This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.

The Happiest Cities in the USA

Pivotfarm's picture




 

How can you measure happiness? The mental or emotional state, the smiley well-being feeling that is so individual and yet we measure happiness, we study it, we analyze it, we even celebrate it on March 20th every year, but what is it?

Wouldn’t it be worth looking at the cities in the USA that are considered to be the happiest places in the country and seeing what they are doing right to get the smiles on their faces? What is it that certain cities have that makes the inhabitants happy and is there a link with money and economic prosperity. The old adage goes that money can’t make you happy, but perhaps people believe that if you have it, then it can buy you time. You can’t buy happiness, or at least it can only be bought temporarily. But, the way we spend our time can certainly make us happy. The way we spend our time in the workplace, for instance can have a great impact on our well-being. Making sure that employees are happy can only have a positive effect on the competitiveness of the company and as such provide greater effort from the people that are being rewarded with that feeling because of the environment in which they work.

The same thing goes for the places where we live. Well-being is hot property today. You can buy your house, but can you buy the happiness of the city in which you live? Where are the happiest places to live in the USA today?

The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index is the measurement published annually of the well-being of Americans based on interviews that are carried out over a period of two months (December and January). There are five metrics that are taken into consideration, which are:

  1. Purpose: Liking what you do each day and being motivated to achieve goals.
  2. Social: Having supportive relationships and love in your life.
  3. Financial: Managing your economic life to reduce stress and increase security.
  4. Community: Liking where you live, feeling safe and having pride in your community.
  5. Physical: Having good health and enough energy to get things done daily.

Happiest Cities in the USA

10. Winston-Salem, NC

9. Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV

8. San-José-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA

7. Provo-Orem, UT

6. Austin-Round Rock, TX

5. El Paso, TX

4. Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Venture, CA

3. Raleigh, NC

2. Urban Honolulu, HI

1. North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, FL

This community has a ranking of 11 for Purpose, meaning that the majority of people can actually see a goal and an objective in the accomplishment of their daily routines and work activities. They have a score of 4, meaning that 96% of the population feels that they have supportive family members and that they feel loved. Just 2% do not feel that they are able to manage financially. 12% of the population does not have pride in the community meaning that 88% do feel that sense of belonging and pride, accompanied with the feeling of safety. The vast majority of the community feels that they have the energy to accomplish daily tasks (with the score of 2, meaning that 98% of the residents feel this way).

The people that live in the communities ranked above are 12% more likely to learn interesting and new things in their daily lives than those that are unhappy. They are 6% more likely to get positive energy from those that surround them than those that are in the saddest communities and they are 16% less likely to worry about where the money is coming from.

Saddest Cities in the USA

Just out of curiosity, where would you probably not like to live because the city comes out as being the saddest in the list of the research carried out? Look at the poverty rate in half of the top ten cities that are the most miserable in the country. They all have poverty rates that are higher than the national average (15.8%). The median household income in all but two of the top ten cities that are the most miserable is also below the national average. Money might not get you happiness, but it certainly gets you security and anyhow, people’s perception of happiness comes from money these days. It’s not important to know if it’s true, it’s important to know if you perceive it as being true. The old craggy-wrinkled granny still uses the beauty cream even though it doesn’t work anymore, it’s the perception that she has of it that makes her feel better. She doesn’t have to really see the effect; she just has to perceive it in her mind. People in these cities, however, no longer have the wrinkle cream to magic away their sadness:

10. Cincinnati, OH

The scores here stood at 73 for Purpose, 85 for Social, 53 for Financial, 77 for Community and 86 for Physical. The poverty rate stands at 14.5% and the unemployment rate at 7.2%. There are 285.2 violent crimes per 100, 000 in this city. Since the Gallup Index started in 2008, this community has systematically ranked in the top ten. Between 2010 and 2014 the city had one of the lowest growth rates of population in the country, standing at 1.5%.

9. Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI

The scores here stood at 87 for Purpose, 86 for Social, 70 for Financial, 97 for Community and 81 for Physical. The poverty rate stands at 16.9% and the unemployment rate hot 10% in 2013/2014. In 2009 it was over 17%. There are 569.6 violent crimes per 100, 000 in this community and this is one of the highest levels across the country. 17.5% of residents use food stamps to live on. Michigan is the 9th most miserable state in the USA also.

8. Columbus, OH

The scores here stood at 94, 96, 80, 69 and 91 respectively for the 5 criteria. The poverty rate in this community stands at 14.8% and the unemployment rate currently stands at just 4.4%, which is surprising since the residents do not perceive themselves to be happy. There is an adult obesity rate that works out to over 30% of the population in this community. Nearly 15% of the residents have to resort to using food stamps to live. The national average is nearer 13% today.

7. Scranton-Wilkes-Barre-Hazleton, PA

This community is the 7th unhappiest in the country with scores ranging from 51 to 98 for the five elements. The poverty rate in this community stands at 15.5% and the adult obesity rate is at nearly 30%. There are over 232 crimes that are considered to be violent for every 100, 000 registered. The typical household income stands at $45, 333 per annum. Roughly 20% of the population has an alcohol-related addiction.

6. Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL

This community has one off the highest scores for Physical well-being, standing at 94, meaning that it is the least likely community to have enough energy to do what needs to be done on a daily basis. Poverty rates here stand at 16.2% and the unemployment rate is currently 5.9%. There are 392.7 violent crimes per 100, 000 that take place. Nearly 20% of those that are resident here do not possess health cover or health insurance and nearly a quarter of the residents smoke. Over 25% of the children there were considered to be living in poverty and as such is one of the highest figures nationwide.

5. Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson, IN

This community has scores ranging from 67 to 99, making it the fifth worst community to live in nationwide and part of the lowest quintile of the study. The poverty rate here stands at more than 15% and the obesity rate is at 30.7%.

4. Dayton, OH.

The poverty rate stands at 16.4% and the adult obesity rate stands at nearly 30% also. There are more than 270 violent crimes per hundred thousand crimes recorded. Between 2010 and 2014, the population of this community only grew by 0.1%. 40% of households are made up of one-parent families. It has a figure of 98 for Physical meaning that just 2% of the population believes that they have enough energy to get their daily tasks done.

3. Knoxville, TN

This community has a poverty rate of 17.5% and an obesity rate that stands at over 30%. The national median household income stands at $52, 250, while the median income here is only at $45,051. All people interviewed for the study reported not having enough energy to complete their daily tasks or ill health that prevented them from doing so. Purpose only scored 98, meaning that people do not consider at all that they have a purpose in life or a goal to achieve.

2. Toledo, OH

The poverty rate stands at 19.5% and there are 530.3 violent crimes per hundred thousand crimes reported. 20% of residents here lived in poverty in 2013 and the median income stood at $42, 792. Nobody has a feeling of pride for the community and nobody feels safe and secure living in this community (score of 100).

1. Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA

This is the community with the lowest feeling of well-being in the country. It scores 100 for both Purpose and Social aspects and 99 for Community. The poverty rate stands at over 17% and obesity at over 31%. The community saw a reduction in its community residents when the population shrank by 2.1%, which was one of the largest falls in population in 2014 for a US community.

The people on the sad list are less likely to be proud of the community that they live in. People in the happy list are 18% more likely to feel a sense of pride about their communities.

 

International Happiness

So what is happiness? A good life? Don’t forget Thomas Jefferson’s universal right of the “pursuit of happiness” in 1776 in the United States Declaration of Independence. Why are we so set on finding out whether we are happy or not? Jefferson took the idea of the pursuit of happiness and its ability to create a free society, and a democracy, from John Lo>“The necessity of pursuing happiness [is] the foundation of liberty.  As therefore the highest perfection of intellectual nature lies in a careful and constant pursuit of true and solid happiness; so the care of ourselves, that we mistake not imaginary for real happiness, is the necessary foundation of our liberty. The stronger ties we have to an unalterable pursuit of happiness in general, which is our greatest good, and which, as such, our desires always follow, the more are we free from any necessary determination of our will to any particular action…”. 

For Locke and for Jefferson, the pursuit of happiness meant freedom. It meant not merely the pursuit of pleasure and property, self-interest and the solid pleasures in society, but the freedom to be able to decide. How far do we remember that goal that was the definition of happiness in the beginning?

Perhaps sometimes some that govern us have forgotten that the universal right to happiness should still exist as the right of every citizen in this country and not just the chosen few. If we look further afield in the international rankings of where we would be happiest? According to the World Happiness Report published by the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, edited by the University of British Columbia and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, then we would have to go to one of these top countries today. Who’s ready to move there?

 On a scale of 0 to 10 there are six categories according to the research that are taken into account when looking at happiness levels in different countries. They are:

  1. Real GDP per capita
  2. Healthy life expectancy
  3. Counting on someone
  4. Perceived freedom of choices in life
  5. Freedom from corruption
  6. Generosity

2015 International Happiness Rankings

  1. Switzerland                        7.587
  2. Iceland                                 7.561
  3. Denmark                             7.527
  4. Norway                                7.522
  5. Canada                                 7.427
  6. Finland                                 7.406
  7. Netherlands                      7.389
  8. Sweden                               7.378
  9. New Zealand                     7.364
  10. Australia                              7.350

The United States comes in only at 17th position with a score of 7.082 and the United Kingdom is in 22nd position with a ranking of 6.883.

Comparing cross-culturally the measurement of someone’s perceived happiness is not easy at all. Happiness by definition is subjective. Naturally, there are some elements that are purely objective such as life expectancy and GDP growth. But, the perceived freedom of choices is hard to measure from one country to another as is the freedom from corruption.  Corruption can only be measured when we truly see the transparency of society and when we know everything that is taking place. Money can only buy you happiness when it is a means of providing subsistence. However, studies show that once we go beyond subsistence money generates very little happiness in the spender. This is known as the Easterlin paradox. High earners have already been shown to have greater life satisfaction (Kahneman and Deaton, 2010) in their personal opinion, but they emotional well-being on a daily basis is not affected by the growth in salary beyond a salary of $75, 000 per annum.

But, Spectrum’s Millionaire’s Corner had research carried out that showed: “Happiness rises steadily with net worth, according to our results. Less than one-fourth of investors with a net worth of less than $100,000 (not including primary residence) rated their happiness as a nine or a ten. Compare that to 44 percent for Millionaires with a net worth of $5 million or more.” That’s not surprising however coming from the Millionaire’s Corner, is it?

Many have already shown that happiness doesn’t come from money. But, few have actually concentrated on the fact that money can certainly make you feel less sad. But, recently in 2015 findings were published that showed that there really is a relationship between feeling less sad and having more money. The findings were made public by Kostadin Kushlev and reported in an article entitled ‘Higher Income Is Associated with Less Daily Sadness but not More Daily Happiness’. The wealthier feel perhaps not happier, but they certainly feel less sad and perceive that they have a better life once they have money.

What would make you perceive greater happiness? 

 

- advertisements -

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Thu, 06/11/2015 - 07:35 | 6185746 lisacolnett
lisacolnett's picture

http://www.doctorshealthpress.com/food-and-nutrition-articles/osha-root

Today, the Osha root is still recognized for its antiviral properties. It is still used when early symptoms of the flu or the common cold are felt—mainly when constant coughing or sneezing take place.

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 15:17 | 6167523 More Ammo
More Ammo's picture

El Paso, TX? Must be from the drugs coming accross the border... Is high and happy the same thing?

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 14:17 | 6167349 tangent
tangent's picture

I noticed that a lot of those places are really dorky. So, I made a top 10 dorkiest countries list off the top of my head:

1. Sweden
2. Netherlands
3. Norway
3. Peru (tie)
4. Finland
5. Canada
6. Australia
7. Albania
8. Romania
9. Italy
10. New Zealand

Why does this look like the top 10 happiest places list?

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 13:20 | 6167162 general ambivalent
general ambivalent's picture

Tells you all you need to know:

"Perceived freedom of choices in life"

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 12:56 | 6167073 q99x2
q99x2's picture

Dude thousand oaks sucks.

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 13:18 | 6167153 OneTinTrooper
OneTinTrooper's picture

Agreed.  How the fuck could Ventura/Oxnard beat out Encinitas/Del Mar?

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 12:40 | 6167014 Parsecs Taxi
Parsecs Taxi's picture

Happiness is for fags and commies.
Happiness is GAY.

Fri, 06/05/2015 - 12:20 | 6166947 Monty Burns
Monty Burns's picture

"Can you measure happiness?"

Course you can. Absence of vibrants.

  • Switzerland                        7.587
  • Iceland                                 7.561
  • Denmark                             7.527
  • Norway                                7.522
  • Canada                                 7.427
  • Finland                                 7.406
  • Netherlands                      7.389
  • Sweden                               7.378
  • New Zealand                     7.364
  • Australia                              7.350
  • Fri, 06/05/2015 - 13:34 | 6167208 general ambivalent
    general ambivalent's picture

    To be fair, white people in these 'Perceived Happiness' nations are no better than the 'vibrants'. How is the distant SSRI plastic-faced man with fake boobs any better than the black guy in orange jumpers and a constant cool slur (even without the drugs)?

    He's not. Almost all culture has been destroyed in these Western nations, and that's why they need a Bureaucratic Happiness Index to ensure the idiots that things really are great, 'Just look at the numbers proving it.'

    White people should take their identities back. But these nations are hellholes in which white people are just as much an embarrassment to the human race as any other colour.

    And several of these countries are more multicultural than America anyways.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:49 | 6166847 One_Two_Trade
    One_Two_Trade's picture

    Where's Disney Land? I always thought it's the happiest place on earth!

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 13:15 | 6167139 OneTinTrooper
    OneTinTrooper's picture

    Disneyland WAS the happiest place on earth.  It is now the most crowded place on earth.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 14:02 | 6167294 General Decline
    General Decline's picture

    Happiest place on earth for peds maybe

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:14 | 6166732 lamont cranston
    lamont cranston's picture

    Everyone in the south knows why Knoxville has no "purpose" or "energy to get things done". It's been 10 years since they beat Alabama in football ;-). 

    While heading back home from Chattanooga, I split up my trip there yesterday afternoon with a delightful BBQ lunch at Calhoun's down on the TN river & several St Louis Soda Pops. 

    Raleigh??? There's a city with NO SOUL, too many damn yankes & CA transplants. And, having grown up in there, I can't believe Jackson MS didn't make the Worst List. 

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:31 | 6166794 Dull Care
    Dull Care's picture

    Enjoy it while it lasts. I suspect the Vols are going to get Alabama this year.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:11 | 6166719 jay28elle
    jay28elle's picture

    So, I'm surprised at Cincinnati's ranking.  I would have thought it would be ranked lower on the list - like maybe 5th worse or so.  Poverty is closer to 25%, and violence as measured by all reasonable means including homicides and crimes committed with guns this year stand way ahead of all previously recorded years.  Including the period most residents feel was the worse of times in Cinci, the riots of the early 2000's.  

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 12:54 | 6167033 Bunghole
    Bunghole's picture

    Another pointless study, probably funded by Goobermint $$$.

    I'm sure the Cincy numbers are skewed not to include Hyde Park, Terrace Park, Indian Hill, Mariemont, Maderia, Montgomery, Blue Ash and the likes and only included the neighborhoods which have Section 8 housing and millenial hipsters.  Cant include those 6 figure income areas when you have a predetermined outcome.

    Do Cincy stats include Butler, Clermont and Warren counties?  Union, KY?

    Bet they dont.

    I'll be watching St X. and Mariemont both play in the state lacrosse finals tomorrow.  You know lacrosse?  That sport of unhappy, desolute, crime ridden areas.

     

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 10:44 | 6166629 Eahudimac
    Eahudimac's picture

    The higher the brewpup to population ratio, the happier. 

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 10:37 | 6166593 Sanity Bear
    Sanity Bear's picture

    If DC is the #9 "happiest city" then one or more of the following is true:

     

    - the whole fucking country is horribly miserable

    - the methodology for determining what a happy city is is a joke

     

    DC is not a happy place AT ALL which is why it is perpetually a national leader in murder rate.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 14:42 | 6167408 graftvshost
    graftvshost's picture

    The statistics were doubly revised...

    Sun, 06/07/2015 - 02:00 | 6170972 boogerbently
    boogerbently's picture

    If I got to make all the rules I'd be pretty F'n happy, too !

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 10:13 | 6166514 Comte d'herblay
    Comte d'herblay's picture

    Happiness, like sex, is vastly overrated.  First of all, happiness is not a steady state. It fluctuates just like radon gas, sexual appetite, hunger, and hillary rodman's political stance on any topic. 

    Switzerland can only be a 'happy place' for indigent Swiss.  For everyone else, not Swiss, your life there will be a total nightmare. We checked it out thoroughly when my GF was offered a position with a big Pharma company in Basel, and could not believe the police state that Switzerland is.  You as an immigrant cannot own a gun but ALL Swiss citizens can.

    The Swiss are probably the most stuck up, snooty, my shit don't stink, and holier than thou people in all of Europe. They can go fuck themselves. 

    The price for rentals and buying a house?  You might be happy if you are Carlos Slim to be able to afford more than a pup tent. Try and buy a piece of property.  This list is automatically flawed when the numero uno place is Switzerland.

     

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 15:40 | 6167595 RafterManFMJ
    RafterManFMJ's picture

    Amen.

    Back when I was an up-and-comer (HA! Didn't work out) I was researching expatriation and Switzerland was a possibility - but, wow! Second what you said. One thing that stuck in my head was seperate laundry facilities for Swiss and the dreaded "Others."

    Fuck the Swiss.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 09:34 | 6166374 Mike Honcho
    Mike Honcho's picture

    I've lived in places on both lists and am a tad surprised.  Then again, Gallup can find a 55% approval rating for any politician in question.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 09:13 | 6166294 Fahque Imuhnutjahb
    Fahque Imuhnutjahb's picture

    Wayward Pines, Idaho is a modern day Shangri-La!!

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 07:41 | 6165996 NoWayJose
    NoWayJose's picture

    How is DC in the happy category? (And did you notice WV at the end?). They obviously cherry-picked who they talked to - likely the homeless addicts lying in the streets of DC had turned down the volume on their Obamaphones so they wouldn't get shot. And WV is the poster child for obesity and poverty (EPA shutting down coal). Of course, life is grand in the government-worker burbs of DC, with bigtme salaries and a chance to find your purpose in life - even if that purpose is creating las and regulations that spy on people, raise taxes, reward non-working, save the planet, stop evil business, and double seasonally adjust payroll numbers!

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 10:29 | 6166564 bbq on whitehou...
    bbq on whitehouse lawn's picture

    Government is growing and doing well so all government employees are happy. Cities that have high government spending report they are happy.
    Those cities that were once economic producers are dead and have stayed dead since production has been moved overseas. Also low government spending cities report that their government workers are less happy.

    This is a government report on the happyness of their government employees. Its important to have such reports to keep track of the liklyhood of inserection.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 07:02 | 6165928 Jack Daniels Esq
    Jack Daniels Esq's picture

    Phuket, Thailand y'all - Land of Smiles - no USG allowed, ever

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 06:57 | 6165922 p00k1e
    p00k1e's picture

    The happiest U.S. cities are those without U.S. military running drills in them this weekend.    

     

     

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 04:35 | 6165827 WTFUD
    WTFUD's picture

    No coincidence then in the International Rankings that you have the Creme-de-la-creme of SHEEP with the most vile and obnoxious USSofA/UK captured Gubbermints. WANKERS.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 01:13 | 6165689 Freedumb
    Freedumb's picture

    "Money can't buy you happiness, but it can solve most of the problems that make you unhappy", forget the author to attribute the quote to but find it an apt statement.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 00:26 | 6165636 Antifaschistische
    Antifaschistische's picture

    Looks to me like there is a strong correlation to being blonde and happy....can the saying really be true!!

    Switzerland   Iceland      Denmark   Norway  Canada  Finland  Sweden New Zealand    Australia    

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 00:22 | 6165629 knavechild
    knavechild's picture

    Are these the cities that don't know Fukushima is melting down?

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 00:13 | 6165611 Salah
    Salah's picture

    EL PASO ???  have these clowns been to E/P? 

    I tell ya who's 'happy'...people living cheaply in a temperate climate, surrounded by others of the same genetic/cultural make-up and socio-economic lifestyle (No, not Appalachia), who can grow or obtain cheaply a variety of locally sourced foodstuffs, competent basic services, hunt & fish unpolluted game, have access to better broadband, but not necessarily superhighways for transport.  Temperate climate is the key, with a community of similar folk 2nd, and energy/food-independence 3rd.  South-central Texas up thru central Kansas, NE Tennessee--Western NC/SC, Central Kentucky south to Huntsville, Amarillo to Midland TX, central western NM--central eastern AZ, Tulsa-Fayetteville-Springfield triangle, Eugene-Medford-Redding, far southern tip of coastal Texas (food-energy cornucopia & warm weather). 

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:02 | 6166694 Normalcy Bias
    Normalcy Bias's picture

    Take Midland, TX off of your list. Been there, done that. The cost of living is brutal and there's little to do there other than work. The 'Wagner' is sweet, though!

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 02:46 | 6165766 SubjectivObject
    SubjectivObject's picture

    They threw El Paso in there just to gauge if anyone was paying attention.

    Itsa barren, treeless desert scape wherein all the inaesthetic detritus of modern civilication cannot be hidden by the greenery.  If you take the train and look in the back yards, you realize itsan above ground land fill.  Has anyone noticed there's a refinery in town?  Must be something in the air that makes everybody so haaaaaaapeeeeeeeey

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 01:19 | 6165701 Freedumb
    Freedumb's picture

    I think you can be as happy in a cold climate but maybe those cold climate dwellers don't express it as outwardly to yield a result in this sort of survey. Personally living in any of those hot places you mentioned sounds like a nightmare to me, purely on a weather basis. I wish it never went over 70.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 00:47 | 6165666 OneTinTrooper
    OneTinTrooper's picture

    There is a very limited number of asian women in those places.  Ya all are free to inbreed your genetic make-up.  But I'll find my happiness elsewhere. 

    Thu, 06/04/2015 - 23:55 | 6165576 Kyddyl
    Kyddyl's picture

    Orem, Provo Utah? Only if you're a "good" Mormon, Enjoy scads of kids, (the area has a birthrate similar to Bangladesh),you can keep up with the plastic surgery/prescription drug habit, love having the NSA right down the road, love polluted air, tiny home lots with enormous homes and all sorts of double standards...have a wonderful life. We used to have property south of there and just going through the area is terrible, squashed between rugged mountains and lake the single "freeway" through the area will make Oxnard look like Paradise.

    Thu, 06/04/2015 - 23:00 | 6165447 tarabel
    tarabel's picture

     

     

    Everybody move to Oxnard and be happy.

    It will especially increase the happiness of despairing Oxnard real estate agents.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 12:57 | 6167079 Bunghole
    Bunghole's picture

    Driving past Oxnard from LAX to Santa Barbara has to be the most depressing part of that drive.

    What a turd town.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 09:17 | 6166318 semperfi
    semperfi's picture

    Is the water situation starting to hit real-estate there?   (I grew up in LA area)

    Thu, 06/04/2015 - 22:46 | 6165418 boogerbently
    boogerbently's picture

    Soooo,

    The colder the better ?

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 02:55 | 6165774 John_Coltrane
    John_Coltrane's picture

    Colder yes, and more importantly whiter and more culturally homogeneous (and I'm not just talking about all the  snow and ice!)  I'm guessing if you remove certainer darker elements of US society (nice pun, eh?) our happiness (and IQ) index would move up quite a bit from #17 while our crime index would go way down.

    We thought slavery was free labor but boy did it turn out to be expensive!

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 11:37 | 6166808 Loucleve
    Loucleve's picture

    unfortunately, the plan is to replace homogenous with heterogenous.  its happening globally, and its no accident.

    divide and conquer.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 08:27 | 6166114 Stuck on Zero
    Stuck on Zero's picture

    How does North Korea rate?

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 13:06 | 6167102 Bunghole
    Bunghole's picture

    Funny how the cities on the bottom of the list are generally colder climate cities and the surveying was done in December and January.

    I wonder what a polling in May and June would do to this list?

    Gallup can lick the clumped toilet paper off the hairs on my ass.

    Fri, 06/05/2015 - 15:31 | 6167565 RafterManFMJ
    RafterManFMJ's picture

    Google bidet.

    Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!