#1) Don't take the Lord's name in vain.bluetick wrote:Mississippi, 3rd most miserable state in the U.S. (West VA #1, KY #2)
Well-being index score: 63.7
Life expectancy: 75.0 years (lowest in U.S.)
Percent obese: 35.4% (highest in U.S.)
Median household income: $37,095 (lowest in U.S.)
Percent with high school diploma (3rd lowest)
Nowhere else in the U.S. did people feel as negative about their work environment as in Mississippi. But this was just one of the problems facing state residents. Respondents were among the most likely in the nation to lack access to basic necessities. More than a quarter of people surveyed in the state indicated they did not have money for food at some point in the previous 12 months, while nearly as many lacked money for health care. By a number of measures, the state was one of the absolute poorest in the nation. The median income in Mississippi was just $37,095 in 2012, lowest in the nation. Also, 24.2% lived below the poverty line, more than any other state. With limited access to basic needs and poor healthy behaviors, the state was among the worst in the nation in physical health assessments. Last year, no state had a higher obesity rate than Mississippi. In 2010, no state had a higher rate of death from heart disease or a lower life expectancy at birth than Mississippi.
Jesus, IB. Have you no shame?
#2) I have said nothing for which I should feel shame.
We have 50 states. There is going to be a 50th in life expectancy. That can't be helped. It can't be helped because there are 50 and we can very easily rank these things.
I suppose it is better than Somalia but no, Mississippi is not a great place to raise a family. There are not a lot of job opportunites there. The jobs that do exist pay crap money. The primary and secondary education system sucks (albeit Ole Miss is an excellent school.) And we can't prop up MS because they already lead the nation in Federal transfer payments (per capita.) 49% of all dollars spent in that state were Federal transfer payments (majority of which, social security.)
But it is great place to retire to because your $100 spent there gets you $115 of goods and services. Which was the whole point of Toem's graph which you missed because you live in a world of liberal-malignant-narcisism.