• @Dozzi92
    link
    51 year ago

    This list seems just a little bit skewed. I’m left of center but I feel like it should’ve been called 10 worst states if youre, and followed it up with any number of marginalized persons. And that’s fine, just want to know the metric we are talking about.

    • @Tedrick02
      link
      171 year ago

      You may be forgetting the fact that 50ish percent of the population has a uterus. Even some of those without one have partners with one and value their partner having access to the Healthcare they need or may need at some point.

    • @OmnislashIsACloudApp
      link
      4
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      yeah I mean I would consider myself left of most of the Democratic party but you can take a look at their weightings on the metrics they used and you can see why they got the answer they did even if we’d quibble about specific state placement.

      cost of doing business and business friendliness collectively makeup 20% of their weighting and cost of living and education only make up 7% total.

      seems like on a list that focuses on inclusivity that they would also focus on basic needs for families but for some reason they valued basic needs for businesses at 3x families.

      overall, I think in order to trust this list, I would need to lower focus on businesses and increase focus on things such as education and immigration. Texas would do poorly in both of those things but so would a lot of other states. I definitely believe it deserves a place on this list, but I don’t think it would end up #1.

      they’re methodology summary:

      • Workforce (400 points – 16%)
      • Infrastructure (390 points – 15.6%)
      • Economy (360 points – 14.4%)
      • Life, Health & Inclusion (350 points – 14%)
      • Cost of Doing Business (290 points – 11.6%)
      • Technology & Innovation (270 points – 10.8%)
      • Business Friendliness (215 points – 8.6%)
      • Education (125 points – 5%)
      • Access to Capital (50 points – 2%)
      • Cost of Living (50 points – 2%)
    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      31 year ago

      Paraphrasing the waiter rule: a state that abuses any of it’s residents is not a nice state. Yes, quality of life is a relative scale, but I think it’s fair to put the states actively making worse the lives of it’s citizens (marginalized or not) at the bottom of the list.