
Was Watching Rick Steves' Europe travel show the other day.....
..and he was walking us through Denmark and Norway and the Low Countries. Something he said made me think of the Tax Maniacs here, mostly Conks who foam at the mouth at perceived overexuberant tax burden in the United states. While walking through a beautiful, colorful, clean square in Copenhagen which overlooked a crowded canal filled with happy tourists and locals in boats, he remarked that Europeans vote for high taxes and expect high service in return. He mentioned the same thing in the other show about Norway.
It struck me for two reasons.
First, I realized that they DO vote for high taxes. I had always assumed, likely caught up in ConkHate about taxes in general over the years, that they were somehow forced on European citizens, as Conks would have you believe AND how they would have you believe government is trying, clandestinely and ceaselessly through Donks, to do here. It's not the case.
Second was the vast difference in sentiment between these two land blobs separated by the Atlantic. Think about it, they actually VOTE FOR HIGHER TAXES. Imagine that sort of sentiment in America! Imagine Tman and Z and native and other naysayers and tax whiners stroking out over a much higher tax bill! As an aside, I remember a particular Conk here who will remain nameless, stating that the Europeans CAN vote for high taxes because they don't have to fund their militaries very heavily, because we protect them. I countered, "Protect them from what? They don't make the trouble we do, so they have very little to fight!"
Now, the ultimate question - Which way is right?
In Europe, there isn't the exhausting chase for the brass ring that exists in America. People don't seem to burn themselves out and get "Tman" about things like taxes and anything that threatens to take from their pie. They seem happy and I bet, privately, they do a big SMFH at how we conduct our lives - SUV's, obesity, racial distress, excess, waste, etc.
Which way is right? What's more important - to die with the most toys or to live a happy life, regardless of income and material?
I've only been to Europe once, when I spent three weeks in Rome, Florence, Pisa and surrounding towns. Yeah, a bit of a long time ago, but the difference between those places and here was immediately striking and still exist. Small, compact, little is wasted, likely a reaction to the centuries of warfare and conflict and deprivation they endured.
We could probably learn a lot from the Europeans if we weren't such a vain nation, clinging to our questionable past and long-gone accomplishments as so much anesthetic, numbing the pain of a dreary future of further polarization and chaos. Reagan tried that in the early 1980's - salve over the wounds we incurred after forty-five years of Donk "excess", his handlers and sycophants said....and we cheered him. Until the salve wore off and the same old pain of stagnation and decline reared up once again, this time at the hands of people who suckled at the tit of Reaganism.
My opinion only, but, because we don't vote for higher taxes, we don't have high expectations, thus, we promote and vote for and come to expect mediocrity. I'm convinced the Europeans have it right. Bless their little hearts.











