• @Syrc@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    …like Voting Rights, Crime Rate and Child Care…?

    “Life, Health and Inclusion” takes up 14% of the total points.

    • Lol crying about nonsense voting rights and demanding government child care are massive democrat talking points. What rock have you been under?

      • @Syrc@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        So do Republicans not want good Child Care or equal Voting Rights?

        As it has already been said in this thread, which metrics would put these states at the top when even statistics published from Fox have the top 10 with 3 states from CNBC’s Top 10 and only 1 from the Bottom 10?

        • So do Republicans not want good Child Care or equal Voting Rights?

          I’m not exactly a big fan of Republicans, but I don’t want the government wasting a dime of my money on child care, and I don’t give a singular fuck about voting rights.

          As it has already been said in this thread, which metrics would put these states at the top when even statistics published from Fox have the top 10 with 3 states from CNBC’s Top 10 and only 1 from the Bottom 10?

          Unfortunately, I’m a human and not a database scraper bot. I have exactly zero clue what numbers would put this specific combination of states at the top, and I really don’t care to spend the time crunching those numbers.

          • @Syrc@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            …how can one not care about voting rights? Do you want other people to decide for you?

            And even then, the biggest factors are Percentage of qualified workers, Infrastructure and Stability of the Economy. I don’t really see those as loaded metrics.

            • how can one not care about voting rights

              Because I don’t consider democracy to be worthwhile in and of itself. It’s just a system. Sometimes it’s good at achieving goals, sometimes it isn’t. When it isn’t, other options should be pursued.

              And even then, the biggest factors are Percentage of qualified workers

              According to their own methodology, it just looks like cherry picked data to favor economic hubs. Why does an influx of skilled workers mean somewhere is better to live? All I see is an excuse to heavily disadvantage rural communities that, reasonably, aren’t seeing a massive influx of people looking for desk jobs. So elaborate, why does more skilled workers mean somewhere is better to live?

              Infrastructure

              This one is also just favoring major commerce hubs, and they basically say it outright. “We measure the vitality of each state’s transportation system by the value and volume of goods shipped by air, waterways, roads and rail” … “We consider access to markets by measuring the population within 500 miles of each state”.

              In addition, they include availability of air travel, which also just favors major commerce hubs.

              Stability of the Economy

              Once again, just a bunch of metrics heavily slanted towards major urban area, as shown by metrics such as major corporations headquartered in state and gdp/job growth.

              All these things are extremely loaded metrics to favor specific lifestyles and types of development that tend to be more popular among democrats. Which is fine, everyone has different tastes, I just hate how this shit pretends like it’s anything except a subjective list of preferred things.