, so best thing you can do with bare gun against government is to shoot yourself in the head.

      --
      839*929
    32. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sweden also has the highest suicide rates
      Strange thing you left out those facts, guess they did not fit your case.

      I would hardly call that a fact since it is a myth.

      I have never seen a list where Sweden is placed at the top when it comes to suicide rates.
      A quick googling gave me a list on Wikipedia

      It looks like suicide rates in the US are higher than those in Sweden.

      The list from Washington Post places Sweden higher than US but that list is based on 8 years old data.

    33. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      So it's better if police spray and pray in the streets?

    34. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Yes, obviously Sweden needs privatized prisons too.

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    35. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sweden hasn't been genetically and socially homogenous in a long time. They have Sami minority in the north, Finnish, Danish and Norwegian across the country and they have been taking refugees to the point where they now have about 10% of nation formed from first and second generation migrants from various conflicts across the globe.

    36. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      However, in Norway the population is, by and large, loyal to the government, believe it or not. In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK

      Where is the BULLSHIT mod option when you need it!?

      While this MAY be true for Norway it is certainly not true for most of Europe.
      Voter participation is on an all time low, demonstrations against the "ruling class" aka politicians get more violent, corruption is everywhere and people know it.

      The only reason that most appear complicit is because overall people are still living comfortably over here.

    37. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, in Norway the population is, by and large, loyal to the government, believe it or not. In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK. Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them.

      That's because your government actually represents you reasonably well. And that, in turn, is because you keep it in check.

      Americans believe that any government is bad government, but that's because all they ever saw is bad government. They don't realize that a strong government can do a great many things for its citizens so long as the citizens keep it in check and make it focus its power towards their needs.

    38. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When police officers wear skimasks -- something went horribly wrong.

      With around 5% of the world's population the US has 25% of the world's prisoners, go figure. One problem is that huge number of prisoners were never actually convicted. They are either awaiting trial -- can take years -- or were threatened with such barbaric terms that they took a "bargain" rather than defend themselves.

      This only applies to the poor, of course, real people get lawyers. Once inside, if you were not a criminal to begin with, the only way to survive is to become a real nasty piece of work.

      The US justice system is fucked beyond repair.

    39. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sweden is also, compared to the US, VERY socialist

      Compared to the US, which is a proto-fascist police state at this point, ANY country is relatively socialist. The sad thing is I just know, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that you have no clue what socialism entails. So, you're not actually wrong, but not for lack of trying.

    40. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Eunuchswear · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're behind the times. GCHQ have their own slashdot.

      Of course, who knows which one you're reading at the moment...

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    41. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That Sweden has high suicide rates is a myth, albeit a popular one.

    42. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by TheP4st · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sweden also has the highest suicide rates Strange thing you left out those facts, guess they did not fit your case.

      Strange thing you left out the fact that the USA have a higher suicide rate than Sweden, guess it did not fit your case. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate

      --
      "I have downloaded hundreds and hundreds of records, why would I care if somebody downloads ours?" Robin Pecknold
    43. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Eunuchswear · · Score: 3, Informative

      On a slightly more serious note, Sweden has an advantage in that the country is genetically and socially homogenous.

      14.3% of the Swedish population are foreign born.

      Around 20% are either foreign born or children of two foreign born parents.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    44. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your observation is that people have always been calling politicians fuckwits, and your conclusion is that people have always been wrong.

      I suggest that people have always been right.

      It's in the nature of the position: if one must want power to gain power, then only those who want power will be in power. Apart from the very rare altruist - Aneurin Bevan was probably one of the last such politicians in the UK - it is a case of give me sortition or give me fuckwits.

    45. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by fustakrakich · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Designed only to put people into prison for minor deeds.

      An empty prison gathers no profit. Morality is irrelevant and is nothing but mental masturbation and distraction.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    46. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A similar story, also learned in school here in Denmark:

      Under World War Two, Denmark was occupied by German forces. One day, when the Danish king was out riding his horse through the streets of Copenhagen, a German soldier was surprised to see no bodyguards. Puzzled, he asked a passerby "who is protecting him"? "Everybody" was the answer.

    47. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calling the sky blue is pointless? What do you prefer to call it?

    48. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by TheLink · · Score: 2

      They spray, you pray. And everyone pays.

      --
    49. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by gmuslera · · Score: 4, Insightful

      US prisons are full because it is profitable for the companies that run them. If crime drops enough, then they will find a way to keep them full anyway, and a surveillance/police state is a guarantee that they will succeed at that.

    50. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by javilon · · Score: 4, Informative

      In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK. Even if we don't agree with the government's
      policies, we still trust and respect them.

      That may be in the North. Here in the south (Spain) we have the opposite. Crowded jails, corrupt politicians and a public that doesn't trust its government at all. Not that we can get rid of them. They have us by the balls.

      --


      When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    51. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by ladoga · · Score: 2

      They won't exit voluntarily. So you need to use force:
      $ sudo killall -9 politicians

      But whatever. You'll only end up witnessing the following:
      "$USER is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported."

    52. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Bongo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In Pinker's Better Angels of Our Nature, he describes a study done on attitudes throughout USA. The study was in the form of a letter, written as if from a guy looking for a job, and the letter was sent to employers round the country. The letter made an admission, "I think you should know, I was involved in a murder, I was confronted by a guy in a bar and we had to take it outside, and he suddenly had a knife and I had to defend myself, and he died." Employers in the Northern states were not sympathetic to him. Employers in Southern states were sympathetic, and admitted that he was forced into it and had to defend his honour and even offered him friendly support would he ever be in town. Meanwhile a similar letter was used with a different admission, that the guy had been poor and so stole a car. Similar difference but in reverse. This time the Northern states were sympathetic to his situation, but Southern states thought it was no excuse. As it happens, separate stats show that the incidence of gun related murders is lowest in Northern states, and highest in Southern states. The inference? Gun crime is largely about cultural values to do with honour. You must guard yourself, your honour is to protect your relatives, your property, etc. Why? Well this is the interesting thing. If you don't trust the government to protect you, because say, you are herding goats in a desert area far from authorities, then the code of honour dominates. So perhaps, USA has higher gun crime because it is enshrined in the constitution that you shouldn't trust the government anyway.

    53. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      1930 is also about the time many of those Norwegian civilian guns were manufactured. It seems every Norwegian I know has a few old hunting rifles they inherited from their grandfather, along with a primitive mountain hut to store them in.

    54. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed there is, and we have far too much of the later at this point.

    55. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Funny

      Why would a country full of blondes and saunas have any suicide rate at all...?

      --
      No sig today...
    56. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Funny

      While this MAY be true for Norway it is certainly not true for most of Europe.

      Yep.

      Here in Spain we'd be cutting their heads off it it were legal and they weren't heavily armed.

      --
      No sig today...
    57. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should just shoot them instead of putting them in prison.

      "eye for eye" never works because the threat is not truly eliminated. While a bullet for an eye certainly would.

    58. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Rufty · · Score: 1

      No, we want to label them "bad" and "worse".

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    59. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by fey000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, in Norway the population is, by and large, loyal to the government, believe it or not. In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK. Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them.

      That's because your government actually represents you reasonably well. And that, in turn, is because you keep it in check.

      Americans believe that any government is bad government, but that's because all they ever saw is bad government. They don't realize that a strong government can do a great many things for its citizens so long as the citizens keep it in check and make it focus its power towards their needs.

      I don't think we have the same idea here. We don't keep our government "in check". Instead, we populate the government with people representative to some degree of the population at large. When the richest 1% are not the ruling class, you get wonderful benefits like a taxation of not only the poor, but also the rich. And that there provides a fantastic boost to the national economy.

      In short, keeping your government "in check" is less important when the government already attempts to work for the nation at large rather than only for those that might fund the next election. Also, it builds one hell of a trusting relation which helps when you need to do unpleasant things like slash the retirement funds or raise the retirement age.

    60. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why use Norwegian gun policy in a thread about Swedish prisons?`

      Figures regarding Sweden from http://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/sweden (not saying they have their numbers correct):

      Civilian guns in Sweden: 2,800,000 (1 in three people)
      Government guns in Sweden: 920,000 (also, the police have 32k guns. You missed the 10k guns police have in Norway)

      In US the numbers are civ: ~300M, gov: 2,7M (+1,15M)

      Government is outgunned about 100:1 in the US.

      So, what is now the connection between these numbers and overcrowded prisons? Is the people with guns proportional with incarcerations?

    61. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dunno about that. Might be the other way around. California prisons are run as a business, right? They might cost surprisingly much.

      Oh btw, I have a question: If you lock up people in for profit prison, where having a prisoner is money in the owners pocket, how do you think they will ever get out? If I were the owner I would mold the place so gangs and violence would form and happen, just to get more days to the golden geeses records.

    62. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, in Norway the government is, by and large, loyal to the people.

    63. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      But without blackjack and hookers.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    64. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by stenvar · · Score: 0

      However, in Norway the population is, by and large, loyal to the government, believe it or not. In fact, that is how it is in most of Europe, AFAIK. Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them.

      Yes, and what's the result? When Europeans get good rulers, they prosper. But when they get rules like Louis XIV, Napoleon, Hitler, Mussolini, and Franco, people suffer and die on a massive scale.

      The American way is not the only way.

      Americans know that; European history is a big part of the US curriculum. Unfortunately, the reverse is obviously not true: to Europeans, there is only the European way.

    65. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by fritsd · · Score: 2

      Some people feel a bit down when the Winter half-year starts in November: all maintenance and hobby projects that you wanted to finish outside have to be postponed under 1 1/2 meters of snow. Also, November can be very very gloomy (no snow yet and less than 8 hours daylight).

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    66. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Informative

      Some more figures about Sweden, shall we?

      Health expenditure (in percent of GDP): 9.4 (USA: 17.9)
      Physician density (per 1000): 3.8 (USA: 2.4)
      Adult obesity: 18.6% (USA: 33%)
      Education expenditure (in percent of GDP): 7.3 (USA: 5.4)
      Public debt (2012/2011, in percent of GDP): 38.2/38.4 (USA: 72.5/67.8)

      Unlike your claims, I have a source for them. Well, of course only if you believe that socialist propaganda machine that the CIA is.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    67. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Is there any source for those numbers? If that is true, it pretty much means that there are more people in prison in the USA than in China.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    68. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont believe his conclusion is that politians are good. I believe that his conclusion is that it doesnt matter wether you call politians good or bad. They are what they are and they are unlikely going to change. And I would mostly agree with that conclusion. The only thing that MIGHT change the polititians would be a much better educated and well informed Public. And even though I am an optimist, I cant see that happening in the US anytime within the next couple of decades.

    69. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by flyneye · · Score: 0

      sudo rem GCHQ NSA -a | /dev/null/

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    70. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, I haven't seen a dupe article this week, so I can't be on the original Slashdot.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    71. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by flyneye · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's a very good reason for that.
      People who put themselves forward and offer services as a politician should be the last choice to fill that position.
      People of sound mind, kind heart and good will should be extorted into fulfilling that duty, if we are ever to be a success.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    72. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Euro moral values?!
      +1 funny
      A little long winded, but the punchline is sublime.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    73. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a great story. Do you have a source for it?

    74. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by spiralx · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's true both by absolute value and percentage, there's any number of sources available but this BBC article has a good summary of various figures.

    75. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What that leads to is that when you get robbed, you'll also get killed. If the punishment is the same whether you live or die, you die. It's one less witness.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    76. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Californians and Swedes are pretty close to each other anyway. They look quite alike. The main difference is maybe that the Swedes speak the better English.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    77. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Damn, I thought I was getting on in years. Seeing that Nicholas was killed in 1917, you must have been born around 1907 and should be about 106 years old...

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    78. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      IIRC Plato suggested the only truly just society (and just means perfect here) was to remove all worldly goods from those in the top rank (the golds) so their welbeing was intricately linked to the happiness and success of the society they governed. Imagine if there was no lobbyists or other vested interests able to sway a politician with promises of a cushy non-exec directorship, or speaking tours, or just buckets of cash.. not only would it discourage the psychopaths from running, it'd also mean they might concentrate of doing a decent job instead!

      I think these people were also chosen at random, but its been a very long time since I read the Republic. Worth are-read I think.

    79. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by erikkemperman · · Score: 1

      Sorry to say that, yes, this is true. The BBC article spiralx mentioned is a good summary. More numbers:
      American incarceration rate
      List of countries by incarceration rate

      Personally I believe the privatization of justice has a lot to do with these figures. Otherwise I can't explain the fact that these incarceration rates were growing all through a major drop in crime rates over the same period.

      --
      Gosh, thanks. That must be why the other ships call me Meatfucker -- GCU Grey Area (Eccentric)
    80. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed that! (European here).

    81. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Free Market God demands USians go to prison. For some, thats literally the only place where they can get food, shelter, education, and healthcare.

    82. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by AlecC · · Score: 1

      That "Sweden has the highest suicide rates" was true when President Eisenhower quoted it. But that was a long, long time ago, and it hasn't been true for a logn time. Sweden's suicide rate is now around or just below the European average.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    83. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by h00l00v00 · · Score: 1

      Just remember to use the swedish prime ministers password 'banan' (banana) leaked from Adobe.

    84. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As it stands prisons in the US as well as social policies simply tend to enrage prisoners. The normal product of a US prison is an inmate being released who is more than ready to commit crimes that are far worse than his prior crimes. That is amplified by a prior life filled with lack of education, decent medical care, poverty and substance abuse.
                                Fixing this will not be easy. And a further consideration is that we do have some inmates that should never be released. If we can educate inmates beyond primitive education get rid of the fear of poverty which drives most crime and make prison a reasonably pleasant experience we just might solve the US crime issue.
                                Right now we have tens of millions of Americans who live with the constant fear of poverty. The guy with a job that senses that he just might end up on the streets lives in a pressure cooker. Somewhere along the line he will tend to slip. If that slippage is into dope you can bet that prison awaits. If it is into alcohol there is a somewhat better chance of helping the person out. What we now see is people committing violence out of the rage that pressure brings. More and more we see oddballs doing mass murders. We also see financial crimes as people try to cling to normal life. Our crime rate is deeply related to capitalism. Northern europe has forms of socialism that take much of the pressure off of the public and low crime rates are a consequence.

    85. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sense an opportunity for a good capitalist.

      Meanwhile, those of us in the civilized world feel that imprisonment is not something that should be handled by market forces.

      Those of us with low prison populations and recidivism rates that is. It's almost like the two were connected.

    86. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by fritsd · · Score: 1

      So you're saying American Christians are technically/culturally Jews; where in Judaïsm the impact of the story of God telling Avraham/Abraham/Ibrahim to slaughter his son Yitzhak/Isaäc/Ishmael is considered as more religiously instructive than, say, the Sermon on the Mount.

      It's interesting to see that, even if the stories are the same in different cultures, the emphasis on which of the stories are of greatest importance can make such a difference.
      Mind you, in all the Abrahamic religions God settles for a barbecue, which is a lot kinder than the ancient ritual of the statue of Moloch (WARNING: link causes distress).

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    87. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another story of the same ilk...

      The previous king of Sweden (this was probably in the 60's) went for a walk with an overseas guest (don't remember who) to Kungsträdgården (around town, close to the castle).

      Guest: How can you walk around without bodyguards?

      King: I do have body guards.

      Guest: Where?!?

      King, pointing at regular civilians: There's one. There's another...

    88. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah ha! it's a temperature issue. Sweden is generally colder than Spain, and they're doing great. Saudi and the UAE are hotter than spain, and they're rife with all sorts of social issues like inequality, corruption etc.

      We simply must stop global warming, or else we'll all be corrupt politician haters!

    89. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by dbIII · · Score: 2

      Americans believe that any government is bad government, but that's because all they ever saw is bad government

      "What did the Romans ever do for us?"
      You people have no idea what a bad government is if you have that attitude.

      Look beyond the cocaine fuelled insanity of Californian government (or whatever has done it to that place for decades) and Southern shitholes (which where I live in another country is starting to resemble politically) and you'll see some stuff that works - maybe not as well as in 1970 in the same place but still better than a lot of other places.

    90. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by shentino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's better if cops are held to the same standards as citizens when they kill someone.

    91. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a justice system, it's a legal system. Subtle difference.

    92. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by camperdave · · Score: 1

      California has a problem with overcrowded prisons. Sweden has a problem with prisons being unoccupied.

      I sense an opportunity for a good capitalist.

      Yes. You need to import Swedish methods for dealing with crime.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    93. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Arkham · · Score: 2

      I don't think we have the same idea here. We don't keep our government "in check". Instead, we populate the government with people representative to some degree of the population at large.

      That's exactly the problem in the US. We're a nation divided. If you look at the last 3 elections, we're divided nearly 50/50 on our political views. Half of Americans seem to want social justice, equality, privacy, and caring for the poor, and the other half want religion in schools, small government, privatization of all government roles, and a huge military. The two sides are so far apart that no compromise is possible.

      A friend explained it like this. Two people go out to dinner. One says, "I feel like eating Italian tonight." The other says, "I want to eat Anthrax and broken glass." Now, compromise so both are happy.

      --
      - Vincit qui patitur.
    94. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      That, folks, is the bizzarest mod I've ever got (and that's saying some, considering some of the stuff that happens in the AGW topics).

      +5 insightful for a silly joke?

      The paranoia is strong today!

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    95. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The U.S. way used to be to have a just governent. If a government is just it will be respected. How can you respect a government that is selling lottery tickets, making a profit, and activly interested in impoverishing it's citizens?

      True the government is no different that the people. The people / government in this case have decided to make a profit at any cost. Let's sell our children to feed ourselves. We lack any kind of moral fibre to see us out of this morass. Guns or gun controll has little if nothing to do wih it. If you have a morall society. You can have plenty of guns and not kill eachother. If you have an immoral society people will be killing themselves and going to prison even without guns. I for one see my fellow coutry men as being largly degernerate. The government certainly is. Shouldn't I get as many guns as I can possibly find to keep all the crazy people away from me?

    96. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      The GCHQ equivalents would be a slot machine in a smelly pub and a toothless blowjob in the car park out back.

      Advice for GCHQ employees - lie back and think of all that lovely NSA cash that pays your wages.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    97. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by igny · · Score: 1

      What suicide rate can they have?

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    98. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gotta add the -9 for the zombies

    99. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A classic quote from de Maistre:

      "In a democracy people get the leaders they deserve."

      Now stop whining.

    100. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europe

      Spain

      There's your problem, you're considering Spain as part of Europe. It really is just a continuation of the Middle East. Greece too. Explains why you guys can't run even modest nation states.

    101. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by h1p5t3r · · Score: 0

      Incarceration rates have dropped due to incompetence, fear, and lack of resources. Incarceration rates should parallel immigration rates, especially in Europe. With the inverse being true, that's indicative. On the immigration front Europe tends to attract the low hanging fruit that nobody else really wants to deal with.

    102. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 1

      His consclusion was that people are wrong ("pointless", "not clever", etc.) to call politicians fuckwits.

      But I think that's the central problem: politicians are intrinsically fuckwits. It's an inherent feature of the system.

    103. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 2

      Stormtroopers aren't accurate, they're precise. ;)

    104. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sweden also has the highest suicide rates

      US has a higher suicide rate, and so does 43 other countries apparently:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate

    105. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by erikkemperman · · Score: 1

      Incarceration rates should parallel immigration rates, especially in Europe.

      I have a hard time parsing this is anything other than xenophobe troll. But I hope I'm wrong, so at the risk of feeding... Why should incarceration rates parallel immigration rates? And why especially in Europe?

      Don't bother replying if your answer is "all immigrants are criminals" or something silly like that.

      --
      Gosh, thanks. That must be why the other ships call me Meatfucker -- GCU Grey Area (Eccentric)
    106. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Homogenous" is rural libertarian code word for "I'm a RA-(cough cough cough) incapable of recognizing when I'm being inappropriate regarding someone's heritage."

      Because we can't play "that" card, lest we be made to look crazy.

      Because, you know, wanting Somalia as your form of government isn't.

    107. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Lucky_Norseman · · Score: 1

      In Norway, those guns would be mainly military. Normal policemen are not armed in Norway, but they may have a sealed box in the glove compartment of their car so they can arm themselves if needed.
      In Sweden the police are normally armed with pistols.

    108. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by slash.jit · · Score: 1

      sudo shutdown government

    109. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by microbox · · Score: 1

      The Government is outgunned by 16:1

      Some Americans don't believe in democracy.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    110. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      It's fine as long as they have stormtrooper accuracy.

      Hey! They're more precise than sand people!

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    111. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Denmark at that time had a population of about 3 million. Iowa currently has a population of 3 million. I wouldn't be surprised if the governor of Iowa walks around without bodyguards. Furthermore, Denmark has a constitutional monarchy and the king doesn't actually rule the country (and appears not to have done so even at the time of the Russian czars), so the impetus to kill him is a lot less.

    112. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Like in the Denmark example,
      1) Sweden is much smaller than the US.
      2) The king doesn't actually rule the country.

      He walks around with bodyguards because he's a nobody.

    113. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by ultranova · · Score: 2

      That's because your government actually represents you reasonably well. And that, in turn, is because you keep it in check.

      Yes, but not with guns. You can't keep a government in check with the threat of revolution because, even if you had all the guns, the cost of overthrowing one is so high and the risk of even worse one rising so dire it almost never happens. Rather, there's a political system that divides power between multiple (>2) parties, which means there's always the threat of an upstart outcompeting the established ones if they get too full of themselves.

      Norway has a free market and competition for political parties, US has a cartel of two holding almost all power. One of these means you get to pick which flavour of two equal evils you dislike less, and othe other that there's always another party competing for your vote, and if they get corrupt that's fine, just switch to another. Which is kinda ironic, considering how much importance US puts on economic competition - I guess its leaders don't like to be subject to their own teachings.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    114. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by paiute · · Score: 1

      sudo killall politicians

      Oh shit, sorry, I wrote your name in the last time I voted. The killbots are on the way.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    115. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Somebody+Is+Using+My · · Score: 1

      You realise GCHQ monitor slashdot?

      All the more reason not to censor oneself.

      Remind Them that we are not afraid of them, and we will not bow.

      Yes, I know the comment I am responding to was made in jest. I still don't think that we should - even in mockery - countenance the idea of obeisance to self-important bureaucrats for doing something we every right to do. It all too quickly turns from a half-hearted jest into a habit and then finally a becomes a requirement beneath which we are all forced to live. I'd rather just give them the finger openly from the start.

      Thus I say in agreement with the GP:
      sudo killall politicians

    116. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people feel a bit down when the Winter half-year starts in November: all maintenance and hobby projects that you wanted to finish outside have to be postponed under 1 1/2 meters of snow. Also, November can be very very gloomy (no snow yet and less than 8 hours daylight).

      So... like Northern states even in the USA's midwest? ...

    117. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by rwise2112 · · Score: 1

      It's fine as long as they have stormtrooper accuracy.

      They can't have. After all "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise". So they would be less precise, and couldn't even hit the side of a sandcrawler, which Imperial Stormtroopers can barely do apparently.

      --

      "For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert"
    118. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Jiro · · Score: 1

      with-->without, of course

    119. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Sloppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Voter participation is on an all time low

      Ah, humans. We have the perfect strategy for getting what we want from democracy: "Don't like it? Stop voting!"

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    120. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Some more figures about Sweden, shall we?

      Health expenditure (in percent of GDP): 9.4 (USA: 17.9) Physician density (per 1000): 3.8 (USA: 2.4) Adult obesity: 18.6% (USA: 33%) Education expenditure (in percent of GDP): 7.3 (USA: 5.4) Public debt (2012/2011, in percent of GDP): 38.2/38.4 (USA: 72.5/67.8)

      Unlike your claims, I have a source for them. Well, of course only if you believe that socialist propaganda machine that the CIA is.

      It's amusing to me that you think outspending on health is bad and that outspending on education is good. [This assumes that all your data points were intended to show Sweden superior].

    121. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What it means is you'd have a 'top rank' completely in the pocket of the 'bottom rank'.

      Please understand - Plato was a megalomaniac fucktard. Notice how easily you adopt his hierarchical labels.

    122. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by fonske · · Score: 1

      "the catapultist empathic capacity for the decapitated capitalist was the capitulation of the californicated cataclysm"

    123. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them."

      So what you're saying is that Norway is full of a bunch of fucking morons?

      There is nothing noble or admirable in trusting human beings in positions of authority over other human beings. Nothing at all. If the attitude of the people of Norway is as you claim, it is something to be ashamed of.

      It's like you're bragging about how good of sheep the people of Norway are.

      And the farmer in your quaint little story? We have a term for people like that - its Uncle Tom.

    124. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      It turns out that holding political office is a hell of a lot of work, and most people don't want to do it. (I sure don't, do you?) You know what's worse than an asshole who wants to be a politician and becomes one? A kindhearted marm who becomes a politician despite not at all wanting the job. That marm is going to wash out but the asshole is at least going to perform the job duties -- and with zeal, even.

    125. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      Low voter participation is a sign that the population is happy with the status of the democracy but the rest of what you said makes sense.

      Keep in mind, however, that most of Europe isn't a democracy. A few countries are, but Spain and Sweden are monarchies and the UK is still a theocracy for goodness sake.

    126. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by operagost · · Score: 2

      No, a strong government is a bad government as long as there are bad people who abuse power... which is forever. If you don't trust individuals to make their own decisions, how are those same people given positions of power going to suddenly become righteous?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    127. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by jandersen · · Score: 1

      They have us by the balls.

      Well, at least it is means your government is relevant to you.

    128. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by operagost · · Score: 1
      You're part of the problem. Look at your two factions:

      social justice, equality, privacy, and caring for the poor

      and

      religion in schools, small government, privatization of all government roles, and a huge military

      I believe in social justice... I just don't believe government is capable of achieving it. And "caring for the poor" is a subset of it.
      A big government capable of enacting "social justice" cannot allow us privacy. It's impossible. We're forced to tell the government exactly how much money we make and what we do with it to pay for the programs, and now that we're forced to buy health insurance they demand to know everything about our health. In order to support "equality", our businesses have to tell the government who they're hiring and firing, how their buildings are designed, who their customers are, etc.

      The crazy "right wing Republican" who wants both small government and a huge military is also a contradiction in terms.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    129. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      American health care is more expensive than other countries because we subsidize the healthcare of the rest of the world. You're welcome! You're welcome for all those inexpensive drugs developed by American companies based on American-government-funded basic science and sold to you at a discount. You're welcome! You're welcome for all those medical devices and procedures developed by American doctors in American hospitals having been trained in American universities with the cost borne by the American economy. You're welcome! We don't mind doing you the favor but frankly it's a little unflattering for you to turn around and say it's to our shame that you are freeloading off of us. Gosh, would it be so hard you all to say thank you?

      Obesity is a sign of wealth. Americans are wealthy and fat -- we are living the dream, baby! Pass the cheese dip!

      I couldn't tell whether the education expenditure counted both public (tax) and private spending. Sweden has tax-paid college education, right? I don't know whether America's private college tuition payments are part of your numbers, but in any case Sweden is getting outspent by Namibia and Cuba and whatever the heck Lethoso is.

      And sheesh we do all of that with tax rates less than half of Sweden's. We have problems, sure, but I'm not sure you've focused on the biggest or truest ones. If you want to focus on the way that Sweden is most better than America, focus on the rate of the populace which believes in magic -- Sweden is a century ahead of us there, even though Sweden was a theocracy until 2000.

    130. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Mab_Mass · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's amusing to me that you think outspending on health is bad and that outspending on education is good. [This assumes that all your data points were intended to show Sweden superior].

      I fail to see the humor here. Sweden manages to spend just over half of the US on health, but manages to have nearly half the infant mortality rate and a longer life expectancy. It seems that they must be doing something right.

      Please don't make the mistake of thinking that all of these numbers are independent.

    131. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Zalbik · · Score: 2

      It's amusing to me that you think outspending on health is bad and that outspending on education is good.

      Given that the USA outspends Sweden on health, but the life expectancy is lower, the outspending by USA is a bad thing.

      Given that Swedish adults outperform American adults on standardized tests, the outspending by Sweden on education appears justified.

    132. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Defending yourself against getting knifed (and quite possibly dying) is "defending your honor"? That is an interesting interpretation.

    133. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about guns.

      FWIW, while I'm pro-gun, I don't believe that guns are particularly useful to keep the government in check. Many repressive regimes had fairly liberal gun laws (e.g. in Saddam's Iraq, the norm was a full-auto AK per household). Guns are for personal self-defense (well, and recreation), not for politics.

      And yes, one of the major reasons why US is bad on that count is because its political system is broken so badly. But it's not just proportional representation. It's also stuff like gerrymandering and unrestricted corporate lobbying. Basically, the two big players in the system conspire to keep it in such a shape that it benefits them both at the expense of any smaller parties.

    134. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

      When health outcomes for the US are worse across the board than they are in Sweden, outspending on health IS bad.

      When poverty, crime, and lack of education are tightly and inextricably linked, outspending on education IS good.

      Longer lifespans are good. Sweden has them. Lower infant mortality rates are good. Sweden has them. Lower maternal mortality rates are good. Sweden has them. Lower prison population coupled with lower crime rates are good. Sweden has them. Lower suicide rates are good. Sweden has them. The list goes on and on and on, so where there are questions or counter-intuitive numbers, such as lower healthcare spending, something in your assumptions is probably wrong and Sweden is doing it right.

      We can safely assume that there is no one Swedish policy that is yielding such good results. We can safely assume that their demographics contribute to their good results. We can safely assume that their culture contributes to their good results. We do not yet know how much any of those things matter, or why the suite of policies they're using work so well, but obviously wrong assumptions such as higher healthcare spending being always good will not help in understanding why what they're doing is working.

    135. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      10%? I don't know what the threshold of "homogenous" for you is but to me 90% is very homogenous. America is nearing 50% non-white, which is normally what we mean when we talk about diversity.

    136. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't think we have the same idea here. We don't keep our government "in check". Instead, we populate the government with people representative to some degree of the population at large.

      That is keeping your government in check. The very fact of having proportionate representation is already a big deal in that regard, but you have to put it in place first (and ensure that it remains there).

      Besides that, I'm pretty sure that you have e.g. laws that limit campaign contributions, don't you?

    137. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by charles2678 · · Score: 1

      [T]he asshole is at least going to perform the job duties

      Counterexample: Current House of Representatives.

    138. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      A friend explained it like this. Two people go out to dinner. One says, "I feel like eating Italian tonight." The other says, "I want to eat Anthrax and broken glass." Now, compromise so both are happy.

      Stay in, order a pizza, and let one of them season his with anthrax and broken glass. The problem in the USA is that the story is more like one says 'Italian is the only food that people should be allowed to eat' and the other says 'no, everyone should be force-fed broken glass'.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    139. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather just give them the finger openly from the start.

      Well said! I personally try to do that -- quite literally -- at every possible opportunity. Second circuit says it's protected speech! :)

    140. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      "Even if we don't agree with the government's policies, we still trust and respect them."

      So what you're saying is that Norway is full of a bunch of fucking morons?

      There is nothing noble or admirable in trusting human beings in positions of authority over other human beings. Nothing at all. If the attitude of the people of Norway is as you claim, it is something to be ashamed of.

      It's like you're bragging about how good of sheep the people of Norway are.

      And the farmer in your quaint little story? We have a term for people like that - its Uncle Tom.

      You don't have to agree with a decision to respect it. It's called compromise. There's a difference between respecting and understanding a decision you may not personally agree with vs. blind obedience.

    141. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      You don't see the irony in thinking that spending more on education is good, but spending more on health isn't? The data presented said nothing about results, only spending.

    142. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      While all that may be true, the original poster presented only the expenditures as proof that Sweden was better. That was my point.

    143. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      I don't think we have the same idea here. We don't keep our government "in check". Instead, we populate the government with people representative to some degree of the population at large. When the richest 1% are not the ruling class, you get wonderful benefits like a taxation of not only the poor, but also the rich. And that there provides a fantastic boost to the national economy.

      That *is* keeping the government "in check". That's what the USA used to have too -- at least more like that than what we have now. Look into Abe Lincoln's early life for example. The reason we're so fucked now is that we failed to prevent them from continuing to amass more and more power over the years to the point where now they're a whole different class.

    144. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by dosilegecko · · Score: 1

      "You'd have to be a real low-life piece of shit to get involved in politics" - Frank Reynolds

    145. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by dosilegecko · · Score: 1

      They're held to nothing. They get to walk around and be rude disrespectful thugs who harass people for no reason whenever they feel like. I think that sentence also describes the gangs they try to control. Who is the real gangs now?!

    146. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by dosilegecko · · Score: 1

      I think its different here in America because the politicians do not even pretend to represent their constituents and see us as a burden that pays them.

    147. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming the USA isn't willing to do punishments worse than death.

    148. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by photo+pilot · · Score: 1

      You cannot really compare a homogeneous Scandanavion countrty with the USA. Not saying we are perfect or anything, but we are assembled out of states that had incredibly diverse interests. Old joke that may be true- Swedish ambassador is touring Minnesota (USA state home to many Swedes). He is talking about how the socialist Swedish government has eliminated poverty in Sweden. The state official from Minnesota observes they have no poverty among the Swedish in Minnesota either!

    149. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by photo+pilot · · Score: 1

      There is a *lot* to this. ALL of the original colonies had a bedrock foundation value that a central far away government was no-fking-way showing up and taking their right to self defense away. Especially after the British egged on Indian tribes to attack the 13 colonies during the Revolution. Then add in westward expansion that had people far away from any government authority relying on their guns for defense - or offense as the case may be - against Indians and sometimes each other. On top of THAT the North and South were very different places. New England looked like a modern country. They had science, industry, railroads, manufacturing, and a tradition of excellent free public education. Someone living in a New England town in 1830 likely had no more need of a firearm for routine self defense than they do now in 2013. The south was...ah. not quite like that. They had a more feudal society where rich whites were very far above all others. They educated their children with private tutors. WAY under them were what we call now "rednecks or hillbillies or white trash" who had not a lot of econimic opportunity. The way up was very much blocked by lack of education and money to buy slaves and those slaves also filled all the low budget niches too. The people at the top made SURE to keep the poor whites stirred up against the slaves. To make it even worse, this element was usually Scotch-Irish and were poor, violent, and always suspicious of central authority even before they GOT to America.

    150. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My conclusion was not that people were wrong. Actually, I didn't have a conclusion, just making an observation.

      But my personal sentiment is that it's really annoying when people go on about how politicians are greedy/dumb/whatever. It's has to be one of the most least constructive things I can imagine one could do in the public sphere, and it's either really narcissistic, or nihilist, or both.

      Also, the idea that "my country is going to shit because of my politicians" is just as stupid. Again, people have always thought that about their country. I bet even a substantial number of Swedes think that. Again, what's the point? If people truly believed what they said they wouldn't be dragging their fat asses through their daily routine, uninterested in actually _doing_ anything to change anything.

      As one of the commenters said, the only way that things improve is if the public becomes more edumacated. But that will never happen when they're droning on about politicians-as-fuckwits. Edumacated means discussing and analyzing issues... real issues... not fuzzy feelings about politics and politicians which haven't changed in millennia.

      Me: I'm a fat ass, but I also don't drone on about politicians as fuckwits. If I thought I knew anything about anything I'd be arbitraging my knowledge through various investment schemes to become rich. In other words, I'd put my money where my mouth is.

    151. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Inser_Name_Here · · Score: 1

      I say we should be disarming law enforcement and police forces in favor of police SERVICES, like the model used in most of the UK. The Peelian principles were developed to make a police service with a social contract of mutual respect. 82% of UK police do not want to be armed with guns, even though UK police do sometimes get shot and many are put in life threatening situations. They feel that doing so would compromise this trust. The emphasis is on deescalating situations, increasing violence and using force to resolve them.

    152. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically Plato never said anything, because his works used fictional characters and stories. And many of his works are contradictory. Mostly they're intended to examine various aspects of politics and ethics. We can never be sure exactly what Plato thought, especially if we assume that he adhered to Socrates' methods of irony.

      But I think it's a fair bet Plato probably had some fucktard ideas about society and ethics, just because some assumptions and premises never seemed to change much, or to be thrown into question.

      Also, we think of Athens as a consummate democracy (not withstanding social classes), but back then lots of scholars thought democracy was idiotic, and that it utilized many of the worst faculties of man and society. Because, you know, so much depended on pandering, fuckwit politicians, and by the transitive property of large complex systems the characteristics of the parts necessarily reflected the characteristics of the whole. (That's intended to be sarcastic.)

    153. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there is a difference between a police officer with a ford sedan, a pistol or 2 with a couple of extra clips...

      'Cos the best way is to have a pistol in each hand.

    154. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      I know this sounds dismissive but the majority party of the House was specifically elected to do nothing. "Nothing" is the policy agenda of a large minority of the voting public, those forming the base of the conservative half of the electorate.

    155. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      As it happens, separate stats show that the incidence of gun related murders is lowest in Northern states, and highest in Southern states.

      That single line makes me doubt everything else. You can't go much farther north from Chicago without being in Canada, and they and New York are the murder capitols of the world. You're going to have to do better than "In Pinker's Better Angels of Our Nature, he describes a study." He's a psychologist, and the one thing I took away from the general studies psychology class I took was, and I quote the instructor (who was as learned as Pinker and held the same degree) who said "there isn't a psychologist alive that there isn't a different one calling the first a gold-studded liar."

      Psychology is even less of a science than economics.

    156. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's how the NYPD does it.

    157. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by jbengt · · Score: 1

      Sweden hasn't been genetically and socially homogenous in a long time. They have Sami minority in the north, Finnish, Danish and Norwegian across the country and they have been taking refugees

      You may have a valid point, I don't know the demographics. I'm from Chicago, where you can (I have) eat at a Swedish restaraunt owned by a Greek, served by an African, food cooked by a Swedish chef, with your table bussed by an Hispanic. As an American of Swedish and Danish descent, I don't think Swedes, Danes, and Norwegians are really that diverse from each other.

    158. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      IMO, a US prison is worse than death.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    159. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Behrooz · · Score: 1

      The per-capita homicide rate in NYC is actually lower than in any other major city in the USA, barely above the national average.

      Chicago roughly comparable to Atlanta... and even Detroit is still safer than New Orleans. You can argue the reasons, but you can't argue that the deep south has more than its share of social problems.

      --
      "We have to go forth and crush every world view that doesn't believe in tolerance and free speech." - David Brin
    160. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      I thought it was common knowledge so I didn't bother pointing out, but apparently it needs to be said.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    161. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I was under the assumption that someone reading on /. can draw the obvious conclusions (that have been pointed out to you by more than one person by now).

      Judging by seeing how three people explained it while only one complained that he doesn't know, I guess my assumption was not so far off. I just can't please everyone, I guess I have to deal with that, but 3 out of 4 should do for now.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    162. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Please tell me that this is somehow ironic, sarcastic or otherwise anything but serious.

      And it's Lesotho. A country in South Africa. And considering its status, it's kinda nonsensical to include it in any statistic (it's a bit like pondering the birth rates in Vatican and how it will be devoid of life considering the average age of the resident).

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    163. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Politicians who do nothing are preferable to those who do things. Duties are a given, outside of that, finding reasons to spend money, fixing things that aren't broken, concocting programs to pay off the voters support for the next election.
      Nope, give me the reluctant marm. I'll even lower his pay. You can give the zealous, a mop and a toilet brush. They belong where they will do little harm and more good.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    164. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm. Funny thing is that huffingtonpost.com is an unabashedly liberal site and it is liberals like Martin O'Malley, Michael Bloomberg, and Barack Obama that keep pushing us further into the 1984 like police state with Drones, NSA spying, cameras on every street corner in Baltimore, banning large sodas because they make people fat, banning trans fats, banning wood stoves etc etc. Democrats are masters of misdirecting and disavowing. They will always find a way to make their unpopular political moves the fault of Republicans. The Republicans are too stupid to talk directly to the American people and give them the truth about what is going on. In the words of the late George Carlin, its a Mongolian clusterf*ck and no one seems to have a solution.

    165. Re: Hey California, I have a solution for you by fritsd · · Score: 1

      So... like Northern states even in the USA's midwest? ...

      I wouldn't know..

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    166. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Yes I don't think much of it either on the whole, which is why I tried to quote exactly what they did and what result they claim they got. From there, infer what you will.

    167. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing you accomplished with your post is to demonstrate that you're too lazy to check what the Swedes get for the spending they do.

      (Here I could play with your inability to look things up as begin a product of the US education system, but I don't know where you're from and it would be childish, so I won't.)

      But, yeah, in short:
      - The Swedes spend less on health care but get (way) better results
      - The Swedes spend more on education and (again) get (way) better results

      Good enough for you?

    168. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      I was under the assumption that someone reading on /. can draw the obvious conclusions (that have been pointed out to you by more than one person by now).

      Judging by seeing how three people explained it while only one complained that he doesn't know, I guess my assumption was not so far off. I just can't please everyone, I guess I have to deal with that, but 3 out of 4 should do for now.

      It's not an obvious conclusion. You omitted facts and just said the spending was better. It's the better outcomes that matter, not the spending. Sorry, I tried to improve your argument, since your superiority was obviously enough.

    169. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      America is a colony where indigenous people were all but wiped out. Using that as an example of an average country is like using a hooker dying of AIDS as an example of average woman.

    170. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by kbx911 · · Score: 0

      i echo your sentiment, it's funny at first, but later it becomes funny for a different reason - that it's taken from granted and no one raises their hand, fist or finger

    171. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I was gonna write that. Prisons in Sweden are not allowed to profit off any labour which the inmates do. And I don't think they are forced to do labour either.

      If it's profitable to lock up people and have them do forced labour - guess what..? Someone profiting on that is probably gonna lobby for harsher laws to get more workforce and therefore larger profits!

      In practice work camps. Is it really any better that there's a CEO getting the money from that forced labour than some highly ranked bureaucrate in the state / govt..?

    172. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CaptainAx · · Score: 1

      drop table politians; commit;

    173. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by zsau · · Score: 1

      If you vote, you don't get what you want. If you don't vote, you don't get what you want—but you haven't wasted your time.

      --
      Look out!
    174. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by zsau · · Score: 1

      What on earth is this kind of comment? It's like "America isn't a democracy, it's a republic". No, Spain and Sweden and the UK are democratic monarchies. They are both democracies and monarchies. The UK is not a theocracy; the church is governed by the the state, not the other way around.

      --
      Look out!
    175. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      The head of state is the head of the church. That is literally the definition of theocracy. UK is a theocracy.

      All these monarchies have unelected heads of state. We can have different opinions I guess, but in my opinion "democracy" strictly implies that you elect the head of state.

    176. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      Every country is a colony where indigenous people were all but wiped out. The only difference is that the USA began in the memorable past. Before Europeans arrived, the natives washed over each other with waves of genocide and interbreeding although it is true that the Europeans were better at it than the untechnological former residents.

      Ever heard of the Clovis people? Let's assume they were "first" -- well then there were several waves of genocide between the Clovis and the Puritans.

      But anyway, I wasn't trying to make the USA out to be an average country I was merely using it as my standard of judging homogeneity.

    177. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Vast majority of those were not so much genocide as standard conquering. You have to remember that when you wipe out men and take women as prostitutes and slaves, these women tend to procreate about as much as before. The cold math of procreation is that if you wipe out all the men and bring completely new men from outside, total amount of children will remain roughly the same. And vast majority of genocide in human history has been about killing enemy men and taking their women as slaves. Hell, you'll find references to this even in the bible and quran.

      US was an exception in that it didn't do that. Instead it actually went for genocide for all ages and sexes. That is fairly rare in human history.

    178. Re:Hey California, I have a solution for you by Otis+B.+Dilroy+III · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but if you are face down dead, the above seems like a matter of semantics.

  3. the wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how un-american

    1. Re:the wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was thinking the same thing. You realize how many Americans prefer to pay for prisons to cloth, feed, clean, etc... their people instead of trying to pay a bunch of their hard earned money trying to keep those useless bastards from becoming criminals in the first place!

      What's a total bitch is that the cost of jailing a single criminal would probably be enough to support a family down on its luck long enough to get out of the hole the were in. Maybe even teach the kids in the family some of those "Christian Morals" we hear so much about. Instead, it's probably better that the kids of those deadbeat parents who are so irresponsible to keep having kids they can't afford should be locked up and their kids sent to a good home to jail them too.

      Funny thing is, I've known people in Sweden and Norway who leave prison each day (without tracking tags), go to work, earn a living and go back to prison for evenings and weekends. Even funnier, except where security clearance is required, I've never heard of anyone being asked to consent to a background check in Norway or Sweden for a job.

      hmmm.. someone say something about home of the free and the brave? It's completely ridiculous to think how often they need to sell themselves that load of crap. With forced pledges to flags every morning for kids to convince them that they are free, have liberty etc...

      Which comedian was it that clarified it all by saying "But we've got the bomb!"

  4. this is not good news by Laxori666 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just think of how many jobs will be lost by the closing of these prisons! Surely there must be something we can do to prevent this calamity from continuing. Maybe the government should subsidize crime to encourage more criminals so that these jobs are safe. Or make a bunch of things illegal that aren't, currently, to increase the incarceration rate. Cause more jobs = better economy as we all know.

    1. Re:this is not good news by EdIII · · Score: 2

      You know it might just be possible that Swedish prisons were actually working to rehabilitate the prisoners. Victims of their own success?

    2. Re:this is not good news by Quasimodem · · Score: 1

      We don't want any of that! If all the criminals are rehabilitated, our police will have no one to push around but law-abiding citizens . . . Oops! Too late.

    3. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just put a criminal at the head of the department of justice, and your prisons will fill up again.

      Works for the U.S.

    4. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, as a Swede I know from the public debate that the reason for the decline in prisoners is a change in policy by the court of law. The government at this time pushes for increased prison sentences and higher maximum penalties. The courts responded by always sentencing the minimum allowed by law. It is basically a pissing contest - the number of police officers and crime has been increasing rapidly while the prison population has been decreasing.

    5. Re:this is not good news by geogob · · Score: 1

      There are jobs that, as a society, we should be happy to cut. Of course, every job lost is a drama for someone. But one should not lose sight of the big picture. What do these jobs represent and what is the gain of losing them. One should also consider the impact of a (almost) crime-free nation on the job distribution and on the economy. Although it is unclear to me which comes first. Jobs leading to lower crime rate or lower crime rate leading to better economy and to more jobs.

      But you were sacrastic, right. Right?

    6. Re:this is not good news by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      There are jobs that, as a society, we should be happy to cut.

      Glaziers?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_broken_window

      --
      No sig today...
    7. Re:this is not good news by Libertarian001 · · Score: 1

      "You know it might just be possible that Swedish prisons were actually working to rehabilitate the prisoners. Victims of their own success?"

      Sooooo... You're blaming the victims... ;)

    8. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did this +5 Funny comment get +5 Insighful? This happens when geeks/engineers comment on society/sociology. Horrible.

    9. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Maybe the government should subsidize crime to encourage more criminals so that these jobs are safe. Or make a bunch of things illegal that aren't, currently, to increase the incarceration rate. ...

      The prison/slave labor system could survive if we could get the CIA to help. From what I understand their drug running skills are stellar--getting children addicted to crack is their specialty.

    10. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did this +5 Funny comment get +5 Insighful? This happens when geeks/engineers comment on society/sociology. Horrible.

      The original comment was definitely being facetious; a type of satirizing humor occasionally mistaken for sarcasm (for those in need of a explanation). Whoosh I say to those clueless moderators. However, there is a grain of truth to the idea which may confuse some--see the comment following about the drug pushers at the Central Intelligence Agency.

    11. Re:this is not good news by geogob · · Score: 1

      That depends what you consider a broken window to society. Loss of a few job or crime and emprisonment.

      That's pretty much where the difference lays between Scandinavian contries and America.

    12. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Swede, I hereby ask you for sources to back up your bullshit.

    13. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just think of how many jobs will be lost by the closing of these prisons! Surely there must be something we can do to prevent this calamity from continuing. Maybe the government should subsidize crime to encourage more criminals so that these jobs are safe. Or make a bunch of things illegal that aren't, currently, to increase the incarceration rate. Cause more jobs = better economy as we all know.

      Yes, but you forgot about the part where private corporations pay lobbyists to keep what should be legal illegal, or make more things illegal because they've privatized prisons now, so it has not only become a business, but needs to sustain profitability now to justify itself with the investors, and thus more victimless criminals are created to ensure "demand" stays up.

      (Yes, in America, even incarceration doesn't escape capitalism.)

    14. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a non-Swede, I can point you to a backup source of bullshit.

    15. Re:this is not good news by dargaud · · Score: 1

      I know you are trolling, but 14% of the swedish population are immigrants. And in a country of blond Valkyries, it's not like Iraqis can go around unnoticed.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    16. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the US of A could consider outsourcing some of their prison inmates to Sweden !!

    17. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a non-Swede living in Sweden, the newspaper (Sydsvenskan) here said that crime rates still are going and continue to go down.
      Which explains a lot of the reduction in prisoners.
      The government isn't entirely happy and thinks that the courts give out too short sentences (which may or may not be true), however the primary reason still is a reduction in crime.
      One comment was that unless the government wants to commit some crimes themselves to get crime up there might be little they can "do against" it.
      Either way the summary seems wrong on the most important points: The government isn't really interested in closing prisons, it would prefer harsher sentencing by courts, and crime isn't actually going up.

    18. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Sooooo... You're blaming the victims.

      Of course. How dare mindless bureaucrats be effective and caring! Plus free enterprise can do it better; honest!

    19. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is most likely thinking about politicians and lawyers

    20. Re:this is not good news by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      As the US show it's not even necessary to rehabilitate them. Locking them all up works just as well.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    21. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forgot to check the anonymous box, huh? Idiot.

    22. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the US show it's not even necessary to rehabilitate them. Locking them all up works just as well.

      Yes, at fantastic cost, huge profits to private entities, and to the exclusion of spending any of those billions of dollars in actually fixing the underlying sources of crime.

      See, if you try to fix your social problems, you can stop wasting all of that money on prisons to warehouse people.

      It's just that America refuses to take any steps to actually try to make things better, and would rather waste far more money on simply locking everyone up.

      Because it's better to piss all that money down the drain to enrich for-profit prison operators than admit that social spending can actually help improve your society.

    23. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already subsidize crime. Why do you think drug prices are so high. Why do you think law enforcement get soo many cool tool toys (NVG's etc). Drugs and law enforcement are but buddies. They go after the idiouts strung out in the 74 pinto. They ignore Mr. big. Manily because the establishment is making soo much money off of drugs. Don't think any different. The prisons in the USA have the highest rate of drug use / availability than anywhere in the uSA. No way you would be getting this many drugs inside a closed system UNLESS the man in charge was making bang of it.

      I know the solution to the homeless problem. Let lock up all thes free loaders who are paying 0 usd per day to stay on the street and put them in a prison where the man will be making upwards of 120 usd per day to make society safe. People should not be allowed to live in society and not contribute to the welfare of the rulling elite who controll prisons, super markets, guns, drugs, T.V, radio, guns, state funded lottery, etc.

      I've got event a better idea. Let's legalize drugs so the man can make even more money of the drug trade. This will keep some of the anarchy out of the drug scene and make it more controlled. The NWO likes controll.

      It is a NWO. What have you done for your masters. Is your Real ID (tm) up to date.
      s

    24. Re:this is not good news by UPi · · Score: 1

      To the lovely people who have moderated this "Insightful" instead of "Funny"... I seriously hope that you have missed the point.

      This reminds me of the discredited parable that breaking a window is good for the 'conomy, because it generates business for the repairman, who then buys new shoes from the cobbler, who then bla bla bla. The real economy in the meantime registers the net loss of a window.

    25. Re:this is not good news by MiniMike · · Score: 1

      The problem is a lack of overlap between areas with excess criminals (USA) and excess prison space (Sweden). What we need is a way for criminals in areas with full prisons to outsource their crimes to under-employed criminals in the other areas. An alternative would be to grant visas to criminals from areas where they are in excess so they could go to areas where they are underrepresented. There are models in current use which could serve as a guide. Either method should help to alleviate the problem.

    26. Re:this is not good news by knarf · · Score: 1

      The real Swedish way to do this would be to make a political issue out of the fact that there are way more men in prison than there are women. Anything related to 'jÃmstÃlldhet' (equality) is sure to become a political issue here, to be met with swift and decisive action. They could start crime classes for women, this would be a good start. As equality in general is a one-way process it would not do to raise sentences for women as that would be seen as misogynistic. Lowering sentences for men would also be interpreted wrongly so that is out as well. No, something should be done to get more girls to be interested in a career in crime.

      --
      --frank[at]unternet.org
    27. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So now you are believing in a corrupt PC-infested newspaper?

    28. Re:this is not good news by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of the discredited parable that breaking a window is good for the 'conomy, because it generates business for the repairman, who then buys new shoes from the cobbler, who then bla bla bla. The real economy in the meantime registers the net loss of a window.

      However, this assumes the glaziers can find a new job at or near the level of their old one. If they can't, you have the choice of desperate former glaziers causing trouble, breaking windows to keep them employed or eeevil communist welfare funded by robbing the rich righteous captains of industry at gunpoint.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    29. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you say is commonly known as the broken bars fallacy.

    30. Re:this is not good news by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      http://members.optusnet.com.au/pennywyatt/Interests/FlandersSwann/Other/Other02.html

      (and these guys don't seem to do ad-generated revenue, so my link shouldn't put them on the "top 50" list :)

    31. Re:this is not good news by Reziac · · Score: 1

      If so, then perhaps average folks see 'rehabilitation' as a great thing that all should seek... per TFA, the crime rate in Sweden has been going UP.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    32. Re:this is not good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like another sweat-matted-hairy-fat-fart-shill employed by the cop lobby to create more crazy-man-fud. Tell me, when you're not starting riots at peaceful demonstrations, how many real children and older victims do you practice your sexual predator skills on when you're not at the computer setting up virtual arrests?

      Ten grand a month just to be a jail guard that enforces court orders, lol. Hurry up and collapse society, collapse. It'll be a paradise for those wanting to prey on the weak gunless cop-kissers who think the police are being paid to be their bodyguard.

  5. false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can both prevent crime and jail offenders. This is NOT a situation where you have to pick one or the other.

    1. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Todd+Palin · · Score: 1

      How is this working out for the USA?

    2. Re:false dichotomy in summary by noh8rz10 · · Score: 0

      as somebody who has spent more than a year in prison cumulatively, let me assure you that I am motivated never to return!

    3. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Bullshit! You've never set foot in a prison, you psycho. What you do do, however, is use a variety of accounts to spew your tourettes-like invective.

    4. Re:false dichotomy in summary by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      but why would you if you're paid per prisoner and per processed "customer"?

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      better if the US had a homogeneous culture

    6. Re:false dichotomy in summary by muphin · · Score: 1

      he could have worked there :p

      --
      It's not a typo if you understood the meaning!
    7. Re:false dichotomy in summary by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Yeah but you were dumb enough to go there to begin with.

      Oh and I'm pretty sure everyone says that after being in prison.
      They ALL hope they don't get caught next time. :P

    8. Re: false dichotomy in summary by FishTankX · · Score: 1

      But one has to recieve priority over the other.

    9. Re:false dichotomy in summary by drhank1980 · · Score: 2

      Actually crime in the USA is also down.

      I am not saying our extremely high incarceration rate is the primary cause for the reduction in crime. But in spite of what is commonly reported about America, crime is actually improving. I would expect if we did a similar reduction in sentences for drug offenders, and have some better support for those getting out of jail we would have gotten a bigger reduction probably at a lower cost, but being "soft on crime" does not help anyone win elections

    10. Re:false dichotomy in summary by crutchy · · Score: 0

      what makes you think crime is a prerequisite for incarceration?

    11. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Joce640k · · Score: 2

      as somebody who has spent more than a year in prison cumulatively, let me assure you that I am motivated never to return!

      Your use of the word "cumulatively" suggests that you already did return...once wasn't enough.

      --
      No sig today...
    12. Re:false dichotomy in summary by biodata · · Score: 2

      You may be wrong, it may be the case that incarceration increases the likelihood of reoffending.

      --
      Korma: Good
    13. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or any culture at all.

    14. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Prison starts a slippery slope..
      Once you've been there, you are forever branded a criminal and it becomes far more difficult to find a job. You also meet lots of new criminal contacts in prison.

      So ask yourself, once you're released you can't get a decent job anywhere and you know lots of criminals... What's the obvious course of action in order to make money?

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    15. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      We can find out as soon as they start doing anything to prevent crime. Right now, the policy seems to be to incite people to it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    16. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Mab_Mass · · Score: 1

      You may be wrong, it may be the case that incarceration increases the likelihood of reoffending.

      The more and more that I've been thinking about it, the more I realize how incarceration is probably one of the best ways to majorly disrupt someone's life and send them down a path where crime is the best option. As a thought experiment, imagine that all of a sudden you weren't able to work for 2 years. By the time you're out, you probably don't have a place to live or a job, and given your criminal record, it is hard to get a job, and given your lack of a job, it is hard to find a place to live.

      For the generic person who had bad circumstances and made a few bad choices, this is almost certainly a recipe for continued trouble with the law.

    17. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as somebody who has spent more than a year in prison cumulatively, let me assure you that I am motivated never to return!

      You imply you've already returned at least once. Motivation is only one part of successful rehabilitation.

    18. Re:false dichotomy in summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "soft on crime" does not help anyone win elections

      I think there is some selective pressure which makes this more and more true. Many crimes can strip one of the right to vote. So some of the people who are affected by the crime are removed from the voter pool.

  6. Tragic... by dyingtolive · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, tragic that the prison industry is too profitable in the US to follow suit, anyway.

    --
    Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    1. Re:Tragic... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Slavery had to be replaced by something.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    2. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds more like the trend of legalizing everything, means nothing is a crime. Of course that means that politicians will be looking for ever more things to legalize to get elected.

    3. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly what has been legalized to empty swedish prisons? The laws even hardened in Sweden and nowadays even more stuff is illegal thanks to U.S. pressure and they has the most loose definition of all countries about what is considered rape. When the law changed 5000 additional rapes (crimes) entered statistics.

    4. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I somehow feel that it involves the numbers 9 and 5 and is repeated 5 times a week with a creepy warden that walks around seemingly doing nothing but pester people.

    5. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slavery is freedom!

    6. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the work force mostly with the same color so no one gets confused

    7. Re:Tragic... by Mojo66 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, blame capitalism. Or the fact that while the whole world find funny and useful things to make with a 3D-Printer, the first thing Americans do with it is print a gun....

    8. Re:Tragic... by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Slavery? You nuts? You have to feed and shelter slaves, with the current going wage rates that's more expensive than hiring people!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? Show me somewhere, anywhere... where the first things Americans do is print a gun.... Capitalism isn't the culprit young grasshopper, I'd say it's the first amendment. In most other countries, you'd be thrown in prison (maybe not in Sweden and no pun intended) for doing such a dastardly act.

      You are seriously a blemish on the Slashdot forums... and that's hard to do.

    10. Re:Tragic... by guyniraxn · · Score: 1

      Americans had 3D printers for a while. Using them for guns is more recent and became a big part of what made them widely known due to the sensational aspect making the media finally take note. So no, not the first thing we did with the tech.

    11. Re:Tragic... by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      I'm reasonably certain that firearms were not the first thing Americans did with a 3D printer.

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    12. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah nah. Bait harder please. The whole gun printing thing was done as a political statement considering many Americans feel strongly about there constitutional rights. Or i can give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you were addressing our cultural predilection towards violence? That would fly if our own crime rates haven't been dropping like a rock for years like the rest of the world. Culturally, yeah, we love violence. We also have severe cognitive dissonance when it comes to sex. The prison systems here are equal parts retributive punishment and a way to funnel money into politically persuasive hands. Most prisons are located in very remote and poor districts as a combination of security and a make work program for poor rural areas. We have a lot of problems, but hey, 5/10 for getting me to reply. Its too early for this :/

    13. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't really heard of very many cases of people outside the US even using 3D printers... Let alone any of it being useful.

    14. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent up...it is cheaper to pay miminum wage than it is to house, feed, clothe and otherwise care for a slave (especially when he/she has children that also need cared for).

      In fact, the current system is *better* for employers than slavery ever was! Nowadays, the difference between cost of living and wages is picked up by the federal government (welfare) or not at all (if a "wage earner" dies, there is no expensive process to replace him/her with a another, as purchasing a slave would have been).

    15. Re:Tragic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And just how many 3D printed guns have been used to commit a crime? ZERO

      Why? It's much easier to get a real gun than it is to get a 3D printer that can print a gun that will probably blow up in your face.

    16. Re:Tragic... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Too true. Current cost to house one inmate in California's penitentiary system for one year is $46,000. This is quite a lot better than minimum wage!

      It occurs to me that one might just turn 'em loose and give 'em that $46k/year, and perhaps achieve a reduction in crime since it's easier to just collect the money.

      Until, of course, everyone making minimum wage wants in on the deal!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    17. Re:Tragic... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      46k? Hell, tell the average inmate that he gets 20k a year and all he has to do is sit around and do NOTHING.

      You will instantly solve overcrowded prisons, crime and part of the budget problem.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    18. Re:Tragic... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      True. Especially as in Calif at least, most of 'em are in for minor offenses like possessing too much pot (assumed intent to sell).

      The only difference between today's for-profit prison and the debtors prisons of the past is who foots the bill.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  7. Those damn socialist! by musixman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    See what happens when you provide free health care, childcare & social services to prevent crimes based on poverty and drug use!

    1. Re:Those damn socialist! by EdIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Drug use is not the problem, nor is it something that needs to be prevented. In fact, you get rid of the bullshit, it practically prevents itself.

      The vast majority of all drug use is not harmful to society. Let's face some facts here. Alcohol is far more dangerous to health and safety than most drugs have ever been combined. Let's also be realistic and set aside marijuana into another category; Use and Distribution. Only its distribution is associated with crimes beyond the act of distribution itself. Crimes associated with use are less prevalent and damaging than crimes associated with alcohol. IIRC, several campuses have outright admitted they wished there was more weed usage than alcohol usage for that same reason.

      An artificial economy created by prohibition is responsible for the crimes. If an addict could get meth/heroin/coke cheaply at a pharmacy along with the opportunity for help that would eliminate most of the problems.

      We never did learn any lessons from prohibition of alcohol did we?

    2. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He's clearly referring to heavy drugs. Meth addicts will do stupid things for their next fix.

    3. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya I 100% agree with you, "drug use" was the wrong term. "Incarceration for drug use" is more what I meant.

    4. Re:Those damn socialist! by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wait. So, prohibition is bad. But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all? Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

    5. Re:Those damn socialist! by EdIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He's clearly referring to heavy drugs. Meth addicts will do stupid things for their next fix.

      That's the whole point. If the "stupid" thing a meth addict has to do is panhandle for 20 minutes, walk to Walgreens, by a little baggie and kit, that's far less damaging to society.

      All of those "stupid" things are completely eliminated when you get rid of drug prohibition.

      Do you need to stupid things, pay exorbitant amounts of money, enable organized crime, slink in the shadows, etc. to get some fucking beer? Or do you go down to the liquor store, slap down a few bucks, and get fucked up in your own home peaceably?

    6. Re:Those damn socialist! by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      We never did learn any lessons from prohibition of alcohol did we?

      No, we learned it from prohibition of cocaine and caffeine -- Except the drink companies wouldn't budge on the caffeine front.

      Lesson learned: Habit forming substances are OK as long as we can profit from them.... How do you keep folks from growing their own weed though? I mean it's WEED.

    7. Re:Those damn socialist! by EdIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry to double post here, but if meth was available at a pharmacy, maybe the worst stupid thing to happen would be a meth addict shoplifting some drugs. By shoplifting I mean grabbing it from the pharmacist when they open the cupboard that has it stocked. Same way spray paint is protected these days (and that is truly stupid).

      If it was legal and cheap, than there would be no place for a "criminal" to go and get it outside of legal means. Jay and Silent Bob would not make a living on the corner handing shit out anymore. I just don't see the stupid things that can be done anymore to obtain it in a society where it's legalized.

      You know what is far more fucking addictive than meth? FOOD. Food is outright the most addictive substance known to man with horrifying withdrawal symptoms that are always fatal.

      Yet, I don't see a pandemic of homeless people going insane and stabbing people to go and get food. They seem to get by with the homeless shelters, food pantries, and existing charities/foundations just fine.

      I know that if I saw a homeless person crying and literally going insane with hunger approach me that my only option available to me would be to feed him/her. It's the only option.

    8. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If the meth was easily obtainable and sold at a price close to its actual cost, they wouldn't have to do those stupid things. Meth and other drugs are so expensive because they are illegal. If a major drug company was allowed to make and sell it, you'd see it over the counter sold for $11 for a 30 day supply. Or even if it was $5 a day, that's affordable for most people.

    9. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

      Why? You can believe that prohibition is bad while at the same time claiming that alcohol is more harmful than a lot of drugs that are or have been illegal.

      I personally say prohibition is bad solely because it infringes upon people's freedoms, not because the illegal drugs aren't harmful.

    10. Re:Those damn socialist! by LordLucless · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, I'm sure it's because they have free childcare, and not because don't they send in a SWAT team every time someone lights up a joint.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    11. Re:Those damn socialist! by GrimShady · · Score: 1

      yes, the crime rate goes up slightly... at least thats what the summary said (i didnt read tfa)

    12. Re:Those damn socialist! by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Meth addicts don't only do stupid things just to get to the next fix. What they do while on meth is pretty stupid too. That's where the comparison between "hard drugs" and alcohol fails. Is there such a thing as non-binge/moderate meth usage? There is such a thing as non-binge alcohol usage, where someone has one or two drinks with dinner and feels a little relaxed and isn't totally messed up. I would say that's the vast majority of alcohol usage. I've never heard of that with meth (or cocaine, or heroin, for example), but please show me some evidence otherwise if it exists. I think it's because the effect is stronger and more addictive than alcohol, so users pretty instantly start going for the totally-fucked-up feeling rather than the moderate feeling.

    13. Re:Those damn socialist! by GrimShady · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of all drug use is not harmful to society. Let's face some facts here...

      drugs dont bother me one way or the other... I honestly dont care. But I did see a video of a guy go batshit crazy and eat another guys face off so.... yeah...

      not all drugs are distilled down from unicorn farts.... bad shit still happens and innocent people still die. Just because you are fine that doesnt mean other people dont snap and do horrible shit

    14. Re:Those damn socialist! by bluegutang · · Score: 1

      There is a story where a Swedish government minister visited the US. He boasted about his country's 0% poverty rate and attributed it to his government's social policies. His American counterpart replied that poverty among Americans of Swedish descent is also 0%.

      Not that free health care etc. are not a good idea, but I don't think they have much relation to the incarceration rate.

    15. Re:Those damn socialist! by CarbonShell · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Perhaps the difference is that Europeans do not go overboard, in every aspect. In general we do not have a lot of drug addicts and we surely do not throw them in jail after their 3rd strike. We also try to help them out as far as we can with treatments and support so they generally do not have to fall back to crime to 'just get by'.
      You can go to a doctors and they will make sure you get the treatment you need.

      Reminds me of the 'If Breaking Bad happened in Canada' pic. Which is not to say we don't have problems, we just try to make sure our jails are full of murderers and thugs and the like, not some poor kid that had a tough break.
      And mind you, we also treat our prisoners differently and hold then in a different environment.

      I think that fixing the crime and prison problem in the US and many other countries is not just a question of laws and regulations, but about changing your society as a whole.

    16. Re:Those damn socialist! by Imsdal · · Score: 1

      I'm really not sure what you are getting at here. Have you never heard of anyone using cocaine or heroin without doing stupid things? I have. In fact, only a very small percentage of usage leads to people doing stupid things. Conversely, surely you have heard of someone doing outrageously stupid things after drinking alcohol? There are in fact TV shows dedicated to this very phenomenon!

      As for your discussion about the level of addictiveness, alcohol is more addictive than many drugs.

    17. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Swede here - you're exaggerating every point you make.

      75% tax rate? Come on.

      The Swedes who loudly "defend" their "native cultures" in most cases ARE fascist, nationalist bigots. The ones who are more moderate about their criticisms join the third largest party instead (SD).

      Men are treated like shit in any proceeding about women huh? So all those rape cases where everyone was furious about the man getting away because of this thing called "rÃttssÃkerhet" (proving beyond reasonable doubt, etc) suddenly doesn't exist.

      I love how any criticism about Sweden can come in two polarly opposite forms, depending on your own worldview.

      Immigration problem? Sweden either has a "huge immigration problem" if you dislike immigrants in your own country, or is "racially homogenous", if you can use that "fact" to show that any social measure such as universal health care just wouldn't work in your country.

      Tax rate? It's enormous, if you're on the right, or has sunk way too low if you're on the left.

      Etc.

    18. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's face some facts here. Alcohol is far more dangerous to health and safety than most drugs have ever been combined.

      You think cocaine and heroine use is LESS dangerous than alcohol consumption? What planet are you living on? Planet of the Hippies?

    19. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Amazing how narrow minded your post is...

      There is no 75% tax regardless of how you look at it. Taxes are higher here yes, but the benefits outweigh the perceived "loss". For example, we get:
      * Free healthcare for life,
      * A full year of paid parental leave days (which you can take out as you like until the child is 7 years old, there's even an equality bonus if the mother and father take out close to equal quantities of these days. Your job is also secured by law during this period.),
      * Very low interest loans for students (of which you pay back only 2/3)

      And of course there's unemployment benefits and everything else you'd expect from a modern democratic society.

      Regarding political correctness... Swedish society in general is moving in a thoroughly accepting and tolerant direction. This does not mean that people can't express their opinions about immigrants, just that they don't usually do it in public out of choice. Why would you want to incite hate against a group of people?

      I don't know what you mean about men being given a bad deal during divorce proceedings as I have never been divorced. I imagine that you mostly just misunderstand the concept of equality.

      From the tone of your comment it seems that you are too set in your ways/opinions to consider a different approach to life, and that's okay. It's your right! But others would appreciate if you could keep your misinformation to yourself :-)

    20. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meth is pretty nasty stuff, causes damage to the dopamine receptors in the brain.

      The reason people do meth anyway is because it's cheap. Without the massive drug costs caused by their prohibition those who do meth would instead be using the less dangerous cocaine.

    21. Re:Those damn socialist! by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      So, prohibition is bad.

      Yes.

      But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all?

      Yes.

      Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

      No. All you need do is look at what happened when the most popular drug was prohibited. Way worse.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    22. Re:Those damn socialist! by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      basically there's little jurisprudence and it would've been a nice easy way to grab him and get him extradited.

      Yeah, the USA has problems, and has fallen far from the ideals of its constitution, but for the moment

      The Sweded arrested their own citizens and handed them over to a foriegn power to be tortured. That's pretty damning. The foreign power who tortured them was the US. That's even more damning.

      In other news, the shit of all countries stinks. Getting into a pissing contest over who is worse to prove oneself's luck as better is pointless and destructive.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    23. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's far less damaging _per individual_, but your unspoken assumption is that the number of meth addicts would be the same. The main reason why alcohol has such a high cost to society is sheer numbers. The number of road deaths per beer served is very low, for instance. Pot is only slightly worse; even if it became popular as alcohol we'd not have a total societal disruption. But "mostly harmless" does not describe meth, even if it were legal.

    24. Re:Those damn socialist! by Gavagai80 · · Score: 2

      That's because they are nationalist bigots. PC would be to give them a nicer label and pretend they're not.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    25. Re:Those damn socialist! by javilon · · Score: 1

      In other news, the shit of all countries stinks. Getting into a pissing contest over who is worse to prove oneself's luck as better is pointless and destructive.

      Agreed. But pointing at individual policies that can improve things and are done better in one country than in another can help to compare options.

      --


      When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    26. Re:Those damn socialist! by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      It's not 'free'. You pay for it. Is it a good deal? You might think so. What about the people who don't? Why do swedes come to the US for complicated procedures? Because the waiting lists can be months long in sweden. Not so here...at least not yet. The jury's still out on obamacare.

      The cost of that downtime gets wrapped into the costs of the goods and services your employer provides since they cannot legally doc your paycheck (I assume). It is not free. The problem is that someone else is deciding what you need and how much you should pay for it. Some of this might be warranted, but I think it's going way too far when governments attempt bans or taxes on anything and everything that might cost these forcibly imposed state run programs money. I like deciding my own cost/benefit analyses. I can't do that when I'm tied down by the 'needs of the many' in ever growing numbers of cases.

      Your statements about political correctness are examples of 'framing the narrative.' Speaking out against people who want to kill you because you happen to be the target their religion dictates as the enemy is not 'inciting hate,' nor is tolerance the same as never challenging peoples' convictions in ways that might upset them. Even the term 'inciting hate' implies that the speaker is responsible for others' feelings when every adult is supposed to be responsible for their own feelings and actions. This discourages people from growing some thicker skin (IE true tolerance) for opinions that are different from theirs and makes them dependent on government to be their 'big brother' and protect them. Lack of skin also makes them more likely to lash out irrationally when exposed.

      I think most people misunderstand equality thanks to the newspeak definition thrown around by politicians. Equality is supposed to mean equal access to opportunity along with responsibility. Unfortunately, most left wing definitions have a rather lopsided distribution. Once it decides who is the oppressor and who is the oppressed, it encodes gross assumptions into the legal code, leaving the 'oppressed' with most of the benefit, and the 'oppressors' with most of the responsibility regardless of the individual situation. This is identity politics at work. The lawyers pouring out of the left-indoctrinated ivy league universities are already tainted before they serve their first days on the job which ensures that the law will never be free of bigotry.

      why should I keep it to myself? Because you don't agree with it? The left are all about tolerance and 'diversity' until someone challenges them on the logic behind their ideology. Then they become as dogmatic and censorious as the westboro baptist church would love to be if it had the power. I am open minded enough to consider new (and in this case, not so new) ideas, but I also try to stay grounded enough to evaluate them as objectively as I can. I realize most europeans don't really understand america either, but that doesn't stop them from passing judgments and spewing criticisms...and that's fine.

    27. Re:Those damn socialist! by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A good proportion of the danger is caused by those drugs being illegal...
      When you buy alcohol from a legitimate source, you know that there are laws regulating what can be sold... When you buy illegal drugs from a guy on the street you have no idea how they were produced, or what other chemicals are mixed in with them.

      The same thing happens with counterfeit alcohol, you get various industrial alcohols which are intended for industrial use and not human consumption, as well as other noxious chemicals mixed in, and these illegally produced alcohols are often far more dangerous than the regulated shop bought stuff.

      If other drugs were legal, there would be legal sources where the ingredients are known and regulated so they would be safer for the users. You'd completely gut the illegal drugs market as there would be significantly less demand and far less profit. The stigma of drug use would be gone, so users would be more likely to seek help, police resources could be diverted to other things, drug prices would be lower so addicts would be less desperate (less likely to commit other crimes and more likely to get help) and there would be tax revenue coming in from the sale of drugs.

      Crime rates would be down, not only because drug possession would no longer be illegal but also the crimes *caused* by drugs such as people stealing to fund their habit, and violence between drug dealers.

      The only people who wouldn't benefit from such a setup are those who currently profit from selling drugs on the black market.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    28. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why do swedes come to the US for complicated procedures? Because the waiting lists can be months long in sweden. Not so here."

      Even if you have no money to pay for it?

    29. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think everyone can judge for themselves what kind of opinion this is.
      75% tax ? Do you expect to be taken serious ?
      Sweden has a non-socialist, politically right, government for the last 7 years. And they have lowered the taxes every year.
      You just have no idea what you are talking about.
      In USA, freedom is only for the rich. In Sweden, everyone is free.
      A Swede.

    30. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you need to stupid things

      What?

    31. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said clearly, provably wrong things like the 75% tax rate (in all fairness, there was a time when the effective tax rate could go over 100%, but that's times long gone). It's very much reasonable to ask you to keep things to yourself if it's only lies and misinformation, it helps no-one, not even your own cause.
      Also, 'speaking out' and 'inciting hate' are different things. And they are not because of whether it might upset someone, but based on what goals the one saying it has.
      If you say things that are _meant_ to provoke people into going out and beating people up there are good reasons to make that illegal (whether not anyone does that is a different point, and proving someone's intentions is tricky), and it is something completely different from speaking up against a certain ideology, religion, immigration, ...
      Also you can still do your own cost/benefit ratio and vote accordingly, in a democracy nobody is helpless against government programs. And in the US that is the only way you can decide that your military isn't worth what you pay for it for example. Sweden instead decided that healthcare is more important but isn't in NATO instead, saving a lot of money on not having to spend the minimum amount NATO requires.
      It seems to me that you think that universal healthcare is a problematic infringment on your freedom, but military spending for some reason is not. If that is the case I seriously doubt you are as open to objective evaluation as you claim (and maybe think) you are.
      Note that I very much believe that universal healthcare is much more relevant in providing actual security than military, anti-terror efforts, police, etc. I would be interested to see numbers (difficult since nobody will agree on the definitions), but I'd expect the amount of people "harmed" by lack of health insurance to be a lot higher than those harmed by terrorists in e.g. the US. Even more interesting would be to see numbers for e.g. Iraq.

    32. Re:Those damn socialist! by Spad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well sure, if you're dumb enough to pay tax on the money your company is paying you in salary as well as paying income tax on it then you probably are paying a 75% effective tax rate.

    33. Re:Those damn socialist! by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      Hum... /Looks at a map of the mid-west, poverty rates and descent.

    34. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... changing your society ...

      Surely don't you don't mean:

          trusting armed bureaucrats more than education and experience
          health insurance only when you're healthy and low-risk
          'tough on crime' punishment for those arrested or convicted
          it's your fault you're not a millionaire or heard by politicians
          preaching 'free market' but practicing cronyism and monopolies
          policing the world so the disobedient and disliked lose allies

    35. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the whole point. If the "stupid" thing a meth addict has to do is panhandle for 20 minutes, walk to Walgreens, by a little baggie and kit, that's far less damaging to society.

      Why do you think that legalizing 'hard' drugs will make addicts turn from robbery and prostitution to panhandling?

      One of the reasons you associate drunks with panhandling, rather than mugging, is that it's damned hard to carry out a successful mugging if you're falling-down-drunk. Not so much if you're tweaked. If you imagine that legalized drugs would be priced so cheaply that an addict can get high all day for a few dollars, then you misunderstand the nature of excise taxes and capitalism. If you imagine that legalized sales will include some form of counseling or background check for addiction, then you will not eliminate the black market and its attendant crime.

    36. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there such a thing as non-binge/moderate meth usage?

      Yes, there is. There's even medicinal methamphetamine.

    37. Re:Those damn socialist! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually it is because of free childcare. When even the poorest people can get access to high quality care for their children, giving them time to work while not letting their children be neglected or miss out on those crucial early years development, it tends to improve their children's life chances greatly. That in turn reduces the chance that those children will turn to crime as an alternative to a law abiding life, because they feel they have some change to make something of themselves and were not abandoned by society.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    38. Re:Those damn socialist! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Where does the "if it's available, more people will take it" myth come from? When you listen to reports from people who were around when prohibition came into existence (which is getting harder since they tend to die off of old age), the very fact that alcohol was forbidden was part of the appeal and since it was anything but hard to get access to it (much like illegal drugs today), it was not only easy to get but also some "stick it to the man" action.

      Be honest. Assume for a moment that you have ready access to Heroin. It's right there in front of you, on the table, and its use is legal. Would you pick up the kit and shoot a load of it in your vein? My guess would be that you don't. Like any sane person. Why the fuck would you want to inject something into your body that is not potentially but near certainly lethal in the long run?

      I agree that it's a good idea to keep it out of the hands of kids. That's a given. Kids are easily influenced and peer pressure is hardest on them. But if anyone above the age of 18 or for all I care 21 reaches for a drug, it's certainly not because his train of thought goes "Hmm, it's Tuesday, let's try to shoot Heroin into my body".

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    39. Re:Those damn socialist! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I guess we should thank the US healthcare system, or the lack of it, for making this show possible.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    40. Re:Those damn socialist! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, probably not. Because if the customer is used to insane prices, the prices would only be lowered so much to ensure that customers buy it. Especially if someone was fast enough to patent the crap.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    41. Re:Those damn socialist! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, it should be kinda trivial to stop them from growing coke, right?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    42. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We never did learn any lessons from prohibition of alcohol did we?

      The argument that the pro-prohibition lobby made against repeal of the 18th was that alcohol had never been fully criminalised, only its sale and distribution, so there wasn't much risk to you personally as a drinker if the cops raided a speakeasy or whatever. Also there was a loophole whereby "patent medicines" could still be chock-full of alcohol, immortalised in the original Lily the Pink drinking song.

      It's amusing in a tragic sort of way that the position of prohibitionists of all drugs hasn't changed in all that time. "Okay, sure, drugs are cheaper and easier to get than ever AND we have huge amounts of associated crime AND many deaths AND a ridiculously large fraction of the population in prison with their lives ruined, but I'm sure it will work if you just prohibit them more severely!"

    43. Re:Those damn socialist! by 3.5+stripes · · Score: 1

      Most people that spend their time chasing that truly fucked up feeling are not doing it due to addiction, but to ESCAPE from the fucked up world that surrounds them. As for moderate usage of "heavy drugs" have a look at victorian society, heroin and other opiate use was rampant, yet strangely enough, many were addicted, but since it wasn't illegal people were not doing stupid things to get their next fix.

      --


      He tried to kill me with a forklift!
    44. Re:Those damn socialist! by 3.5+stripes · · Score: 1

      Most of those drugs would not exist today (especially bath salts) if there wasn't a prohibition on natural (or at least known) substances, the demand is there, but illegality keeps the supply very low, and people move in to fill the demand.

      --


      He tried to kill me with a forklift!
    45. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree legalizing a lot of drugs makes sense, meth is a bad example. Meth is a really self-destructive drug, in ways marijuana and even alcohol just isn't.

    46. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only people who wouldn't benefit from such a setup are those who currently profit from selling drugs on the black market.

      Other groups who would lose includes lost revenue for the prison industrial complex, and all the companies that sell paramilitary gear to the drug enforcement agencies and depts.

    47. Re:Those damn socialist! by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

      But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all?

      Did he use too many words? Maybe not sound-bite-y enough?

      It is a fact that different drugs have different levels of harm. I know, I know, hard to fit that idea into a black and white world.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    48. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The vast majority of all drug use is not harmful to society.

      Swing by a methadone center and say that again with a straight face.

      Alcohol is far more dangerous to health
      You not being able to get geeked out from your favorite flavor ignores the fact that MANY other drugs have some serious long (some short) term side effects. This is basically the same argument as 'all my friends do it'.

    49. Re:Those damn socialist! by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      There is a large volume of 'soft' hard drug use in the world. Do you think every kilo of cocaine goes to someone who eventually ends up in jail? The problem is that the highly addictive drugs (like alcohol) get a sizable minority of users falling over into the 'abuse' category (where it demonstrably messes up your life, either by direct physical consequences or social or legal issues).

      It is impossible to pin down how many users turn to abusers with cocaine, heroin and meth and the like, but if you use alcohol as a prototypic dangerous drug, it's around 10% - significant but a minority. Now, the question for the student is - does this represent a legal or medical (or just a social) problem?

      Quiz next period.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    50. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that out there if you combine property, income and VATs. In Canada, the total tax burden for someone on the higher end of the scale can easily exceed 60%. I expect the Swedish model to be similar;

    51. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only people who wouldn't benefit from such a setup are law enforcement agencies, law enforcement personnel, law enforcement unions, prison unions, private prisons, federal agencies such as: DEA, ATF, FBI, everyone who takes a bribe for looking the other way during distribution, and those who currently profit from selling drugs on the black market.

      FTFY

    52. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An artificial economy created by prohibition is responsible for the crimes. If an addict could get meth/heroin/coke cheaply at a pharmacy along with the opportunity for help that would eliminate most of the problems.

      I'm guessing you think the Hippocratic Oath is about promising to say one thing and do another...

      Easy access to highly addictive and deadly drugs WOULD "solve" the problem. Unfortunately for you, it would be a much faster and harsher solution than attempting to convince people that they need help. It would simply allow them to kill themselves off faster via overdose. Plenty of people want to get rid of drug addicts but it would take a special kind of sociopath to actually want to see that happen...

    53. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, so what you're saying is that Europeans are *better* than Americans. Aaaahhhh - now I see. Explains a lot.

      So novel too.

    54. Re:Those damn socialist! by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Meth addicts don't only do stupid things just to get to the next fix. What they do while on meth is pretty stupid too. That's where the comparison between "hard drugs" and alcohol fails.

      Just out of curiosity: have you ever actually seen a drunk person?

      In any case, you could always restrict the sale of some substance to a licensed establishment, and have them require an agreement to stay on the premises while under influence as a condition of sale. Licensed opium dens, in other words. This would also allow monitoring of usage, and medical intervention in case of addiction.

      Is there such a thing as non-binge/moderate meth usage?

      Probably, since Silk Road stayed online for several years despite needing a considerable amount of trouble to use.

      I've never heard of that with meth (or cocaine, or heroin, for example), but please show me some evidence otherwise if it exists. I think it's because the effect is stronger and more addictive than alcohol, so users pretty instantly start going for the totally-fucked-up feeling rather than the moderate feeling.

      Well, the whole concept of random drug testing only makes sense if you assume that a significant fraction of users are able to perform their work at acceptable level despite using one, which implies they are moderating their usage.

      Also, some "hard" drugs are actually self-regulating; for example, according to Wikipedia, LSD causes such a rapid built-up of tolerance it's not possible to use it regularly.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    55. Re:Those damn socialist! by EdIII · · Score: 1

      I get your point about the profit, however, getting people to stop growing weed is easy.

      Do you raise your own chickens for eggs and meat? Do you grow your own vegetables? Probably not. Do you go to the store and buy premium organic vegetables on occasion? Do you shop for the best meat? I do.

      If weed does become legal it will be an issue with quality. It really is not all that easy to grow weed with high quality results, and it takes money to do so.

      Most people are lazy. If they can go down to the store and buy it versus the hard work and financial investment of growing it, I think they will buy it cheaply instead. It will be cheap. I mean it's WEED.

    56. Re:Those damn socialist! by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity: have you ever actually seen a drunk person?

      Yes, of course. But did you read the next couple sentences of my post? I've seen alcohol users drunk, but I've also seen many, many alcohol users NOT drunk, and as I stated, the vast majority of alcohol users I've seen have not been drunk. What I haven't heard much about is moderation in meth users. Every time I hear about meth (which, like I acknowledged in my post, is not much), I hear about meth heads being super high and totally messed up.

      In any case, you could always restrict the sale of some substance to a licensed establishment, and have them require an agreement to stay on the premises while under influence as a condition of sale. Licensed opium dens, in other words. This would also allow monitoring of usage, and medical intervention in case of addiction.

      Sure. You realize though that China figured out that even with legal opium dens, it was still bad to have a good fraction of the population addicated to it?

      What I'm asking for is non-anecdotal studies on the addiction and abuse rates of the drugs everyone is proposing to legalize. If the addiction and/or abuse rates are too high, then I'm contending that legalizing them is still bad for society. You've trade one set of problems (black market drug trade, drug crime, etc.) for a different set (a good chunk of your population is whacked out on whatever drugs are now legal) and it's not an obvious call to me that the problems you introduce with legalization are actually superior.

    57. Re:Those damn socialist! by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I like deciding my own cost/benefit analyses. I can't do that when I'm tied down by the 'needs of the many' in ever growing numbers of cases.

      The good side of living in a society is that you get Internet, shopping malls, the merchandise there, food, clothes, electricity, roads, people who patrol those roads and keep them safe from bandits, etc. etc. The bad side is that your personal interests may conflict with those of others and don't always trump them. After all, you might be the center of your world but to everyone else you're just one of the faceless "many" in "the needs of the many", and shouldn't expect them to care more about your interests than you care about theirs. Which is something you seem to not have quite grasped, since why else would you state the obvious?

      In other words, grow up.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    58. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sorry to double post here, but if meth was available at a pharmacy

      Fun fact of the day - meth IS available at a pharmacy under the name "Desoxyn". Apparently it's prescribed for particularly severe cases of ADD/ADHD...

    59. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably TL;DR, but here goes anyhow....

      I think that you're right insofar as most "sane" people (for a definition of "sane" which correlates strongly with "has at least a dim concept of deferred gratification and some concept of impulse control") would not make use of mood--and-physiology-altering substances directly in front of them if
      A: the substance is likely to cause dependence, and
      B: they are in a situation (outside the home, or other safe location) where taking such a substance would expose them to significant potential harm.

      The relatively small number of people who *would* do so, however, tend - in general - to have other issues (very poor impulse control, other psychiatric conditions) that magnify the effects of their use. They may be, for whatever reason, constitutionally incapable of functioning in society, and so live on the streets (or otherwise isolated, if they're sufficiently functional to hold a remote-work job) because they simply can't fit in.

      If they're capable of taking care of themselves at some minimal level - e.g., basic food, housing, and scoring without resorting to crime - there's not a lot to complain about, other than the economic consequences (and the personal/family damage) caused by using. I don't care for that fact but there it is.

      If, on the other hand, they're part of the real outlier contingent, the ones who use at any cost, and whose behavior causes them to engage in a variety of behaviors that are not sanctioned by the society at large - for example, tweakers breaking into houses to steal to get money to score, or $other_substance users who wind up standing naked in street dividers screaming about how the aliens are eating their brainz*, or some such. *Those* users tend to consume outsized resources compared to peaceful users. They are often violent and unpredictable, and some of them go lateral just because the possibility exists.

      How to deal with people like that is a matter of debate. In the interests of maximizing autonomy and minimizing abuses of institutionalization, mental health advocates convinced state legislatures to severely restrict criteria for institutionalization way back when, in the hope that these people could be re-integrated into society. History has proven that such a solution is not optimal, as the result has been criminalization of what are, in essence, medical conditions** and the subsequent increase in prison population vs psychiatric institutions.

      What's the solution? I don't have a blanket panacea. But I suspect that
      A: use needs to be decriminalized and
      B: addiction needs to be medicalized (both physical treatment and psychiatric treatment)
      C: medicalization needs to include psychiatric institutionalization (rather than criminal incarceration) if the user continues to act out - and the two need to be separate.

      When I was working for a vendor integrating software which, occasionally, included working inside jails/prisons, I learned that a tremendous percentage of incarcerated people carry a psychiatric diagnosis. In a jail setting, there are very limited resources to help fix such issues as such care is chronically underfunded, so when people are released, they have no coping or adaptive skills and do the same (to "sane" people) idiotic things that placed them inside initially.

      I have - justifiably, I think - been accused of "wanting to get them [the crazies] off the street so [we] don't have to look at them" before, the 'warehousing' argument which was responsible for the first wave of de-institutionalization. That's not my key motive but I would be remiss to say that it's not part of the motive at large - people don't want to see non-functional people lying in the streets, for a variety of reasons, variously more or less noble.

      At the end of the day, I suggest that some action has to be taken to create shades of nuance when dealing with people who operate sufficiently outside social norms that they cause significant disruption. The actions won't make anyone a profit -

    60. Re:Those damn socialist! by almechist · · Score: 1

      Meth addicts don't only do stupid things just to get to the next fix. What they do while on meth is pretty stupid too. That's where the comparison between "hard drugs" and alcohol fails. Is there such a thing as non-binge/moderate meth usage? There is such a thing as non-binge alcohol usage, where someone has one or two drinks with dinner and feels a little relaxed and isn't totally messed up. I would say that's the vast majority of alcohol usage. I've never heard of that with meth (or cocaine, or heroin, for example), but please show me some evidence otherwise if it exists. I think it's because the effect is stronger and more addictive than alcohol, so users pretty instantly start going for the totally-fucked-up feeling rather than the moderate feeling.

      Don't have much time so out of the drugs you mention I will tackle only cocaine. Back in the disco era of the '70s, the casual use of cocaine had become so prevalent that the President of the United States commissioned a panel of experts to research the dangers of cocaine usage. The outcome of that research was eventually published as a so-called "White Paper" by the Carter administration, and I remember well the conclusion they came to, which was that cocaine is primarily, and I'm quoting pretty much exactly here, "a harmless recreational drug". And guess what, back then, before crack arrived, that's exactly what it was for the vast majority of users. I need hardly add that without prohibition the very idea of crack would probably never have occurred to anyone.

      So there you have it. It's true, look it up.

    61. Re:Those damn socialist! by zsau · · Score: 1

      Um, it's seriously easy to make booze. You get a bunch of fruit, juice it, make bread, and then ignore the juice for a couple of weeks. What, it's illegal to have food go off now? It's impossible to prohibit that.

      How do you get meth or heroin? Heroin comes from specific plants, but you don't just eat the plants whole, and even if you did many countries ban all sorts of plants; here, Scottish Thistle can't be planted; a hundred kilometres over, it must be removed.

      The fact that prohibition failed in the case of alcohol is not evidence that prohibition is impossible. The fact that prohibition of meth is incomplete is also not evidence that we shouldn't try it, any more than the prohibition of rape is incomplete means we shouldn't try.

      --
      Look out!
    62. Re:Those damn socialist! by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      you fool! don't let facts get in the way of your enjoyment of a good crypto-racist joke.

    63. Re:Those damn socialist! by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Yes, of course. But did you read the next couple sentences of my post?

      Yes, I quoted and answered them right in the next paragraph. And repeat myself below.

      I've seen alcohol users drunk, but I've also seen many, many alcohol users NOT drunk, and as I stated, the vast majority of alcohol users I've seen have not been drunk. What I haven't heard much about is moderation in meth users. Every time I hear about meth (which, like I acknowledged in my post, is not much), I hear about meth heads being super high and totally messed up.

      Because meth is illegal, a person who's using it doesn't advertize the fact. So how would you recognize anyone who used it in moderation?

      You've committed a classical selection bias statistical error.

      Sure. You realize though that China figured out that even with legal opium dens, it was still bad to have a good fraction of the population addicated to it?

      Yes. Do you realize said opium dens were run by the British with the specific goal of selling as much opium as possible, and as such didn't have any of the safeguards I proposed? Or that few people are hell-bent on getting themselves addicted, so safer alternatives could be developed after lifting the stigma?

      What I'm asking for is non-anecdotal studies on the addiction and abuse rates of the drugs everyone is proposing to legalize.

      Start here.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    64. Re:Those damn socialist! by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Because meth is illegal, a person who's using it doesn't advertize the fact. So how would you recognize anyone who used it in moderation?

      I wouldn't, of course. As I've acknowledge three times now, I'm no expert on meth usage. But we have all sorts of data on usage for all sorts of illegal drugs. Where is the data on casual meth usage? This is now the third time I've asked for it.

      And please don't wikipedia-link me stupid crap. That's a Slashdot addiction that has got to stop.

      Do you realize said opium dens were run by the British with the specific goal of selling as much opium as possible, and as such didn't have any of the safeguards I proposed?

      So in your meth dens, the dens would not be run with the intent to sell as much meth as possible? Is that how a licensed liquor establishment (a bar) operates?

      Start here [wikipedia.org].

      That link has a chart that lists heroin and cocaine (two drugs I called out as bad candidates for legalization) as very harmful. It lists meth as more harmful than alcohol. It has no information on addiction rate. It does have information on how dependent an addict is on the drug.

    65. Re:Those damn socialist! by zsau · · Score: 1

      If it's any consolation, in these parts Scandinavia and Sweden are typically used as positive examples, and I don't think it's occurred to most people to use them badly (altho I've seen the far-right examples on the internets).

      --
      Look out!
    66. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      75% is actually a quite reasonable guess. Think about it...

      First your employer pays arbetsgivaravgift / "social fees" (15-30 %) of the money he wants to give you. Then communal / regional tax about 30%. Then "moms" ("buyers tax", don't know what it's called in USA), about 12-25% depending on what you buy. Not mentioning extra taxes for stuff that is "bad" for you. For instance alcohol and tobacco. And nation wide "värnskatt" additional 20% if you are a high-income employee.

      I actually made a calculation some few years ago. I played with the idea that my employer wants to give me 1000 Swedish crowns more a month, how much value of beer will I get if I want to buy beer to celebrate? ( how much of the money leaving my employers hands will end up in the brewery's hands. That's about 120 crowns worth of beer after all the fees and taxes I could think of. I'm not kidding!

    67. Re:Those damn socialist! by Bob_Who · · Score: 1

      Well sure, if you're dumb enough to pay tax on the money your company is paying you in salary as well as paying income tax on it then you probably are paying a 75% effective tax rate.

      And if you're stupid enough to believe "apples and oranges" methodologies of taxation calculation is an absolute measure of how national macroeconomics can effectively manipulate tax liability, then you overlook most of the equation. Whether willful ignorance or devout kool-aid swigger, how can one overlook all of the variables we chose not to consider. Taxation is but one manipulated variable that is MEANINGLESS if you fail to look at the WHOLE economic dynamic. But please go ahead with a delusional oversimplification of an even 75% rate of funny money in the vacuum between your ears just to be a righteous fundamentalist. Go ahead and fight for your fair tax rate while overlooking any nation's complete reign on monetary values, market manipulation, price propaganda, supply glut and/or shortages, embargoes, sanctions, deregulation, lobbies, dirty tricks, lies, organized crime, black and grey markets, corporate espionage, customs, law enforcement, TSA, border patrol, fences, war on drugs, planned obsolescence, decaying infrastructure, jammed highways, ruined schools, jails jails jails, and national defense.... well then you sound as stupid as the Tea Party pretends to be. You can pick any ol' number you want and I guarantee that it won't fix your perpetual and frustrated economic irrelevance in this funny money poker game of democracy, capitalism, and free will in the 21st Century. Obsess all you want on one variable, and watch it become completely irrelevant before your very eyes. The meaning of life and cure for all ills should be so simple, so black and white, so righteously graced by the divine... "We're number .... " whatever.

      We continue to argue these inconsequential points as if it has bearing on the results. What a bunch of numb skulls we've become when politics has reduced society to neutered fanboys' irrelevant cross town rivalry in a game of fool-ball. Who cares who wins in a game that doesn't really matter. It comes down to how we live our lives here together on earth. Nothing more or less. A fool's folly, no matter the taxes.

    68. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cocaine:

      Cocaine, in countries where it's dirt cheap, where people regularly chew on coca leaves to cope with the altitude sickness for example, is not such a big problem for addicts, and yes recreational usage is typical.

      It's quite different from street coke mixed with speed. Street coke is a designer drug, it's designed so that once the effects of the cocaine wear off (15-30min later), the speed is just kicking in. The effects of speed in this case causes the addict to focus on the cocaine buzz which has recently faded, this lasts about 4 hours and is referred to as the 'jones'.

      When a coke addict is 'jonesing', that's when they start to do stupid things to get more

      Heroine:

      Smack is one of the top physically addictive drugs in the world (as opposed to cocaine which is not technically addictive at all, only the habit is addictive).

      One of the interesting things about Smack, one of the reasons why it's so difficult for Smack addicts to kick the habit, is that Smack addicts are perfectly functional members of society (assuming they can afford the habit).

      There is no intervention for smack addicts until it's too late, since smack addicts are not percieved by their peers as having any problem at all (at work, at home etc)... until it's too late, they've spent all of their fortune and are picking through the trash and looking for a way to get another hit.

    69. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You hit the nail on the head! Well done!

      Our problem here is a society that glorifies violence. People kill others here over a piece of chewing gum.

    70. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm gonna' call bullshit on that!

      I live and work in the ghetto. Every single aspect of their lives is paid for by the government. Rent, utilities, food, medical, and clothing.
      They send the children to daycare or school, IF they're up early enough. They send them in dirty clothes. The schools and daycares have to keep washing machines to wash the children's clothing for them, because the sorry ass crack whores won't.
      They are free of having the children all day and what do they do?... they smoke dope and trick all day. That's it! It's all they do.

    71. Re:Those damn socialist! by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      Back in the 50s tons of people took amphetamines for extra pep or to lose a few pounds. Many millions of people took them moderately. The addiction potential was there, but you didn't see the horrible social effects until the legal source dried up and bikers started selling crank.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    72. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...nor is it something that needs to be prevented.

      In places where drugs are a problem and using hard drugs is made legal, drug use is still discouraged and treatment centres are created to help people deal with their addictions. It isn't something that is prevented in the same way that the US is trying to prevent it today, but it is something that it is prevented in that people try to get help to prevent themselves from using it repeatedly.

    73. Re:Those damn socialist! by Roger+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Wait. So, prohibition is bad. But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all? Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

      You obviously don't understand what GP is getting at. The argument you present above is nonsense.

      GP posits two separate points:

      • 1. Alcohol use causes more damage than the use of other drugs.
      • 2. Prohibition is bad.

      These points are related only insofar as alcohol is a drug and drugs are prohibited.

      What you missed: alcohol caused our society even more trouble than it currently does under prohibition. There are many reasons for this, but the chief issue is that prohibition simply doesn't work. People will do what people want to do, and under prohibition of alcohol they did. There was demand for booze and because there was no legal supply, a black market emerged to meet that demand.

      GP is pointing out that this black market still exists for other drugs, and that many of the problems society faces in relation to those drugs is a direct result of prohibitionist policy.

      The fact that alcohol use is more damaging than the use of other drugs illustrates how silly it is that we continue to prohibit other substances, even as the black markets and prisoner costs created by the prohibition continue to compound the problems that we face.

    74. Re:Those damn socialist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the effective tax rate was about 62% last time a saw a figure (about a year ago) and it has gone down. This includes all taxes payed before you get your salary in your bank account as well as all taxes you pay after that (VAT, investment taxes and so on). To really appreciate what this means you also need to take in to account what the taxes actually pay for, such as medical care, school, child care, council services etc. Since we are comparing USA to Sweden in this case, In my experience the result is about the same on an average. The difference being you have more of a choise in what you spend your money on in USA, VS letting the goverment decide on what is needed by the many in Sweden. The downside is of course that if you let the goverment decide, a lot of people end up paying for services they don't need or even asked for, while others enjoy a quality of life they otherways couldn't afford. Another effect is that the financial wealth is more evenly distributed in Sweden and a "poor" persons income and lifestyle is comparable to lower middle class in USA. There are a few "filthy rich" people in Sweden (e.g. Ingvar Kamprad, IKEA, Rausing(fam), Tetra pak and Persson(fam), H&M) but after them there is a huge gap down to the "average rich" person and a smaller gap from them down to "poor" people. There is actually no poor people in Sweden (according to UN standards) unless caused by mental illnes, extensive drug use, alkoholism etc. or simply by choise. Help is always available but not unconditionally and it is getting increasingly more difficult to receive financial support without being forced to apply for jobs, go through medical treatments for drug addictions and so forth.

  8. Uh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actual rational thinking from a government? I was beginning to think that didn't happen anymore... but then I'm in the US.

  9. Hope to see that in Egypt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    amazing

  10. Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Remember when American schoolchildren were taught that communism was evil (and by extension, socialism was suspect) because the Soviet Union, had more prisoners per capita than the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave?

    All those precious moments of a Cold War youth, and all I have to show for them is that I saw them go down the memory hole.

    1. Re:Remember when... by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Informative

      No, i do not remember that and you do not either unless your teachers were morons.

      Communist first got a bad name in the US durring the 1919 failed attemp to overthrow yhe US government. After the communist party was broken up and most foreing member were deported, the remaining members went underground or joined the socialist party. Then WWII happened and afterwards the openly communist in Europe joined the socialists due to a large stigma communism had right after the war and with the start of the vold war.

      If you actually had a teacher mentioning something about Russian jails, it was most likely about how lots of people were jailed for speaking thier minds(free speech) which a lot fifferent then you think you heard.

    2. Re:Remember when... by H0p313ss · · Score: 2

      [citation needed]

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    3. Re:Remember when... by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Open any history book that covers those times. Your google finger aint broke.

      Perhaps if people actually did the work of gaining knowlege themselves instead of expecting everything to be spoon fed to them, this world would be a better place.

    4. Re:Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Russian Gulags!

    5. Re:Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      Worldwide Incarceration Rates 2008

      If you want to see a TSA BDO in action, watch a 1982 Clint Eastwood movie. Clint nearly botches the mission when confronted by a KGB Behavioral Detection officer who's lying about his papers not being in order, when, in fact, they were always in order.

      Line that could only be uttered in the Cold War: (Soviet dissident scientist to American infiltrator Eastwood): "...you are an American. You are a free man. I am not. There is a difference."

      Another scene that I thought was only possible behind the unfree part of the Iron Curtain was the scene in which Pavel (Soviet dissident) and Gant (Eastwood) are stopped at an internal checkpoint. They're waived through the checkpoint, and only afterwards does Pavel tell Gant that the reason they were waved through was so that the KGB could tail them while waiting for a film-and-paper facial recognition algorithm figured out who they were and what they were up to.

      Today, the US has DHS-manned internal checkpoints that do this within seconds.

      I can forgive your skepticism. You might not be an American. You might be a free man. There is a difference.

    6. Re:Remember when... by CarbonShell · · Score: 1

      And, as if most of the later 'Communists' or 'Socialist' governments really had to do anything with their names.
      It is like what happened after the French revolution, it started up good and then, well people are people and they want power, so the Republic became an Empire and the Communists/Socialists became Dictatorships.
      But to keep the people in line, they kept on pushing the 'core values'.

      And it seems that we can add Democracies to that list, as they seem to become Corporatocracies/Oligarchies.

    7. Re:Remember when... by feral-troll · · Score: 1

      And it seems that we can add Democracies to that list, as they seem to become Corporatocracies/Oligarchies.

      ...with lots of enthusiastic help from market Capitalists. That leaves all participants in the Cold war with a fatally flawed system of government.

    8. Re:Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wasn't taught that the Soviet Union was bad because it had more prisoners per capita than the US. I was taught that the Soviet Union was bad because
      - Stalin killed as many or more people as Hitler,
      - Eastern Europe was oppressed under Soviet rule,
      - The secret police of Communist governments would regularly arrest and mercilessly punish people for voicing their opinions,
      - Communism was a failed economic system.

      In other words, I was taught the truth.

    9. Re:Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a lot of talk in America about crime in Russia. My 8th grade teacher told us wistfully that Russia was almost crime-free because her totalitarian state, for all its bad points, was at least able to enforce the law vigorously.

    10. Re:Remember when... by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      Not being American, my study of post WWI history mostly focused on my own country and the impacts of the war on Europe, especially the effect of the punitive treaty of Versailles on the economy of Germany. (Which as Churchill observed is one of the primary causes of WWII)

      I think your whole analysis is somewhat suspect, but I was specifically referring to:

      1919 failed attemp to overthrow yhe (sic) US government

      I can find lots of references to the communists attempts to organize political parties and how they were (probably illegally) targeted by the state, but I have never heard of any attempts to actually overthrow the government. There were mass arrests and deportations, but there doesn't seem to be any evidence to support the statement "1919 failed attemp to overthrow yhe(sic) US government" other than that's what they were accused of.

      Source please?

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    11. Re:Remember when... by poity · · Score: 1

      What does this have to do with Communism?

      Sweden is a successful free market capitalist country, and has benefited greatly from advantageous geographic/demographic makeup which gives it abundant land and ocean resources for a low population, along with geographical isolation from both domineering regional players and low skilled immigration. It funnels a few more percentage points of GDP into social welfare than its contemporaries, but that inflow of wealth would not have been possible without the entrepreneurial spirit and private property laws which are antithetical to Communism.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    12. Re:Remember when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, like tears in the rain.

    13. Re:Remember when... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Look into the first red scare. You are likely going to need to find some old history books. Wikipedia seems to be sanitized of calling it a revolt but gives details of the events surounding it.

      Why wikipedia is sanitized i don't know. It is no secret that the same tactics and the same people, or origins of the people revolted in russia, germany, and other countries. They actually had a member of one of the foreign orgs state to congress that they wanted to install a stalin like dictator in the us.

    14. Re:Remember when... by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      So still no source... let me know when you find one.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    15. Re:Remember when... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      As I said, I'm not spoon feeding you so look it up yourself.

      Or you could sit there and remain purposely ignorant then complain about the world not being they way you imagine it. It doesn't matter much to me.

  11. Repulsive! Government Waste! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is the sort of thing you see in countries deeply afflicted with the European-socialist culture of dependency and waste. First, the state wastefully builds a bunch of white-elephant infrastructure projects, rather than embarking on an Efficient private contract; because it's somebody else's money they are spending.

    Then, when those projects stand empty, the state just expects somebody to give them customers (we worked so hard, don't we deserve to succeed?) and then throws up its hands in limp-wristed failure and admits defeat, rather than going out there and making customers through good, old-fashioned, hard work and brutal overcriminalization of all sorts of petty offenses.

    This, my friends, is what a sick society looks like. I bet they try to hide their shame by cooking up a bunch of fancy statistics about how good their human development index rankings, life expectancy, and similar ivory-tower nonsense are; but you can't hide moral sickness this profound.

    1. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by dyingtolive · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The most disturbing thing to me is that, on a different site, that comment could be construed as both, serious AND insightful.

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      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    2. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by EdIII · · Score: 1

      What is profoundly sickening is that you would be cheered on by a tearful crowd in some places right now...

      (I'm thinking Iowa)

    3. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by MacTO · · Score: 1

      They clearly need to dump more money into university research on increasing criminal activity.

    4. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by clarkkent09 · · Score: 0

      So the point of your joke is that the US high prison inmate rate per capita is the result of excessive reliance on private enterprise and not enough government regulation and welfare state?

      There are countries far more socialist than Sweden that have a prison and murder rate per capita far higher than the US. Venezuela is as socialist as it gets outside Cuba and North Korea and the government controls far more of the economy for the "benefit" of the poor and yet its murder rate is more than 10 times higher than the US.

      There are factors outside economic/political system that affect the crime rate. US excessive "war on drugs" as well as much higher use of drugs that in Sweden is one, the violent culture of gangs in inner cities (also related to drugs) etc. Also, I would guess that the % of Swedish people living in the US who are in prison is comparable to the % of Swedish people living in Sweden who are in prison, but I shouldn't say that since true statistics are often racist.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    5. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by HalfFlat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There are countries far more socialist than Sweden that have a prison and murder rate per capita far higher than the US.

      Well, no. No, there isn't. Because the US is in fact the world leader in per capita incarceration rate. The US is, in this metric, really number one.

      Murder is another story. If you compare the US though with its economic peers, you have to go a long way down the per-capita GDP axis before you find another country with a higher per-capita homicide rate.

    6. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then, when those projects stand empty, the state just expects somebody to give them customers (we worked so hard, don't we deserve to succeed?) and then throws up its hands in limp-wristed failure and admits defeat, rather than going out there and making customers through good, old-fashioned, hard work and brutal overcriminalization of all sorts of petty offenses.

      There is no empty buildings...
      We had a project called million-programme where we buildt over a million apartments in the 1960. They are not empty there is a contant demand for them becourse private comapnies dont want to build becoruse it is not profitable enougth. Is that better? And im actually mean "profitable enougth". Do we want refugess to be homeless? Do we want people to have it better? The anwser is YES! There is s reason that we have taxes in Sweden. we want to do these things to help those who cant not help them selfs. They dont have to be as efficent as the private industry, I like paying taxes. I like seeing my fellow freinds and people having a batter life.

      People who work hard are allowed to "succesed"(what ever that is? making money?) but are people who can not, be course of social inequality and monetary in equality are they not allowed to have healthy life? We are a society, not a nation of individualists.

      But then again, you can always migrate to united states and live and die, thiere. We don't have to have the same opinion ion what is the best for the individual.

    7. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1, Redundant

      The US has a higher incarceration rate due to harsher sentences, not necessarily due to higher crime rate. Overall crime rate in UK and Germany (far better comparison to the US than Sweden) are higher than in the US. US has lower burglary and robbery rates than Australia or Canada. Take 20 worst gangland ghettos out of the equation and US compares favorably to most major developed countries in any crime statistic. Whatever the reasons for the harsh sentences (in particular for drug use), which is the true reason for the US record incarceration rate, they are not obviously related to welfare state which was the actual point of my post.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    8. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by dyingtolive · · Score: 5, Informative

      You're totally right, I haven't seen them. I'm talking out my ass. Let me look at them. Thank god we have Wikipedia for these things.

      Sweden: -17.632
      United States: 87.859

      Wow. Yup, just like you said. Theirs is negative and the US's is so much higher. What was I thinking? Hey, I gotta read up more about this Debt to GDP thingy so I stop making an ass of myself and be smart too. Good thing I still have wikipedia open:

      A low debt-to-GDP ratio indicates an economy that produces and sells goods and services sufficient to pay back debts without incurring further debt. Governments aim for low debt-to-GDP ratios, but geopolitical and economic considerations - including interest rates, war, recessions, and other variables - influence the borrowing practices of a nation and the choice to incur further debt.

      ...huh.

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      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    9. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also reflect favorable outcomes to my arguments when I create statistic altering exceptions.

    10. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A source would be nice, because by googling "crime rate by country", it seems that you are just talking out of your ass.

      Taking the 20 worst gangland ghettos from the us away is pointless unless you do the same for the other countries too.

    11. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      Obviously we are talking per capita crime rate.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    12. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your debt/GDP figures are rather misleading.

      Wikipedia lists two sets of figures, Gross debt-to-GDP and Net debt-to-GDP. Gross debt-to-GDP is the measure that is almost always used in these kind of discussions. You quoted the Net debt-to-GDP.

      The Gross figures are 38.6% for Sweden and 80.7% for the USA - which still support your statement. The original AC was perhaps thinking about the late 1990s, when Sweden's Gross debt-to-GDP was over 70%. How times have changed ...

    13. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      The Tea Party is made up of nothing more than a bunch of borderline delusional self-serving arseholes, who think freedom means "Whatever you like, as long as it's our way." They give the Boston Tea Party a bad name.

      But then, you're attempting to apply a United States political lobby group to another country, so I guess you're a fucking idiot as well.

    14. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Poorcku · · Score: 1

      I don't get these numbers because I am no economist. So AC says low debt/gdp is good because it doesn't incur further debt (A low debt-to-GDP ratio indicates an economy that produces and sells goods and services sufficient to pay back debts without incurring further debt) and gives sweden as an example. Wiki says the US is on the other side of the scale and that is, again... good?

      --
      I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
    15. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sweden's debt was increasing, just like most other countries, well into the 90s. It's not until the last 20 years or so that they have actually been paying it off. And, believe it or not, Sweden didn't have US levels of violent crime and incarceration before that, so there's no correlation.

    16. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by dunkelfalke · · Score: 2

      Not just due to harsher sentences but also due to harsher crimes. The US murder rate is four times as high as the UK murder rate and almost 6 times as high as the German one.

      The number of drug offences is way higher in Germany, that skews the statictics, as you can see in this comparison

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    17. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC is a troll, a moron, or both. Whereas I am a gentleman of refined and sophisticated tastes.

    18. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't increasing the education budget just make it worse, though?

    19. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      I'm not an economist either, but the bottom paragraph of mine is from wikipedia on debt to GDP ratio. In a nutshell, it appears to say "lower is better". Since it's a fraction, and lower is better, I'm assuming "Debt / GDP = Ratio". For Sweden to have a negative ratio, that would imply that one of those variables would have to be negative. I'm guessing they don't have a negative GDP, so it sounds like they're buying more debt than they're selling.

      Regarding my comments on how good it is, I was just being sarcastic as hell.

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    20. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Xest · · Score: 1

      So in 2011, the US had a debt to GDP ratio of 100%. It had a debt of about $14tn and it made $14tn in a year, so, if it dedicated all it's income that year to paying off debt it could've cleared it's debt in a single year.

      In practice though you can't do that as you have to pay your military, police, fix roads, and so on. A debt to GDP ratio of 50% would've meant it could pay off it's debt in half a year.

      A negative debt to GDP ratio means you have no debt, and you're putting whatever percentage of your income into your savings account (or whatever - probably a sovereign wealth fund or something).

      So Swedish GDP is about $400bn per year IIRC, and if they're putting what, 18% I think you said of that into savings each year it means they're putting $72bn a year into their piggy bank.

      In contrast at 80% debt to GDP ratio it'll take the US 8 years to pay off it's debt if it pays even 10% of it's GDP each year towards that (and spends the other 90% of it's GDP on wars, Tea Parties and Obamacares or whatever the fuck it likes to get upto nowadays).

    21. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Xest · · Score: 1

      "Overall crime rate in UK and Germany (far better comparison to the US than Sweden) are higher than in the US."

      Not true any more. This idea was based on data from over a decade ago. Nowadays the UK is far more peaceful than the US, and seems to have the lowest levels of crime it's possibly ever had in modern history. It's now one of the more peaceful nations in Europe and Europe on average does much better than the US:

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24566994

      Even where the UK does have high figures (i.e. sexual offences) a lot of that is historical too (i.e. offences from the 60s, 70s, 80s) only now coming to light and being reported so high figures there doesn't mean you're likely to suffer sexual assault nowadays.

    22. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by dyingtolive · · Score: 1

      That makes sense. Thank you for that.

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      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    23. Re:Repulsive! Government Waste! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want to take the 20 worst ganglang ghettos out of the US crime statistics?!

      Do you know what happens to Sweden's crime statistics if you take out the crimes committed by the population of the districts with majority immigrant population?

      Or to any country's crime statistics if you take out the crime comited by socially disadvantaged people?

      Rich and powerful people contribute very little to crime statistics.

  12. Start jailing the rapists by Suiggy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Maybe they should start prosecuting all of the immigrant child rapists instead of letting them get away with it. Oh no, can't do that because it would be deemed "racist."

    http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=sv&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.friatider.se%2F11-aring-gruppvaldtogs-pa-badhus&act=url

    85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

    http://www.newsmax.com/jameswalsh/europe-immigration-muslim-obama/2013/05/29/id/506837

    1. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Quoting newsmax? Way to discredit yourself.

    2. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point.

    3. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Suiggy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not my fault the vast majority of yellow press will avoid reporting on anything that goes contrary to the politically correct narrative.

    4. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

      Except those committed by Australians.

    5. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Microlith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, right, IT'S A CONSPIRACY! Come back when you have a source more credible than Newsmax.

    6. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jailing the rapists would be racist. Not jailing anyone would be sexist. The solution is to jail random white men.

    7. Re:Start jailing the rapists by whistlingtony · · Score: 3, Funny

      It is your fault for quoting Newsmax. :D

      Seriously, look a the link itself. "europe-immigration-muslim-obama". I mean.... come on... sheesh.

    8. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Terrible as this is, when I see the words 'rape' and 'Sweden' together, the first thing I think is: 'insurance scam'.

      In the mid 90's, I was told by a Greek colleague that, whilst desirable, female Swedish tourists were avoided like the plague by the local Greek males thanks to their propensity for crying 'rape'.
      Turned out it was a long standing scam, they took out rape insurance prior to their holiday, suckered some local lothario at their holiday destination, cried rape, got the lothario arrested, then claimed on the policy back in Sweden.

      I see from a quick Google search, that this is still probably going on.

      I've no doubt that some of the stuff pointed to in your links is true, we have a similar problem here in Britain with sections of the Muslim population, as an example, Google: Muslim paedophile rings Britain.

      [FWIW, the existence of these 'rings' was 'common knowledge' at least as far back as the early 90's - I was told about them as an example of the 'depraved' behaviour of 'British' Muslims which appalled a number of the foreign Muslim students at the University I worked in at the time (I won't even go into the skewed logic employed that 'as western women do not dress like women (burquas etc) they're not 'true' women', ergo we can do what we like with them as they're then in a category not covered by our religious rulebook.')
      Amusingly (if I can use that word in this context), this was posited by the foreign Muslim students as an example of the corrupting influence of the West, and, please note, I'm not talking about rabid card carrying 'We hate the West' types - though considering what we've subsequently done to one of the countries that a number of them came from, I think that'll have changed to our detriment ].

    9. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

      Except those committed by Australians.

      When it comes to that: note that's actually a single Australian to allegedly commit the rest of 15%.
      (large grin)

    10. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm.. Those scammers better be careful they don't turn those (fake) rapes into (real) murders... I'd murder the fuck out of anyone who did that to me.

    11. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is no such thing as rape insurance in Sweden. It is a Greek myth: http://www.thelocal.se/20110415/33232

    12. Re:Start jailing the rapists by crutchy · · Score: 1

      yeah cos everyone knows CNN is waaaaaaaay more credible :-)

    13. Re:Start jailing the rapists by crutchy · · Score: 0

      Swedish chicks just can't get enough of Aussie blokes

    14. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

      Sweden has a peculiarity in rape reporting statistics. See here. In family disputes, rape complaints by the wife can get registered hundreds of times against the husband. With only about 6,000 reported instances, it could be that this 85% represents only a handful of individuals whose wives have registered such complaints.

    15. Re:Start jailing the rapists by whistlingtony · · Score: 1, Insightful

      CNN? More credible than Newsmax? Uhm. Yes. And that says a lot about Newsmax.

      Also, Crutchy? I looked at your comments. You're a racist, and a genderist. In the last week you spouted the "women are asking for it with those clothes" line, and in THIS discussion, you felt it necessary to bust out the N word.

      Perhaps you should think about your attitudes and your life.

    16. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok,
      from the article pointed to, there is no such thing as specific 'rape insurance' per se, but it does mention that there is a mechanism for claiming against general household insurance if rape occurs..

      '..When Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) contacted a number of insurance companies in Sweden they found that there is no such thing as ‘rape insurance’.

      Those that have been raped during holiday can claim recompense under a special clause in their home insurance, however.'

      So, in other words, there is a special clause in an insurance policy where they can be compensated if they're raped,
      i.e. 'rape insurance'.

      Or is this another misinterpretation?

    17. Re:Start jailing the rapists by isorox · · Score: 1

      85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

      http://www.newsmax.com/jameswalsh/europe-immigration-muslim-obama/2013/05/29/id/506837

      But slashdot has already told me that any sexual action is "rape" -- look at Asange.

    18. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why are you quoting the yellow press then?

    19. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why are you quoting the 'yellow press'?

      Why doesn't your 'yellow press' then report on ethnic swedes that get away with rape? Wasn't there in the news recently how a swedish care taker of an immigrant child was raping and sodomizing the child and got away because the judge agreed that the dna evidence wasn't enough because it could have gotten there a multitude of other ways.

      http://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/article17777415.ab

    20. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Two logical fallacies in a single line of text, and you are 5 Insightful?

      The Strawman and the Genetic fallacy - well played.

    21. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amusingly (if I can use that word in this context), this was posited by the foreign Muslim students as an example of the corrupting influence of the West

      If they come from a hard stance "cut off the offending body part" muslim country, I would not be surprised that they see our laws as basically condoning rape.

    22. Re:Start jailing the rapists by fey000 · · Score: 1

      85% of reported rapes in Sweden are perpetrated by Muslim immigrants.

      Except those committed by Australians.

      When it comes to that: note that's actually a single Australian to allegedly commit the rest of 15%.

      (large grin)

      The remaining 85% would then be 5 and 2/3. Is the last guy a midget?

    23. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC can add that "Fria tider" from where the other link was translated is a Swedish extreme-right baloney news source. They and "Avpixlat" are the outlets for pure racist bigotry in this country, as they are more or less official outlets of the right-wing populist party Sverigedemokraterna (SD) (people high up in SD are heavily involved in these sites; there have been some semi-scandals about this).

    24. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you lived in a country where you have paid tax all your life as well as your ancestors and you experience the same transition Sweden has during the past 3 decades I really wonder what *your* attitude would be.

      If one had let the Swedish people vote about allowing the immigrants here, the verdict would have been a resounding NO. This was the case back in the '80s in a small district called "Sjöbo".

      But the politicians don't care about the Swedish people and now we have people who don't belong here; immigrants ranging from African and Middle-eastern regions to Yugoslav and Baltic regions. These people don't work and they live off the Dole doing nothing but harassing the Swedish people and gang-raping Swedish girls calling them "svennehora" and other derogatory things. The prevalence of gang-rapes and violence related crimes is mostly among Africans and Middle-eastern ethnic groups, particularly the Muslim groups as their religion (or at least their Mullahs) encourage it. We, who are not Muslims are a haram, Dhimmis or Kuffs, and are not worth our salt in their views. In other words, we are their slaves according to Qu'ran.

      I would really like to see you grow up in those troubled 'hoods being harassed and robbed. I think you would snap rather quickly, unless you are one of them.
       
      The government is literally throwing money after the immigrants and committing quite extensive affirmative action procedures at the expense of the white Swedish people. That accompanied by a Swedish politically correct mainstream media who is witch-hunting dissidents by creating "racism" out of everything and spreading outright lies, all in the name of "everyones' and everythings' equal value". The hypocrisy is enormous.

      Coming to Sweden as an immigrant and getting a citizenship is not a human right and the Swedish people should have the right to decide who to let in. The country here is really f*cked up and it will collapse pretty soon unless someone decides to do something about it.

    25. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I could call you anti-racist bigot for merely stating this. There is nothing wrong with news sites such as "Fria Tider" or Axpixlat. They are pretty objective and sensible. It's just that when you make statements and present facts that are not politically correct you automatically get called racist, white supremacist bigot or whatever. These news sites are heavily monitored by the PC establishment and I can assure you that everything that is written on those news sites are diligently perused for factual correctness. One small mistake in one of those news sites and h3ll would freeze over I assure you. The PC establishment is constantly guarding for opportunities to shoot them down and so far they haven't found one.

    26. Re:Start jailing the rapists by oh2 · · Score: 1

      Avpixlat is a sewer of anonymous bigotry, lies and propaganda supported by SD, a political party whose prominent members of parliament enjoy taking drunken walks on the streets of Stockholm with iron pipes in case someone wants to mess with them. Fria tider is even worse, its thinly disguised white supremacist bullshit. Yes, we have asshole bigots in Sweden as well.

      --

      Now the world has gone to bed, Darkness won't engulf my head, I can see by infra-red, How I hate the night.

    27. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Microlith · · Score: 1

      Thankfully I never made that claim. The AC below would do well to observe your straw man so he can recognize one in the future.

    28. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is strange how SD get bashed for "this and that". If you really read into their political agenda you will realize how blown out of proportions those claims really are. Heck, they even support the state of Israel which is frowned upon among several nationalist parties.
       
        The main agenda is to "import" as many people from the MENA regions as possible. 'MENA' is an abbreviation for 'Middle East and North Africa'. The purpose is to destabilize the countries of Europe and particularly Sweden. The majority of people from the MENA regions are unemployed and live off the Swedish welfare system. These people are less "gifted" than other people, this has been proven scientifically and they are more prone to criminality which is shown pretty clearly in criminal statistics. In short, they are not suited for the society of Sweden and so cannot adapt.
       
      The conclusion is that the mass import (100-200 thousand people are coming from this region every year to a country of 8-9 million people which already have over 1.5 million immigrants from this region) is not about welfare, it's about dividing the country and fighting nationalism. Nationalism appears to be very harmful to a certain group of people, so in order to maintain control they instigate this mass invasion. In short, they want to control the people. Sweden will soon turn into what the Yugoslav countries were in the '90s. This may seem a little strange to Americans who are inclined to be very patriotic. Sweden is a very unpatriotic country and any hint of patriotism in this country is seriously frowned upon. This is thanks to mainstream media who is in control of the country (run by the Bonnier group), the school and the government. This scheme is not only going on in Sweden but in most European countries.
       
      This is not going to last for very long because the welfare system was built up by hard-working individuals and now it is utterly consumed by individuals (i.e. immigrants) so it will collapse eventually. We see this development by increasing taxes (increased income taxes which are already high, introduction of toll fees for driving into major cities, ...), parts that used to be governmental are now privatized (electricity companies, post offices, the car inspection agencies, pharmacies...), in other words, a lot of parts of the society have been sold out to free capital to fund this madness. The truth is that Sweden has a reputation for being extremely generous with their welfare to immigrants, heck they are even opening up agencies in countries such as Somalia to encourage people to come to Sweden and live off the welfare. Some people even pretend to be paperless children just to get permanent citizenship in Sweden. This reputation therefore opens up to the lowest grade of people which is why there are so high levels of criminality in this country. The country will collapse eventually (unless someone stops this madness) because eventually, there will be no money to fund this mass infestation.
       
      In the other end, we have the Bonnier controlled mass media controlling the who thing under the quite hypocritical "equal value" adage accompanied by a really strange agenda to fight racism, structural racism and nationalism. They spread lies like there is no tomorrow just to maintain this "policy".

    29. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is. Prove it or it didn't happen. We've heard quite enough lies about the rape statistics. There is no such thing as a 'rape insurance' and the women don't do this because they think it is funny, on the contrary, there is a high number of rape victims who don't report the rape out of fear and shame. I quite frankly find your post to be very disrespectful of these victims!

    30. Re:Start jailing the rapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and that is an outright lie. Swedish women don't report rapes more frequently than any other women. I think what BBS does is quite disrespectful.

  13. Solution by jxander · · Score: 1

    As an American, I'm sure we could let them have some of ours. We have way more prisoners than we know what to do with.

    --
    This signature is false.
    1. Re:Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let the non-violent offenders out maybe?

    2. Re:Solution by CarbonShell · · Score: 1

      How about fixing the problems in stead of moving them around? And by fixing I mean doing a complete overhaul, including society.
      Release all the 3rd-Strikers. Don't incarcerate people for having trivial amounts of drugs. Then work on real rehabilitation. Focus your justice system fully on the really bad people.
      You are caught in a vicious cycle where people are unable to break from. Help them instead of kicking them and leaving them to fend for themselves, as the 'easiest' thing to do is crime.

  14. OTOH our neighbors are fine with jailing a MS pati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    On the other hand, our neighbors to the West are fine with jailing a MS patient for using pot to help her with her condition: http://www.thelocal.se/20080125/9775

  15. well in the usa people went to prison for healthca by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    As they where locked out of other choices.

    Also some homeless people go in and out of jails as well.

  16. Outsource it to the Americans by renzhi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why closing them? They should outsource/rent to the Americans, I'm sure they could make some money and create more jobs at the same time.

    1. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      American prisoners would fight to the death for a stay in Swedish prisons. I'm not sure on which side that I would stand...

    2. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A couple of airplanes full of American prisoners could probably take over Sweden.

    3. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets compromise and send the NSA instead to be locked up indefinitely.

    4. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by whistlingtony · · Score: 2

      "A couple of airplanes full of American prisoners could probably take over Sweden."

      Well, that's obviously not true. But assuming it was, what would that tell us? What would that prove?

      I think your statement tells us more about you than about Sweden. And I think it tells us that you're an idiot.

    5. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by dryeo · · Score: 2

      You might want to look at a map sometime. Sweden is a ways away from Switzerland.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    6. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by crutchy · · Score: 0

      A couple of airplanes full of American prisoners could probably take over Sweden.

      the same way a handful of middle-eastern muslims took over america

    7. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if Nicholas Cage has anything to say about it.

    8. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're kidding, of course, but the Dutch are actually doing that: Belgium is renting a Dutch prison.

      Mostly because the effective penalties in the Netherlands have fallen to quite low levels. Sure, if you _do_ get convicted, say for shoplifting, you can get a long sentence by European standards. But the conviction rate is very low for most crimes. 1/60 is not unheard of, ie. confess 60 cases of shoplifting and be sentenced for one. You get volume discounts. "Three strikes and you're out" is the absolute opposite of Dutch justice.

    9. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sweden had a conscription army until just a few years ago. Whether "most" swedish males still qualifies as "military trained" is an open question thanks to defence budget cuts, but in the past it was undoubtedly so. There are still a significant proportion around that is.

      People who got too old to be of any use in the regular troops got transferred to the "Homeguard", and issued an ak:4, (our version of the H&K G3) which was to be kept handy but hidden in case of an emergency.

    10. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read that link again. What does the last word say?

    11. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Tom · · Score: 1

      That exactly is the point: The difference is that Sweden is running its prisons as sadly necessary government institutions, and not as commercial enterprises.

      This simple step reverses the incentives.
      The american prison system actually has an interest in more crime, more criminals, more prison sentences, because that equates to more profit.
      The swedish prison system has an interest in less crime, less criminals and prison sentences only where adequate, because that equates to less costs.

      For a civilized society, one of these is perverse. I'll let you guess which one and you only get one try.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    12. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know for Sweden, but my father (Norwegian) had his army assault riffle at home, just like most people. That was 20 years ago though.

    13. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well the link is wrong but he's factually right (for much the same reasons as Switzerland). Then again, it might be a joke - I think it was G.W Bush who insisted that Sweden doesn't have an army "because they are neutral" when someone, Powell I think?, suggested asking Sweden if they were interested in providing peace keeping forces somewhere.

    14. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of that is still true for sweden. Every adult did basic military training but that practise did stopp just a few years a go when we switched to a carrier based military. We also had a civilian part of the military wich where volentary wich allowed people to have their military wepoans at home. With no ammo. We also have alot of hunters with guns.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_of_guns_per_capita_by_country
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden#Military

    15. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Americans run the Swedish jail, expect more Swedes to be jail shortly.

    16. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      "What? You mean professional wrestling ISN'T real?? You lie!" --Anonymous Coward

    17. Re:Outsource it to the Americans by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Always good to check posted links :) Having conscription has a lot to say for it, especially for nations that aren't always at war. I'd feel a lot better about people having been trained in the use of weapons if they own them rather then treating them as toys.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  17. mental health by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    does Sweden have mental health centers to help people unlike the us that shout some down and the people just moved to prisons.

    1. Re: mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue in USA is that poor black are sent to prison. Just check the laws. Same drug gives 10 times bigger sentence for blacks. Used to be 100.

    2. Re:mental health by Frobnicator · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Yes, mental health is covered by the government-run health system.

      On one hand, as a country Sweden has solved a great many social woes by implementing broad social care and welfare programs.

      On the other hand, they have the highest tax rate in the world in order to sustain all the social services. National taxes alone account for nearly 50% of an individual's income, with regional and local taxes potentially adding another 30%.

      In recent years the social services have rapidly been switching to private for-profit models and the costs have started to skyrocket. So there is that side to consider.

      --
      //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
    3. Re: mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue in USA is that poor black are sent to prison. Just check the laws. Same drug gives 10 times bigger sentence for blacks. Used to be 100.

      Let me guess: the prison terms for common offenses were just multiplied by 10?

    4. Re:mental health by dryeo · · Score: 1

      The real question is what is the standard of living like after paying those taxes, including how much net is left.
      If your income goes up with the taxes, eg make 50% more before taxes, then it's not so bad. Same with if expenses drop so even though you have less money, you need less money as you don't have to pay for certain things such as quality health care.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    5. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      National taxes alone account for nearly 50% of an individual's income, with regional and local taxes potentially adding another 30%.

      Your numbers are kind of off unless you're bending over backwards trying to make Swedish taxes seem high by adding up sales tax, income tax, taxes your employer pays and so on like some Swedish neo-liberals like to do in order to be able to say that the average Swede pays 80% (or whatever) of their income in taxes.

      Yes, sales tax here is pretty high (25% for a lot of things) and income tax for most people is in the 30-40% range but it's not some dystopian society where your paycheck (eh, direct bank transfer, no one uses checks around here and no one has for a very long time) goes almost exclusively to the government.

    6. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Go home and do your homework again..

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_Sweden

      The tax-pressure is just above 50% (but it's the company that pays 20% of that so you only see ~30-32% yourself) .. But for those extra 20% (over the taxes in the US for example) we get free healthcare and even paid sick-leave by the goverment if you catch something that takes a long time to get rid of and then we have really generous social security..

      On top of this we also have things like tax-reduction when buying some services like someone to clean your home (to make people hire people that pay taxes) and when doing renovation of your home you can deduct money for the workers that do it, but not the material..
      The deductions are up to 50000SEK each and that will lower your tax.. (ie 50000*0.3 == reduced tax for most people)..

      Sure we have a incremental taxes also so if you earn more than a specific amount ( do the research yourself ) you get to pay higher taxes on the amount above that..

      The average pay in Sweden is ~28000SEK (number from 2012) and you get to keep ~70% of that...

      Then we have the healthcare.. It has NOT gone up due to privitization... The private companies compete with public companies for the same amount of money for the same amount of services... Ie all they do is optimize the routines to be able to make a bit of profit but this also results in that they will lower their offer next year to try and get the deal making public hospitals work harder to stay in business.. Just go do your homework.. There are tons of information on the subject if you manage to actually do a search on the subject.

      So again... go and do your homework...

    7. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way U.S. tax system is setup it gives less back and takes more. While Swedish tax system is setup to give more and take less. In the end no matter what you have more money to spend of whatever you want in Sweden. In the U.S. you have to spend more money on what _must_ before being able to spend less on whatever you want.

      The americans can't get the idea that together we are stronger than as individuals. I bet they would consider companies that sell electricity sourced from many providers as socialism because the more customers the company has the more negotiation power they have to get fair and cheap prices for their customers. Anything were corporations can't suck you dry is a socialism and communism for americans.

    8. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the tax rate is 48.3%

      Then there is VAT; generally 25%, 12% on foodstuffs and services, 6% for cultural events and publications.

    9. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The standard is good.

      My family has an income of one specialist nurse 3 656.04 USD 24'000 SEK. And we live comfortably but not exessively. We got 100/100 MB internet, PS3, 1 smartphone each, eat good quality food, 1 year old computer, tv with cable and a tablet. /Hagge

    10. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has lived in all four terrible socialist countries in Northern Europe (Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Norway, which is a little bit of an exception due to their oil) I'd like to remind you that when you actually get something else than a military behemoth for your taxes, you have more money to spend on whatever you like. Healthcare, subsidized good public transportation, free education including study allowances (yes, there the governments pay part of the living costs of students so study loans are generally smaller). The system is such that those services are not always even implemented by the state but instead the state buys them from private providers since they too have reaiized that capitalist competition between private companies is beneficial. I'm not claiming that it's an utopia but they generally do have their shit together.

    11. Re:mental health by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently Sweden assigns lots of homework.

    12. Re:mental health by CBravo · · Score: 1

      And it really does not matter who pays for healthcare (or any other common cost post), whichever is more efficient. Taxes are bad only when it hides a government which is (more) inefficient (than businesses).

      --
      nosig today
    13. Re:mental health by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Generally government is always more efficient then private business, at least in large projects such as health care as no need to make a profit, no excessive paperwork such as results with Doctors having to bill multiple organizations and perhaps fight over the billing when the other organization is motivated to pay out as little as possible as well as economy of scale, easier to get good deals when purchasing millions of dollars worth of whatever.
      Of course like all generalizations there are many exceptions, governments that don't try due to ideological beliefs, businesses that take advantage of the government, governments that are in bed with businesses and rather then businesses giving cost of living raises, the government gives tax breaks so business can make higher profits.
      I'm sure that there are many more exceptions but the important thing is to have a government that tries to serve the people rather then campaign contributors, businesses that offer great jobs after the politician leaves politics etc.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    14. Re:mental health by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      saying that government is inherently inefficient is as monstrously nonsensical as saying that all women are illogical and think only of shoes and shopping.

      i.e. it's a stupid lie that only prejudiced fuckwits believe.

  18. Re:Start jailing therapists by _merlin · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yes, we should start jailing therapists. Their extortionate "professional rates" suck the lifeblood out of the economy. People would be better off spending this money on hookers and gigolos who give guaranteed relief. Oh wait, not "therapists" but "the rapists". Well, if people were more inclined to hire hookers, that problem could be solved, too!

  19. Re:Start jailing therapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always found it odd that a profession counting Sigmund Freud among its ranks named themselves "the rapists".

  20. This is a bad idea by SlovakWakko · · Score: 4, Funny

    Don't mess with the equilibrium. Less criminals means less need for cops means more unemplyed cops who usually go into organized crime means more criminals means you need to hire more cops means less crime means... - OMG, it's just a way to get the whole population into organized crime!

  21. How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can that be? The require their citizens to own military style weapons, so they must have higher number of gun crimes. Obviously that's wrong.

    1. Re:How? by dave420 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sweden != Switzerland. And Switzerland is having a problem with gun crime. So you're about as wrong as you can be, which is not surprising for a gun nut.

    2. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switzerland has a considerably lower crime rate than most countries, thanks to their more liberal gun laws. All in all, it is a much safer country than any other country in the world. The homicide rate has proven to be one of the lowest in the world in that country. As a contrast, homicide rates have sky-rocketed in Sweden since the mid '70ies due to an extremely liberal immigration policy introduced back in 1975. There is a strong correlation between immigration and increasing homicides when looking into the statistics. The fact that prisons rather look like luxury hotels and a court system that is overly lenient towards this type of crime doesn't exactly discourage individuals from committing such crimes. The court system is particularly lenient towards non-Swedish ethnic groups when it comes to these crimes because of enforcing policies of positive affirmation and rather strange "anti-racism" policies.

      Also, in spite of rather strict gun laws in countries such as Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Shootings are actually very common in those countries, more so than Switzerland. Gun crimes usually involves illegal, non-licensed guns and the vast majority of them occur in troubled neighbourhoods dominated by immigrants.

    3. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Btw, I said "positive affirmation" but I rather meant "affirmative action", sorry about that.

    4. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The require their citizens to own military style weapons

      No, that's not Sweden. That's Switzerland, the country bordering on Austria. You know, with the kangaroos and shit.

    5. Re:How? by Zalbik · · Score: 1

      As a contrast, homicide rates have sky-rocketed in Sweden since the mid '70ies due to an extremely liberal immigration policy introduced back in 1975.

      Strange, cause when I look at the firearm-related homicides for the two countries, I see over double the number of homicides per 100,000 people in Switzerland vs. Sweden.

      Yes, Sweden has a slightly higher overall homicide rate (1.0 vs. 0.7 per 100,000), but it would be quite the stretch to deduce that this has anything to do with gun control.

    6. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The homicide rate in Sweden is rather high, a lot higher than in Switzerland, but the problem is that in many cases the death occurring is reported as "death by natural causes" rather than homicide. A lot of shootings are reported, I don't know whether this increase is due to changes that are too recent for the Wiki statistics, or because these shootings aren't properly reported. A victim harmed by a firearm may not seek medical attention or the doctor may fail to recognize the injury as caused by a firearm or may simply not report it into statistics out other reasons even if the injury would be fatal.
       
      Either way, I'd say that these gun related homicides are pretty low in Switzerland and a more fair comparison would be to look at the total homicide rate, and here Switzerland is considerably safer by a large margin.

    7. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switzerland is having a problem with gun crime

      The annual rate of homicide by any means per 100,000 population was 0.70, which is one of the lowest in the world, you fucking idiot.

    8. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it would be quite the stretch to deduce that this has anything to do with gun control.

      Only if you refuse to acknowledge reality. According to the US Victimization Survey, run by the DOJ, firearms, used in self defense, prevent an estimated 500 rapes and 1,000 murders/deadly assaults every day. Over 90% of these crimes are preventing just by brandishing the weapon. Considering that only 250 rapes are successfully committed every day, that means potentially, the crime rate was lowered 66% by gun availability.

      Conversely, crimes against women increased dramatically when the Brady Laws went into effect. Who knew that keeping people from buying guns, when they felt their lives were in danger, would ultimately fuck over the victims!?!

  22. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  23. Damned socialists! by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

    That's what happens when you don't let the Prison Industrial Complex freedom-speak with their campaign donation dollars.

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  24. Here's An Idea... by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    Why don't we outsource our prisons to Sweden? They get to keep their prisons and I bet they can implement them for a lot less expense than American prisons! Then everyone's a winner!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Here's An Idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want your criminals on the streets instead of in your prisons that's your prerogative, but in my swedish experience violent crime is currently at an all time high.

    2. Re:Here's An Idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In your experience? No.

  25. Those crazy swedish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have it backwards! If there's not enough prisoners, it means you're not cracking down enough or don't have enough laws! You need to start a war on something inanimate that too many people seem to enjoy. Use yer noggins!

  26. Sweden has its head up its Butt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Husby Sweden, 100 cars blown up by immigrants over a perceived misjustice which was actually nothing of the sort: http://goo.gl/qgK6fF.
    Police officers were litterally running away from these 'youth'. Not a single person arrested. This is Swedish justice. They are useless.
    Even when they know a crime is committed, have evidence to that effect, they will let the criminals go free.

  27. Re:Start jailing therapists by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I also want to know why so many people have a problem with rap music artists.

  28. fixed that for you... by globaljustin · · Score: 0

    I sense an opportunity for a bad capitalist.

    profiting off of human misery is unsustainable...at some point with mathematical certainty you will have to put business profit over human suffering

    capitalism is not an excuse to abuse & profit from human misery

    capitalism is a macroeconomic contextualization of resource management...it is a concept that transcends an individual economic system or governemnt

    everything about your comment is wrong

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re: fixed that for you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whoosh

    2. Re:fixed that for you... by crutchy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      capitalism is extremely efficient at profiting from human misery

      government is extremely efficient at creating human misery

    3. Re:fixed that for you... by iserlohn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      capitalism is extremely efficient at profiting from human misery

      humans are extremely efficient at creating human misery

      /FIFY

  29. Premature. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They and the other scandinavian countries are importing the 3rd world in record numbers. Thanks to Muslim and African immigrants, they are a rape capital of the world now:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_statistics#Sweden

    And that doesn't stop there. Soon murder and theft will follow.

    If you like the idea of people being "rehabiliated" aka set free and never going to jail, then yes, Swedish model is really something to look forward to. I know the US overdoes punishment, particularly against the war on drugs, but my family has been on the receiving end of crime and seeing the perp walk with little more than a slap on the wrist does not satisfy justice imo.

  30. end of scarcity by globaljustin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Cause more jobs = better economy as we all know.

    right?

    I understand what you're saying and i'm starting to become more sure about an idea that's been around for awhile...

    I think the economic concept of ***scarcity*** itself is being rendered statistically irrelevant because of technology

    technology is solving so many of our problems that we really don't **need** to work as much as we used to...

    at least theoretically...right? or WTF else do we bother making and using these flaming gadgets?

    look at food production...technology can become so efficient that it can always keep pace with demand...what then? wouldn't it be a crime **NOT** to give food freely?

    we have the technology as humans to feed and clothe every living human in perpetuity now...strip away the B.S. and it is true

    people talk of things like "divide and conquer" and "artificial scarcity" or "making a market" all the time, but I think we all need to reconsider **how much we are being held back as a species**

    it has gotten really, really bad, IMHO...

    **WHAT IF WE DON'T NEED TO WORK AS HARD ANYMORE???**

    would your boss tell you that? what about the company that profits from the scarcity a particular technology solves?

    technology has worked...it is solving most of our immediate problems...scarcity for the most basic essentials of human existence is no longer a evolutionary factor in modern countries to survival for most...the food is there...

    as the trope goes, the problem is "human error" in this system...

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:end of scarcity by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      If scarcity of current stuff ends we'll find new stuff to be scarce. That's how we work, it would just move from basic survival stuff to luxury goods. And that would be good.
      However, it is more probable that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer (unless something big happens). Thus the poor will not be able to afford a place to live, although food may be cheap enough to be almost free.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    2. Re:end of scarcity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      **WHAT IF WE DON'T NEED TO WORK AS HARD ANYMORE???**

      would your boss tell you that?

      Of course. I think the standard way to say this is "we have to lay you off for economical reasons."

    3. Re:end of scarcity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scarcity today is manufactured and managed. Capitalism is driving ever increasing productivity and growth of its own sake, regardless if its actually needed. Thus, instead of utopia, resources are sequestrated by the very wealthy (a tiny few who control 40% of the world's resources) in order to cause artificial scarcity to drive production, thus growth, and increase their already ostentatious fortunes.

    4. Re:end of scarcity by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Will you please stop watching Star Trek reruns?

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    5. Re:end of scarcity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry - there's a tax for that

  31. Sure by mrwolf007 · · Score: 5, Funny

    But they just dont have enough space for all the NSA employees.

  32. swedish criminals on youtube by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wallander (the original in Swedish - not the BBC remake) is an excellent series about a Swedish police detective, and all the episodes are on youtube. What makes it so interesting for an American is not just the usual crime-solving stuff, but the insights into Swedish society that you pick up in passing.

  33. Don't believe in it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *Sigh* Another "Sweden is so great"-article. Trust me, it does NOT look that rosy from the inside. Segregation, increased violence and crime, health care quality is laughable, public pension plan is doomed, housing bubble about to burst etc etc

    But there's nothing wrong with the lobbying. Apparently... /Swede

  34. Better than McDonalds or Walmart by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Swedish prisoners have a better life in general than people in the USA in a minimum wage job. They get better housing, food and work hours, plus they get education, health care and all, so they have a chance to stay out of prison once their punishment is over. Bonus: they get to keep their voting rights after they are out, so they are still part of the democratic process that is the base of the laws that put them in prison in the first place.

    Maybe it's time the USA starts looking at how Sweden gets this accomplished and use that as an inspiration to improve. If even the prisoners there have it better than over a quarter of the free people in the USA, you'd say there should be improvements to be found.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
    1. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also have better care than most Swedes on retirement many of whom are truly poor.

    2. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy, about 50% of the Swedish GDP is for taxes. If you want to live in a 5 star country, it's gonna cost ya.

    3. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Shimbo · · Score: 1

      Bonus: they get to keep their voting rights after they are out

      I don't believe you need to qualify that: they get to keep their voting rights, period. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-11674014

    4. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the US prison is not intended to rehabilitate people that society failed, it exists to trap 'undesirables.' This is the real reason why white collar criminals who steal enough never go to jail for it and only end up paying a small fraction of what their crime netted as a fine.

    5. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course they do. You can't really call a country a democracy, if the government can just throw their opponents in prison, and thus makes sure they won't be voted out for doing so.

      "But they aren't doing that"

      Oh, really? Let's use the US as an example. A lot of people are in prison for drug-related offences. Do you really think, that if allowed to vote, those people would vote for the politicians promising stricter drug laws, like most people outside prison do? If not, they really have thrown their opponents in prison, preventing them for voting for somebody who would abolish those laws.

    6. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cite cultural relativism all you want, but you can't claim to be democratic if you silence certain groups by prohibiting them from voting. Yet disenfranchisement it is accepted *part of the process* in the Land of the Free.

    7. Re:Better than McDonalds or Walmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The voting thing varies quite a bit by state. In at least a couple of states you can vote while in prison serving your sentence. In a number of others you can vote while out on parole and even more let you vote once your whole sentence is done with.

      Of course there are some states which are total dicks about it and don't let you vote ever again, but that's just wrong, IMO.

      Of course, even if a majority of Americans agree with me on that, nothing will change because no candidate wants to campaign on a platform of restoring voting rights to felons who have paid their "debt to society."

      And unless I'm ever convicted of a felony, I'm not going to go out and protest for them. It's kind of sad really. My view is that if a crime is so heinous or if a criminal is so dangerous that they should never be allowed to vote again, they should probably still be in prison, but if we give them a sentence and they serve their time they should have all of their rights restored, including the right to bear arms even if their crime was murder (see earlier point - if they're too dangerous to trust with basic rights supposedly guaranteed by the Constitution, they should still be in prison).

      And it's not like loss of voting rights is a big deterrent to someone about to commit a felony either. Does anyone actually think that someone intent on murder or even dealing felony quantities of marijuana is going to decide not to because they may lose their right to vote if they're caught? I don't.

      Too often it feels like my vote doesn't matter anyway even though I still do it. All but 2 things I voted for last week went my way, but each and every item was decisive. None of the races were even close and yet only 50% of registered voters bothered to cast a ballot.

      I'll keep on voting though and I sometimes spend hours researching the issues and candidates. Sometimes the majority of voters disagree with me, but at least I made my tiny voice heard among a sea of other people who also had their voices heard.

  35. Re:OTOH our neighbors are fine with jailing a MS p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just recently started a trial with a THC based compound that can be prescribed....

    But yes.. I think growing and using something should be completely legal... Ie.. Personal use within ones home...

    There are many really interesting properties of these plants...

    One example : http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/cam/cannabis/patient/page2 and one quite big thing from there.. "Preventing the growth of blood vessels that supply tumors" and that is huge! Being able to use this cheap alternative to prevent tumors from growing bigger is HUGE! (even if would only be for a few cancer-types)

  36. Kind of the point by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    And those that go, shoudl go to be rehabilitated into civil society.

    At least in this case I think the original AC had a very good point in this. A good capitalist will outsource when the result is cheaper and more effective. Sweden has shown the ability to rehabilitate around twice as effectively as the USA(20% recedivism vs 60% here, ergo 80% effective vs 40%), with about 1/3rd the sentence period.

    So sending at least a portion of our prison population to the Swedish prisons, paying them the appropriate amounts of course, to do what they manage to do so effectively seems a very good way to rehabilitate them. At least until we send some US personnel over there to learn the appropriate methodology and bring it back.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Kind of the point by TrollstonButterbeans · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The US suffers a "inefficiency of scale" problem -- the idea of acting like a citizen.

      Many of the continental European countries are more tightly bound in the human spirit and sense of identity and culture than the USA.

      The USA suffers from "what's in it for me?" freeloaders and "what's in it for me?" capitalists and "what's in it for me?" politicians --- all of which miss grander and greater human concepts.

      Although people in the USA generally have a lot of freedom and very little oversight ... and we don't get micromanaged like what happens in European countries ...

      pros and cons, everyone wants the cake and eat it too ...

      --
      Priest: "Universe from nothing, no laws of physics, sped up time"+ huge discrepancies. Creationism? No. Big Bang Theory
    2. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many of the continental European countries are more tightly bound in the human spirit and sense of identity and culture than the USA.

      That's a nice way of saying "kick out anybody who isn't like us".

    3. Re:Kind of the point by SpectreBlofeld · · Score: 5, Insightful

      [i] Sweden has shown the ability to rehabilitate around twice as effectively as the USA(20% recedivism vs 60% here, ergo 80% effective vs 40%)[/i]

        I think an important point being overlooked in this discussion is an analysis of the conditions that drove the inmates to crime in the first place. How many crimes are committed by someone trying to callously shortcut the rules of society vs. someone down on their luck or just trying to survive? Perhaps there's nothing particularly special about the rehabilitation methods performed by the prisons, but instead, Sweden's done a top job of addressing the underlying issues.

        Also - and I have to bring it up - stupid-ass drug laws. If we can't legalize the mostly harmless recreational drugs out there, can we PLEASE stop locking people up for minor drug offenses, and instead fine them, like traffic violations (which are actually, you know, dangerous) and other civil infractions? Fines would actually help regulate the 'problem' while RAISING MONEY instead of needlessly locking up harmless people (destroying their lives in the process) which then becomes a gigantic drain on society due to the fact that we've now made them effectively wards of the state. It's fucking idiotic, man. Catch a guy smoking a joint? Slap him with a $150 ticket. No criminal record established, just show up and pay your fine and everything is golden. Don't slam his face into the pavement and seize his house and pull his children into state custody and ruin his reputation for the rest of his life, ensuring that when he finally gets out of prison, he'll turn to crime, because you've eliminated any and all chances that he'll magically fall into being a useful member of society after you've branded him for life. Nobody wants to hire the guy that just spent months in lockup on drug charges. The system we have here now does not 'rehabilitate' anyone. It brands them with a criminal record that they can never live down, often for minor charges. OF COURSE they turn to crime - even if what they were doing was harmless and not immoral in any way. They were convicted and served sentences and were told by everyone that they were a criminal and did criminal things. Why wouldn't they turn to crime when released? Everyone thinks they're a criminal anyway.

       

    4. Re:Kind of the point by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      That's not what Sweden does though. It does jail people for drug offenses and it doesn't go tough on driving offenses. Please don't attach your preferences to someone else's success.

    5. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      The US suffers a "inefficiency of scale" problem -- the idea of acting like a citizen.

      Many of the continental European countries are more tightly bound in the human spirit and sense of identity and culture than the USA.

      And yet the US states share a common language, a common culture, a common history and more or less the same political ideology. Yeah yeah democrats and republicans. When you go deeper than the names they are just minor variants on the same theme. And the conclusion is that the europeans are more unified than the americans. Not so not so. There is more diversity in europe than you'll ever find in the US. Hell you'll find more political diversity within a single european country than in whole of the US.

      The USA suffers from "what's in it for me?" freeloaders and "what's in it for me?" capitalists and "what's in it for me?" politicians --- all of which miss grander and greater human concepts.

      Although people in the USA generally have a lot of freedom and very little oversight ... and we don't get micromanaged like what happens in European countries ...

      pros and cons, everyone wants the cake and eat it too ...

      The US suffers from the same disease that the Soviets suffered from. They think their country, their ideology is people's paradise. And in doing so they effectively cut out any dissenting voice from ever having the possibily of changing the country.

    6. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Pretty much this. Someone caught for minor drug offenses will be sent to rehab, not to jail in Sweden.

      That is however not the entire story. A recent study in Sweden made in Swedish prisons found that the prisoners were highly overrepresented when it came to suffering from ADHD. (63% compared to around 5% for the rest of the population.)
      What this means is that even the really violent criminals that people generally think deserves to be in jail can be treated.
      I think the study was extended to all Swedish jails earlier this year or something.
      The early tests showed that by just giving a correct diagnosis and give the prisoner the option (It is a completely voluntary system.) to take medication for ADHD the previously violent criminal will magically transform into a contributing member of society instead of becoming a repeat offender.

    7. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm confused as to what you mean by "we don't get micromanaged like what happens in European countries"...

    8. Re:Kind of the point by blackest_k · · Score: 3

      Sweden does have a zero tolerance approach to drugs but it is much more than that, basic possession can get you a fine or imprisonment up to 6 months but the 6 months is a requirement for police to perform a body search. So in reality you'd probably get a fine. If children are involved well that raises the seriousness and is more likely to get you prison time. There are comprehensive residential drug treatment programs available and free too those who need them.

      There is a bug difference in prison population between the USA who jails 750 out of 100,000 and sweden who jails just 84 around 23% of prison inmates are there for drugs offences but the average number of people locked up in sweden is around 4,100 total.
      figures here are pulled from
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_policy_of_Sweden

      Sweden isn't soft on drugs by any stretch but you are more likely to be treated rather than imprisoned. Sweden seems to be focussed on making its entire society productive and happy. Totally different from the American aim which seems to be look out for yourself and be sure not to stumble or your screwed. Trouble is just being honest isn't enough, you have to be healthy and lucky too. I say lucky because even having great genes doesn't stop you getting hit by a bus and crippled.

      Sad thing is although there may be millions of Americans who can see how much their society fails them. The barriers to change seem pretty much impossible to overcome. The system fails Americans rich and poor. Even if your doing ok, whats to stop some crack head breaking in to your home? Ok you might kill him, but you are just as much let down as the crack head who tried to rob you.

         

    9. Re:Kind of the point by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      The problem with fines is that they disproportionately punish the poor, while the rich just consider them a cost of doing business.
      Around here you see a lot of very expensive cars parked in handicap spaces, because to someone driving a 500k+ car the cost of the fine is cheaper than the inconvenience of having to park further away.
      The exact same thing would happen with drugs, only those who are already having to commit other crimes in order to fund their habit will now need to commit more crime in order to pay for the fines as well.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    10. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because you're basically Germans, but never had any humility beaten into you in the second world war...

    11. Re:Kind of the point by slashmatti · · Score: 1

      ... which then becomes a gigantic drain on society ...

      Which is precisely the point. It's been long since any consideration to societal benefit was taken when it comes to the military-intelligence-police-prison-media-industrial-complex. At this point, it serves no other purpose than to enrich our oligarchs.

      It's fucking idiotic, man.

      Yes, from a societal point of view. But it is also profitable, for a select few. As a society, rather than accepting what are natural human behaviors and affording care to minimize societal detriments, we choose to reward people that take advantage of these behaviors and exploit weakness in men.

      Profit at all costs, especially when they befall society as a whole rather than your own bottom line.

      War Is A Racket is in need of a couple of addenda.

    12. Re:Kind of the point by stenvar · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The US suffers a "inefficiency of scale" problem -- the idea of acting like a citizen.

      Which is why a lot of Americans would like to see more power returned to state and local governments, so that US states are much more like EU members.

    13. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The fun part is that we LIKE that.

      Take that compulsory health care thing. When we heard the US is going to get something like that, a good deal of us pretty much thought something along the lines of "finally, it's been about time their politicians came to their senses and did something for the ... wait, what? They do NOT want that?"

      Quite frankly, we were incredibly surprised that there could possibly be any kind of resistance to that. I mean, sure, I'll probably spend more on my health care "tax" than I'll ever "get out" of it (at least I sure hope so!), but there are so many who are unfortunate enough to get more out of the deal than they could possibly afford. Worse, no private company would give them insurance and they'd probably die.

      I think that's the "human spirit" you talk about.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      I think he means how many "social" things are pretty much compulsory here in Europe while they're very optional in the US. Health/accident/pension/unemployment insurance, all mandatory here. Among other things. And just like the US now fight tooth and nail to not get them (at least that's what the "obamacare" craze taught me), so would we fight tooth and nail if anyone dared to ponder considering talking about taken them from us.

      Of course that means that, in the end, I get only about 60% of my actual wage, the rest goes to this tax and that healthcare and whatnot. And the more you earn, the closer you get to 50%. On the bright side, if you're earning minimum wage, your tax total isn't even close to 10% of your income. Not that you could possibly afford more...

      A side effect of this is, though, that even the lowest income earners have a pension, healthcare and unemployment insurance. Since you cannot simply forgo it, your employer HAS to pay you enough to live AND prepare for unfortunate times.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      That's pretty much why I don't complain about our, from an US point of view certainly insane, tax level. Right now I pay around 40% of my income in tax for various things. Ok, it's not only tax, it's also healthcare, but what do I care, it's money I earn but don't get.

      That's fine, though. Those 40% not only pay for my retirement, unemployment, healthcare and so on, it also pays some kind of social service for the crackhead so he knows he got something to lose and hitting me over the head on the street for the 20 bucks in my pocket just ain't worth it. I can actually go out at any time of the day in any part of my country's capital and not get mugged, robbed and killed. Can you?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    16. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's why a lot of countries now move away from fixed fines to "daily rates". I.e. you pay depending on your income, and that fine is then 10, 30, 60, 90... days of your income. I.e. 30 days = 1 month's pay.

      If you don't want to tell the court how much you make, that's fine. They'll simply estimate. Guess on what side they usually err if you let them guess.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    17. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not what Sweden does though. It does jail people for drug offenses and it doesn't go tough on driving offenses.

      I always thought that drunk driving would give you 2 years in jail (even at a low promillage). I could be wrong.

    18. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      60% recidivism in the US, but only 6% of sex offenders sexually reoffend within 10 years of release...and what's the most witch-hunted criminal class in the US? Well it's certainly not the "60% likely to recidivate" category. The US also prefers to have murders over rapes, and even sees rape where there isn't any ("rape culture" anyone?) The worst part is that such stupidity is spreading across the pond and Europeans are even being infected with the religious belief that rape is everywhere and is worse than murder.

    19. Re:Kind of the point by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      that's not that much of a claim :) most places you won't get killed as a matter of routine.

      pretty sure i would be safer in Dublin than London and I feel Washington and Moscow would be worse. Is crime worse in Washington or Moscow?

    20. Re:Kind of the point by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

      Can't ignore the 800 lb gorilla in the room, the US has a far more diverse population.. racially and culturally.

      --
      "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
    21. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Quite frankly, we were *incredibly surprised* that there could possibly be *any kind* of resistance to that.

      Speak for yourself. You seem to be quite naive. The apearance of "grassroots" movements against this was written on the wall. "Corporations are people my friend." People that never die. And may be out for sale. It's the USofA for you. Land of the free... and brave... "people"... :S

    22. Re:Kind of the point by nctritech · · Score: 1

      What does this say to people who claim that ADHD is not a "real illness" or that it is merely "an excuse for bad behavior?"

    23. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fines would actually help regulate the 'problem' while RAISING MONEY instead of needlessly locking up harmless people

      One thing you really need to understand about the USA. Prisons in the US are an industry. Every person that gets locked up, be it from drugs or minor traffic infractions, makes someone a ton of money.

    24. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, ADHD is more or less defined as bad behaviour, and the "treatment" for it are some stimulants that even its proponents think are treating only the symptons, not the cause.

      So, sure, diagnose violent criminals as "violent", fill them up with drugs, and surprise suprised, the doped up zombie does not commit any more crimes. Is this really what you want for society?

    25. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Is crime worse in Washington or Moscow?

      Is that a trick question? But easy to answer: Which town has more politicians?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    26. Re:Kind of the point by Rich0 · · Score: 2

      ...you've eliminated any and all chances that he'll magically fall into being a useful member of society after you've branded him for life.

      Honestly, I think public criminal records are a big problem.

      My feeling is that the justice system should be primarily rehabilitative. Criminal records are anything but.

      People should be incarcerated if they're too dangerous to walk out on the street, or if they can't be rehabilitated while having access to the streets. If somebody has been rehabilitated, then they are no longer a criminal, and they should not be interfered with. If they can't be trusted out in public without warning everybody that they're potentially dangerous, then they shouldn't be out in public in the first place.

      I think that rehabilitating criminals so that they can re-integrate into society without being treated like criminals for the rest of their lives is just the morally right thing to do. However, if I were a selfish bastard I'd still think that it was the smart thing to do. Locking up criminals repeatedly costs me taxes. Having them out on the street committing crimes costs me taxes. Then when they're out if they can't get a job then they're not making any significant income and that means they're not paying taxes, which means I'm paying their share of the taxes, and they're probably even collecting social benefits of some kind, which also costs me taxes. The current US justice system is probably the most expensive way of handling criminals I could come up with, and we're all paying the bill for it. About the only people who come out ahead are the companies that run the prisons.

    27. Re:Kind of the point by metrix007 · · Score: 1

      Many of the continental European countries are more tightly bound in the human spirit and sense of identity and culture than the USA.

      And what do you base this on? Your lengthy time spent in the USA? Or your idea of the USA without ever having been here?

      --
      If you ignore ACs because they are anonymous - you're an idiot.
    28. Re:Kind of the point by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

      I've read that there has been a change in how drug-related crime is sentenced. Swedish judges and lay judges in the lowest courts (Tingsrätt) are increasingly sentencing drug-related criminals to parole instead of prison and shorter prison terms instead of longer ones. Apparently nobody knows why they are doing this, including the judges and lay judges themselves.

      In any case, this could potentially explain why the prisons are emptying out, but the cumulative effect on the size of the prison population has not been quantified by anyone. Research needed.

    29. Re:Kind of the point by ausekilis · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Take that compulsory health care thing. When we heard the US is going to get something like that, a good deal of us pretty much thought something along the lines of "finally, it's been about time their politicians came to their senses and did something for the ... wait, what? They do NOT want that?"

      I was watching Real Time with Bill Maher last weekend, he had (almost Mayor) Weiner on there, and while the guy may not be socially savvy, he at least has a pretty good political mind. My favorite quote was during the debate on Obamacare where the Republican Rep (name doesn't matter, they're all Republemmings these days and few think for themselves) was reciting his parties lines, and Weiner quipped "It was a Republican idea, the Democrats just implemented it. Why do you have so much hate for your own good ideas?" There was also a comment in there about the way the parties respond to things, Republicans have this trend of shutting down and fighting every action done by the Democrats (i.e. Obamacare, or any of Obama's policies for that matter), while Democrats may not agree with a Republican (i.e. Bush), they don't do the same level of shutdown and public outcry. Neither party is perfect, they all act like spoiled children who want to be the one to create that crayon picture that mom (history) puts up on the fridge for all to see.

      It is an interesting view on our society though. We want everything for nothing, we elect people who claim they are for the people but often are anything but (e.g. furlough, twice this year alone), and capitalism, capitalism, capitalism. The intent for our government was by the people, for the people, and Senate recess was supposed to be so the Senators could go home and tend their crops, to see how the people they are representing are doing. Instead we get this popularity contest of rich people who know how to say what people want to hear, and are so disconnected from the reality of the poor that when something comes along whose intent is to help everyone, there is so much bickering and mud throwing that the people lose.

    30. Re:Kind of the point by anyanka · · Score: 1

      And those that go, shoudl go to be rehabilitated into civil society.

      At least in this case I think the original AC had a very good point in this. A good capitalist will outsource when the result is cheaper and more effective. Sweden has shown the ability to rehabilitate around twice as effectively as the USA(20% recedivism vs 60% here, ergo 80% effective vs 40%), with about 1/3rd the sentence period.

      Which makes one wonder what the rate would be if one just did nothing – wouldn't be terribly surprised if no punishment at all would give as good or better recidivism rates than the US prison system.

    31. Re:Kind of the point by Torvac · · Score: 1

      you should NEVER lock up people because they have a drug problem.

    32. Re:Kind of the point by rwise2112 · · Score: 1

      I mean, sure, I'll probably spend more on my health care "tax" than I'll ever "get out" of it

      It's funny but the US already spends more on healthcare at 13.6% of it's GNP than Sweden mentioned above at ~9.5% and Canada also at 9.5% who already have universal healthcare. They need to work on efficiency.

      --

      "For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert"
    33. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course they want their cake and to eat it too. Why else would you even have cake? I don't bake a cake and then toss it in the bin.

    34. Re:Kind of the point by coinreturn · · Score: 2

      Actually, many, many of us do want it. Just the greedy, self-centered, me-first, Fox news watchers don't.

    35. Re:Kind of the point by nctritech · · Score: 2

      A major part of the problem in the United States is that "once a felon, always a felon." Misdemeanor littering charges will drastically lower your ability to get a job and housing, and a felony conviction practically guarantees never being able to rent a decent apartment or obtain a decent job. The US has little concept of forgiveness, and the predominant attitude towards those who have wronged and wish to start walking the straight and very narrow path of lawful and ethically sound conduct are met with "if you didn't want to be homeless and jobless, you shouldn't have committed a crime. (Implicitly: We don't give a fuck if it was 20 years ago, you're a Bad Person(TM) and we hate you and wish you would die, but you won't so we'll do whatever we can to make you a permanent outcast.)" It is only through a combination of silence, deception, and a few understanding/forgiving people out there that a criminal can climb back up the ladder and live a more normal life.

      I wonder how many repeat offenders are that only because they were at the end of their rope and had to steal just to survive, or how many probation violations are minor things like being unable to get a job. It's interesting that probationers are typically required to get and/or maintain employment as part of their probation even though a criminal conviction butchers their ability to do so. It's a pretty messed up system all around, but the largest fault falls on the shoulders of people who refuse to understand other people before passing rapid, harsh judgment upon them. Paranoid helicopter moms with rapist-scanning eyes set at ISO 6400 calling the cops on lone males minding their own business in a city park come to mind as one example. The threshold for "creepy" has lowered so far that if you simply exist with a penis attached in a public place, it's assumed you're going to go Candlejack on all the kids in short order. Throw in the people who can't grasp the concept that not everything they read online or see in a 24-hour news report is truthful and you've got a huge vocal chunk of the population that assume everyone is out to stab them and their families to death for the $2.47 and a paper clip in their pocket if they walk past the wrong bush.

      Where are the societies in this world that consist of mostly trustworthy and friendly people? What happened in America that wrecked our compassion and desire to help people? When did that get replaced with token gestures and false fronts?

    36. Re:Kind of the point by nctritech · · Score: 1

      What's better: people who are normally breaching boundaries becoming productive and stable due to taking drugs, or locking them in a metal box and letting them go over and over as the problem gets worse?

    37. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, where do you only get a fine for parking in handicap spaces? You get towed away. And have to get your car from some place in the middle of nowhere, during prime business hours only.
      Do it too often and in a lot of places you'll lose your driver's license.

    38. Re:Kind of the point by operagost · · Score: 1

      That's not what we did, though. Instead, the government is ordering us to buy something from some of the most corrupt businesses known to man: insurance companies.

      Single-payer would have been better. And that means a lot coming from a libertarian.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    39. Re:Kind of the point by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      You guys are reading it wrong because you're only hearing the words in the news reports. You hear "Tea Party conservatives are opposed to universal health care" and you probably think that Tea Party conservatives are opposed to universal health care. You can be forgiven for responding to the information you hear but what you need to understand is that the news reports don't detail how the Tea Party conservatives are simpleton racists. It is just not possible to convince a simpleton racist to accept their own policy (the new law was a conservative suggestion in the recent past) from a black President. There is literally, not figuratively, nothing whatsoever that Obama could do to get any support from the simpleton racists in the Tea Party.

    40. Re:Kind of the point by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      Agreed, and we should start by charging you the same rates -- no, even higher rates -- for American medicines, devices and procedures than we charge ourselves. If countries like Canada and Sweden would stop freeloading off of us, it would be a little bit easier to fix our problems with the medical system. Suddenly your number would be 11.5% and ours would be 12% and you wouldn't have as much of a talking point.

    41. Re:Kind of the point by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      Nah, man, those guys want it to; they're just rhetorical hypocrites.

    42. Re:Kind of the point by operagost · · Score: 1

      It's funny but Canada and Sweden spend more on their education. They need to work on efficiency.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    43. Re:Kind of the point by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      "How many crimes are committed by someone trying to callously shortcut the rules of society vs. someone down on their luck or just trying to survive?"

      Good question, here's the answer:

      * someone trying to callously shortcut the rules of society: 100%
      * someone down on their luck or just trying to survive: 0%

      We don't live in the world of "Les Miserables", okay? In America we feed 100% of people. Nobody has starved to death in America for a century (a laudable social achievement) so there is no excuse for stealing bread in order to live.

    44. Re:Kind of the point by operagost · · Score: 1

      Umm... all of those except pensions are mandatory in the USA.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    45. Re:Kind of the point by operagost · · Score: 1

      How many $500K+ cars do you see in your neighborhood? That's an exclusive club: Porsche 918, McLaren, Hennesey, Lamborghini, Maybach, Ferrari, Pagani, Koenigsegg, Aston Martin, Bugatti. That's about it.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    46. Re:Kind of the point by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I beg to disagree. There's a huge laundry list that allows employers to get out of having to provide healthcare, for example - too small, part time, not been there long enough, etc...

      On the other hand I don't think employers should be expected to provide healthcare in the first place. The most they should be expected to do is split payments into a healthcare account that the employee can use to buy healthcare using pre-tax dollars. Perhaps bump the minimum wage by ~$1/hour, mandatory into the account if the business doesn't provide a qualifying plan otherwise.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    47. Re:Kind of the point by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      In America we feed 100% of people. Nobody has starved to death in America for a century (a laudable social achievement) so there is no excuse for stealing bread in order to live.

      Just to be nitpicky, I read an incident of this happening just a few days ago. Trick is that the parents are up on a raft of charges ranging from neglect all the way up to murder. Investigations into the social services units involved are also ongoing.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    48. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My god... if that's actually true, there's a lot more hope for the human race than I had before.

    49. Re:Kind of the point by thoromyr · · Score: 1

      anecdotal, but my experience is that many ADHD diagnosis are a result of "I have a lot of money, but no time to spend with my family which has resulted in acting out". Its a diagnosis given by a doctor for another doctor's kids. Except for when its a lawyer's kid.

      And my view is skewed based on how I've encountered most ADHD diagnosed kids (a camp for them, which charged those "I have money but no time" parents a good sum of money to get the kids out of the house over the summer. Yeah, there are other cases, but by far the majority of ADHD diagnoses I've encountered would not hold up to a rigorous examination. Its an easy diagnosis that is all pluses for the doctors and pharmaceutical companies. At least it is in the US.

    50. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're hilarious. Rhone-Poulenc, Sanofi, Bayer, et. al. have R&D divisions in Canada. We create those medicines you Yanks want to charge an obscene uplift on; doing so is what gets your patent pulled by our government. Ditto for the devices. Also, the guidance systems on your more modern nukes. There's nothing you can do we can't do better, except being an idiot.

    51. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ADHD isn't a real illness, it's a category of illnesses. I think there was thirteen of them in the literature I read the last time, but it would help if they'd stop playing ping-pong with the DSM. The problem is that the differentiation between your "excuse" and "illness" points is subjective based on the practitioner's opinion. A broken arm is a broken arm but a madman just may be really enthusiastic about football, right? Humans require concrete evidence to dissuade them from their preconceived notions (sometimes not even that works).

    52. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When insurance companies started denying claims because you hired Bad Person and should have known better. You guys would do the world a favour if you would have a Boston Barrister Party as your legal precedents are leaking into foreign justice systems.

    53. Re:Kind of the point by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      The cake is a lie.

      --
      ~X~
    54. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See the comments about trust in the government. If the government has control of my healthcare then I have no alternative if they refuse me service. If, for example, they decide that because I'm old or disabled it's not worth treating me then I die. To whom can I go to to protest? If a private insurance company treats me the same way I have alternatives. I can sue at last resort, if nothing else. Yes it sounds silly but I can trust the government (int the person of a court) to force a private business to do something that I can't trust the government to do itself. Because the agenda of the court is to enforce the law. The agenda of the government bureaucrat is to stay within budget and rules, even if it means I die.
      I know I can't trust the private company, but their is a lower balance of power between me and them than there is between me and the government.

    55. Re:Kind of the point by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      "grander and greater human concepts"

      This is like passing out cookbooks to starving people, to paraphrase something Kierkegaard said.

      Professorial verbophilia is not going to sovle anyone's woes.

    56. Re:Kind of the point by photo+pilot · · Score: 1

      Well I have never been robbed by a crackhead in the USA or anywhere else so far so this is all just theory, but the % of Swedish-Americans in jail is likely very low. I have also noticed that the rates of most crimes OTHER than murder are lower, sometimes a LOT lower, in the USA vs. other 1st world countries. Also as much as I would be sad if crackheads DID start breaking into my house, they will only do it once.

    57. Re:Kind of the point by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Health/accident/pension/unemployment insurance

      Umm... all of those except pensions are mandatory in the USA.

      Health? Barely, and only recently.

      Accident? Nope. Maybe on an employer level -- assuming your employer isn't shady.

      Pension? Nope (which you agreed -- otherwise I'd argue that Social Security sort of counts).

      Unemployment? Not if you're an "independent contractor," because employers in your industry refuse to hire W-2s (but treat you as if you were one, minus all the benefits and protections)...

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    58. Re:Kind of the point by alexo · · Score: 1

      When you're rich, there are way to structure your wealth generation so that your nominal "income" is, or close to, zero.

    59. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're sensible, they consider increase in wealth from capital gains and other sources as "income".

    60. Re:Kind of the point by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      We don't charge higher rates because the medicine is expensive, we charge higher rates because of all the GODDAMNED USELESS INSURANCE MIDDLEMEN that countries with universal healthcare DON'T HAVE!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    61. Re:Kind of the point by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 1

      Yes. The difference between the USA and pretty much every other civilized country is that in America sick people are first and foremost considered an opportunity to make huge profits. Nothing comes before capitalism. Helping people is kind of an unfortunate but necessary afterthought.

      Those middlemen suck a huge amount of money out of the system (I've seen numbers like 1/3) while not providing anything actually healthcare related. It's just about shareholders getting as much as they can off that gravy train of illness.

      I'm constantly thankful I don't live there.

    62. Re:Kind of the point by wumbler · · Score: 1

      That! Some countries in Europe have been doing that for traffic violations for many years already. The "daily rate" or "day set" to determine fines seems to be fair and gets the point across, even to those who earn a lot.

      Only issue: It can be tough to get the estimate right.

    63. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. If the state thinks you're trying to BS, they'll just guess. It's not the tax. There are no rules. You're busted, buster, be glad we don't hang you at your ankles and shake you 'til enough money fell out of your pockets that we're satisfied.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    64. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      As stated above, the state is pretty good at guessing what you do "sensibly" earn. They know your standard of living, at least if you're halfway well off (if you're not, there ain't any money to squeeze from you anyway). If you try to bullshit, you're in for a wager. If you try to go too low, they'll simply call you bluff and start guessing. And trust me, you'd rather say what you really earn than have them guess. They'll simply look at what you have, what you do for a living, then ponder what you could possibly, at best, earn in that position.

      Then they multiply by 1.5 or 2, depending on how much you pissed them off.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    65. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, the solution here is pretty easy: First of all, try to find a doc to support you in that malpractice suit. I wish you the best of luck to find one before you die. Then you can sue him and eventually, maybe, with a hint of luck you get what you would have gotten anyway: Another operation to fix what was fucked up. The main reason why there are very few malpractice suits in Europe is simply that you can at any time go back and have them fix it for free anyway, so why bother suing first?

      And if you come with "mental anguish" or any such bull, prepare to turn that wheelchair around pretty fast, our judges can throw that book mighty well and with quite some force.

      There is a slim chance for those few odd cases when doctors really drop the ball, and usually they are settled amiably between hospital and patient. You rarely get to hear about them. Maybe the general sentiment that you don't sue someone who tried to effin help you just to make a buck is the difference here...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    66. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Judging from the results, I cannot agree. It's money well spent considering the PISA tests...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    67. Re:Kind of the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      If a private insurance company mistreats you, you can sue... and pray that you live long enough to see the end of it. That's actually, as macabre as it may sound, a quite popular way to get out of such law suits: Simply drag it out 'til the opponent passes away from the disease the treatment of which we didn't want to pay for.

      I can of course not speak about the US. Over here, we do actually have a complete separation of powers. The legislative has no say in the judicial branch (judges are appointed by peers, not politicians). That makes them quite powerful. And quite independent, too, since there is literally nothing anyone could do to oust a judge unless he is felled by his peers (something that has at least to my knowledge never happened). And while scandals with politicians are quite common (you can't go a single year without anyone having to resign because some kind of corruption became public), scandals with judges are rare to nonexistent. Actually, judges quickly shy away from trials with a lot of public interest because anyone with half a background in law will comment on it. Judges here have to explain and partly defend their verdict, and in such trials, that "reasons" part of the complete case record can make up a sizable portion of the file.

      So while my faith in executive and legislative are gone, I still hold our judges in pretty high esteem. I do trust them (and considering the more recent verdicts on some "politically motivated" cases, with good reason) to come up with fair, balanced and legally sound verdicts. Yes, even against the government. Actually, considering that lingering animosities between legislative and the courts, your chances to win against the government is quite high.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    68. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take that compulsory health care thing. When we heard the US is going to get something like that, a good deal of us pretty much thought something along the lines of "finally, it's been about time their politicians came to their senses and did something for the ... wait, what? They do NOT want that?"

      I was watching Real Time with Bill Maher last weekend, he had (almost Mayor) Weiner on there, and while the guy may not be socially savvy, he at least has a pretty good political mind. My favorite quote was during the debate on Obamacare where the Republican Rep (name doesn't matter, they're all Republemmings these days and few think for themselves) was reciting his parties lines, and Weiner quipped "It was a Republican idea, the Democrats just implemented it. Why do you have so much hate for your own good ideas?" There was also a comment in there about the way the parties respond to things, Republicans have this trend of shutting down and fighting every action done by the Democrats (i.e. Obamacare, or any of Obama's policies for that matter), while Democrats may not agree with a Republican (i.e. Bush), they don't do the same level of shutdown and public outcry. Neither party is perfect, they all act like spoiled children who want to be the one to create that crayon picture that mom (history) puts up on the fridge for all to see.

      It is an interesting view on our society though. We want everything for nothing, we elect people who claim they are for the people but often are anything but (e.g. furlough, twice this year alone), and capitalism, capitalism, capitalism. The intent for our government was by the people, for the people, and Senate recess was supposed to be so the Senators could go home and tend their crops, to see how the people they are representing are doing. Instead we get this popularity contest of rich people who know how to say what people want to hear, and are so disconnected from the reality of the poor that when something comes along whose intent is to help everyone, there is so much bickering and mud throwing that the people lose.

      WTF are you talking about!? Republicans were not going to force people to buy insurance from a government exchange. They also were not going to outlaw "crappy" insurance policies which is now leaving millions who had insurance uninsured and forced to spend thousands more/year for worse coverage. And as far as the Republicans shutting the government down and Democrats never doing such a thing because they are perfect morally upstanding politicians that never try to mindf*ck the population I urge you to look into what the Annapolis MD city council is doing to the newly elected Republican mayor. God forbid someone from the opposing political party get elected to office, they just decide to strip him of all of his power and leave him with a largely ceremonial role.

      I absolutely abhor sanctimonious jerks who tell bold faced lies to their constituents about how the ACA, in its 1990 pages of indecipherable text that not a single politician that voted for it can understand its entire ramifications, was going to lower insurance rates and allow those who liked their existing coverage could keep it. It is rather unfortunate that very few Americans could cut through the crap to see what was really going on. You know it is really interesting to note that while many of the health insurance companies may have issued public statements against the ACA, they were sure to open their wallets to fund the campaigns of Pres. Obama and many of the Democrat members of congress that championed the ACA. The whole thing was a power and money grab by the Democrats and the health insurance industry.

      Just to clarify, I am a registered Republican only so that I can vote in the primaries for State offices which are FAR less screwy than national office. I am a Liberitarian through and through as I have seen both Democrats and Republicans screw way too many things up in my 20+ years on this Earth. Government in the US has lost the "By the people, for the people" ideology and is too entrenched in cronyism and political buy-outs. We have all lost touch with the Constitution, what it means and why it came to be and it is really a very sad thing.

    69. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, just reading Slasdot in generally tells us that.

    70. Re:Kind of the point by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Gorilla reference in your not subtly racist comment, how very clever.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    71. Re:Kind of the point by operagost · · Score: 1

      But answer to every question about US education is, "we need more money." It really is. That's why we have a problem with property taxes everywhere. Of course, then the other "answer" becomes, "let's fully federalize education," which isn't any more logical than, "let's fully de-federalize education" because it seems that the state and local-run systems worked fine until the feds told everyone how they had to be run but they still had to rely on property owners to pay for everything.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    72. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the Swedish approach to drugs is harsh and anyone voicing another opinion is usually considered "drug liberal !!!", which has become a very foul word which (almost) no one wants to be called.

      Sweden has about double death rate due to drugs compared to countries with less harsh laws, such as the Netherlands or Portugal. The problem is, if possession and usage of drugs is illegal, who would dare seek help for their use from authorities?

      Anyone getting reported or caught would get into the police registry - and good luck finding a job, getting a loan, renting an apartment and so on once you're in the police registry for something as bad as DRUGS.

      So basically the politics in Sweden knock out youngesters from Society. No one wants to employ a "druggie". No one wants to be neighbor with a "druggie". It's really counterproductive. Those becoming addicts have no where to turn but to the organized crime networks who distribute the drugs... That's probably exactly what said networks want..

    73. Re:Kind of the point by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

      I actually had no intent.. the phrase was in my head as I had just read it in my business ethics book.

      Substitute pink elephant if that offends you less.

      --
      "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
    74. Re:Kind of the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what Sweden does, it's called "dagsböter" in Swedish. I know a guy who got busted with ~5g cannabis, he got a fine of ~13000SEK. I know another guy who got busted with ~0.1g cocaine, he got a 38000SEK fine.

      In Sweden they base the fine on your previous year's income that was reported to the tax authorities.

    75. Re:Kind of the point by ausekilis · · Score: 1

      Despite it being a couple days later, I just thought I'd point this out to you. Romney isn't as deathly opposed to Obamacare as you make it out to be. He signed a state-level healthcare bill into law during his term as Governor of Mass. that is really a lot like Obamacare. His primary disagreement is he thinks it should be state-level.

      You and I are in agreement with regard to who ends up in the Great White Daycare on capital hill, it is no longer by the people for the people, Senators no longer have to go home to tend to crops and see how the general populous lives. They no longer represent the community interest. That's exactly why I made the crayon picture to put on the fridge analogy.

  37. since when do humans need govt to be evil? by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    n/t

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:since when do humans need govt to be evil? by crutchy · · Score: 1

      humans don't need government to be evil, but government allows for tremendous increase in efficiency of evil

  38. government = BAD? by DavidMZ · · Score: 1

    It seems that there is an involuntary irony in Laxori666's post and his criticism of government action, considering that Sweden has one of the most interventionist government, as illustrated by the level of welfare (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_in_Sweden). I guess that you have the government that you deserve...

  39. Argument against prohibition still makes sense by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all? Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

    It still makes sense if you look at it in the context of that as bad as alcohol is now, as bad as it was before prohibition, the net effects of it's prohibition on society was worse. Alcohol poisonings went up. Hell, our own government caused a number of deaths by deliberately poisoning alcohol in a weird "Drinking is bad! Let's make it worse! by deliberately poisoning it and maybe people will stop!" line of thinking. You vastly empowered organized crime(the 'mobs' of the day, 'gangs' today), got violence on the street, incredible incentives for police to become corrupt, the shift from 'officer of the peace' to 'law enforcement', etc...

    My support for legalizing drugs is pure harm mitigation, not harm prevention. Because prevention isn't working even at huge expense.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Argument against prohibition still makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the net effects of it's prohibition on society was worse.

      That should be "the net effects of its prohibition on society were worse". You appear to be fairly intelligent, but sub-literate.

    2. Re:Argument against prohibition still makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. There were less alchohal related deaths during prohibition even if you include all the deaths due to the alchohal gang war going on than there were beforfe of after. Alchohal prohibition was repealed because the man realized he could make more money off of taxes than he could off an illegal product and smuggling. Remember before the Kennedy's were president they were booz runners.

  40. Yellow press by DavidMZ · · Score: 1

    I am not sure you know what it means: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_journalism

  41. well let's find out by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    That's how we work, it would just move from basic survival stuff to luxury goods. And that would be good.

    you seem to subscribe to an adapted version of the 'Brave New World' idea of how the future might look...

    i like that idea...i really think we could move to where our tech advancements have rightfully placed us without harming anyone & minimally offending people

    I agree that "that's how we work" but just b/c that's true doesn't mean we'd "move from basic survival stuff to luxury goods"...

    I mean, I think your right on that point, but in my mind if scarcity became balanced out we could progress to **new problems** and **new challenges** that we don't even see completely yet

    What i'm saying is, Jules Vern could probably imagine humans sending an automaton to other worlds to explore...however, could Homer imagine the same?

    Homer had no concept of other planets in the solar system...nor did they ancient mythmakers know anything about the internet...

    Yet their works are equally valid and inspiring to certain people just as Jules Vern was for me...

    The point is, the fun part is all about what we don't know...we should always be pushing to the edge of our capabilities b/c IMHO its the only way we'll keep from killing each other haha!

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  42. .... jailing a MS patients -true role of FDA & by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    The FDA and DEA are tools to keep drugs controlled with prices high. Otherwise, people would pay perhaps $200-$300 per month for advanced cancer treatments off patent, sourced globally, instead of $40,000-$50,000 snake venom and oil. I have personal experience - turned down the $40,000+ per month offer - too little benefit, too short a result, and too painful. Fortunately I have some science and resource advantages over the normal MDs. Although I know I still pay too much, it is still only about $500-600 per month. I called the FDA about doing it in the US (35 yr old drugs overseas) and they chewed on me, but then I explained we were doing it all outside the US, corrupt fuckwits.

  43. This should suit Julian Assange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At this rate, the Swedes will be able to give him a prison OF HIS VERY OWN!

    How exclusive is that???

  44. Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Must dispel myths!

  45. European filth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, keep your filth right where it is.
    What the US should be doing is disarming its law ENFORCEMENT agency and let it become again a police force.
    What the US should be doing is let less and less people go to prison. And those that go, shoudl go to be rehabilitated into civil society. In other words the US should be inspired by european moral values and not the shitty "eye for eye, tooth for tooth" bullshit ideology that underlies its entire judicial system. Designed only to put people into prison for minor deeds.

    European moral values? You mean a failed policy of crime deterrence which is exercised by handing out reduced prison sentences to violent criminals and subsequently publishing misleading crime statistics? I think it's ironic to hear Europeans using terms like moral values when referring to policies that actually decrease the overall security of a country's population.

    1. Re:European filth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have anything to back up your charge of fabricated statistics? No? Thought so.

    2. Re:European filth by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      The real problem with America is that everybody thinks they're entitled to their opinion even when there's hard facts to the contrary.

      2 + 2 = 4? Go online and let us know what you think...

      --
      No sig today...
    3. Re:European filth by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they're shutting down prisons based on doctored statistics...

      I've been to Stockholm, I've been to New York. There are few parts of Stockholm I wouldn't go at night. There are also few parts in New York that I would.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  46. IBSAT Admit Card 2013 view here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBSAT Admit Card 2013
    http://news.entrancecorner.com/2013/09/09/ibsat-2013-admit-card-hall-ticket/

  47. See how bad it can turn out by krigat · · Score: 1

    See where massive health care, strict gun laws, strong labor rights etc. lead you to... now Sweden pays the bill - they have not enough crime and prisoners.

    Good that the US does not follow that way - we dont' want to lose our world leading role in imprisonment!

    1. Re:See how bad it can turn out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wrong.

      Violent crime is at an all time high, because the supreme court has lowered the punishment rates letting the criminals out much faster.

  48. Ha, stupid socialists... by D'Sphitz · · Score: 0

    Stupid socialists spending taxes on healthcare and education rather than building prisons, what a bunch of R-tards.

  49. Swedish supreme court lowered punishment for crime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    When the current goverment gained power they did it on among other things a law and order platform. Increasing police budget and promising harsher punishment.

    What the swedish supreme court has done on the other hand is lower the punishments for most crimes. Leading to empty prisons.

    The direct result is an all time high in violent crime and cases such as these:
    6 youth beat an old man unconsious and to an inch of is life for telling them not to kick a dog. Their punishment? 2 weeks community service.
    6 youth locked a girl in a room and gangraped her, the court believed her but did not think she was in a helpless position. Their punishment? None, not even an appeal.

    Welcome to Fubaristan.

  50. What are they doing with rapists? by Lucky_Pierre · · Score: 2

    Letting them walk?

    From Wikipedia:
    "Sweden has the highest incidence of reported rapes in Europe and one of the highest in the world. According to a 2009 study, there were 46 incidents of rape per 100,000 residents. This figure is twice that of the UK which reports 23 cases, and four times that of the other Nordic countries, Germany and France. The figure is up to 20 times the figure for certain countries in southern and eastern Europe."

    --
    "Whenever the cause of the people is entrusted to professors, it is lost." ~ V.I. Lenin
    1. Re:What are they doing with rapists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the crime solve rate for rape in sweden is between 4 and 10% depending on how you choose to look at "Crime could not be confirmed".

      Even when there is an open and shut case such as this.
      6 youth locked a girl in a room and gangraped her, the court believed her but did not think she was in a helpless position. Their punishment? None, not even an appeal.

      A typical description of a criminal from the police report is "no description". How the swedish police expect to solve crimes when they will not let the population at large help is beyond me.

    2. Re:What are they doing with rapists? by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that might just have something to do with the far better treatment of rape victims in Sweden. In the UK, for example, around one in ten rapes is actually reported.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    3. Re:What are they doing with rapists? by Spad · · Score: 2

      Read this http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-19592372 - the figures you're quoting are pretty misleading.

      It's mostly due to differences in how reported rapes are recorded and a system that encourages rape victims to go to the police.

  51. Highest suicide rates? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate

    Sweden is 44:th on the list and as such probably isn't eligible for the "highest suicide rates"-prize this year...

  52. Not true by madak3 · · Score: 1

    In Sweden many criminals get sentenced to mental treatment instead of prision. One year of two of insutution with strong drugs after crimes like rape, murder, vilolence, pedophilia etc. then your out again.

  53. California's Prison Guard Union Would Object by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The primary reason CA has overcrowded prisons is because the extremely powerful guards union not only makes each prison prohibitively expensive to run, but the union opposes alternative options to incarceration.

  54. Yeah right... did everybody forget about sweden? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    This is the country that locks up file sharers. This is the country that is the toadie of the US where Assange is wanted on a bogus "rape" charge that wouldn't be a charge in any other civilized country.

    There isn't a lack of criminals. The Dutch government is doing the same thing, closing jails. It is however NOT because crime has dropped, just that fewer and fewer jail sentences are given for even serious crime. It is easy to decrease the prison population, just abolish jail sentences.

    Does that make for a better society? Ask this when you are violated and the criminal gets a slap on the wrist.

    This has nothing to do with Sweden having found the answer to the problems of crimes and is just a cost cutting measure. Crime in Sweden has NOT gone down.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  55. What the? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2

    Do you actually ever read the books you chew on?

    Communist parties existed in Europe well into the 80's and in for instance France they still play a major role.

    Although I suppose technically 2013 is after WW2.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:What the? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The existance of the comunist party or variations does not detract from from what was said, openly and known comunist switched to socialism in order to avoid the stigma of comunism.

      I'm not sure why you think they all stayed with the communist parties.

    2. Re:What the? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The existance of the comunist party or variations does not detract from from what was said, openly and known comunist switched to socialism in order to avoid the stigma of comunism.

      If openly communistic people switched to socialism, then who are the members of the current communist parties? Hipster bankers?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    3. Re:What the? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      They would be current members of course. Do you think the end of WWII was yesterday or something? Do you think communism still has a global stigma? Do you think you could think a little about it?

  56. Does not add up by chrismcb · · Score: 1
    FTS:

    the crime rate in Sweden has increased slightly. It seems they are planning to take steps for preventing crime

    Crime rate has increased, but they are PLANNING on taking steps to prevent crime? Well apparently they are only planning, because if they started, their prevention hasn't worked.
    I'm not sure what this mention of "planning to prevent crimes" has to do with the actual situation, which is the courts are being more lenient on drug crimes.

    1. Re:Does not add up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This could not be less true. This is a quote from one of the more credible newspapers in Sweden DN (the Daily News)

      "Violent crime declines in Sweden and throughout the Western world. The trend is clear and has lasted a long time. Not least of Stockholm where a recent poll showed that the number of victims of street violence that ends up in hospital has decreased by 30 percent in five years."

      http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/antalet-mord-halverat-sedan-90-talet/

      In the same article there is another quote:

      "The violent crimes has declined in Sweden for 20 years, shows National Crime Prevention Council statistics. There were 62 murders last year, the lowest number since the 1960s. Homicide rate has more than halved in comparison with 2012 the most violent in the years around 1990 and is now one of the very lowest in Europe. Trend-wise, the decline is around 30 percent."

    2. Re:Does not add up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And people with a tiny bit of sanity know that this is a stupid lie coming from a corrupt newspaper. There is no credibility to Sweden DN when it comes to these matters.

  57. It will work by Chrisq · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    1. Re:It will work by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1, Funny

      Looking at the URLs, I strongly doubt that most of those are unbiased sources.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:It will work by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Yes, because when a few report on something while the rest actively ignore it means there is bias. You should wake up a bit. You understand, for example, in the US, they censor the race of criminals when they are black as a matter of policy and it has been admitted by the "unbiased press." The reasons for doing so it simply trying to not make things even worse.

      I, like so many tech-people here, see things in a more simple way. First you must acknowledge and identifiy a problem. Then you can act to resolve or manage it. The rest of humanity seems to believe the head-in-sand approach is far better.

  58. Re:.... jailing a MS patients -true role of FDA &a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, no, no! They *do* have this in the US. They just keep it on the shelf at Area 51, next to the 100 mpg carburetor, the battery technology that gives EVs a 400 mile range on a 10 minute charge, and the 20 TB USB thumb drives that marketing decided shouldn't be released yet.

  59. Sweden prisons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We have a Police that somehow manage to not solve crimes...
    And now the prison population is going down...

    Sounds like those 2 things is not related? ;-)

  60. Socialism myth by denoir · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not sure why there is this weird myth in the US about Sweden being "socialist". We've had a right wing government for the past 8 years. There has also been in the past two decades a sharp turn towards libertarian ideology in Sweden (our right is not socially conservative) and this is also true for the social democrats who have very little of socialism left in them.

    Health care isn't free, nor are child care and social services. They are in some cases heavily subsidized, but definitely not free. It is accessible to everyone and it works very well for most people and their needs. It sort of sucks for more advanced medicine: If you are going to have a child for instance, it's superb while if you have say lung cancer, your chances are much better if you have the operation in the US.

    The rather dysfunctional medical care system in the US is not a socialist/capitalist thing - it's just a system that doesn't work very well for a lot of people. The insurance model of financing healthcare is for instance very questionable etc.

    As for other stuff such as taxes, I could mention stuff like that Sweden has no inheritance taxes, no real estate taxes or that the financial system is orders of magnitude less regulated than the US one etc Sweden is also somewhat of a corporate tax haven - with the right corporate structure you can get away with paying very little taxes. The bottom line is that from a Swedish perspective at least in in some respects the US is far more socialist than Sweden.

    Ideologically you could say that the typical Swede is a pragmatic individualist who thinks that the role of the state is to protect, liberate and enable the individual. Unlike a 'pure' socialist system the role of the state is limited to problems it actually can solve. Unlike a 'pure' capitalist system the state has an enabling role as well (positive freedoms) rather than just a protective role (negative freedoms). If you things those concepts are muddled, you are quite right. Hence the pragmatism. And it sort of works. It's far from perfect. It's very disappointing to those that wish to classify it ideologically. There are many small issues and some huge ones (integration into society of immigrants is one example) but on the whole it is a decent society - and much better off than 30 years ago when it was much easier to classify ideologically.

    1. Re:Socialism myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure why there is this weird myth in the US about Sweden being "socialist". We've had a right wing government for the past 8 years.

      The "right-wing" of Sweden is different than the "right-wing" of the US.

      In Canada we also have a government "on the right", but if you compare them to the US parties, they wouldn't be very different than many Democrats (who are considered "left" in the US).

      Some of the Republicans (never mind the Tea Party) folks would be considered lunatics politically speaking by many Canadians, but the GOPers are only 'average' in the American spectrum.

    2. Re:Socialism myth by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure why there is this weird myth in the US about Sweden being "socialist".

      All of Europe is socialist compared to the US.

      Health care isn't free, nor are child care and social services. They are in some cases heavily subsidized, but definitely not free. It is accessible to everyone

      That's what counts - everyone can get high quality child care, even if they have 0 SEK in the bank and need to work full time to pay the rent. If they get ill they get treatment and don't go bankrupt.

      if you have say lung cancer, your chances are much better if you have the operation in the US.

      Only if you can afford it in the US. If your health insurance won't pay or you don't have insurance the Swedish system is far better than nothing.

      Ideologically you could say that the typical Swede is a pragmatic individualist who thinks that the role of the state is to protect, liberate and enable the individual.

      That is extreme socialism in the US. Over there the idea that the government should involve itself in a person's life is abhorrent. The state never "enables" anyone in an American's eyes, it just takes money out of their pocket and gives it to someone else as an entitlement.

      I don't think libertarianism means what you think it means.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:Socialism myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding your point on Sweden's "rightist" government - true, but if they moved the party to the USA they would be so far left of the US Democrats that the Yanks would probably reanimate a zombie McCarthy. I travel a LOT, (about to apply for fourth passport in 2 years) and spend a great deal of time in the Nordics, Middle East, South Pacific and North America and one thing I have learned in a decade of travel, is that everyone's political "left" and "right" is very relative to where you are.

      I tell you what though - every single time I return from a trip to the Nordic nations (I currently reside in the UK) I heave a sigh of regret, as in all of my travels, seldom have I seen such well-run and well-organised societies as those.

      Britain on the other hand, grrr...

    4. Re:Socialism myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > All of Europe is socialist compared to the US.

      That's like saying 2 is 3 compared to 1.

    5. Re:Socialism myth by luisdom · · Score: 1

      "your chances are much better if you have the operation in the US"
      As in 20 per 100K death rate in in Sweden, 35 in US? I know that's not what you were referring to, but it's the result that counts...

  61. Staff forgot to lock up inmates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From a swedish newspaper. Picked up by reddit...

    http://i.imgur.com/v5jVyQH.jpg

  62. The truth is pposite of pro-coloureds propaganda! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The reality is that Sweden has a significant crime rate, but the authorities are refusing to investigate most of those cases, where the perpetrators are obviously coloureds (mostly black africans and north african muslims and former yugoslav balkanic people) . It seems strange to have many african people in the northernmost part of Europe, but Sweden has over 10% of coloured population, due to 5 decades of extremely lenient left-wing immigration policies. The swedish politics and press is entirly saturated with political left leaning people, whose views are part libertine and part reform-communist (of the 1968 Paris agenda). For those elite, investigating any crime, where eye witnesses or evidence describes the perp as a coloured, is equal to starting the Holocaust again.

    In contrast, the swedish population suffers a lot from un-persecuted coloured crime, muslim sharia movements and coloured ghettoization - intimidation, as well as the total wall of silence surrounding these phenomenon. This early autumn, a hungarian TV documentary crew went to Sweden to investigate the backyard of that "multi-kulti kabuki theathre". They were harassed everywhere by car hire companies, hotels, all trying to cancel their valid reservations on-site, unwarranted police stops, etc. Meanwhile, the swedish TV news aired many reports, describing Hungary as a neo-nazi governed country, that is actively exterminating the gipsy (a.k.a roma or tzigane, an extremely primitive coloured ethnic minority, originating and expelled from northern India in the 9th century AD, who combine the extremely violent and nature of negroids with the laziness and thievousness of hispanics).

    In response, a swedish citizen's grassroots movement sprung up, with thousands of ordinary swedish citizens posting in web forums about their coloured crime grievances, of uni-directional pro-coloured tolerance and supporting the hungarian TV crew in uncovering the swedish coloured crime shielding conspiracy. A few dozen people even went to the hungarian embassy building with slogan banners to express their solidarity! Swedish middle class people, the great majority of their egalitarian society, are afraid to lose their jobs if they speak up, but in private most admit that 90% of coloureds within the territory of Sweden would be in jail, if only crimes were investigated and persecuted without regards to the official anti-white agenda. Indeed, there would be little to no crime in a purely blonde and palefaced Sweden, but today's Sweden has over a million coloureds and most of them are up for no good.

    BTW, neighbouring Finland has the same problem, mostly with their gipsy minority, who have a penchant for shoplift, theft and blood revenge (no kidding). At least Finland places deliquent gipsy youth into reform camps located above the Artic Circle, where the EU-banned fences and locked doors are not needed, since bears roam the wild freely, preventing escape... In fact the rapid closing of economic and GDP gap that took place since 1990 between the traditionally rich Sweden and the historically poor Finland is due to less crime-tolerant finnish policies and less coloured immigration to Finland. Finnish people, being of ugric origin, are not genetically nordic, but they are civilized and diligent and resourceful. They love their country and won't le it be ruined by the judeo-anarcho-communism cabal that has brainwashed Sweden since WW2.

  63. Re:Yeah right... did everybody forget about sweden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the country that locks up file sharers. This is the country that is the toadie of the US where Assange is wanted on a bogus "rape" charge that wouldn't be a charge in any other civilized country.

    There's plenty of legitimate criticism that can be made against Sweden so there's no need to exaggerate (I know, I've lived there for 15 years). The only file sharers to get prison sentences were people behind the world's largest bittorrent tracker and that was due to political pressure from the US. Which leads me to my second point: Just like almost all countries in the world, Sweden is the US' bitch (especially thanks to Carl Bildt who just cannot suck enough US dick thinking he'll be important on the world stage that way). The smaller a country is, the more often it has to blow the US and that's the whole reason for the Julian Assange affair. You do remember that originally he was told that he was free to leave the country and that was supposed to be the end of it but then the whole saga began when the US realized that they could get some leverage thanks to a he-said-she-said rape accusation. Originally the police and prosecutor handled it the way they should by looking into the matter. I definitely think that the prevalence of extremist feminists in Sweden is doing a lot of damage to the country but I also think that in a civilized country the police has to at least look into the matter, if a woman claims that she has been raped. I won't comment on the increase in crime until I find out if it's a specific type of crime or a specific group of people. Sweden has a lot of immigrants which has resulted in something they just couldn't imagine - the emergence of ghetto-like suburbs.

  64. Even better... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we are also considering allowing everyone to carry around guns, to make Sweden even better and safer. ....awww just kidding, were not doing that!
    =)D

  65. Re:low crime - think again by u38cg · · Score: 1

    [citation needed] on several levels.

    --
    [FUCK BETA]
  66. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  67. My view by xenobyte · · Score: 1

    If I were to construct the policy of a country, I'd go for unlocked doors and very strict punishments for those 'breaking in' and stealing, i.e. an open society with harsh punishments for those breaking the rules.

    Punishments should be 4-5 years minimum and double each time when re-offending. Prison time should be hard labor and not a paid vacation. Resocializing should only happen the first time. Re-offenders are just kept away from society so they can do no harm while they're locked up. No parole system for reoffenders either.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    1. Re:My view by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      The problem there is that a lot of the people who end up in your prisons would actually not be serious offenders, but rather rebellious teenagers doing a little petty shoplifting or smoking pot. Crimes they would cease if just given a slap on the wrist, or just outgrow. Instead your approach throws them in jail to disrupt their education, ruin them socially, give them plenty of new criminal contacts and exposure to a criminal culture that encourages crime, and render them effectively unemployable upon release so their only possible income is harder crime.

      You've just invented a way to turn annoying teenagers into home invaders, drug dealers and murderers. Nice plan.

    2. Re:My view by squizzar · · Score: 1

      The conflict between your comment and your signature is making my brain hurt... is it intentional?

  68. Genes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could RACE possibly have anything to do with it?
    Is there a breakdown of the prison population by race, and then figures on the per capita rate of crime by race?

    Thought not.

    1. Re:Genes... by fritsd · · Score: 0

      YES! Strong correlation, in fact!

      It turned out that in Scandinavia, 99.999 (+/- 0.003)% of the perps belonged to the Homo Sapiens race, with a few Alces Alces Møöse thrown in (probably sentenced for their drunk and disorderly conduct ;-) ).

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
  69. Compare incarceration rateo to crime rates: by Press2ToContinue · · Score: 1

    http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_tot_cri-crime-total-crimes
    How's that prison-as-a-deterrent thing working out for you, America? Not so much, huh,

    --
    Sent from my ENIAC
  70. Exclusion zones by erroneus · · Score: 1

    It's hard to put people into prisons when they live in "exclusion zones" where police and fire people are actively prevented from entering. If you think there isn't a crime problem in Sweden, you would be quite mistaken.

  71. Lead by flyingfsck · · Score: 4, Informative

    One reason for the almost world-wide reduction in crime is the reduction of lead in the environment, thanks to unleaded fuel.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:Lead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Gosh, you're so clever. Please, post more words of wisdom lest we be able to learn!

    2. Re:Lead by umafuckit · · Score: 2

      One reason for the almost world-wide reduction in crime is the reduction of lead in the environment, thanks to unleaded fuel.

      http://www.venganza.org/images/PiratesVsTemp.png

    3. Re:Lead by madro · · Score: 1

      For more details on this, I recommend Kevin Drum's article, which summarizes the research well. (Not just a spurious correlation, although it's good to be skeptical.)

      http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2013/01/lead-crime-link-gasoline

    4. Re:Lead by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Another being the availability of 24/7 TV with a lots of options and computers.
      People have things to do in the home instead of of being bored and roaming the streets.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Lead by geekoid · · Score: 1
      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:Lead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the decrease of our bodily fluids theft

    7. Re:Lead by geekoid · · Score: 1

      That would only be clever and have a point if you followed it up with something the counters the dozens of studies that link lead to violent crime.

      Just post that makes you a tosser.

      Start here and maybe you will learn something
      http://www.ricknevin.com/uploads/Nevin_2000_Env_Res_Author_Manuscript.pdf

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    8. Re:Lead by umafuckit · · Score: 1

      Just post that makes you a tosser.

      The graphs in the article you link to are good and I Googled before posting and realised there was something in. It makes sense that lead, a neurotoxin, could be responsible for effects of this sort. It's just that your original post was somewhat sweeping in nature and didn't have a citation so I couldn't resist ribbing you. I should have added a smiley. I'm sorry you appear to have been offended by it, as I've noticed your sig in the past and rather liked it.

    9. Re:Lead by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Perhaps not always but more often than not it's a good indicator.

    10. Re:Lead by Diamonddavej · · Score: 1

      "A small number of epidemiological studies that have found a dose-response relationship between lead exposure in childhood and self-reported and officially recorded criminal offences in young adulthood; and evidence for the biological plausibility of a causal relationship."

      Hall, W., 2013. Did the elimination of lead from petrol reduce crime in the USA in the 1990s? F1000Research 2013, 2:156 (doi: 10.12688/f1000research.2-156.v2)

    11. Re:Lead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did crime spike when leaded fuel was introduced?

    12. Re:Lead by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      Ouch, the hostility. I'm sorry I hurt your feelings. I have read the studies, and this isn't an open and shut case. Also if you're going to be unnecessarily snarky, it's "effects", not "affects".

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    13. Re:Lead by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      Recognition at last.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    14. Re:Lead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...] I Googled [...]

      You compromised. You NSA'd.

    15. Re:Lead by _BrianMahoney · · Score: 1

      I've read that before so I'm not sure why you're getting all the hate with this statement. NASCAR finally dropped TEL in 2008 so there's still some hope for the American South...at least in a few years when they have time to recover. Bubba for Pres!

    16. Re:Lead by kbx911 · · Score: 0

      u mean lead leads to crime? wow, really? wow!

    17. Re:Lead by TechnoJoe · · Score: 0

      One reason for the almost world-wide reduction in crime is the reduction of lead in the environment, thanks to unleaded fuel.

      citation needed

    18. Re:Lead by HorseArcher · · Score: 1

      That's a reduction in violent crime, but the 'correlation is insufficient to draw any conclusions regarding causality'... http://bit.ly/U4j10P

    19. Re:Lead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One reason for the almost world-wide reduction in crime is the reduction of lead in the environment, thanks to unleaded fuel.

      Ya sure. Next you'll be telling us it was the flouride in the water that made their teeth healthier which led to higher paying jobs.

  72. problems from Use and Prohibition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait. So, prohibition is bad. But the one drug that is no longer prohibited is now the worst offender of all? Me thinks you need to rethink that argument.

    The are two things being talked about: Use and Prohibition.

    The Use of alcohol causes certain problems.But Prohibition also causes certain problems (a different set).

    So if you Prohibit alcohol then you get crime, corruption, violence--but still have the problems associated with Use. So we got rid of Prohibition (i.e., made alcohol legal again) and only one set of problems to deal with (those of Use).

    Similarly with other narcotics: there are problems that are created by their Prohibition (i.e., black market) and problems that are around by their Use (addiction, theft for drug money). Given that Prohibition has not stopped their Use, the GP is arguing we might as well get rid of Prohibition (make them legal) and then we only have one class of problems to deal with (addiction via Use, etc.).

  73. All these comments by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    and no link to Inga Und Helga: Swedish Chained Heat? Before the locations will be shut down.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  74. Re:Start jailing therapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sigmund Freud was a severe coke-fiend who thought everybody had an Oedipus complex and penis envy. He probably picked the name specifically because it was "the rapists."

  75. It pains me to write this but by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    you can accomplish quite a lot societally if the populace is essentially homogeneous. When you neighbor is on the dole, it's fine if he's from the same 'tribe' as you, but if he 'different', that's when all the lizard brain hatreds come to fore.

  76. The real reason for low numbers of prisoners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real reason for lower number of prisoners compared to other countries are that Swedish police is too incompetent to catch the criminals in the first place. /Tommy

  77. Modern Prisons by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    At least in the so-called civilized world prisons are far too plush. Often times prison life is better than the outside life of the criminal. And FAR better than most of our military.

    Changing this would go a long way to help.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  78. confessions of a recovering Reaganite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    remember that era well!

    remember always pulling against Martina Navratilova b/c she was a COMMUNIST! (after she'd defected...)

    I had a life changing experience when I got to go on an adult exchange trip to Moscow (Friendship Force) in 1993. while this was technically post-Soviet it was recent enough that you wouldn't know it all that much (police, army, etc still had Soviet uniforms). I was absolutely STUNNED! THESE were the people we'd grown up fearing/hating? THESE were the people who wanted to destroy us? I realized how much we had in common - we just wanted to go about our lives w/a reasonable amount of opportunity & security but our societies tended to put paranoid hardliners in positions of power...

    I've never been to Iran or China but I suspect it would be a similar experience...

  79. Re:Incarceration rates: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if you just kill a lot of people instead of putting them in prison those rates go way down. Doesn't make it a good thing though.

  80. Re:.... jailing a MS patients -true role of FDA &a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have heard about the 100mpg Carburetor, it was called the Pogue Carburetor, but never saw anything substantiated on it.

    There never was a battery that got the range and recharge times you talk about, but we have had one that was more than viable over 14 years ago. The Nickel–metal hydride battery (NiMH). It was used on the EV1 and RAV 4 EV. It could get over 100 (EPA Certified 140 mile range) miles per charge and could charge from near dead to full in about 8 hours and could handled thousands upon thousands of recharges and was cheap enough to use.

    The patents behind it was bought out by a subsidiary company owned by GM and Chevron/Texaco and mothballed for anything big enough to power a vehicle, the EV1s were returned and crushed. The RAV 4 EV, they couldn't do that to but once their batteries died, they could no longer get replacements. But after 10 years,there are still a few left on the road, some of which have over 150,000 miles on the stock battery. That patent expires in 2014, which is the whole reason you are seeing cars released now that actually use this technology as they have no choice or another will.

    As for the Thumbdrives, they don't have them yet and the companies are going to drag it out making them as long as they can as it takes billions to retool and want to milk it the whole way up which is why they have been caught multiple times in price fixing with its competitors. If they tried to rush as quick as they could, many would not be able to retool fast enough. It is illegal but they will continue to do so..... The luxury of being a multinational....

    The electric car thing still pisses me off though, had our vehicle technology held back over 10 years due to a 2 companies with a vested interest in doing so.

  81. Rentseeking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Let me guess -- prison guards are not unionized. End of explanation.

  82. Re:Start jailing therapists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, we should start jailing therapists. Their extortionate "professional rates" suck the lifeblood out of the economy. People would be better off spending this money on hookers and gigolos who give guaranteed relief. Oh wait, not "therapists" but "the rapists". Well, if people were more inclined to hire hookers, that problem could be solved, too!

    But not just any "the rapists". Just look at their nameplates. "Psycho the rapist".

  83. What steps are they taking? by callmebill · · Score: 2

    The article doesn't state what specific steps the country is taking to reduce crime. That would be much more interesting to read. Currently the article isn't much more than a page out of the IKEA catalog.

  84. Simple really.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of European countries actually REHABILITATE their prisoners. They don't just throw them into a prison to be raped by inmates and abused by guards.

  85. Now I know why they want Julian Assange... by deboli · · Score: 1

    If you have empty prisons you go to any length to fill them...

  86. This can't be true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This can't be true. Sweden requires their citizens to own military style weapons, so they MUST have a gun problem, and higher crimes, so obviously this isn't real.

  87. Julian Assange by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    So the real reason they were so after Julian Assange wasn't Corporate USA political interference, but rather Sweden simply trying to fill prison beds! It is all so clear now!

  88. Re:Those damn socialist! nothing is free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free? Who pays for the doctors, facilities and drugs? Oh that's right, the revenue fairies. They only exist in socialist countries.

  89. Swedish police incompetent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One reason might be that Swedish police is very bad at solving crimes.

  90. American voters need to BECOME divided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Half of Americans seem to want social justice, equality, privacy, and caring for the poor, and the other half want religion in schools, small government, privatization of all government roles, and a huge military. The two sides are so far apart that no compromise is possible.

    Maybe we're divided as a people, but as voters there's hardly any division at all. 99% of voters want government to be doing more to pay back campaign contributors, 99% of voters feel the government is overall not powerful enough and not sufficiently involved in monitoring and governing peoples' private lives, and 99% of voters want a huge military.

    It sound like you know of a mysterious 49% who never, ever shows up at the polls. If you ever meet one of those people, please tell them to get off their ass on election day, for a change.

    Could it be that this mythical 49% doesn't actually exist, and that Americans are pretty much united and on the same page, with regard to most political questions? I think so.

    A friend explained it like this. Two people go out to dinner. One says, "I feel like eating Italian tonight." The other says, "I want to eat Anthrax and broken glass." Now, compromise so both are happy.

    I don't know what country that example is intended to illustrate, but it sure as hell isn't America. America goes like this:

    Two people go out to dinner. One says "I want McDonalds." The other says "No, I want Burger King." And they each get mad, pretending that they're actually disagreeing over a big deal. 49 couples do that. Then one couple goes out, where one says they want McDonalds and the other says "No wait, let's try Italian for a change." And the McDonalds advocate looks at the Italian-curious foodie with a bemused look. "Huuuh huuuh. Yeah, sure. Throw away your vote!"

  91. legal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If everything is legal, there is no crime

  92. We already tried "Hug and Release" by Beeftopia · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sweden, on the other hand, focuses on bringing people who have strayed from the path back into society. Their methods work. However, if anyone in the US wants to employ their methods, they are seen as "soft on crime" at worst. At best, they can't get the funding needed to enact meaningful rehabilitation programs. It is far cheaper (in the short term) and easier to put people in cages compared to education and rehabilitation.

    We already tried "Hug and Release" back in the 1970s and 80s. Crime rates had been skyrocketing for a long time. Only when the mid 90s hit, and the country returned to retributive punishments with a vengeance did crime rates start falling again.

    Citation:
    1) http://www.bjs.gov/ucrdata/Search/Crime/State/RunCrimeStatebyState.cfm - select "United States-total" from the first list box, "Violent Crime Rates" from the second list box, leave date range from 1960 to 2012, and click the "Get Table" button.

    This seems to be a pattern. Prisoners rights advocates hold sway, influence the public to forget the offenders' crimes, just look at how handsome they are, crime starts going up. Innocent people are victimized more and more, then finally, society realizes it must remove criminals from society and aggressively pursue criminals in order to lower crime rates. New York is this issue writ large. Only when it unbelievably elected Giuliani did he institute zero tolerance policies which finally brought the crime rate down. I remember the puzzled social commentators just baffled about how Giuliani's policies could possibly work. Darkly amusing.

    1. Re:We already tried "Hug and Release" by turing_m · · Score: 1

      It is testament to the naivety and stupidity of some people on here that your comment is modded 1 and the one above you is modded +5 insightful, which is wrong for all sorts of reasons, including the one that you state. Most importantly, ethnic/racial background is vastly different between Sweden and the USA, and that is the number one factor in crime rates around the world. Just take a look at a map of homicide rates around the globe. Take a look at rates of homicide within the USA. I guess the crime rate in Detroit is because of the schools or something.

      Just repeat after me, "people are fungible", "people are fungible", "people are fungible", and all your dreams will come true. That dumb kid you knew in the first grade - his problem was that the teachers just would never try hard enough. He could have been Don Knuth if only his parents gave him the Tiger Mother treatment. Ted Bundy - with a well enough designed re-education camp ("Murders are bad, mmmmkay?"), would have been a great contributor to society.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    2. Re:We already tried "Hug and Release" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crime rates started dropping everywhere regardless of policy changes. The crime surge of the 70s and 80s was likely anomalous.

      See also temporal correlation with blood lead levels during development.

    3. Re:We already tried "Hug and Release" by dbIII · · Score: 1

      We already tried "Hug and Release" back in the 1970s and 80s

      Nice myth, but reality made your bit in quotes a prison rape joke. Some places have had improvements in prison conditions since then and are still seen as brutal.

      It's a cheap political trick to be "tough on crime" and add some arbitrary unusual punishment so something is seen to be done.

    4. Re:We already tried "Hug and Release" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have seen that mentioned elsewhere, I think in a past Slashdot comment. Let's hope you get modded up.

      We should focus on cutting pollution, even if we cannot prove the correlation to be causation. But cutting pollution for its own sake is good in and of itself. Is it just lead that's the issue?

      We should focus on rehab in prisons and better conditions. We should outlaw private prisons.

      For the harsher crimes, we need to get over that stigma and try to help those people. We need to stop any potential cycles if there's a root cause causing their behavior.

  93. to which episodes by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    are you referring?

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  94. Sweden as a Model, and Pothead Logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People here are using the pothead logic of Dr. Dean Adell. The most abused drugs are the legal drugs. Your answer is to make drugs that are illegal, with low rates of abuse, into legal drugs? It stands to reason that low rate use drugs would increase in both use and abuse, if legalized. I used to joke that only a pothead could come up with such assheaded logic, but apparently the logic is spreading.

    If the end is lowering expenditures on the incarcerated, we will have to deal with the rise in rates of use and abuse, and the concomitant problems that go with it: workplace safety, child safety, taxation, more regulation, knockoffs, a spike in NARCANON membership, the inevitable upheavel of introducing new drugs into the population that are legal, available, used, and abused, defining how these new drugs have to revamp the penal code when they are abused and involve crimes like violence, theft and the like, which won't magically go away if they are legalized, and finally the reeducation of society, and youth, that yes, even though all these drugs you used to go to jail for are now legal, but you still shouldn't use them.

    I have yet to see the legalization crowd accurately account for all the problems legalization will bring. Its some magic panacea that will be like the Peace Dividend (yeah, right).

    Drug abuse is economic and psychological, and society has to figure out if the money spent on social and economic diversion and the overall economics of getting people not to use or abuse legal drugs will offset the money saved by lowering incarceration rates. Coke, crack and meth have incredibly damaging health effects, and are profoundly addictive. How again will legalizing these drugs not create new problems, but only solve existing problems? Oxycotin is legal, and also heavily trafficked and abused in an illegal fashion. Let's list all the legal prescription drugs trafficked in, and then consider the idea of legalizing pot and a wide range of other drugs.

    SWEDEN AS A MODEL

    Lastly, I find it amusing that a country with a population less that HALF that that of the New York metropolitan area alone is being held up as a model for all. It is completely understandable that a small, homogeneous native population with strong passive, urban, socialized traits and a harsh, demanding northern climate would be relatively low crime compared to a large, heterogeneous mixed population with wide ranging ethnic characteristics, urban and rural temperaments, both socialized urban and independent rural populations, and an enormously varied climate and landscape like the U.S.

    Someone is surprised by this?

  95. US Has Solved This Problem by pubwvj · · Score: 2

    In the USA they solved this problem by making more laws that send people to prison. Prisons are BIG BUSINESS with capital letters. They have lobbyists working full time to write laws to create more customers.

  96. Different Countries, Different Populations by userw014 · · Score: 1

    Clearly, Sweden doesn't have the kind of problems that Norway has (see http://www.trollhunterfilm.com/ )

    Although I don't imagine that Norway is locking up those miscreants.

  97. Re:Yeah right... did everybody forget about sweden by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Does that make for a better society? Ask this when you are violated and the criminal gets a slap on the wrist.

    Nice selection bias you have there. Must be that famous US education system at work again. But the question actually is: which makes a better society, one where you have low chances of being violated but the criminal gets a slap on the wrist, or one where you have high chances of being violated but the culprit is hanged?

    In other words, do you care more about your own welfare or that your enemies suffer? Or, even simpler, do you care more about yourself or your enemies?

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  98. don't worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their immigration policies will help fill them up again at some point, unless political correctness gets in the way.

  99. Looks like a comfortable, cheap apartment to me. by Dekker3D · · Score: 1

    From a quick glance at the text and photos, I'd say this looks about as comfortable as my current life... and the surveillance there is only marginally worse than it is atm, thanks to the NSA :P

  100. Cheaper solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullets are even cheaper.

    Fire a bullet through the heads of these vermin criminals, preferably before they reproduce.

  101. Cultural and demographic differences... by couchslug · · Score: 1

    ... are worth mentioning.
    The US isn't Sweden, and many of its subgroups never had and never will have (because it's resented) the future-oriented culture which most facilitates advancing civilization.

    Not a racial thing so don't even go there. The most cherished myth of White (and other) racists is that they are functionally different from the (other) lower class zeros they hate. That "narcissism of small differences" is toxic.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  102. Closing Prisons? by IndieVoter · · Score: 1

    Never happen in California. The Prison Guard Unions bought the Democratic Party and installed Gov. Davis. They are now amoung the highest paid law enforcement officers in the US. Oh, and lots of prisoners for minor drug offenses. Didn't help Davis, as he was thrown out, but DID help the Union. Demos for sale, just not cheap.

  103. they need for profit prisons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and a bunch of corporate-whore lawmakers to make a bunch of laws with mandatory prison terms to keep them all 'safe'... oh yeah, and whore judges who take bribes from said for-profit prisons so as to send them a stream of young inmates

  104. So that explains it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now we know why they want Assange so badly.

  105. Evidence-based policy please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what the world needs. Copy best practices from other governments that get the results. Everyone should be copying Sweden by the looks of it.

  106. They need additional Groids and Arabs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Probably 99% of their prisoners are groid and arab savages...(immigrants)...
    Just Sunday night I heard a female activist in Sweden and she spoke for 2 hours about the rapes
    robberies, murders and incessant harassment these non-white animals are committing..
    Sweden is so insane it is illegal to compile crime states based on race or ethnicity....

  107. Re:OTOH our neighbors are fine with jailing a MS p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I read this I can't decide if I should get angry or depressed. The drug policies of this country really are fucking crazy. MS is a terrible disease. It would be totally inhumane to reject ANY possibility to reduce the suffering those patients have to endure.

  108. Re:OTOH our neighbors are fine with jailing a MS p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Singapore would kill someone in a similar situation. (No Tolerance actually means it there).

  109. not 'gov't' its **all systems** by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    but government allows for tremendous increase in efficiency of evil

    wrong

    'government' is humans organizing for economic advantage

    ****any system**** can be abused....

    government, corporation, family, USMC platoon, classroom...they are all human systems

    what makes one system better than the other is having better feedback channels...aka ****accountability****

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  110. WE'd never let that happen here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Crorrections Corporation would prevail on Congress to increase the number of offenses and their severity along with the length of their prison sentences. They'd cfreate new classifications of crimes which need "three strikes" laws accompany them. Hmmm.. what class of helpless naive people can we reliably prosecute for crimes.. hey I've got it! Let's go after YOUNG people, they have terrible judgment and poor impulse control and reliably act out. Let's drop the age of :"adulthood" as it applies to crimes to 12 or 15. Oh those terrible children, what's the world coming to? We need to try them as adults ! Then when we convict them we can keep them in prison doing hard time or better yet , subject them to a system" which "helps" them (HAR HAR HAR) at the end of which time they're sure to have become REAL criminals.

    Hey, business is business. A business, by law, exists only to enrich its shareholders and for NO other reason and officers of corporations have a fiduciary DUTY to pursue all avenues of such enrichment or face being sued by their shareholders. We HAVE to do it. plus, preying on people weaker, more naive and fundamentally unable to defend themselves against a complex and sophisticated system of jurisprudence which is designed to channel them into jails why, it's the American Way!

    So quit your whining.

  111. Re:low crime - think again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why was this post modded '-1" flamebait? It was quite insightful !?

  112. Immigrants by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

    I hear a lot of this same nonsense here in the USA. Immigrants coming in and ruining everything, they're on Welfare, They take all the jobs, they're culturally backwater, they're going to bankrupt the country, etc etc etc.

    Meanwhile my nearest two neighbors are immigrants. They're nice people, hardworking. Their lawn is beautiful and I'm sure they shake their heads at the gringo next door. They're poor, sure, but that's not a crime(yet). They're nice people. I eat dinner with them sometimes. I help their kids with homework. I practice my spanish because it's interesting and polite, instead of ranting about how they need to learn english.

    And you know what? They have some funny ideas. Some funny beliefs. They're very "old world" with their attitudes to a woman's place in the home. Eh. I know that'll get worked out with their kids. I try to get their daughters hooked on power tools as much as I can. You know how I know that? My dad was an immigrant. Swiss. And everything turned out fine.

    People are people the world over. Most of them just want to be left alone, to do some meaningful work, to enjoy their family and their life, to raise children who do better than they did.

    If immigrants to Sweden are having a hard time adjusting, perhaps it's because of shit attitudes on YOUR part. Perhaps you should take some time to show them what it means to be Swedish. Perhaps you should get to know them before throwing your racist rants all over the place.

  113. Wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's almost as if people there don't let other people make millions out of throwing people in jail for anything and everything to leech hundreds of millions of dollars from the government.