No major errors stood out so far, so I would say it's a pretty good video. I have never heard of that tale about the 2 people surviving the black death in Espoo, but I assume he picked up the story from some source. The picture he used actually looked like Nokia's former headquarters in Espoo, so that was correct. In 2024, there are 309 municipalities in Finland. The number has dropped significantly since the depression in the early 1990s, since the economy of many small municipalities has kept getting worse so they have had to merge with neighbouring municipalities. University students, who are not from the EU or EEA, have to pay a tuition fee. The law was changed in 2016, if I remember correctly, and the fee is from a few thousand euros upwards, depending on the university. The population of Helsinki in 2024 is 674,000.
Forgive me, but it must be a big disappointment that Finland is supposed to be the happiest nation in the world. First of all, there are a lot of suicides in Finland every year. Secondly, a lot of mood medications are taken in Finland. Thirdly, Finland has perhaps the highest taxation in the world, but despite this, the government's debt is growing and various services from Finns are constantly being degraded. For example, care for the elderly and health services are getting worse every year. Let's save on education money. Infrastructure such as e.g. the roads and their winter maintenance are constantly deteriorating, even though more and more money is collected from traffic in the form of various taxes and fees every year. Money can be found when it is sown "to the winds of the world", but unfortunately it is no longer enough for our own people. In Finland, almost one million senior citizens live close to the poverty line defined by the UN. So this is how the "happiest nation in the world" lives to day.
No major errors stood out so far, so I would say it's a pretty good video.
I have never heard of that tale about the 2 people surviving the black death in Espoo, but I assume he picked up the story from some source. The picture he used actually looked like Nokia's former headquarters in Espoo, so that was correct.
In 2024, there are 309 municipalities in Finland. The number has dropped significantly since the depression in the early 1990s, since the economy of many small municipalities has kept getting worse so they have had to merge with neighbouring municipalities.
University students, who are not from the EU or EEA, have to pay a tuition fee. The law was changed in 2016, if I remember correctly, and the fee is from a few thousand euros upwards, depending on the university.
The population of Helsinki in 2024 is 674,000.
Forgive me, but it must be a big disappointment that Finland is supposed to be the happiest nation in the world.
First of all, there are a lot of suicides in Finland every year.
Secondly, a lot of mood medications are taken in Finland.
Thirdly, Finland has perhaps the highest taxation in the world, but despite this, the government's debt is growing and various services from Finns are constantly being degraded. For example, care for the elderly and health services are getting worse every year. Let's save on education money. Infrastructure such as e.g. the roads and their winter maintenance are constantly deteriorating, even though more and more money is collected from traffic in the form of various taxes and fees every year.
Money can be found when it is sown "to the winds of the world", but unfortunately it is no longer enough for our own people. In Finland, almost one million senior citizens live close to the poverty line defined by the UN. So this is how the "happiest nation in the world" lives to day.