In Örebro, every downtown shop was rented and many were selling magnificent fashion. There was one fashion boutique after another. Imagine the best brands: Hugo Boss, Ralph Lauren, Burberry, etc. all being on offer in the downtown of an American manufacturing town. I can't. I could only assume the wealth hadn't 'trickled up' enough to move out-of-town.
Surely I would find poverty in the public library.
Where are the homeless people
trying to stay warm?
They weren't sitting in the cafe
all day either
Wait...nope just a sculpture.
I went into the public library of Örebro to count how many homeless people I could see. If it matched a downtown library of an American manufacturing city on an equally frosty day, I would estimate in advance, that there would be about 20 homeless people. I couldn't find one. NOT ONE! I went through every nook and cranny of that library too from the top floor to the basement.I couldn't take my eyes off of Swedish old people over the age of 70. I wish I had thought to take pictures. Swedish old people are aging beautifully. I saw person after person looking 10 to 15 years younger than their actual age. The Swedish universal health care system meant that the entire population was better cared for their whole life and they must have had the faces and bodies and teeth and health they deserved. Not only did the old folks look great they were dressed fashionably in stylish clothes. As I was chatting up one older gentleman in Sweden who told me he was seventy, he said with a mischievous twinkle "yes, but if I start speaking French, I'm a mere 60!"
Human beings aren't the only part of Sweden that looks great. So does the land. In Turkey, every ounce of topsoil and all the trees are gone from my neck of the woods - quite understandable given 8,000 years of continuous civilization. In Sweden, the forests went on for miles and miles and the air and water were very clean. Swedes say they are very lucky because they didn't pay the price other European countries did during WWII, but they aren't giving themselves enough credit for being incredible stewards of the environment.
When I would compliment Swedes on their nation, I would hear "oh, but we have terrible problems with income inequality [the link shows they really don't, at least compared to everyone else, Swedes must be comparing internally]. Plus, it gets dark too early in the day and it is cold." Now would a statement like that about income inequality come out of an American's mouth? I don't think we would even think such a thought. Yet, our nation has more income equality than at any time since 1928.
I didn't actually get to see this but a friend in Stockholm told me there was an extensive series of tunnels underneath the City of Stockholm so that no neighborhood had to have a multi-lane highway going through it. Just the idea of being willing to spend tax money on underground highways so as to not impose that on anyone (in America, above-ground multi-lane highways would get imposed on poor neighborhoods) stunned me.
Visiting Sweden I couldn't help but think of American intellectual Cornell West. He has a phrase for our current American experience: "we have become well-adjusted to injustice." If Sweden represents the socialism that is so often derided back home in America, sign me up!
Related posts:
A Week in Sweden
There is No Need to Save Face in Sweden
Daydreaming at Stockholm City Hall
Visiting the Nobel Museum
The Swedish Tourist Attraction that Didn't Attract Me