Is this my country and my people, or is it yours?

Norwegian attitudes and values. 2.

A critical review.

In the NRK program “TYPICAL NORWEGIAN”, Petter Scherven has mentioned a number of Norwegian characteristics that we may also add to our values:

– Low fences between our houses and properties.

Large houses with low or no fences around the property, by DocPlayer.me

Not having tall fences and gates around our houses is typically Norwegian. Every fifth Norwegian also has a cabin or association with a cabin.

Typical Norwegian mountain cabin with skigard, photo janeriwaa.com

-Norwegian nature.

It is important for us to have access to nature where ever we live, both on workdays but especially in weekends and during vacation, which there are plenty of. We have a long tradition of berry harvesting and picking mushrooms in the woods and fields. In the autumn there is a lot of work picklng apples from the the trees, and preparation of the different berries and fruits of the garden.

– The lunch box.

Our lunch box is very Norwegian and characterized by the old attitudes to moderation. It’s usually no box with slices of bread, it’s bread with spread wrapped in white paper. Otherwise abroad you usually eat a hot meal in the middle of  day

“Matpakka” or ” matpakken”( apack of food ) is very norwegian indeed.

– We love to “have it cosy”, or a cosy time.

Norwegians love to enjoy themselves in differnt ways infront of the fireplace, They love to enjoy themselves in front of the TV, on the sofa, in the bed. They enjoy their animals, enjoy their children and even each other’s company. The Saturday gathering has a special position in their lives. Tealights and candles in the evening, especially in the dark times, is typical Norwegian. They call it “Peiskos”,that is cosyness in front of the fireplace.

“Peiskos” in front of the fireplace. by Click.co.uk.

– Newer values

We are a country where men do what was previously most reserved women. Male party politicians, crown princes and social leaders are walking out with their babies in  prams and strollers. They take fathers leave with pleasure. My own observation is that Norwegian fathers want to create closer relationships with their children from infancy and upwards.

– A tradition of strong trade unions.

Norway has a tradition of a strong trade union movement. That’s not how it is England and the United States after Reagan and Thatcher. Such values as Trade Unions ​​contradict what the Right wing politicians think about the rights of employees. Instead they support the view of the employers, in  what is traditionally called the tripartite cooperation in Norwegian working life.

LO, by Gabrielsen, the State Negotiator, Dalseide and NHO represented by Skogen-Lund. Photo Aftenposten.

Here the tradition has been that LO (workers and employees union), and NHO(the employers union) have had a steady balance of strength, with the state in a intermediate negotiating position.

A new and dangerous path regarding traditional values.

The idea has always been that wealth and wellfare must be widely distributed in order to avoid the imbalance and disadvantages of a country with great differences. The majority in the population does not want increasing differences. We simply do not want a society where the individual is left to himself and is “the blacksmith of his own happiness.”  

But this last mentioned attitude is in fact, the tenets of neo-liberalism. They have been standing for a long time  strong in Republican circles in the United States, with philosopher Ayn Rand in the lead,  and economists like Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek as providers of the premises for the intrinsic  excellence of the market.

Americans themselves have pointed on the impact of these values ​​in the US society today. For in the US today, its difficult to succeed if your pictorially are born with one dice in “Life’s Monopoly Game,” instead of three or six dices, at the upper middle class and the rich.

Dice. Multiple exposure

– A well-functioning social democracy even with conservative governments for periods.

Here we differ from most countries in the world, except for the other Scandinavian countries. Year after year Norway has been voted one of the best countries in the world to live in. Both poor and rich have access to free public health and social services. We therefore do not need health insurance as in the US and other countries.

But I will add; How long will we keep this kind of society that has charachterized us the last 70 years?

We also have good Pension Agreements until now. Still, some right-wing politicians say we can no longer afford it. In the richest country in the world we can not afford? Which other countries should then be able to afford tax-paid and pension fund-paid welfare?

– “Norway is unbelievable to Americans!”

This is what filmmaker Michael Moore says. The fundamental differences between Norway and the United States are so great that no American will believe it to be true. Therefore, he also had to edit out some elements from his documentary about Norway.

“In Norway, there is a tradition for politicians to serve the people and the community and not vice versa. When the politician Slagsvold Vedum talked about Norwegian values ​​in the main party debate before the election day, he pointed out that we have never bowed to the elite or the authorities. He pointed to the National type of State as the best governance framework, pointing out that the Conservative Right wing politicians has the EU as the best governance framework. “(Quoted by Tonje Gjevon in Dagbladet’s above article)

– Protest Nation.

Our tradition of equality involves small social and geographical differences, Journalist Gjevjon continues. – And we have used tax policy actively to ensure this. It is also about proximity to the power and respect for the national government and local Norway.

Our status as governed by Denmark and Sweden for hundreds of years until 1814 and 1905, has led to a rebellious spirit in the people that is typically Norwegian. The opposition to the EC, the EU and now the European energy connection to ACER, may be a consequence of this. We have fought with strong forces to free ourselves from domination by others countries before, and won our independence in the end.

Hurray for Norway and the Fatherland, by Rajaamajd WordPress.com

Yes, we are proud of this country,” Yes, we love this land”.(Our national anthem, video with music, press link below)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qr3HJIp9cvY

Part one of this article is here: http://www.selvuniverset.com/2019/11/27/lazy-not-hard-working-rich-independent-out-walking-in-nature-social-democratic-neo-liberal-freedom-of-speech-loving-themselves-best-in-the-world-helpful-love-helping-others-best-in-winter-sport-equali/

What kind of people and country is this?

Norwegian attitudes and values.1. A critical review.

Yours, ours or mine values?

This article will focus on some basic values that the Norwegian people and society almost take for granted. At least until today. I write to you about these attitudes and values so you can compare with your own people and country’s values and attitudes. Then I hope you can reflect what is good and less good or even bad with these norwegian practices compared to you own country’s. So in the following I’ll try to give an overview of so-called typical Norwegian values that most researchers and people in our country will recognize.

Who are we?

But who are we Norwegians, really? Aren’t we just farmers, fishermen, clerks IT people, academics, industrial workers, urban people, rural people, people on the coast, in the valleys, and inside the fjords? Likewise people from the Bible Belt in the South and Southwest! Capital citizens, rich, poor, sick, healthy, young and old, women and men?

And is there not much variation in what we appreciate and expect from each other? And not the least what values ​​we have, given these differences? In addition, since the 1970s, we have also received cultural influence from other more foreign countries, religions and traditions than the typical European and Western ones (see King’s speech on this: http://www.selvuniverset.com/2016/09/02/the-kings-speech/

Postcard from Norway, by B.R. Rasmussen
Norwegians with backgrounds from other cultures. A more mixed population than in the 1970 ies ab 80 ies, by Bergens Tidende

For several reasons, I think that Norwegian values ​​must always be regarded as taken out of an average of the population. Then actually very few individuals recognize themselves, or fall in under all the listed values.

– Great emphasis on independence.

Ottar Hellevik and Tale Hellevik conducted a thorough value survey for WVS, ie the World Value Overview. It then turned out that no other country in Europe had a population that placed as much emphasis on independence as Norwegians. (Hellevik, & Hellevik 2016). This may also be an international point.

– Godless, lazy and not very hard working.

Another extreme is the lack of interest in hard work by the Norwegians. Nor are we concerned with religious beliefs nationwide, compared to other populations in our continent.

-Extremely tolerant an eager to help.

At the very top of Europe we find ourselves in the importance of emphasizing tolerance, respect for others and helpfulness. Yes we are very happy to help others!

-Without modesty and unpolite.

However we are at the bottom in terms of modesty and thrift. We are also lacking in politeness and concerns about correctness. We are not typically charecterized by humility. I addition we stand out globally in that we are not keen on behaving properly, ie avoiding doing what other people and cultures think is wrong.

-Not so keen on being rich and succesfull.

Nor are we concerned about living in safe environments or avoiding anything that is dangerous. Interestingly enough we are not so keen on being rich and successful. Oddly enough, according to this overview, Norwegians are not so occupied with having fun. Here, I guess researchers have overlooked our teenagers in this value account. Maybe also metropolitan people, and financial and shipping people, ie people in our capital Oslo and the surrounding Bærum region?

Those who are most concerned with themselves and those who are most concerned with the well-being of others.

  • Idealists and materialists.

There are also some contradictions in the population: Hellevik thinks the contradiction between idealists and materialists is most interesting. Idealists emphasize inner values, and are outwardly concerned with relationships and showing concern for others.

The materialists, on the other hand, are mostly concerned with the exterior, consumption and usually think more about their own needs than others.

As I said, idealists emphasize the interior. They think much about self-realization and spiritual experiences. They are very concerned with relationships and showing concern for other people.

This is not so for the materialist. They tend to think more about their own needs than about other’s. The “Monitor Round 1999” showed a marked increase in materialistic values ​​between 1987 and 1999. There was a sharp decline in the so-called idealistic values at the same time. A graph also shows a jump from tradition to modernity between 1985 and 1987. (https://www.google.com/search? client =firefox-b-d&=share+materialists+ og+idealister+i+den +norsk+ population)

-A new trend of materialism.

From the 1980 ies and until now, it was a period both nationally and internationally, during which there was a dramatic political (neo-liberalist) deregulation of banking and finance. Some call this the Reagan-Thatcher period in international politics.

It is not my impression that we have become less materialistic since then. One can get the impression that houses, homes and interiors are in a special position. That the kitchen, bathroom and car park are renewed very often. In some places, the kitchen is renewed every five years. In addition, trips to all corners of the world come. I do not have data from 2018 and 2019 that show a decline in accordance with a growing awareness of the climate and environmental problems we are facing.

-Norwegians are full of trust in each other and in the state.

Hellevik, who has been leading the Norwegian Monitor Survey conducted by Ipsos (MMI) since 1985, has every year surveyed values ​​among 3000–4000 Norwegians. One of the most important things he found was the enormous confidence in the Norwegian population in general. – “In Norway, trust between people and society has been built up over a very long time. It has its roots in the Hans Nilsen Hauges movement 200 years ago, to the Constitution in 1814 and to the introduction of parliamentarism in 1884. »

But may I ask: Do we still have that confidence in 2019? Then the question is whether the NAV wellfare scandal was unveiled in the fall of 2019, The maternity care offer and birth aid is getting worse in the districts, especially in the north. Despairing midwives are leaving their positions, reduced bed capacity at the new hospitals, closure of local hospitals, as well as Oslo’s biggest hospital Ullevål Sykehus, create much less confidence to the state and municipality than before.

-Many new reforms are dismantling the welfare state.

In addition, the outsourced air ambulance service in theNorth, can be mentioned, where the planes are grounded most of the time. The socalled Local Police Reform, is a great disappointment. Because instead of being visible and present in the streets of the city and in the suburban regions, they are removed from these places. Here they previously formed alliances with the young, and worked a lot preventively.

When the care of grandmother and grandfather is outsourced to the lowest bidder, it creates unrest. When elderly care and profit-based nursery homes proliferate, where profits from the enterprises, or sales, are transferred to shell companies in tax pardises instead of pensions to the employees, then many protest. And when our tax money does not go to extra service to the elderly and strengthens the professional staffing of the kindergartens, this also weakens the former confidence in the state in the population.

Having a lot in common.

Bjørn Roger Rasmussen talks about: “The Norwegian people’s soul or the Norwegian people’s spirit. This is about having a cultural community, such as shared language, shared history, shared culture and shared values,

United in our interest for winter sports and our olympic gold medalists among many other things. by Framtidinord.no

A small country with few inhabitants.

Here I would add that Norway is a small country with a small population of around 5.4 million people. There is also relatively little ethnic cultural diversity in Norway, as opposed to Russia, China, France, USA, and England, to name a few.

A typical norwegian inhabitant, alone out in nature, by trolltungahotell.no

A list of Norwegian values:

Some Norwegian values, photo Aftenposten.no

Rasmussen highlights a number of peculiar values ​​that are very high in Norway:

· Democracy

· Legal security

· Human rights

  • Gender equality (relatively far between gender equality and “gender equality” between the sexes)

· Equality and low level of discrimination (?)

· Freedom of speech

· Freedom of religion / belief

· Freedom of the press, where framework conditions and governance sets allow us to have confidence in the established media and journalism.

· Respect

· Equal opportunities and justice for all

· Economic and social equality / social justice

· Space for everyone in the community

· Solidarity

· Everyone has opportunities for active community participation in organizations, etc.

· Freedom and national independency

· Norway, the nation of peace and Nobel Peace Price

· Confidence (society based on trust), community, unity and generosity

· Rule of law with fair and predictable judgment in accordance with legislation

· “Dugnad” Spirit” (You do things together with parents, co- inhabitants in condomiums, at our childrens school, to repair,paint and refresh the area, at least twice a year.(my addition)) and all kinds of voluntary effort. This attitude is now on a declining front.

· A Social democratic basic attitude inside our people’s soul

The Social democratic leading politicians in Oslo Town’s Mayors Government. by Tjen Folket

· Our royal castle, monarchy with the royal family, king and queen, crown prince and crown princess, etc.

Our Royl Family with Crown Princess Mette-Marit, Crown Prince Haakon, and The Queen Sonja, and his Majesty King Harald.by VG

· Nature experiences.

Geirangerfjord, and the Village of Geiranger with international cruiseships on their way in or out of the harbour. by Dagbladet.

Cited from B.R. Rasmussen, “The Norwegian and its Origin”

I would personally add:

  • We think we are the best country in the world, while at the same time we have the Law of Jante(“janteloven”, witch tells you not to believe that you are better than anyone else .
Photo: http://idaogmuskatt.blogspot.no/2011/05/ja-takk-til-en-mann-i-bunad.html
  • We are the hikers: “Ut på tur aldri sur”, which means in english that you never get sour or grumpy if you go for a walk(in nature). When it comes to nature experiences, I would like to think that walking, skiing, especially on weekends, is highly appreciated by most Norwegians.    
Typical half-naked norwegian jogging in the mountain, by filterfilmogtv.no
Photo: Olsoairports.com

Coming up: What kind of people and country is this? Norwegian Attitudes and Values. 2

http://www.selvuniverset.com/2019/11/27/lazy-not-hard-working-rich-independent-out-walking-in-nature-social-democratic-neo-liberal-freedom-of-speech-loving-themselves-best-in-the-world-helpful-love-helping-others-best-in-winter-sport-equali/