Winstonm, on 2021-June-07, 20:36, said:
I must be weird as I don't view luck as having anything to do with it. My parents were both Americans so it would have been odd not to have been born and reared here, though not impossible. I think the question you are trying to get to is: do you think you would be better off had you been born a citizen of another country. All I can say is I don't think so but how can you rule out that possibility?
I really think it is a simple question. And, as always, I see value in simplicity. I guess you could say I am simple-minded. And proud of it.
I regard myself as lucky to have been born in 1939 rather than 1439. Of course I could not have been born in 1439 because my mother got pregnant in 1938, Still, I think people know what I mean.
As far as comparisons go, I am not comparing life in the US with, say, life in France. Although if we were to compare it with life in France I would say my life in the US from 1940 through 1945 was probably better than life was for many in France at that time. That's not the comparison I am looking at when I feel lucky. I grew up making great use of a bicycle and skates, I had a free education for elementary school and high school, I made good use of the free public library, College wasn't free but there was a scholarship and I got paid decently, not great but decently, for working. Of course I understand that this is not unique to the US. But in many places and in many times, this all would seem like a dream. So I feel lucky. Even if my lucky birth was pre-determined by the fact that my mother was living in Minnesota.
Bad luck that I was not born into wealth? A minor detail, no importance at all.