00:00ISOCAPA АНТРОМОВ
00:01Если не так все, что РУССАФА
00:02ПРОСТВЕНИЕ
00:06ВСЕЙСКОРА
00:08ВСЕЙСКОРА
00:08С «ПВЕЙСКОРА»
00:09С кем-то, что ОТОМ ПРОСТВЕНИЕ
00:11ВСЕЛИТЕ ВСЕДЕ ОТОРАДОЛАВА
00:13ПРОСТВЕНИЕ СДЕКСОРА
00:15СУВЕТСОРА
00:18С ВЕРОПЕЗНА
00:20ИСПАТЫ
00:20БОССАВА
00:21БОГО
00:22БОГО
00:23БОГО
00:23ВСЕСКОРА
00:25ЛАЙСКОРА
00:26It's not even believable. It's a whole different country.
00:29They're not terms that we usually hear used when talking about the Nordic countries.
00:33So how true are they?
00:35How safe is Sweden really, especially compared to the US?
00:38To answer this, we can look at several different metrics,
00:41such as the Global Peace Index,
00:43which measures a country's levels of safety and security,
00:46the conflicts it's involved in,
00:48and how militarized it is.
00:50Sweden ranked 35th out of 163 countries here, scoring 1.709.
00:56The closer to one, the more peaceful and safe a country supposedly is.
01:01Compare this to the US, which came in 128th place and scored 2.443.
01:06Another way we can compare them is by taking numbers from Eurostat,
01:10which logged every EU member's homicide rates per 100,000 people,
01:14and the US National Center for Health statistics,
01:17which did the same for the states.
01:19Now, clearly these aren't the same data sets,
01:22so their methodologies are slightly different,
01:24but they can help us to compare safety levels between Sweden and the US.
01:28In 2023, Sweden's homicide rate came in at 1.15 per 100,000 people,
01:34up from 0.9 in 2014.
01:36So yes, you could say that it's become less safe during that time.
01:40Compared to the US, it's still safer than the safest state, though.
01:44New Hampshire's death rate is 1.9, according to the NCHS.
01:48The District of Columbia comes in at 33.1,
01:51far higher than Sweden, with all the other states in between.
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