Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Collapsing Empire Watch

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Collapsing Empire Watch

    Collapsing empire watch

    By Glenn Greenwald



    It's easy to say and easy to document, but quite difficult to really internalize, that the United States is in the process of imperial collapse. Every now and then, however, one encounters certain facts which compellingly and viscerally highlight how real that is. Here's the latest such fact, from a new study in Health Affairs by Columbia Health Policy Professors Peter A. Muennig and Sherry A. Glied (h/t):
    In 1950, the United States was fifth among the leading industrialized nations with respect to female life expectancy at birth, surpassed only by Sweden, Norway, Australia, and the Netherlands. The last available measure of female life expectancy had the United States ranked at forty-sixth in the world. As of September 23, 2010, the United States ranked forty-ninth for both male and female life expectancy combined.
    Just to underscore the rapidity of the decline, as recently as 1999, the U.S. was ranked by the World Health Organization as 24th in life expectancy. It's now 49th. There are other similarly potent indicators. In 2009, the National Center for Health Statistics ranked the U.S. in 30th place in global infant mortality rates. Out of 20 "rich countries" measured by UNICEF, the U.S. ranks 19th in "child well-being." Out of 33 nations measured by the OECD, the U.S. ranks 27th for student math literacy and 22nd for student science literacy. In 2009, the World Economic Forum ranked 133 nations in terms of "soundness" of their banks, and the U.S. was ranked in 108th place, just behind Tanzania and just ahead of Venezuela.

    There is, however, some good news: the U.S. is now in fifth place in total number of executions, behind only China, Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, and comfortably ahead of Yemen and Sudan, while there are two categories in which the U.S. has been and remains the undisputed champion of the world -- this one and this one. And, of course, the U.S. is not just objectively the greatest country on the planet, but the greatest country ever to exist in all of human history -- as Dave Roberts put it in response to these life expectancy numbers: "but we're No. 1 in bestness!" -- so we're every bit as exceptional as ever.

    http://www.salon.com/news/healthcare...0/10/11/empire

  • #2
    Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

    Life expectancy is a very misused number. A great many factors can influence it. Most people think life insurance actuaries use life expectancy in pricing a product. This is not true. In fact I believe it is no longer even part of the 10 exams that lead to the designation Fellow of the Society of Actuaries.

    Infant mortality, definition of a live birth, racial makeup and many other items greatly influence the number. Wikepedia has a good article all about this for those interested. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_expectancy

    jim

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

      Russia’s average life expectancy suffered a catastrophic crash following the collapse of the Soviet Union, plunging to 56 years for men during the early 1990s. This figure rose to nearly 62 years last year (69 for both men and women) thanks to the recovery in the economy and Russians' new-found interest in leading more healthy lives.

      Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov recently announced that, thanks to longer lives and immigration, the country’s population grew for the first time in 15 years in 2009.

      http://rbth.ru/articles/2010/03/24/240310_life.html

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

        Originally posted by don View Post
        ...thanks to the recovery in the economy and Russians' new-found interest in leading more healthy lives...
        I'll buy the "recovery in the economy" thing, but maybe not the rest of it... ;-)

        Some examples of healthy Russians:



        A Complete Guide To The Private Jet Fleets Of Russian Oligarchs


        Boing 767-300 belonging to the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, just before landing at Ben-Gurion Airport, Israel



        A Russian oligarch is the brand new owner of Villa Léopolda on the coast of France’s Côte d’Azur. The monumental sale of the Villa Léopolda has made headline news when the estate was sold last week for a total of $750 million after being on the market for some time. Deemed the most expensive house on the planet now, Villa Léopolda is one of the most sumptuous estates on the Côte d’Azur, the French Riviera.



        How to snare your very own (young!) Russian oligarch

        By SVETLANA GRAUDT

        The prospect of getting hitched to a rich Russian has never looked so good. Where once they were seen as surly-faced, povertystricken vodka drinkers, Russian men are now a real catch.

        With more cash than you have ever seen, a gas pipeline, an oil well and perhaps a bank to their name, an eligible oligarch could be your way out - no, not out to Siberia, but to the best resorts in the South of France, the casinos of Las Vegas or exclusive area near Moscow where Prada and Chopard boutiques are the local corner shops...

        Better still, and unlike most British billionaires, they are young! It is not uncommon in Russia to meet a head of a bank in his 30s and most big business owners are just a decade older.

        The collapse of the Soviet Union 15 years ago made it possible for the young and ambitious to make their fortunes.

        Chelsea boss Roman Abramovich is just 41 - a baby!

        So when he gets bored with Daria Zhukova, the model and socialite he took up with after dumping his second wife, you could be next in line.

        But oligarchs are fussy and to get one you will need to compete with a Russian woman like me. We are well prepared for the cat-and-mouse game of catch-anoligarch and we have our mothers to thank for that.

        They don't let us out of the house until they are satisfied we are well dressed, our nails are in perfect shape and we have brushed our hair.

        How else are you going to get a man, they reason. They encourage us to wear heels (good for posture), buy feminine clothes and learn to cook a mean cabbage soup.

        Most rich Russian men come from Moscow, where young, beautiful women outnumber them off the scale. A single friend complains that a highly eligible woman can go around Moscow naked with a mattress strapped to her back and no one will take the bait.

        Russian women have no trouble getting British men: they like our sense of adventure, appearance and knowledge of art and literature. But British women have to try a lot harder to land one of our men...

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

          Most rich Russian men come from Moscow, where young, beautiful women outnumber them off the scale. A single friend complains that a highly eligible woman can go around Moscow naked with a mattress strapped to her back and no one will take the bait.
          During the Cold war we were led to believe, with the exception of James Bond honey pot traps, that all Russian women drove tractors, were combat-ready, and looked like this fair wench.



          gullible Americanskis,



          Russkie babes are beautiful....in or at your service




          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

            It's my understanding a lot of those life expectancy tables are thrown off by the level of care given in the US to premature babies. Premature= much more likely to die early. Whereas, some nations do not count babies who die immediately after childbirth as being "born".

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Collapsing Empire Watch

              Originally posted by flintlock View Post
              It's my understanding a lot of those life expectancy tables are thrown off by the level of care given in the US to premature babies. Premature= much more likely to die early. Whereas, some nations do not count babies who die immediately after childbirth as being "born".
              Yes, that is true along with many other things such as distribution by age, sex and race, income level, etc. The link I posted above gives more detail.

              jim

              Comment

              Working...
              X