>>>
I really am very interested to hear where you'd find it better to live than the US.>>>
>>>Depends how you define "better". If you look at the Mercer analysis of international cities focusing on quality of life measures such as political, social, economic, health, education, recreation, public services and housing, the highest entry for the US is Honolulu at #28.
>>>
>>>The reality is that if you have money and/or a high social status, you can have a good quality of life just about anywhere in the First World.
>>
>>But I'm curious about William's view. Based on things he's said before, he has major issues with what he considers socialism, so I'd think that most of Europe (which, I think, he would consider socialist) would be off-limits. He also feels strongly about personal freedoms, so that would seem to rule out a lot of places. I'm really curious what he's thinking about this.
>>
>>Tamar
>
>From here Williams definition of "socialism" seems very broad. I would say you don't have a socialist party in the US. And at the moment we don't have one in the UK either.
>
>Its interesting the
level of animosity towards this new administration from the right wing. Perhaps the security problems of the next few years in the US might be a little more "home grown".
(Emphasis mine)
Can you provide an example where it is animosity against the new administration and not disagreement about practices or policies?
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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
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"De omnibus dubitandum"