PDA

View Full Version : Denmark: plodding mediocrity, high taxes and dull


real6
18-03-2010, 04:48 PM
Denmark: plodding mediocrity, high taxes and dull obedience

http://cphpost.dk/news/139-feature/48544-denmark-plodding-mediocrity-high-taxes-and-dull-obedience.html

A nation burdened with heavy taxation, plodding mediocrity and a dearth of dreamers and enthusiasts ...

That is the way British diplomat Robert Molesworth described Denmark in a notorious 300 year-old book, an account of Denmark as it was in the year 1692. It was published anonymously in London in 1694, and though initially banned in Denmark, was a bestseller throughout Europe in its day.

‘In Denmark there are no seditions, mutinies, or libels against the government, but all people are, or appear to be, lovers of their king, notwithstanding their ill-treatment, and the hardships they groan under. And I suppose one principal reason of this to be the equality of the taxes, and the manner of taxing. It is not to be imagined by those that see it not, what a comfort it is to the sufferers to be ill-used alike,’ Molesworth writes in a book which was an eagerly read, controversial success from the word go with four editions printed in English and one in French in its first year of publication. ‘The ancient love of liberty seems to be quite extinct in the North; and in its place to have succeeded the conveniences of a dull obedience. A miserable life which jogs on at the same heavy rate, has a mixture of melancholy ease with it.’
Molesworth concludes: ‘I never knew any country where the minds of the people were more of one calibre and pitch than here; you shall meet with none of extraordinary parts or qualifications, or excellent in particular studies and trades; you see no enthusiasts, madmen, natural fools, or fanciful fools, but a certain equality of understanding reigns among them: everyone keeps the ordinary beaten road of sense, which in this country is neither the fairest nor the foulest, without deviating to the right or left; yet I will add this one remark to their praise, that the common people do generally write and read … there is a great unity in belief … there are no factions nor disputes about religion; all are of one mind as to the duty they owe their sovereign.’

Denmark, he notes, had produced very learned men such as the astronomer Tycho Brahe, but learning was at a low ebb.

‘There is but one university, which is at Copenhagen, and that mean enough in all respects.’

Like many modern day foreigners, Molesworth had trouble with the Danish language and the food: ‘The language is very ungrateful and not unlike the Irish in its whining, complaining tone.’

As regards the cuisine: ‘Although the bacon and butter is excellent, sea fish is scarce,’ and Molesworth found Danish cheese bland: ‘In general, their way of cookery would hardly be pleasing to an English man,’ he states. The Danes are ‘much addicted to drinking,’ he notes, listing Rhenish and French wines, and cherry brandy as the favourite tipple of ‘persons of condition’, whilst ‘the poor people indulge themselves in bad beer.’

On a more positive note, the Danish legal system was accorded praise. ‘To speak of the Danish laws, I must needs begin with this good character of them in general: that for justice, brevity and perspicuity, they exceed all that I know in the world… good laws enable them to bear their other hardships with more ease and patience.’

Even in the 17th century, Danes enjoyed cosy, well-heated homes, it seems. ‘Their warm stoves, with the plenty and pureness of their firing (which is beechwood) contributes to their freedom from maladies … the feather beds are better, and in greater plenty, than in any place I ever saw; and which are made use of, not only to lie upon, but also to cover with instead of blankets.'

Molesworth’s observations derive from a three year stint as British ambassador to Denmark from 1689-1692. Back in London, Molesworth became a Member of Parliament. Legal proceedings against him for his negative attitude to Denmark, instigated by the Danish Ambassador, came to nothing.

A Danish translation of the book did not appear until 1977.

orage
18-03-2010, 11:23 PM
While Denmark suffers under Janteloven, stifling private initiative & enterprise, the Danes have nonetheless achieved a high level of sophistication. Danish industry & products have a lot of value added, be it medicine (Insulin), hearing aids, Lego or environmental technology such as windmills. The Danish Film industry has had a string of successes in the last two decades. Danes are highly educated today and try to balance prosperity with social conscience. They also drink a lot :)

The Jante Law (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jante_Law) (Danish and Norwegian: Janteloven; Swedish: Jantelagen; Finnish: Janten laki; Faroese: Jantulógin) refers to a pattern of group behaviour towards individuals within Scandinavian communities, which negatively portrays and criticizes success and achievement as unworthy and inappropriate.

Definition

There are ten different rules in the law as defined by Sandemose, but they are all variations on a single theme and are usually referred to as a homogeneous unit: Don't think you're anyone special or that you're better than us.
The ten rules are:
Don't think that you are special.
Don't think that you are of the same standing as us.
Don't think that you are smarter than us.
Don't fancy yourself as being better than us.
Don't think that you know more than us.
Don't think that you are more important than us.
Don't think that you are good at anything.
Don't laugh at us.
Don't think that any one of us cares about you.
Don't think that you can teach us anything.

A further rule recognised in the novel is: 11. Don't think that there is anything we don't know about you.
In the book, those Janters who transgress this unwritten 'law' are regarded with suspicion and some hostility, as it goes against communal desire in the town, which is to preserve social stability and uniformity.