Whoa. It is just me, or did that site give anyone else a popup with that fake antivirus warning ("You need to clean your computer to prevent the system breakage...")?
I'll test this in a sandbox here when I get a chance. It's probably one of their ads, not the Daily Mail site itself.
The geographical state I'm in - IL - is not so happy.
When you click through to the Gallup data, this was interesting:
Economic Confidence Index
"Gallup's Economic Confidence Index is based on state residents' views of economic conditions in this country today, and whether they think economic conditions in the country are getting better or getting worse.
National average -16 State / Score 1-District of Columbia / 19 2-Massachusetts / -1
Anyone else think the people running this country are in denial?
I noticed that Washington jumped from 15 to 9, and Colorado went from 2 to 7. Colorado is already distributing marijuana, and collecting tax dollars. Washington is still working on it.
Hmmm. OR ranks 25th, so we have median happiness. Sounds about right to me. Though they really ought to redo this in five months or thereabouts. I didn't think SAD was a genuine thing until I'd been through a few OR winters.
North Dakota, the happiest? That can't be. Wasn't there an article in the NYT not long ago, bemoaning how awful ND had become because of the oilmen, the prostitutes, and the environmental carnage wrought by the oil boom?
The term "happiness" is in the headline, not the name of the index which ranks "well-being." If you took the headline seriously, you'd have to conclude that no state had been happy until the middle of the 20th century. Before that, nothing we would recognize as "healthcare" had been invented. No workplace would be considered "safe."
I did wonder if they polled all those cold states in the summer! That might explain why they were happy.
It isn't even the cold; it's the lack of daylight. I wouldn't have believed that moving 600 miles north, as I did, would make such a difference. The thing about Oregon winters, with the very conspicuous exception of our spectacular snowstorm two weeks back, is that they're cold, but snowless, just wet. It gets dispiriting.
The problem with the general snowlessness, of course, is that when there actually is snow, there's no equipment to deal with it. We were snowbound here four days running. We shoveled out paths up the driveway, and cleared the sidewalk, but no one plows minor streets in Salem; you just wait for it to melt, and hope that more intrepid people than yourselves will carve ruts that you can fit your own wheels into.
I grew up in NY, where heavy snowfall is a given, and a storm like we just experienced would've been pretty much taken in stride. Here, it was more "unforeseeable catastrophe." Pretty much all of Salem shut down altogether. The city required chains for driving on all streets, and its website declared all streets dangerous to impassible. Which was, alas, true.
Now there's the inevitable cleanup, still ongoing, of all the gravel dumped on major arteries, which is pretty much how snowfall is handled in OR. (Salt is out, because anything you put on the roads here eventually ends up in the Willamette River.)
It is also interesting that we get this sort of 'information' from a British rag (not that I'm really complaining about that - must be that lack of happiness kicking in - since there seems to be a lot of newsiness in the Daily Mail).
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Encourage Althouse by making a donation:
Make a 1-time donation or set up a monthly donation of any amount you choose:
27 comments:
The clustering of 1st and 5th quintiles quite interesting.
With all the new jobs and money from the oil industry, no wonder the Dakotas are happy.
(Not happy enough to keep my niece in South Dakota from asking me to wire her money, though.)
Hmm, anything else going on in Wisconsin?
Maybe all the unhappy people in the Northern Plains have left for warmer climes -- like Louisiana -- and found that unhappiness has followed them?
Fascinating map.
Montana now number 5. Yet we're always hearing about our high suicide rate and DUI numbers as if we were the Worst State in the World!
We pride ourselves on our misery in New York State.
Our primary industry is manufacturing misery. That's why we're better than you. We have very serious business to contemplate.
Only yokels in Flyover Country want to be happy.
Whoa. It is just me, or did that site give anyone else a popup with that fake antivirus warning ("You need to clean your computer to prevent the system breakage...")?
I'll test this in a sandbox here when I get a chance. It's probably one of their ads, not the Daily Mail site itself.
The geographical state I'm in - IL - is not so happy.
When you click through to the Gallup data, this was interesting:
Economic Confidence Index
"Gallup's Economic Confidence Index is based on state residents' views of economic conditions in this country today, and whether they think economic conditions in the country are getting better or getting worse.
National average -16
State / Score
1-District of Columbia / 19
2-Massachusetts / -1
Anyone else think the people running this country are in denial?
And Virginia is just right! A perfect blend of misery and happiness! Keeps you on your toes.
I noticed that Washington jumped from 15 to 9, and Colorado went from 2 to 7. Colorado is already distributing marijuana, and collecting tax dollars. Washington is still working on it.
Does marijuana diminish happiness??
At this point, what difference does it make?
Hmmm. OR ranks 25th, so we have median happiness. Sounds about right to me. Though they really ought to redo this in five months or thereabouts. I didn't think SAD was a genuine thing until I'd been through a few OR winters.
John (the other John), it's not coincidence that about half the richest counties in the US are in MD or VA.
North Dakota, the happiest? That can't be. Wasn't there an article in the NYT not long ago, bemoaning how awful ND had become because of the oilmen, the prostitutes, and the environmental carnage wrought by the oil boom?
@Carol
Its the suicide and drinking that keep MT moving up on the happy scale.
There are a lot of poor people in the south. These lists almost always come down to the demographics...
"I didn't think SAD was a genuine thing until I'd been through a few OR winters. "
I did wonder if they polled all those cold states in the summer! That might explain why they were happy.
The term "happiness" is in the headline, not the name of the index which ranks "well-being." If you took the headline seriously, you'd have to conclude that no state had been happy until the middle of the 20th century. Before that, nothing we would recognize as "healthcare" had been invented. No workplace would be considered "safe."
37th! Hot Damn! Well...at least we're not Ohio....
Related:
via Drudge
A not-very-scientific ranking of states determined those that have the longest and shortest duration of sex.
http://wtop.com/256/3566972/Ma
West Virginia is a bottom and Mississippi is another bottom-of course.
Mass is a 10, natch.
"madAsHell said...
Does marijuana diminish happiness??"
Only when they run out. So maybe that's the problem: Legalization's caused consumption to outpace supply. ;)
North Dakota:
Happy = Money rolling in.
Carol, some of that Dakota money is rolling into Montana too. Happy, happy, happy.
Shanna,
I did wonder if they polled all those cold states in the summer! That might explain why they were happy.
It isn't even the cold; it's the lack of daylight. I wouldn't have believed that moving 600 miles north, as I did, would make such a difference. The thing about Oregon winters, with the very conspicuous exception of our spectacular snowstorm two weeks back, is that they're cold, but snowless, just wet. It gets dispiriting.
The problem with the general snowlessness, of course, is that when there actually is snow, there's no equipment to deal with it. We were snowbound here four days running. We shoveled out paths up the driveway, and cleared the sidewalk, but no one plows minor streets in Salem; you just wait for it to melt, and hope that more intrepid people than yourselves will carve ruts that you can fit your own wheels into.
I grew up in NY, where heavy snowfall is a given, and a storm like we just experienced would've been pretty much taken in stride. Here, it was more "unforeseeable catastrophe." Pretty much all of Salem shut down altogether. The city required chains for driving on all streets, and its website declared all streets dangerous to impassible. Which was, alas, true.
Now there's the inevitable cleanup, still ongoing, of all the gravel dumped on major arteries, which is pretty much how snowfall is handled in OR. (Salt is out, because anything you put on the roads here eventually ends up in the Willamette River.)
West Virginia is last again. The Scots-Irish are miserable folk.
Always say you are happy. If you don't, they will send you more junk. That's what I do.
Um, look at how they 'measure' happiness.
It is also interesting that we get this sort of 'information' from a British rag (not that I'm really complaining about that - must be that lack of happiness kicking in - since there seems to be a lot of newsiness in the Daily Mail).
Post a Comment