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3 answers

Sure a good quality of life means a well balanced life, it takes care of health, wealth and happiness!

2006-10-30 08:19:27 · answer #1 · answered by thachu5 5 · 0 0

aww why is ur avatar crying? :(.. it's ok i was crying ALL DAY last friday at work =T...

anyways, social standing is extremely related: first of all, depending on how wealthy you are, or well liked you are, or how admired u are, u will either be able to provide for yourself, or others will be Willing to help you out. but not all Positive things are linked w/ wealth, and not all Negative things are linked w/ being poor.

for example:

Wealthy (high standing):
1) health: u can get the best doctors/hospitals/service
2) values: it gets harder to instill True values unless u had to work for it yourself, and u understand how hard it is to live w/o wealth. too much wealth can skew your mentality on what u deserve, or what u contribute, responsibilities, etc
3) politics: u have the capability to have a "say" in politics, and hypothetcally make a Change. however, u may feel the ability to "buy" people off
4) family life: u have capability to provide ur family w/ the BEST..but not all do that when they start confusing Money with Love


Poor (low standing):
1) health: less ability to get access to hospitals, doctors
2) values: u may either work hard to better urself, OR u may feel the need to steal and cheat to get food on the table
3) politics: have less of a say..... don't have as much access to information
4) family life: may be too run down in debt to keep the family tight.. OR u may find that Family is MOST important over money

which is why it definitely Affects things but is not a direct Indicator of what kind of person u will be in your social standings... many times the stereo type is that the Rich is "mean" and the Poor is "humble and nice"..! :)

2006-10-30 15:06:36 · answer #2 · answered by sasmallworld 6 · 0 0

One's social standing-what do you mean? I'm going out on a limb here and try to answer this one from a convict's POV: While incarcerated, (s/b it also depends if you are jailed at camp cupcake or at a facility in Mississippi) the quality of health care is at the lowest acceptable tolerance of what is considered standard/acceptable. Healthcare is available in a correctional facility, but on how much of a limited basis? An in-mate can be rushed to a medical facility under crisis conditions(O/D days prior to execution), but I have seen simple allergies develop into something far far worse when neglected. Also consider an in-mate's concept of wealth. Also while pondering that, deliberate the values system of an in-mate's society, what is jail-house politics? How does being incarcerated affect the family unit? What resources are available to the family that has lost (through no fault of their own) the sole primary breadwinner? Just something to consider.

2006-11-01 04:48:06 · answer #3 · answered by D_Lucky1 1 · 0 0

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