Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Good point.

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Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Good point.
Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Wage Slave wrote:Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Oh wait. Did you mean that by the definition of median income nearly half of the sample live on less than the median income? That's of course true but it isn't what the statement says at all. Hopefully, the number of people living on less than half the median income would be much lower than 25%. Mathematically speaking it could easily be zero.
In the UK, the working definition of poverty insofar as income is concerned, is below 60% of median household income.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Salty wrote:... Nearly half of South Koreans aged 65 and older live on less than half the national median income,...
This would be true for most countries.... and almost, by definition.
Oh wait. Did you mean that by the definition of median income nearly half of the sample live on less than the median income? That's of course true but it isn't what the statement says at all. Hopefully, the number of people living on less than half the median income would be much lower than 25%. Mathematically speaking it could easily be zero.
In the UK, the working definition of poverty insofar as income is concerned, is below 60% of median household income.
Yeah, looks like Salty and I both misread that. They should have used half as many halfs in that sentence.
kurogane wrote:I think we should call it a 50/50 split, but I can't think of how you would put that in words.................![]()
Salty wrote:kurogane wrote:I think we should call it a 50/50 split, but I can't think of how you would put that in words.................![]()
Either way, I fear I am exposed as a halfwit.... Good that I can comfortably live on double the median income....
Coligny wrote:You are killing me... Can we stop the torture now ?
Hummmmmm po-tay-toe...
Coligny wrote:Where can I buy so of them korean seks slave ? I just repainted the dungeon room and need new slaves...
Coligny wrote:I don't want the starving one, i want the cosmeticamatically enhanced slutz...
Takechanpoo wrote:... a tradition to ruthlessly abandon or sell their children as a whore or an adopted child(i.e. a slave), ...
Salty wrote:Also, 6 of 12 homes in my neighborhood share the same surname - yet are not related by blood. All of them owned by people whose fathers, or they themselves - were adopted by a farmer in one of these homes right after the war, so essentially slaves for high labor rice farming.
So it wasn`t just in Korea that poverty pushed women into prostitution and both girls and boys into slavery.
kurogane wrote:It seems a little unfair to confuse him with facts, but yeah to all that. The whole tenant farmer system was seriously fucked up mediaeval shit that lasted until 1947, at which point the average life span of a Japanese woman was <<<<40. I almost laughed when I read the words for tithe and corvee in post-Meiji social histories; then I cried instead.
matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
Mike Oxlong wrote:matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
In a discussion with a local lemur, it seems many ladies of breeding age seem to have the goal of having a child, that is of giving birth. If I understand correctly, said goal does not extend to raising a child. Once they pop one out, it's mission accomplished, back to their accustomed lifestyle.
matsuki wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
In a discussion with a local lemur, it seems many ladies of breeding age seem to have the goal of having a child, that is of giving birth. If I understand correctly, said goal does not extend to raising a child. Once they pop one out, it's mission accomplished, back to their accustomed lifestyle.
The whole zangyo/isogashii work culture isn't exactly producing the most well rounded families either. Whether the parent is just a pushover or a workaholic, I've heard soo many unbelievable stories where work sekinin had priority over kids, the wife in a hospital, etc.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:matsuki wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
In a discussion with a local lemur, it seems many ladies of breeding age seem to have the goal of having a child, that is of giving birth. If I understand correctly, said goal does not extend to raising a child. Once they pop one out, it's mission accomplished, back to their accustomed lifestyle.
The whole zangyo/isogashii work culture isn't exactly producing the most well rounded families either. Whether the parent is just a pushover or a workaholic, I've heard soo many unbelievable stories where work sekinin had priority over kids, the wife in a hospital, etc.
But hasn't is been that way forever?
Mike Oxlong wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:matsuki wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
In a discussion with a local lemur, it seems many ladies of breeding age seem to have the goal of having a child, that is of giving birth. If I understand correctly, said goal does not extend to raising a child. Once they pop one out, it's mission accomplished, back to their accustomed lifestyle.
The whole zangyo/isogashii work culture isn't exactly producing the most well rounded families either. Whether the parent is just a pushover or a workaholic, I've heard soo many unbelievable stories where work sekinin had priority over kids, the wife in a hospital, etc.
But hasn't is been that way forever?
I don't think the "mom ain't got no time for kids / let tv & day care raise them" thing has been around forever. Seems a more recent development.
The whole zangyo/isogashii work culture isn't exactly producing the most well rounded families either. Whether the parent is just a pushover or a workaholic, I've heard soo many unbelievable stories where work sekinin had priority over kids, the wife in a hospital, etc.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:matsuki wrote:Mike Oxlong wrote:matsuki wrote:I'm more disgusted with 2015 Japan and the parents who "ain't got no time fo no kizzu." Not to mention, daddy issues are far from rare here...
In a discussion with a local lemur, it seems many ladies of breeding age seem to have the goal of having a child, that is of giving birth. If I understand correctly, said goal does not extend to raising a child. Once they pop one out, it's mission accomplished, back to their accustomed lifestyle.
The whole zangyo/isogashii work culture isn't exactly producing the most well rounded families either. Whether the parent is just a pushover or a workaholic, I've heard soo many unbelievable stories where work sekinin had priority over kids, the wife in a hospital, etc.
But hasn't is been that way forever?
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