[RD] Daily Graphs and Charts

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Spain's resting easy in the penthouse.
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I'm shocked by how low the number is in ultra-dense Hong Kong.
 
But actually the higher the buildings, the fewer elevators per capita you would need.
 
Indeed. A higher number seems more a result of many mid-height buildings rather than a lot of low buildings or a few high buildings.
 
Isn't that tendency reversed in the gigantic towers in the Gulf and others, which need several sets of elevators?
 
I'm shocked by how low the number is in ultra-dense Hong Kong.
Answers your own question though. But I hear ya.
 
800px-SOWM2010_maternal_mortality_map.svg.png


Key here, I was shocked that the UK is down in 1 in 530 to 1 in 1000 range with Turkey and Mongolia rather than the 1 in 4400 to 1 in 47600 that the rest of Europe and North America is. What are we doing wrong? I thought we had a good health care system?

Spoiler :
Maternal death is:

"The death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the pregnancy, from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but not from accidental or incidental causes."

The data represent the lifetime risk of maternal death from pregnancy-related causes.
 
What are we doing wrong? I thought we had a good health care system?
We did. Then we got a Tory government. Satisfaction and outcomes were at an all time high until just a few years ago. That's the wonders of 'austerity' for you.
 
Huh, I thought that the US did slightly worse on these things compared to other developed countries (not terrible, mind you, but slightly worse). Could vary from region to region of the US, though, I suppose.
 
The West is such a downer.
pew_1_2014-10-09_18_14_16-greenshot_290.jpg
 
@Samson: That sticks out like a sore thumb, which to me points to methodological issues. Perhaps it's a different measurement method in UK compared with the rest of Europe, e.g. what the NHS counts as "pregnancy-related causes" vs what other countries record in that category.

EDIT: I would also prefer if it was "x per 1,000" or whatever, rather than "1 in x". Linear scaling might make it easier to see the real gap: an 8 fold difference between UK and France is quite large in percentage terms but (I think?) quite small in absolute terms.
 
The West is such a downer.
pew_1_2014-10-09_18_14_16-greenshot_290.jpg

Philippines economy is growing at 7something %, other Asian nations are also doing well. The US definitely and Europe somewhat are manufacturing less, the Asains do it for them cheaper. Plus in the US its a litigious society, industry and small enterprise takes a real chance by simply existing. Some ******* throws water on the floor of the supermarket and slips in it while texting a lawyer. Then they ask why there is no supermarket in their town.

The super rich can make more by having stuff manufactured in Asia, but the workers are screwed and then the rich lament that their stuff doesn't sell because the economy is bad. Idiots with dollar signs in their eyes, heartless *******s. Where is the middle class? They got fired when their jobs went to Asia and they went on government assistance instead of paying taxes, so the governments are diving into debt. What hope is there? Not much according to the graph.

So the Asians are doing well and the future looks bright, as long as they are willing to accept the main US export, dollars. For now all is well but this graph is about the future. When the western economies drop then Asians are going to have to sell to each other and things will cool down here too.
 
http://www.maternalmortalitydata.org/

The uk is at 12 per 100k, or one per 8333. This puts it with most of Europe, Canada, Oz and Japan, and slightly head of the US. The map looks to be flat out wrong.

The map's wrong. Your interpretation is wrong as well, though.

This is about lifetime risk.
Since them "feminist" Brits breed like rabbits and those mra Italians, mra Spaniards and mra Germans don't, they rank even worse than they otherwise would.

The estimates that should be reflected in the map (which obviously resulted in grafics intern fail in the case of the UK):

20300 Italy
14400 Poland
12000 Spain
12200 Finland
10600 Germany
10500 Netherlands
8100 Australia (Anglosphere #1 -as in everything else)
5900 Slovenia (for Zack)
5200 Canada
4600 United Kingdom
3300 New Zealand
2400 United States
2200 Turkey​
 
I see, so it's per female lifetime, without being normalised against avg number of pregnancies?

Yes.

So your positively American abortion rates and your disposition towards multiplication puts you at a disadvantage.
There is the small upside that the average age at first birth in the UK is lower than in continental Europe. A lot lower.
This small upside, yet again comes with the downside of your absurd underage pregnancy rates.

To make a long story short:
The UK is a pathetic and miserable failure regarding anything and everything sex/women/gender and i blame your pseudo-feminism for it.

But, yeah, the map is messed up. :D
 
Just shows how well Ireland is doing in that regard in spite of the recent hysterics.

Yeah, also this:

Spoiler :
her13-05-2.png


Stereotype successfully subverted.

Also:
The danger of an independent Scotland becoming a Reformed theocracy are greatly excaggerated. Cause, well, those are at the other end of the graph.
 
Graphs (genealogy trees) showing descent of Queen Elisabeth II, Eleonore Bourbon, Elisabeth Saxe-Coburg, Joseph Wenzel von und zu Lichtenstein, Albert II Grimaldi, Andrew Casiraghi, Wilhelm de Bourbon-Parma, Catherine Amelia Orange-Nassau, Christian Oldenburg, Ingrid Alexandra Oldenburg and Estella Bernadotte of Sweden from Polish Piast dynasty duke Siemowit I of Mazovia (1215 - 1262):

http://blogi.newsweek.pl/Tekst/hist...ie-panujacych-ksiazat-oraz-krolow-europy.html
 
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