Wednesday, August 1, 2018

"No man can tell the truth", strictly for intellectuals! Ok, stop the emails, dip shits aren't supposed to get it.

 Was chatting with a friend and had to let him know, "No man tells the truth, not even me! We tell what we have "perceived". 



Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Warning Signs of Sex Addiction in Men

 If you have no dick discipline you're really not a man, you're a "male type".


Although most people know sex addiction exists, many don’t know exactly what it means. Sexual addiction refers to sexual behavior that has become compulsive – no longer just for the sake of pleasure itself – and leads to negative repercussions that seriously disrupt a person’s relationships and work. While sex addiction often involves sexual contact with one or several people, people might be considered addicted because of the extreme use of pornography, internet channels like chat rooms, or sexting with strangers. For example, if a man starts to view pornography for hours a day, he begins to believe that porn truly represents the way real people make love. As his expectations soar, he finds himself losing interest in the wife whom he had previously found sexually alluring. His quest for sexual excitement makes work and family seem dull by comparison.
To be clear, sex addiction is not exclusively a man’s problem. A small percentage of women also experience sexually compulsive behavior. Women typically experience sex addiction a bit differently than men, so for this post, we’ll focus only on men.
Here are 5 behaviors that can indicate sex addiction in men:
  • Loss of interest in current sexual partner. When a male suddenly stops wanting sex, it can deeply disturb the relationship. Certainly each partner has differing levels of desire, and the struggle to align those can be difficult. But a complete withdrawal from the sexual relationship for an extended period can be a warning sign that his sexual energy is going in a different direction.
  • Loss of sexual functioning. In my practice, many young male patients who entered therapy to address erectile dysfunction and delayed ejaculation during intercourse are experiencing those issues because of their pornography habits. When a man views many erotic images before reaching climax, his dopamine rises to an excitement level that cannot be matched in sex with his partner. Essentially, he starts to condition his body to need these high levels of arousal, and his ability to function with a partner may decline.
  • A large amount of time spent on sexual activities. When a man’s pornography habit begins to take up large amounts of time, consuming sleep or working hours, it’s likely he has a compulsion. The behavior could be rooted in something other than sex addiction – he could be compensating for depression, for example. Whatever the reason, at this stage he needs help.
  • He neglects responsibilities. If his time involved in sexual activity interrupts relationships with spouse and family or work, sexual behavior has likely become compulsion. And if he takes risks that would alert his employer’s HR department (flirting with colleagues, masturbation at work, view of pornography on work servers), the danger of the compulsion has increased to jeopardize his livelihood.
  • An escalation of sexual danger. While I don’t believe pornography is like a “gateway drug”, if a man senses that his use of porn is out of control, he needs therapy. When the need for sexual thrills has escalated from a dirty book, to a porn habit, to live chat rooms, to stranger pick-ups, escorts and/or prostitutes, the level of his risk-taking has exceeded his control. Any behavior considered illegal – exposure, peeping, up-skirting, child pornography, or paid-for sex warrants immediate action. Break the denial – these activities are not about sex.
What to do about this? If any of these signs are present it is time to consult a sex therapist or a psychiatrist and potentially consider inpatient treatment.
You can find Laurie Watson at AwakeningsCenter.org.

The U.S. is the most obese nation in the world, just ahead of Mexico

*Why won't I date in America? Because most are H U G E + broke.


Mirror mirror on the wall, who’s the fattest country in the world? Ouch.
The obesity rate for American adults (aged 15 and over) came in at a whopping 38.2%, which puts the birthplace of the hamburger and the Cronut at the top of the heftiest-nations-in-the-world rankings, according to an updated survey from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Running at a not-too-close second is border pal Mexico, with 32.4% of population considered obese, followed by New Zealand, Hungary and Australia (the U.K. comes in at No. 6). The skinniest nations are Japan, with a tiny 3.7% of the population tipping the scales, followed by India, Korea, Indonesia and China. And across much of Europe, less than 20% of the population can be considered obese, according to the survey that was released Thursday.
Here’s a visual on those statistics:

In most countries, the OECD has found that women are more obese than men, though obesity rates for the male population are growing rapidly. Education is a determinant as the organization found that less schooling makes a woman two to three times more likely to be overweight than the more educated in about half of the eight countries for which the data was available:

That's enough for me > https://tinyurl.com/ybt9aufv

America is a cruel, self-destructive oligarchy


Ihaven’t touched this blog in nearly a month. I suppose that’s due in no small measure to my general state of disillusionment with the direction of the country into which I was born and still hold great affection. Frankly, it’s become hard for me to put words to it, on this site or anywhere else.
Following the widely publicized (but soon-to-be-forgotten) episode several weeks ago in which a ticketed and boarded Asian passenger was violently dragged off of a United flight because he refused to give up his (paid-for) seat for a group of airline employees, this viral article did a fantastic job articulating many of the sharpest grievances I hold against a nation I now often feel ashamed of:
The reality is plain: United Airlines is not the disease. United Airlines is a symptom of an infected country whose institutions of power no longer respect the dignity or the sanctity of the individual life. They don’t care about you…
It is commendable and necessary to direct your outrage at this particular corporation, on this particular day, but keep the larger truth in mind:
You are not mad at United Airlines; you are mad at America.
Exactly right. I needn’t list every one of America’s societal sins to which the article aptly alludes, but many bear mentioning or repeating at least in part:
  • Majority Republicans in Congress are talking about “tax reform.” But don’t be deceived: The word “reform” to them — whether in relation to taxation, health care, workers’ rights, or otherwise — really just means taking away what little the poor and middle class still have and transferring it so that the already-wealthy and powerful become even more so. If you’re a billionaire, you probably don’t have to worry if insurance protections for pre-existing medical conditions get repealed. But if you’re almost anyone else who won’t have a steady, full-time job with benefits throughout your life, well, tough shit, I guess.
  • Pharmaceutical companies profiteer on misery and suffering. Because shareholders’ bottom lines matter more than public health (or almost anything else) in the United States, there’s no check on price gouging for prescription drugs, which cost more here than anywhere else in the world. Meanwhile, drugmakers are allowed to advertise directly to consumers, so many of whom could never even afford the medications they see in the ubiquitous ads that pollute primetime television. In a particularly cruel twist, at least one pharmaceutical outfit ends its commercials with this PR stunt: “If you can’t afford your medication, AstraZeneca may be able to help.” Right.
  • Along with other bastions of human rights like Saudi Arabia or China, the United States still executes prisoners for sport. Arkansas’ death machine ate up four in just a week. Texas…well, Texas. By the way, it’s not the rich or well-connected who populate death rows across America.
  • We sanctimoniously scream about aborted fetuses while simultaneously doing everything we can to leave vulnerable women with no other choice. We’re the only country in the world without any kind of mandated paid family or sick leave. There is no universal health care, and tens of millions still lack insurance because, again, corporate profits come before citizens in this so-called “democracy.” Republicans are chomping at the bit to rescind Medicaid expansions, and access to birth control is regularly attacked under the guise of “religious freedom.” Those who aren’t wholly self-sufficient or independently wealthy are branded as moochers or bums. Those who need public assistance of any kind are immediately viewed with suspicion in a dehumanizing way, as though they exist only to game the system.
  • We’ve turned guns into false gods. After 20 children and six adults were slaughtered at an elementary school, the U.S. government did absolutely nothing. We did nothing again when 49 people were massacred at a nightclub in Orlando. We have blood on our hands because we’ve idolizedmanmade instruments of death (and, yet again, because certain entities are making lots and lots of money from it). And don’t think for one second that there isn’t a racial component to the debate euphemistically labeled “Second Amendment rights.”
  • Corporations and monied special interests are free to spend limitless amounts of money to buy elections and legislative outcomes, drowning out the voices and grassroots efforts of actual human constituents. (Example: Congress recently voted to allow Internet service providers to sell your browsing history without permission. Do you know of anyone — as in, even one single person — who was writing or calling his or her lawmakers asking for this law? Neither do I…of course, I don’t know anyone who owns stock in Comcast.)
  • As the world’s polar ice caps melt and the natural environment faces irrevocable harm at the hands of human activity and greed, the current administration is committed to denying the reality of global warming. At the helm is an incoherent, mendacious, pathological narcissist who knows less than nothing about policy or governance and cares little about such petty details as long as his delusions of greatness and omnipotence are maintained. As I write this, concerned citizens are gathered in 90-degree heat in Washington, D.C., to protest the climate policies of this regime. Their concerns will certainly fall on deaf ears, since lawmakers are focused solely on protecting the profits of their monied backers, no matter what devastating costs may befall our natural resources or the people who live near and rely on them.
  • Racism today is as real in America as it was during the Civil Rights Era of the 1950s and 1960s. As an upper-middle-class white male, I’m not particularly qualified to speak to this issue. I’ve never lived in Flint, Michigan, or Ferguson, Missouri; I’ve never been viewed with suspicion at an airport security checkpoint, during a traffic stop, or late at night at a convenience store just because of the color of my skin. I had the opportunity to go to college and eventually graduate school, not because of my intellect or scholastic performance but because I came from a family wealthy enough that I never had to contend with tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars of student debt. I never lived in a neighborhood where my parents worried I might end up dead on the way home from school or work. So, no, it might not be my place to speak about racism in the United States — but I’d be remiss to not at least mention it.
  • This country is ruled by a political party bent on maintaining its power and influence, even if the pursuit of that goal shreds any remaining vestiges of democracy. North Carolina is perhaps the most hideous example of this — but like a malignant tumor, it has spread all across the country. And lest you feel tempted to accuse me of favoring Democrats, consider this: That milquetoast “opposition” party has failed spectacularly at addressing in any meaningful way the issues I’ve outlined. Even with supermajorities in Congress, for example, Democrats couldn’t pass anything resembling universal health care in the United States. As a result, even with the gains made under the Affordable Care Act, Americans still end up declaring bankruptcy because of medical bills. This is a country that still has more wealth, by the way, than any other place on earth.
What did I forget? Undoubtedly a lot — not just as a matter of memory lapse, but as a function of keeping this post a reasonable length. Like I said, it’s profoundly difficult to put words to all of this. The level of corruption, self-promotion, and general malevolence that embodies our society, from the local to the federal level, should overwhelm and sicken anyone who cares about this country, even if we don’t all agree on the solutions to it.
This is not, by the way, a proclamation that America is all bad. Far from it. Indeed, I live in a country that gives me the freedom to speak about these maladies. I don’t take that lightly. I will not be arrested by a secret police force for pushing the “publish” button on this post (at least not yet). Accordingly, I consider it my duty to do precisely that. The sanctity of free speech is derived not merely from repeating talking points that are popular or laudatory.
So we ought to take that responsibility seriously and call a spade a spade: America has become a cruel, self-destructive oligarchy where wealth and power are envied by those who will never have it, only to constantly provide more of both to those who already have way too much. I don’t oppose the idea of becoming rich, or even inheriting lots of money; I oppose the idea of a society where an increasingly tiny number of people are fabulously successful while everyone else struggles just to survive.
We can do something about it now — or reach a point where the opportunity no longer exists.

State Department Estimates Show an Increase in US Expats Worldwide

*America can't be fixed, tear it down and start over!


The US Department of State’s Bureau of Consular Affairs is an agency tasked with protecting the lives and interests of US expats overseas. You may be familiar with them if you or someone you know has experienced births, deaths, disasters, arrests, or medical emergencies during your time abroad. Their latest report showed several interesting trends in expat-related issues – read below for the details!

US Expat Statistics

For fiscal year 2016, the State Department estimates that there are 9 million Americans living abroad, a significant increase from 4 million in 1999. Further, there were 70,666 registered births of US citizens abroad. 1,218 US citizens were repatriated, and 50,307 emergency passports were issued. A more unfortunate statistic is that the State Department provided aid to the families of 10,992 US expats who passed away while overseas during the year.

Other Statistics

Last year, the State Department issued 18 million passports, out of 132 million valid US passports currently in circulation. More incredible is that last year alone, international visitors contributed 246 billion dollars to the US economy! You can find more helpful information including adoption statistics, travel warnings and alerts, student travel information, and visa and passport data by going to visit the State Department’s website.

What Does This Mean For You?

The ever-increasing number of expats means that you are in good company. The global economy continues to create jobs with unprecedented flexibility – so more people than ever are choosing to reside in different countries. Expat opinions are impacting politics in a major way and expat issues have more visibility than ever before. However, expat tax issues are not going away any time soon.

Have Questions About Your Expat Taxes?

Greenback can help make the tax portion of your life as an expat hassle-free. Contact us today to get your questions answered!

Help wanted – China struggles to fill jobs


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https://www.ft.com/content/92108d0a-b13b-11e1-9800-00144feabdc0

At the Tiger Lane Bridge recruitment centre in Beijing, a handful of men scan a board plastered with job ads. Waiters, cooks, teachers, security guards, welders, telephone operators and drivers are all in demand. But the job seekers, – who are outnumbered roughly ten-to-one by the positions advertised – are in no great rush. “Actually, I’ve got a job already. I just come here every now and again to see if I can find a job that pays better,” says Mr Liu, 40, a migrant from nearby Hebei province. Mr Liu, who earns Rmb2000 ($314) a month, was upset when he did not get a 15 per cent pay raise this year – an annual increase that has become the norm for blue-collar workers in China. 


The Chinese economy has been slowing – data due this weekend are expected to reveal that exports, investment and industrial production were all weak in May – but the labour market remains very tight. From Beijing in north China to the southern manufacturing province of Guangdong, the main concern of workers is not finding jobs, but securing higher pay. In fact, companies say they are struggling to find and retain staff. For the government, this is a significant argument against launching large-scale economic stimulus, as there is no need for a major spending boost to create jobs. The central bank’s move to cut interest rates this week shows that Beijing is worried about slowing growth. 

But officials stress that there will no repeat of the massive stimulus package unveiled in late 2008 during the global financial crisis. While Europe and the US struggle with rising unemployment, China’s labour problem is the opposite: it experienced a record shortfall of workers in the first quarter. The human resources ministry says that for every 108 employees sought by companies, only 100 people were looking for jobs – equating to a nationwide deficit of nearly 1m workers. The reason China’s job market is tightening when the economy is slowing is simple: demographics.  

The government introduced its one-child policy just over three decades ago to limit explosive population growth. Since then birth rates have declined steadily, with the proportion of the working-age population expanding at a slower rate in recent years. UBS estimates that China’s workforce will peak in about 2015, and then start to shrink. At Polaris Jewellery in Guangzhou, Guangdong’s capital, the factory manager worries that China’s tight labour market will destroy the company’s apprentice programme, as young workers are no longer willing to commit to the two years of training. Lee Hin-shing, who manages the factory of 440 workers, says the floor that used to house trainees is empty. Polaris has just one trainee, down from a couple of hundred more than a decade ago. “No one wants to join the industry,” he says ruefully. “In 2004 and 2005, we had more than 800 workers.” This demographic landscape is likely to get worse. 

China’s ratio of workers to retirees is likely to “drop precipitously” from roughly 5:1 today to 2:1 in 2030, according to Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center in Beijing. But while demographics are extremely powerful, if economic growth were to collapse, for example, unemployment in China would inevitably rise – and potentially quite sharply.   

When the global financial crisis savaged the Chinese export sector in late 2008, more than 20m blue-collar workers lost their jobs virtually overnight. Concerns about social instability prompted the government to roll out a Rmb4tn mega-stimulus package, which helped propel the country back to double-digit growth. Unemployment is considered to be a “lagging indicator”, meaning, an economic slowdown today may only lead to job losses a few months down the road. There are, in fact, a couple of warning signs. Almost 8 per cent of respondents to a HSBC survey of the Chinese manufacturing sector said they cut jobs last month. The overall decline was modest, but it was also the steepest fall in 38 months, stemming from a decline in new orders. Moreover, the export sector is once again suffering sluggish growth, a bad omen for the employment situation.

 But for the time being, job seekers are still spoiled for choice. At a leather factory in Dongguan, a manufacturing hub in Guangdong province, the owner David Liu says workers used to queue outside the factory and ask their friends for contacts. “Now the factory owners are asking acquaintances for help recruiting workers,” says Mr Liu. Additional reporting by Emma Dong and Zhou Ping

Some president, some politician is going to make this go away

If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.


Monday, July 30, 2018

How life is when you don't chase ass *Updated

 I spent the better part of my weekend applying to overseas employment agencies and you can do it too.
 God will give you the steak and potatoes but don't be a damned fool thinking He will cook it for you.


*Update:
 For those of you that sent emails of appreciation and or donations, I'll send tokens of my appreciation as well as "specific" how to's to your private emails.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Can you tell?

Nietzsche doesn't like his A/C at all LOL Have a good week.


Time is Only an Illusion

"There exists only the present instant ...
There is no yesterday nor any tomorrow, but only Now ... "
Meister Eckhart



Time, as we know it, is only an illusion. We usually think of time as having three parts - Past, Present, Future. But what is the Past - only a collection of memories. We can't experience the Past, we can only remember it. And we can only remember it in the Present (furthermore, our memories are noticeably unreliable). There is no objective thing that we call the Past; it can't be measured in any way; our only contact with it is in the Present.
And what is the Future - only a mental construct in the Present. We can't experience the Future until it "becomes" the Present. Until then it only a hope and dream. We can project what the Future may be like, but we are considerably less accurate than when we remember the Past. There is no objective thing that we call the Future; it can't be measured in any way; our only contact with it is in the Present.
That leaves us with only the Present - the ever changing Present. Time is an illusion we created to try and measure the rate of change of the Present. It's always NOW. But it's an ever changing NOW. In a effort to cope with the change, we have invented time. It's a handy mental device that helps us deal with the higher order derivatives of the rate of change.
This change that we experience in the ever present Present does have a "direction." Things change in the general direction of having greater entropy. Entropy is a measure of the amount of disorder in a system. That's why when we measure time we find it restricted to one direction (unlike when we measure distance) - things are changing such that the overall system has more and more entropy.
Although the illusionary nature of time is the deep truth in this matter, it's not particularly practical. To be totally in harmony with this truth, you'd need to wear a watch that always said "now". But you'd be late for a lot of meetings....
Leigh Brasington
2005/05/04
Written in honor of Kurt Gödel, who also didn't believe in Time (New Yorker ~ Feb 28, 2005, pg 80ff)


Be Here Now

In 1979 - 1981 I took a trip around the world. I often encountered signs that said "You are here." You know what - every one of those signs was right! I'm always here. I can't go anywhere but here. If I think I'll leave here and go there, when I get there, here I am here again.
In light of it always being Now and always being Here, "Be Here Now" isn't just good advice, it's the only possibility. If you want to experience the deepest truth of things as they really are, you are going to have to be in harmony with being here, now.
Leigh Brasington
2005/05/07
 


Is "time" all in the mind? Is it real?
Physicists continue work to abolish time as fourth dimension of space
Discover Magazine: Newsflash: Time May Not Exist
Discover Magazine: 3 Theories That Might Blow Up the Big Bang - see #3 on page 3
NewScientist Magazine: What makes the universe tick?
NewScientist Magazine: Is time an illusion? (payment required to read article)
NewScientist Magazine: "time is no more than a mirage."
New Statesman: There's no such thing as time (2nd article)
NewScientist Magazine: Your Brain Is a Time Machine
Quartz: This physicist’s ideas of time will blow your mind 
Sam Harris - It Is Always Now - 5½ minute youtube video
Why space and time have a secret connection - 2½ minute youtube video
Back to Essays

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Would you like to recover & save all of your Facebook memories?

 On average I go through two craptops per year and unless I save the hard drive I lose all the information, pictures and videos, etc.
 The link that I have placed in this post will allow you to retrieve all of your Facebook information.


Saturday, July 28, 2018

Should I Have Kids QUIZ

 LMAO, I'm simply going to leave this one up to you. I don't have any and never will.


https://www.shouldihaveababy.com/the-quizzes.html

Egotistical overzealous patriots hate this


Please beware: The average income has changed in recent years, especially in small countries. A list with more recent figures can be found here. This page covers the period from 1990 to 2010, which relates to the evaluation time of the studies.


RankCountryIQØ IncomeEducation expenditures
per capita
Ø Daily max
temperature
1Singapore10825,407 $905 $31.5 °C
2Hong Kong10825,419 $915 $26.1 °C
3Taiwan106  27.1 °C
4South Korea10613,710 $520 $18.2 °C
5Japan10536,792 $1,242 $19.8 °C
6China1041,375 $27 $19.4 °C
7Switzerland10250,004 $2,465 $12.7 °C
8Netherlands10233,383 $1,681 $14.3 °C
9North Korea102  14.9 °C
10Macao10120,622 $625 $25.8 °C
11Iceland10134,913 $2,406 $7.9 °C
12Finland10131,424 $1,985 $8.0 °C
13Canada10127,545 $1,654 $7.4 °C
14Belgium10030,760 $1,683 $14.5 °C
15Germany10030,918 $1,386 $13.5 °C
16United Kingdom10030,889 $1,441 $12.8 °C
17Austria10032,002 $1,762 $13.0 °C
18New Zealand10018,680 $1,283 $17.5 °C
19Norway9948,277 $3,527 $8.9 °C
20Sweden9936,411 $2,334 $9.4 °C
21Luxembourg9954,392 $2,286 $13.8 °C
22Denmark9939,129 $3,127 $11.9 °C
23Czech Republic999,264 $385 $12.1 °C
24Estonia999,552 $457 $10.0 °C
25Australia9925,698 $1,386 $24.4 °C
26France9829,590 $1,605 $16.5 °C
27United States9836,609 $1,909 $18.7 °C
28Hungary987,404 $391 $16.1 °C
29Malta9712,385 $615 $23.1 °C
30Italy9725,872 $1,170 $18.2 °C
31Latvia976,954 $333 $10.7 °C
32Slovakia979,319 $332 $14.9 °C
33Spain9719,834 $885 $21.0 °C
34Slovenia9716,381 $880 $15.3 °C
35Poland976,111 $298 $13.1 °C
36Russia964,103 $157 $8.6 °C
37Moldova95765 $53 $16.0 °C
38Croatia958,676 $346 $18.2 °C
39Ukraine951,496 $83 $14.0 °C
40Portugal9514,177 $724 $21.2 °C
41Ireland9428,462 $1,633 $13.2 °C
42Vietnam94484 $26 $29.2 °C
43Israel9419,398 $1,224 $26.2 °C
44Belarus932,514 $140 $11.5 °C
45Malaysia934,562 $274 $31.9 °C
46Lithuania936,731 $326 $11.4 °C
47Kazakhstan922,768 $97 $13.0 °C
48Greece9216,859 $541 $22.4 °C
49Bulgaria912,768 $111 $17.8 °C
50Macedonia912,505 $115 $18.5 °C
51Argentina906,340 $277 $23.8 °C
52Romania903,364 $116 $15.0 °C
53Turkey894,924 $140 $19.8 °C
54Thailand892,607 $108 $32.8 °C
55Serbia893,393 $157 $18.1 °C
56Chile895,640 $211 $17.4 °C
57Cambodia88431 $7 $33.4 °C
58Laos88420 $11 $32.0 °C
59Mauritius874,528 $166 $26.3 °C
60Costa Rica864,013 $217 $28.9 °C
61Philippines861,307 $36 $31.3 °C
62Mexico866,118 $274 $29.2 °C
63Iraq863,927 $ 32.3 °C
64Venezuela854,704 $237 $31.6 °C
65Bolivia851,031 $68 $25.3 °C
66Cuba843,245 $311 $29.8 °C
67Iran842,825 $119 $23.6 °C
68Montenegro844,516 $ 19.2 °C
69Albania841,713 $56 $22.5 °C
70Indonesia841,086 $28 $31.7 °C
71Egypt831,239 $58 $30.0 °C
72Ecuador832,352 $69 $24.5 °C
73Burma83390 $5 $32.1 °C
74Brazil834,460 $228 $30.6 °C
75United Arab Emirates8336,044 $380 $34.5 °C
76Pakistan82614 $16 $31.5 °C
77Algeria822,315 $108 $24.9 °C
78Peru822,316 $77 $25.8 °C
79Syria821,131 $58 $25.6 °C
80Colombia822,685 $124 $28.3 °C
81Morocco821,716 $88 $23.8 °C
82Bosnia and Herzegovina822,599 $ 18.5 °C
83India81568 $22 $29.9 °C
84Saudi Arabia8110,580 $697 $32.6 °C
85Tunisia812,495 $168 $25.2 °C
86Afghanistan80340 $13 $24.3 °C
87Panama794,273 $187 $30.9 °C
88Sri Lanka791,025 $30 $28.9 °C
89Madagascar79277 $9 $28.4 °C
90Bangladesh77451 $9 $30.7 °C
91Nepal77277 $10 $25.6 °C
92Kenya71480 $33 $28.8 °C
93Tanzania71325 $13 $29.9 °C
94South Africa703,931 $221 $24.8 °C
95Nigeria70508 $ 33.0 °C
96Jamaica703,007 $157 $31.8 °C
97Ghana69530 $34 $31.5 °C
98Namibia692,749 $196 $29.1 °C
99Mali64381 $14 $36.0 °C
100Democratic Republic of the Congo63196 $4 $30.0 °C
101Eritrea63250 $9 $29.2 °C
102Guinea-Bissau62306 $12 $32.9 °C
103Ethiopia61189 $8 $27.1 °C
104Senegal60685 $30 $35.7 °C
105Gambia60568 $12 $32.7 °C
106East Timor601,548 $107 $31.0 °C
107Gabon604,830 $190 $29.8 °C
108Sao Tome and Principe58885 $54 $28.6 °C
109Equatorial Guinea563,336 $156 $30.2 °C

What is the intelligence quotient?

The definition states that the intelligence quotient is a measure of intellectual ability. Often the IQ is confused with a concrete performance or even education. However, it is the "ability" of performing. In other words, the ability for comprehension, combinations and learning.

A person isn't less intelligent, because of oa lower level of education. Instead, the one who can achieve the same education with less effort is classified as more intelligent. For example: In some intelligence tests are questions for the names of current politicians. This determines whether and how well the patient can remember a name and its position only by the influence of the media presence.

The intelligence quotient was adapted to a mean value of 100 points. For a standard deviation of 15%, an IQ between 85 and 115 should be taken as normal. Depending on the psychological and physical condition of the patient, the results can also vary by up to 10 points.

Intelligence is not a learning ability, but can be consciously increased. Through regular brain training like in school, individual skills are specifically addressed and achieved through a performance increase. Thus the general thinking-ability can be influenced by each individual within a certain framework. With increasing age, this possibility decreases considerably. Also part of the intelligence is inherited by father and mother.

Criticism:
The IQ was developed by West Europeans for West Europeans according to West European standards. It is still debatable whether this procedure can be applied to people(s) with entirely different social structures, cultures, values and ways of thinking.

IQ in relation to income and educational expenditures

As shown in the table above, there seems to be a correlation between IQ and income level. It is true that high-income countries are among the top places, while those with far lower incomes, such as China, Mongolia and Eastern European countries are often ranking much lower.

On the other hand, countries with high education expenditures almost always have an intelligent population. The reversing circuit is not always true, because among the first 30 places there are also countries with medium to low educational expenditures. The leading countries of this ranking are exclusively the most developed East Asian countries. In these countries it is usual for the families to invest in education of their children and not for the government. The educational expenses are not less than elsewhere - but not caused or payed by any government.

Is intelligence dependent on the climate?

Since 1991 there has been the presumption that persistent heat affects the IQ over generations. It was initially assumed that living in lower temperatures requires a higher physical fitness and causes higher social demands. Richard Lynn, a professor at the University of Ulster in Northern Ireland, also assumes that the colder temperatures increase the brain volume. Whether brain size is at all related to intelligence, is controversial.

In general, a hot climate is considered a disadvantage for the development of intelligence. The reason is nowadays primarily seen in the high physical energy demand and the resulting stress.

No racial dependences

None of the studies used here, conclude that the intelligence quotient is influenced by a particular race. In some cases, differences within population groups were found (e.g. in Basil: Blacks 71, Mulatto 81, Whites 95, Japaneses 99), but all differences could be attributed to their origin, level of education or other factors.

In 2006 Donald Templera and Hiroko Arikawab found a connection between increasing skin pigmentation and a decreasing IQ. Even this was not racially dued, because the pigmentation grade is climatically conditioned. The observations were also made within the same groups of other races, e.g. caucasians.

Data base

The intelligence quotients by countries are taken from the studies conducted by Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen (2002), Heiner Rindermann (2007), Khaleefa and Lynn (2008), Ahmad, Khanum and Riaz (2008), Lynn, Abdalla and Al-Shahomee (2008), Lynn and Meisenberg (2010) as well as the PISA tests in 2003, 2006 and 2009. More recent results were weighted heigher. The studies are not entirely uncontroversial as they're often considering only specific population groups or only a few individuals per countries. If, on the other hand, an average is obtained from all the tests and studies, an at least usable overview will be obtained.

The figures for average income, population and education expenditures are based on World Bank data, which were averaged over the period from 1990 to 2010. This corresponds to the period during which the studies were carried out. Temperatures were averaged from the data of the German Weather Service of the same period.

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