Socialist Norway (population: 5.7m) beats US (342m) to top Winter Olympics medal table

Stalin

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Socialism in action

Norway has once again topped the Winter Olympics medal table, surpassing countries with far larger populations.

The Scandinavian country won more gold medals (18) and more total medals (41) than the US, who came second in both categories (12 golds and 33 total medals). Norway’s 18 golds were the most by a country in Winter Olympics history, while their cross-country skiing hero Johannes Høsflot Klæbo accounted for six golds on his own, more than the all but seven other countries at this year’s Games.


The achievements of Norway, which has a population of about 5.7m, are all the more remarkable given that they outperformed winter-sports nations with far larger populations such as the US (342m), China (1.4bn), Germany (84m), Italy (59m) and Canada (40m). The Netherlands, which excels in speed skating, also punched above its weight, finishing with 10 golds – the same as host nation Italy – despite its relatively small population of around 18m.


Norway’s Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget, Johannes Høsflot Klæbo and Emil Iversen
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...-historic-record-six-gold-medals-winter-games
It was also a good Olympics for countries with modest winter sports traditions. Great Britain enjoyed its best ever medal haul at a Winter Olympics with three golds, a silver and a bronze, as did Australia (three golds, two silver and a bronze).

While the US finished in second place, the Americans’ 12 golds were the most at a Winter Olympics in the nation’s history.

Norway’s success is nothing new. The Norwegians have won the most golds at every Winter Olympics since 2014 (they tied with Germany in 2018). It also has world class athletes in other areas such as Erling Haaland and Ada Hegerberg (football), Casper Ruud (tennis), Viktor Hovland (golf), Jakob Ingebrigtsen (athletics) and Solfrid Koanda (weightlifting).

While the country’s climate and terrain play a part in its Winter Olympics success, other factors are at play. It is one of the wealthiest countries in the world per capita, while sports and exercise are a large part of many Norwegians’ lives.

Unlike countries such as the US, Norwegians put less emphasis on competition and specialisation in their youth sports – scores are not recorded in team sports matches featuring children under 12 – and more importance on fun. Norwegians believe this leads to fewer children becoming discouraged and quitting sports before they have time to develop their potential.

Norway’s Winter Olympics success is also concentrated in sports such as cross-country skiing, biathlon and ski jumping.

“We don’t do skeleton or bobsleigh because that costs too much money. We are a very rich country, but we believe in the socialist way of doing things. That success should be from working hard and being together,” Morten Aasen, a former Norwegian Olympian, said in 2018.

Geir Jordet, a professor at the Norwegian School of Sports Sciences in Oslo, told CNN Sports his country’s athletic success comes down to a simple formula: “Collaboration, communication and care.”


comrade stalin
 
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Socialism in action

Norway has once again topped the Winter Olympics medal table, surpassing countries with far larger populations.

The Scandinavian country won more gold medals (18) and more total medals (41) than the US, who came second in both categories (12 golds and 33 total medals). Norway’s 18 golds were the most by a country in Winter Olympics history, while their cross-country skiing hero Johannes Høsflot Klæbo accounted for six golds on his own, more than the all but seven other countries at this year’s Games.


The achievements of Norway, which has a population of about 5.7m, are all the more remarkable given that they outperformed winter-sports nations with far larger populations such as the US (342m), China (1.4bn), Germany (84m), Italy (59m) and Canada (40m). The Netherlands, which excels in speed skating, also punched above its weight, finishing with 10 golds – the same as host nation Italy – despite its relatively small population of around 18m.

Norway’s Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget, Johannes Høsflot Klæbo and Emil Iversen
Norway’s Klæbo seals historic sweep with record sixth gold of Winter Games
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...-historic-record-six-gold-medals-winter-games
It was also a good Olympics for countries with modest winter sports traditions. Great Britain enjoyed its best ever medal haul at a Winter Olympics with three golds, a silver and a bronze, as did Australia (three golds, two silver and a bronze).

While the US finished in second place, the Americans’ 12 golds were the most at a Winter Olympics in the nation’s history.

Norway’s success is nothing new. The Norwegians have won the most golds at every Winter Olympics since 2014 (they tied with Germany in 2018). It also has world class athletes in other areas such as Erling Haaland and Ada Hegerberg (football), Casper Ruud (tennis), Viktor Hovland (golf), Jakob Ingebrigtsen (athletics) and Solfrid Koanda (weightlifting).

While the country’s climate and terrain play a part in its Winter Olympics success, other factors are at play. It is one of the wealthiest countries in the world per capita, while sports and exercise are a large part of many Norwegians’ lives.

Unlike countries such as the US, Norwegians put less emphasis on competition and specialisation in their youth sports – scores are not recorded in team sports matches featuring children under 12 – and more importance on fun. Norwegians believe this leads to fewer children becoming discouraged and quitting sports before they have time to develop their potential.

Norway’s Winter Olympics success is also concentrated in sports such as cross-country skiing, biathlon and ski jumping.

“We don’t do skeleton or bobsleigh because that costs too much money. We are a very rich country, but we believe in the socialist way of doing things. That success should be from working hard and being together,” Morten Aasen, a former Norwegian Olympian, said in 2018.

Geir Jordet, a professor at the Norwegian School of Sports Sciences in Oslo, told CNN Sports his country’s athletic success comes down to a simple formula: “Collaboration, communication and care.”


comrade stalin
Norway has a natural advantage because of their cold climate, just as Asians have academic advantages because of their high IQs.
 
Norwegians are better at winter, Norway is entirely a chilly country, and of course, Norwegians enjoy a month of vacation every year, and have subsidized education and universal healthcare.
 
Norway manages its oil resources for the benefit of the Norwegian people and has no national debt. The US allows ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Shell, Valero and other Big Oil companies to loot our national resources and to run the country.
 
Norway manages its oil resources for the benefit of the Norwegian people and has no national debt. The US allows ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Shell, Valero and other Big Oil companies to loot our national resources and to run the country.
Your amateur take on foreign policy is irrational and nonsensical.
 
Your amateur take on foreign policy is irrational and nonsensical.
Shitshizpants' tariffs are irrational because they did not increase US manufacturing jobs, nor did they make for an equal trade balance, and of course, replacing the income tax, which is progressive, with tariffs, which is a regressive tax. The capitalist system already favors the rich over the middle and working classes, and substituting tariffs makes the system even more unfair.

Shitshizpants and you, who worship Shitshizpants, are the amateurs.
 
Shitshizpants' tariffs are irrational because they did not increase US manufacturing jobs, nor did they make for an equal trade balance, and of course, replacing the income tax, which is progressive, with tariffs, which is a regressive tax. The capitalist system already favors the rich over the middle and working classes, and substituting tariffs makes the system even more unfair.

Shitshizpants and you, who worship Shitshizpants, are the amateurs.
Democraps cannot balance budgets and know nothing about reasonable foreign trade policies.
 
No Republican administration has balanced a budget, either. Clinton managed to balance the budget once, No Republican since Calvin Coolidge.
A summary of the Obama years:


______________________


Brian M. Riedl is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Previously, he worked for six years as chief economist to Senator Rob Portman (R-OH) and as staff director of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Growth. Follow him on Twitter here.

$4.6 Trillion in Additional Federal Deficits

Upon taking office in January 2009, President Obama inherited a budget deficit that had soared from $161 billion in 2007 to a recession-slammed $1.186 trillion estimate for 2009. The January 2009 CBO baseline budget projection for 2009–19—which already incorporated the effects of the year-old recession in its projections—estimated that a strong economic recovery and the expiration of certain tax cuts would return the annual budget deficit to approximately $260 billion by 2012. In other words, the projections assumed that the high recessionary deficits would quickly fall back to earlier levels. Overall, CBO estimated that there would be $4.32 trillion in total budget deficits over the decade.

That is not what happened. Figure 1 shows that, as Obama left office, the 2009–19 budget deficits were now estimated to total $8.93 trillion—more than double the initial projections. Annual budget deficits remained above $1 trillion through 2012, fell to $438 billion by 2015, and have since begun rising once again. While current deficits of 3% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) are not historically atypical, they are significantly higher than the default baseline when Obama took office.

These deficits also exceeded the president’s own targets. A month after his inauguration, Obama pledged to “cut the deficit we inherited by half by the end of my first term in office.”[4] Instead, the inherited $1.186 trillion was pushed up to $1.413 trillion by 2009 stimulus legislation, and then remained over $1 trillion throughout the president’s first term (Figure 2).

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It was not until 2014 that the budget deficit fell to half the inherited level in nominal dollars (2013, if measuring by percentage of GDP).

Screen%20Shot%202018-10-24%20at%2010.33.03%20AM.png

Had the president and Congress simply stuck to CBO’s original budget baseline legislatively (even allowing for budget effects of the weak recovery), the deficit would have fallen well below $300 billion by 2013 and approached balance by 2018. Instead, expensive new policies slowed the deficit reduction, leading to $8.93 trillion in red ink rather than $4.32 trillion—which is $4.6 trillion in additional deficits. Readers can determine which new costs were justified, and which were not.

 
your data is cheery picked from one of the myriads of right-wing "think" tanks

..the manhattan institute was part founded by right-wing arsehole william casey who supplied arms to iran...

a very bad choice..

i doubt if this cooked data survives any decent analysis




what about a socialist country beating the gawd almighty usa into a cocked hat...you know...the topic

comrade stalin
moscow
 
Werbung:
your data is cheery picked from one of the myriads of right-wing "think" tanks

..the manhattan institute was part founded by right-wing arsehole william casey who supplied arms to iran...

a very bad choice..

i doubt if this cooked data survives any decent analysis




what about a socialist country beating the gawd almighty usa into a cocked hat...you know...the topic

comrade stalin
moscow
Criticizing a report is a far cry from refuting a report.
 
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