British YouTuber gets Mind Blown by 101 Facts About Finland

In my last video we looked at Geography Now Finland in this 101 Facts about Finland. Do Finnish people have the best bands in the world? And nicest prisons? You should see my reaction. Let me know in the comments section below if this is all true?
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Пікірлер: 554

  • @wilbertxz32
    @wilbertxz3211 ай бұрын

    As a Finn I never really understood how we are ranked ''The happiest place on Earth''. Like are people here happy? Yes, but it doesnt feel like anything special or noteworthy. Either its being exaggerated, or the world is just borderline miserable. Ima go with the former, and hope it isnt the latter.

  • @sofiajohansson8537

    @sofiajohansson8537

    11 ай бұрын

    There is different parameters that comes into play: scale of freedom in legislation, unemployment statistics, social security, amount of povery, average life expectancy etc. You guys must rank high on all of these 🙌 (PS. As a Swede I was rooting for Käärijä in Eurovison)

  • @wilbertxz32

    @wilbertxz32

    11 ай бұрын

    @@sofiajohansson8537 Oh wow. That many factors? Huh, the more you know. And I rarely tune into Eurovision. Ive never been too big of a fan of Finnish songs. I mean there is Hard Rock Hallelujah by Lordi, but, well, thats all in english 😅

  • @sofiajohansson8537

    @sofiajohansson8537

    11 ай бұрын

    @@wilbertxz32 I think there are twice or thrice as many factors

  • @sket179

    @sket179

    11 ай бұрын

    It's not actually measuring happiness but being content. But they don't change the title because the current one gets more clicks

  • @formatique_arschloch

    @formatique_arschloch

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@wilbertxz32I think you should check out those parameters, I bet you would understand better after that 😊

  • @Makkonenx
    @Makkonenx10 ай бұрын

    As a Finn, this was beautiful to watch, damn Im proud to be Finnish

  • @LuckyStars2010

    @LuckyStars2010

    10 ай бұрын

    Totta❤

  • @mikaellindroos1594

    @mikaellindroos1594

    10 ай бұрын

    Same feels here too.

  • @r2dezki

    @r2dezki

    10 ай бұрын

    It's okay, it all is old news. We're heading towards North Korea fast.

  • @adasarita6769

    @adasarita6769

    10 ай бұрын

    yea heres 1 fact abt sweden, 1 its gay

  • @kallekallenen4346

    @kallekallenen4346

    10 ай бұрын

    Vitun cringe. Huomaa ettei suomalaisilla ole vittu mitään itsetuntoa.

  • @coliukedo
    @coliukedo10 ай бұрын

    It is interesting that in Lithuania Finland we call Suomija :) and the word "žemė" is Lithuanian and means land/earth ;)

  • @vihreelinja4743

    @vihreelinja4743

    7 ай бұрын

    In Finnish we say Suomi. And "Suo" = Swamp :D

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz10 ай бұрын

    We are not happy all the time, we are content about what we have, we have what we need and our wants are small.

  • @snape_head
    @snape_head10 ай бұрын

    I'm a Finn and I remember that while in middle school the grades where replaced by "laudable", "good", "somewhat good" etc. It was probably less harsh than grades.

  • @patoman5112

    @patoman5112

    9 ай бұрын

    I think I stated getting numbers on my report card at either 3rd or 4th grade personally

  • @ViltzkuH
    @ViltzkuH10 ай бұрын

    Yes, in Finland Swedish is taught in school (in many places only the basics, most students hate Swedish and Swedish even is the second national language in Finland (due to the 5% of people that speak Swedish for their native language). Also in the very western side of Finland, Swedish is spoken the most). I, personally, can mostly understand Swedish text but only some reeeally basic words in speech. We go to preschool at the age of 6. But actual school the year we turn 7. It's great that we can have a nice childhood. In Primary School we get one 'report' in the last day of school before our long 10 week summer holiday. But there's no 'grades'. There's (or at least was some years ago) 4 different words that described how you did on every subject (they're something like Excellent, Good, Mediocre and Pretty Bad. Not exactly but you get the point). In the last grade of middle school (the year we turn 16) we have a few tests that are about everything we've learned to that moment about the subject. Most schools have those only on Swedish, English and maths. In some schools there is more. The tests take about an hour, and depending on the test and how it went compared to the few years before, teachers deside how much it should impact on the grade we get after the school year. I said some things again that were already said on the video, but if only reading this, it explains a lot within.

  • @sampuhhupmas5666

    @sampuhhupmas5666

    10 ай бұрын

    I had real grades starting from 3rd grade(4-10, getting a 4 meant summer school and two or more 4's meant re-taking the grade)

  • @theokayishgamer

    @theokayishgamer

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm curious when you went through primary and middle school to have that kind of experience because at least for me, none of what you said about them is true, though i did finish middle school 7 years ago now so things might've changed since then. We used real grades starting from 1st grade. No end of year exams for grade 9, infact i have never heard of something like this before. The only exams that i can think of that are 'similar' to that, would be the baccalaureate (YO-kokeet), but those have some pretty major differences.

  • @ViltzkuH

    @ViltzkuH

    10 ай бұрын

    @@theokayishgamer i graduated from Middle School this year:::D how funny. The exams i was talking about are Valtakunnalliset. Times have changes haha :D

  • @jussipussi1941

    @jussipussi1941

    10 ай бұрын

    There is still 4 communes in Finland where not even the second biggest language is finnish. They speak swedish and russian, swedish and estonian, swedish and somalian, swedish and ukranian, but NO finnish! There also usually small naive children ask WHY do we need to learn finnish when we never have to use it.

  • @MB-sx4nq

    @MB-sx4nq

    10 ай бұрын

    I’m one of the Swedish speaking Finns. I’ve lived my whole life in Finland, and also my parents and grandparents and so on. In school we were many who hated Finnish class. So till this day I never speak Finnish and I rearly need to think about it in my daily life, but if people don’t understand me when I speak my mother tongue I speak English with them. But it limits what work I can have, and this is really shit. I don’t feel part of Finland in some way. When I see Finnish text it’s like blur to me, I don’t bother to read it. I know more about Sweden, cities, dialects, jokes, traditions and so on because I only watch Swedish tv, but I don’t feel at home there either. It’s crazy really if you think about it.

  • @henrihuuskonen5085
    @henrihuuskonen508510 ай бұрын

    It's very odd to watch these type of reaction videos, because all that stuff is just bread and butter for me. But in some way very eye opening to hear things said loud! Good video!

  • @rullepufftail9709
    @rullepufftail970910 ай бұрын

    Just to clear things up a bit, Tolkien did not base Elvish on Finnish. A lot of the grammar of Elvish is borrowed from Finnish, though. What is true, however, is that Tolkien was inspired by Finnish mythology, and even wrote his own interpretation of a story from Kalevala. He also loved Finnish culture.

  • @olafthebear2327
    @olafthebear232710 ай бұрын

    I'm not entirely sure about this, so take it with a grain of salt. But a "prison break" in Finland might include just not answering the phone when the police calls to check on you while you're in open prison. Or if you forget to put your ancle gps monitor back on after a sauna or whatever, and go somewhere else.

  • @magicofshootingstar5825
    @magicofshootingstar582510 ай бұрын

    Kids at school are tested (in-school testing, we only have one standardised test in the end of secondary school) but they are only given "verbal" grades eg. "You did good at writing" instead of number grades in first 1-3 years depending on school. After that I think it's mandatory to give number grades. I think the eight grade is about first possible standardised test but only some schools choose to participate in that. There is only one mandatory standardised test in the end of secondary school and even that is only in the "academic school", not in the "trade school" 😃 Also broadband isn't free, it's just available for anyone. Internet providers aren't allowed to say that someone lives in too rural area, that they don't provide them any kind of internet.

  • @TheTheNatona
    @TheTheNatona10 ай бұрын

    I feel so flattered. Thank you for this video ❤

  • @masterticcu35
    @masterticcu3510 ай бұрын

    Its great for a change to see someone actually pay attention to the video and instantly comment on the topics and names mentioned. Thoroughly enjoyed this

  • @torspomedia5861
    @torspomedia586110 ай бұрын

    Swedish is my main language, but I speak Finnish and Swedish equally well, since most of my friends speak finnish, but with my family I speak swedish.

  • @Miqael69
    @Miqael6910 ай бұрын

    It's not kindness IT'S Respect.

  • @danielmalinen6337
    @danielmalinen633710 ай бұрын

    Here in Finland, they made Broadband and fiber optic cable kind of mandatory for everyone and the idea was originally that it would make the Internet more accessible and provides a basis for running society completely digitally. But unfortunately they forgot to make it free because the technology lobbies were against this idea. Now we have semi-mandatory Broadband and fiber optic cable, which everyone has to pay for themselves. Finland's rapid digitalization has also led to technological inequality, for example, such that nowadays you cannot use a bank, identify yourself digitally or travel on public transport without a smartphone.

  • @uttula

    @uttula

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah... we did follow up the trend started in Sweden (about a decade after they started doing it) and kinda half-assed the implementation :D It is getting better and generally, since the availability is there, but the pricing is still far cry from what it was in our western neighbour during the early 2000s ... interestingly though, these days it is easy to get faster internet on your mobile phone than it is to get on your home through literal cables :D

  • @toastslicer4885

    @toastslicer4885

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@uttulai mean we did put those internet towers literally everywhere forests included

  • @mel1816
    @mel181610 ай бұрын

    I am suomenruotsalainen (finnish-swedish) so swedish in my native language, I may not be great at speaking finnish but i understand almost perfectly and i can speak it but i’m not very confident in it, i wish i was better but i blame me for not studying very hard, but also i wish that in my kindergarten we wouldn’t have the finnish and swedish speaking ppl separeted, we did nothing togheter so i have no finnish friends and i believe i would be better if we started learning when we were younger, but i really wish i was fluent, but i’m trying!

  • @LinkOfVision
    @LinkOfVision10 ай бұрын

    Like it's been said, we need to study swedish in schools but majority of the students don't like nor care about the language (me included when I was in school). Mainly you hear people complaining how useless it is for us and that's where this whole attitude comes from. So most people don't speak or even understand it or at least not too well. It is a shame in a way but seriously, I studied swedish for 7 years. 7. years. And I can't even say one sentence in swedish. It just shows how little we really need it and if you stop studying and speaking it... you simply forget it. And I was average at it 😅

  • @XGD5layer

    @XGD5layer

    10 ай бұрын

    Don't take it personally, because no language is taught effectively at school. Probably due to the influence of some.

  • @hennakettunen8755

    @hennakettunen8755

    9 ай бұрын

    "I studied Swedish for 7 years. 7 years. And I can't even say one sentence in Swedish. It just shows how little we really need it --" Oh. Doesn't it show more the quality of your attitude to studying, or your abilities to appreciate and learn foreign languages?

  • @LinkOfVision

    @LinkOfVision

    9 ай бұрын

    @@hennakettunen8755 Did you even read my comment before commenting? I said if you stop studying and speaking the language, you forget it. Why do you also insist that it's all on me? Did you ever think that the teachers didn't give a fuck either and taught us poorly. I do admit I prioritized other languages over Swedish. It has been 13 years since I was at school so don't come talking like you know me and my "ability to appreciate" other languages. 🤦‍♂

  • @patoman5112

    @patoman5112

    9 ай бұрын

    My Swedish started in 6th grade but it wasn't like we started to learn new stuff younger, more like they pushed the Swedish of 7th grade to the 6th and spread the Swedish of 8th grade to both 8th and 7th grades so my Swedish learning was a bit slower due to the fact that three years of Swedish was spread across of four years but I did get a 9 on almost every Swedish test I took except for the swedish National exam where I got a round 6🎉

  • @tobias_dahlberg

    @tobias_dahlberg

    6 ай бұрын

    This is sort of the same in Sweden and many other countries though. I studied German for many years here in Sweden but can't hold a conversation with any Germans beyond saying my name, age and favorite colours and basic, useless stuff like that. I can sort of grasp written German though, I understand the contextual clues but I couldn't write or hold a conversation with anyone. This is a school problem in general. The difference is in Finland you don't have a choice with Swedish. I understand that to some people having to learn Swedish has a negative connotation to it but I also think most Finns understand that today's Sweden is by no means thinking that Finland is Sweden or that you should be like us. All the Swedes I know see Finland as its own seperate country, culture and as a brother. Just like all the other countries in the Nordic region. We're brothers and sisters and make fun of each other but if anyone needs help we'll all be there for each other. If anything, I as a Swede with my grandmother who fled Finland during the 2nd world war have learnt a lot about Finland and you guys are probably my favorite out of the Nordics. Having worked with Finnish people I like your grit and the idea of only speaking if you have something valuable to say, compared to, say Danes who can be quite proficient in talking bullshit (that was a joke, with some truths in it).

  • @uttula
    @uttula10 ай бұрын

    Without having read the other comments, regarding @5:10 ... it's more that the Finns were well integrated into the Swedish society - seeing how we were part of Sweden for pretty much half of a millennium :) At the time we were simply swedes who happened to have a funny local language we used in our day-to-day lives amongst our neighbours ;) Very few people at the time ever needed to travel more than ~100 miles from their birthplace during their lifetime at max.

  • @lukapoyry4999
    @lukapoyry499910 ай бұрын

    as a finn grades start to be given from the fifth grade but they give you more broad reports and use meetings to discuss how to student is doing in school(parents are usually in these meetings)

  • @patoman5112

    @patoman5112

    9 ай бұрын

    For me I started getting actual grades in either 3rd or 4th grade (probably 3rd but I could misremember) but I don't know how it's now

  • @j3mixa
    @j3mixa11 ай бұрын

    The broadband connection is not free but it's guranteed that you can have one and it should be reasonably prised. It can still be a bit difficult in the most far away places but most people can have it pretty easily. Many times appartment buildings have a basic connection that is included to the maintenance fee or the rent. I for example have a free 10Mbit/s broadband connection available and if I would want to have a 100Mbit/s then I would have to pay 29,90€/month. But mobile internet is so cheap in Finland that I don't use the free broadband. I have an unlimited 200 Mbit/s mobile internet for 19,90€/month so I use that for all my devices.

  • @teemupuumalainen3051
    @teemupuumalainen305110 ай бұрын

    I'm a finn but I have been living in Poland for years now. I just visited home for couple weeks and what did I bring back? 7 bags of rye bread(jälkiuuni) and 5 bags of salmiakki :D

  • @sallavee
    @sallavee7 ай бұрын

    I'm Finnish speaking and I've learned Swedish in school for six years. I can speak and write Swedish quite well. I've used it in my work as well, altough I'm not totally fluent.

  • @Vahlsten
    @Vahlsten10 ай бұрын

    As an long term unemployed person, laying in a hospital bed for the 6th fay straight, I can tell that the happiness comes from the social security, I am not worried one bit by the bill that comes after and my incurance payments aren't crazy at all, like tops 300€ per YEAR about 250£ or something like that. And my black sense of humour compells me to add the FACT that we are also leaders in suicides per capita so, the unhappy people aren't filling the questionaire abot happiness...

  • @nellitheretrogamer8666
    @nellitheretrogamer866611 ай бұрын

    I'm Finnish, and when you said that internet connections should be as cheap as water, I started wondering which one actually costs more for me. I pay 19,90 euros a month for my 100M internet connection and my water bill for three months is usually about 80-100 euros, so... internet is much cheaper for me :D

  • @juhagabrieltakkinen1131

    @juhagabrieltakkinen1131

    10 ай бұрын

    i pay 25 eur for 600mb and 25 for water :D but that is in Helsinki

  • @CultOfMU

    @CultOfMU

    10 ай бұрын

    14,90/mo for 1000/500Mbit fiber. Unfortunately only a one year deal.

  • @antsa85

    @antsa85

    10 ай бұрын

    29,90 1000/100 fibre cheap as soap👌😅

  • @antsa85

    @antsa85

    10 ай бұрын

    + some tv crap what i barely watch😂

  • @tavislyyti1742

    @tavislyyti1742

    10 ай бұрын

    sometimes, like mine, water is included in the rent.

  • @reinokarvinen8845
    @reinokarvinen884510 ай бұрын

    just a little thing about trust. I visited finland last month and was looking for a place where to spend a night in the city of vaasa. a lady on the phone gave me instructions how to get in to the appartment and I was told just leave the money on the bed when you leave

  • @joonalehtinen5462
    @joonalehtinen546210 ай бұрын

    Everyone in school hates studying Swedish but everyone of us should be capable of basic communication on Swedish

  • @WannaBeSauzy

    @WannaBeSauzy

    10 ай бұрын

    varför hatar ni att studera svenska?

  • @jaskau2462

    @jaskau2462

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@WannaBeSauzy 🙈 Learning swedish in school at in quite early age might easily feel like it takes off space and time out of the other subjects what you're set to learn in relatively short period of time. Just the time when they start teaching you more advanced math, biology, english, chemistry, physics etc. by 'demanding' you to success in every subject to a certain degree. Different areas in FIN has slightly different set of educational levels. Especially in the judiciary of school subject curricula between different subjects. And there's always the factor what kind of a person start teaching you swedish... 🙈 For example somewhere in Sawonian little village type of a county school other subjects, already familiar ones might feel way more comfortable than introduction to a totally 'foreign' language what you haven't used before. Or haven't had the Need to use at in your environment never ever before. And for a long time we have had the seed on the thing called : "Americanized" The amount of series, movies, docus you're watching off the webs, TV and off the screens, generally includes waaayyy more english spoken content with subtitles what makes it more approachable than many other subject you're taking class in the school, like this one right now while I'm typing this sh1t down! Personally it was the teacher who managed to alienate many of us from swedish....Unfortunately. That old, dried out, bulldog - like granny who couldn't even pronounce: "KETCHUP" propiately in swedish!!! (käts - häöp) 😝 Dunno in what class they begin to teach swedish nowadays and is it the same time for every one all over the Finnish educational system(???) HELLUWA LONG REPLY AND FOR NO REASON!!! 🤘 😹 🇫🇮 💙 💯 💥

  • @joonalehtinen5462

    @joonalehtinen5462

    10 ай бұрын

    @@WannaBeSauzy Because it's pretty much pointless for most of us.

  • @sissichu

    @sissichu

    10 ай бұрын

    @@WannaBeSauzy When I was at school age, for most Finns the swedish studies started when we were 13, when we graduated from elemantry school to middle school (from ala-aste to ylä-aste). It can be for some (me included) VERY turbulent time. New school, new school school mates and puberty. So like many others, I had almost zero interest in learning Swedish, or school at all during that time. I'm good at languages, so I'm very sure that if my Swedish studies would have started when I was in elementary school, like english did, I would be really good at swedish now.

  • @wahakk

    @wahakk

    10 ай бұрын

    When I see swedish citicen, I say "den glider in" 😅

  • @essipitkanen2811
    @essipitkanen281110 ай бұрын

    3:25 yes, a lot of people there speak Swedish as their native language, we call them by the name "suomenruotsalainen" (Finnish Swede), but they usually speak Finnish too, I have a couple friends from that area that speak Swedish at home but Finnish with me

  • @hxllheart1421
    @hxllheart142110 ай бұрын

    3:22 yes, most swedish speaking finns are in western and southern finland, and it is finlands second official language

  • @85sharifa55
    @85sharifa5510 ай бұрын

    Now someone from south- east Finland. I was born shortly after the war against Russia/ then Sowiet- Union. 20 years of my young- adult years I was living and studiing in Germany. Now back in Finland I live aside a lake, and earlier was swimming in the lake Saimaa!! Your video is very interesting!

  • @onddu2254
    @onddu225410 ай бұрын

    Not sure about that "no grades until 8th grade". In my school we got only verbal assessments until 3rd grade, but ever since that I've always gotten grades as numbers (4-10 system, 4 being failed).

  • @rinoahh4694
    @rinoahh469410 ай бұрын

    The connection to the internet may be there but you still have to pay for the provider xD

  • @ambrusin4889

    @ambrusin4889

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, and the electricity.

  • @iloinenleski2593
    @iloinenleski259310 ай бұрын

    Well reaction ❤

  • @theoneandonlyparsa
    @theoneandonlyparsa8 ай бұрын

    3:22 Yes. Swedish is also an official language here in Finland, which means its also mandatory to learn in Finnish schools.

  • @markyyy2008
    @markyyy200810 ай бұрын

    Learning swedish is mandatory here in every school from 7th grade to point of gaduation. Then you can choose your third (strong second language) between english, russia, german etc. depending of your school. Studies for strong second language starts 3th grade. Usually everybody choose english, because they teach it in every school here.

  • @williamlindqvist6471

    @williamlindqvist6471

    10 ай бұрын

    missä päin alkaa ruotsin opiskelu vasta seiskalla itellä alko jo ala asteella

  • @markyyy2008

    @markyyy2008

    10 ай бұрын

    @@williamlindqvist6471 Raumalla.

  • @Narangarath

    @Narangarath

    10 ай бұрын

    @@williamlindqvist6471 Espoossa ainakin 90-luvulla alko vasta 7:llä luokalla, mutta kuten kommentti sanoi niin se on pakollinen aine siitä lähtien, ei ettei sitä opiskella aikaisemmin missään päin maata.

  • @merileva

    @merileva

    8 ай бұрын

    @@williamlindqvist6471 itehän kävin pirkanmaalla yläasteen vuosina 2012-2015 ja vasta silloin alotettiin ruotsin opetus. muistaakseni muutama vuosi takaperin päätettiin alottaa ruotsin pakotus jo ala-asteelta mut emt si onko ollu jo muuallakin esim lännessä jo aikasemminkin jo et ala-asteelta alkaa.. en mä nyt vannomaan mee näistä tiedoista mutta kolmen vuoden pakkoruotsilla mennään:P

  • @nesta8273
    @nesta827310 ай бұрын

    Im not finnish but rye bread is king. White bread is air and goes straight to the waist without even satisfying the hunger.

  • @sjc9121
    @sjc912110 ай бұрын

    Rye bread is my absolute favorite bread. Karelian pies are also a delicacy

  • @VampiraVonGhoulscout
    @VampiraVonGhoulscout7 ай бұрын

    Bro, you should definitely visit one day. I've been to Helsinki twice and out to the national park in Espoo (about 1.5hrs away from the capital). Finland is absolute paradise. About to stay there for a whole month over Christmas/New Year as a trial run before I leave Glasgow permanently.

  • @sophapam
    @sophapam10 ай бұрын

    Yes most us finns don't really like Sweden or Russia lmao. We're sort of forced to learn swedish during our school years but pretty much everyone who only learns through school doesn't know anything but the basics. I don't know swedish further than the basics, but I've only studied swedish for a year in school (We start swedish mostly in 6th grade, but my older siblings started in 5th grade, so in some schools it starts in the 5th year.)

  • @uttula
    @uttula10 ай бұрын

    @19:15 ... yes - with a couple of asterisks attached :D Originally "broadband" was defined as anything above 128kbps, which was soon raised to 256kbps connection. The minimum speed has been raised as time has passed and these days definition of "broadband" is, I believe, minimum of 10Mbps connection. However ... this only applies to new buildings. If you live "in the middle of nowhere", the county will have a place for you to visit (usually in a nearest library) where you're allowed to access the Internet at no cost.

  • @Silvyrfir

    @Silvyrfir

    10 ай бұрын

    Atm the minimum is 5Mbit/s and it has to work at one point of every permanent residence. It also has ro be priced reasonably. Funnily enough when 3G came around the responsible company came a dug up all the cables in our little town ^^;

  • @sshortcuts3994
    @sshortcuts399410 ай бұрын

    In Finland we have a minority lf about 5% who speak swedish as their first language, but many people, mostly by the coast speak swedish. I am one of those so called swedish speaking finns. But me and me friends still speak finnish, we basically have two mothertongues

  • @nobsterious

    @nobsterious

    10 ай бұрын

    same here bro, im from vaasa

  • @lemondoes5110

    @lemondoes5110

    10 ай бұрын

    Same here, I'm from Espoo

  • @sshortcuts3994

    @sshortcuts3994

    10 ай бұрын

    @@nobsterious bro skrev int just Vasa med tre A 💀

  • @sofiajohansson8537
    @sofiajohansson853711 ай бұрын

    I started school when I was 7, I got my first grades in 8th grade. This was strandard in Sweden in the 90's. Sweden changed the grade system in 2011 and now grades are given from 6th grade, and the school system have deteriorated ever since.

  • @TheScaryName

    @TheScaryName

    11 ай бұрын

    No, Sweden had traditionally grades from 7th grade, now it is from 5rh or 6th (I forget)

  • @scanpolar
    @scanpolar10 ай бұрын

    I understand it totally ! I am Finnish and live nowadays in Spain . I very happy every spring time when I will start my summer and autumn in Finland . No problems with my pension , health care and clean food and nature . No robberies , no organized crime , few murders and street violence . No corrrupcion , police which you can trust and politicians mostlly anti racists. Forests are not bbuurniing , lakes are not dumping place for plastic and illegal products .. My happy greetings from the forests near lake Koitere .

  • @juhotuomaala1297
    @juhotuomaala12979 ай бұрын

    U really should look into more info videos about winter war and continue war. U could be amazed😎

  • @SchazmenRassir
    @SchazmenRassir10 ай бұрын

    Finland also largely consists of swampland. Or did at the time, at least. Swamp in Finnish is "suo". And swampland is "suomaa" which also leads to suomi.

  • @kuuno22
    @kuuno2210 ай бұрын

    In Finland, we actually got grades from 4th grade, so idk what's the 101 facts guy tripping

  • @Emppu-st9pq
    @Emppu-st9pq10 ай бұрын

    We get grades starting from the first grade. We just don’t get number grades until like third grade if I remember correctly but we still do get “bad, good, very good” or something like that during first and second grade. I don’t know why people always say that we don’t get grades, test/exams and homework even though we do starting from first grade. Sometimes we even get little homework’s in like the grade before first grade but after kindergarten.

  • @kallekallenen4346
    @kallekallenen434610 ай бұрын

    RUssia basically let us be finnish in the end, gave autonomy, government. We never had that in the exploits of the swedish Freudenthals.

  • @Redlights111
    @Redlights11110 ай бұрын

    When I was a child I would get tests at elementary school and they would rate them with words not numbers like: acceptable, good, very good and if you did amazing you would get smiley face next to very good.

  • @Inakarjalainen
    @Inakarjalainen11 ай бұрын

    I live in Finland and I talk swedish normally but I speak Finnish swedish

  • @dwaynesview

    @dwaynesview

    11 ай бұрын

    Finnish Swedish is a different kind of Swedish? I didn't know that.

  • @Pepzi987

    @Pepzi987

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dwaynesview Slightly different. I'm pretty sure everything else is almost identical to "normal" Swedish but the pronunciations are more in line with the way Finns pronounce words. Some words are different from Swedish and the sentence structure can be different (Kinda same as "I now go to bed / I'm going to bed now") but mostly the same.

  • @thejjzz

    @thejjzz

    11 ай бұрын

    @@dwaynesview it's kind of Swedish with Finnish accent.

  • @susannebrunberg4174

    @susannebrunberg4174

    10 ай бұрын

    ​ No it's not. No "Finnish accent"

  • @mikaellindroos1594

    @mikaellindroos1594

    10 ай бұрын

    @@dwaynesview As austrlian and amerikan english is different from brittish english. SWE speaking Finn🇫🇮

  • @FallenAdam
    @FallenAdam10 ай бұрын

    I really like that internet fact. Probably my favourite fact about my country. And in fact, I've got a 10mbps connection included in my rent.

  • @caky68
    @caky6810 ай бұрын

    Ryebread is perfect. Especially with soups with meat or minced meat 😊

  • @uttula
    @uttula10 ай бұрын

    @17:30 ... "not compulsory" here doesn't mean that it isn't done. Generally on the first few years you're graded on a three-level scale "knows well", "knows well enough", "needs more work". Beginning around third or fourth year, the start being graded numerically on a range of 4-10 where 4 means that "you really need to start working on this" and sometime means that you will need to re-take the previous year (not if you get a single 4 on your yearly report) ... and this is why students get two report cards per year; one in the end of first half of a school year and another one at the end of the school year. This way you know which skills need approving in. Back to the "not compulsory" ... the reason for the legal requirement for kids to have comparable grading during their 8th year is that there are nine years of basic schooling after which all students need to be able to be compared to everyone else in their age group. There are very few schools that start it this late, but it is legally possible to only start at that stage. It is rarely done; personally I don't know of a single school that actually does delays numerical grading until such late stage.

  • @kiipy
    @kiipy10 ай бұрын

    For me first test in finnish school where Al ready at first year but they where test to find out kids with learning difficulties or disabilities. Got myself to have separed teaching for mother language because of those. Some other got their small group by math and some got school helper to be with them in classroom. That way kids don't fall behind because of group setting even they have development delays in some areas of school. After those I think our first onew where speed counting in math. As kids many hated them because of the anxiety but as adult we have understood that they where just little poorly named calculation in head speed training. Kids of course compared themself to each other. We also don't have ready made questions as much example north Americans have. When I was in exchange at canada I was so supriced that they had exam papers with question and then lines where to answer. Change to essay answers after 9th grade if not earlier in some subjects and schools. We need to learn to understand our subjects not just memories them. Because of this avarage finnish students can often be straight A student when they go to exchange.

  • @Drive_with_soma
    @Drive_with_soma10 ай бұрын

    We have actually areas where mostly spoken language is swedish but we also learn swedish in our schools. Must learn language.

  • @6St6Jimmy6
    @6St6Jimmy610 ай бұрын

    I remember numeric grades from 3rd or 4th grade. First and second year we just got word grades. I've no idea what the broadband thing means. Though there aren't really any data limitations sold, except on some mobile phones, so we only pay for the speed. Though that's common on many other countries also, except some English speaking countries :D

  • @jugituubi

    @jugituubi

    10 ай бұрын

    I have all of my school report cards. I got numeric grades from 4th and forward

  • @ouuushiiidd
    @ouuushiiidd10 ай бұрын

    The grades one is a loop hole, it begins with numbers and later on numbers

  • @hm7369
    @hm73696 ай бұрын

    Yeah! I grew up in a very Swedish speaking community in Pohjanmaa of Finland and have learnt to speak Finnish since I was 7 years old. The place I grew up in was so Swedish that I got by without having to use my Finnish speaking skills until I moved to Varsinais-Suomi at 18 years old. I can't judge Finnish speaking people who don't care to learn or speak Swedish, because Swedish is hell of a language to learn. I usually prefer to use Finnish anyway, because it gives me practice to speak and hear it. And I want to stay and work (in the future) in Finland so the only way for me is to learn Finnish. Also, I agree with some comments that the reason Finland is the happiest people is that we are content and really don't demand much, like living in a mansion or something like that. Aside from that, we generally have less pressure and stress when it comes to paying for education, since costs are very low, and we are able to focus on acquiring high degrees quickly and getting relatively good paying jobs (that's, of course, depending on what you study and where you choose to work). I am grateful for getting to grow up in Finland and having had the privilege of free school food, free healthcare (free in the form of paying high taxes, but I don't mind) and good education.

  • @margotvandenwijngaerden2429
    @margotvandenwijngaerden24297 ай бұрын

    I live in Belgium, my daughter is 14 and has never had grades in her live. First she went to an 'Freinet'school and since last year she went to a school that follows the finnish education methodes.

  • @jeppisnina
    @jeppisnina10 ай бұрын

    a swedish speaking finn here... struggling with finnish every day :)

  • @fannyhaddas2998
    @fannyhaddas299810 ай бұрын

    When i went to school, we got grades and had tests from 1st grade forward... 1st grade started when i was 7

  • @einothegamer
    @einothegamer10 ай бұрын

    My grading started in the 4th grade, but even that is pretty late

  • @joik2ww
    @joik2ww10 ай бұрын

    They count as escaped if you are late from holiday. Are in some other address than you suppose to be. Also open prison doesn't have gates or fenches so sometimes they walk past line bc ball rolled there and get recorded as escaped. Mostly punishment for it is like losing phone right for week or losing playstation from room. :D Like losing gained benefits.

  • @finnishculturalchannel
    @finnishculturalchannel10 ай бұрын

    The happiest as in comparison the best society to live a content life. In 1686 the church law demanded, that the children should be taught to read within the church practices, but the development of literacy took time. In the beginning of the 1800s 70 percent of the people could read, of which 60 percent could read well. One of the Finnish literature classics, by Aleksis Kivi, addresses that topic: "Seven Brothers One Woman show by Heidi Niemi". Aleksis Kivi is the national author of Finland and "The Seven Brothers" is widely regarded as the first significant novel written in Finnish and by a Finnish-speaking author. The novel was published in 1870. Aleksis Kivi's birth name was Swedish Alexis Stenvall, which he changed to a Finnish one. About Sweden, Russia and Finnic languages: "Venäjä = Ruotsi // 'Russia' means Sweden". The monarchists were hoping to create stronger ties with German Empire. There were Finnish volunteers getting military training in Germany between the years 1915-1918 with an intent to cut ties to Russian Empire with force, if necessary. This took place during the second period of oppression (1908-1917). Jean Sibelius, who isregarded as Finland's greatest composer, composed a march for those volunteers: "Finnish Army Song - Jääkärimarssi". In all, the period between 1856-1916 is considered as a period of social progress in Finland.

  • @mikkos8636
    @mikkos86365 күн бұрын

    Hey, great video :) we native finns don't like to say things we don't mean, me especially, and I know life, so... rest assured it's a good video you made. :) As for the word "Suomi" we in Finland call our country, the word Suomi is very similar to the word "suomu" which in english means "finn", the scale of a fish that you better remove with a sharp knife or something before you eat that fish. So yeah, fin = suomu, and Finland = Suomi. Hm. I don't know if it's a coincidence or something, but I doubt it is just "without connection". Oh, and with the scale of the fish "finn" = "suomu" in finnish: Suomi Finland has the most lakes in the world, and we like our fish, even though some of our fishes have been called "trash fish" or "roskakala" in finnish, because people didn't like them as much as some other fish. But fish is an integral part of finnish cuisine, I'd say.

  • @nieppari
    @nieppari10 ай бұрын

    you should chek out winter war about finland, large piece history for finnish people

  • @chair8663
    @chair866310 ай бұрын

    Im Sadly A Swedish Finn And Its Really Difficult To Live Without Finnish

  • @catspaw72

    @catspaw72

    9 ай бұрын

    Jätte kiva vad

  • @ristovirtanen6396
    @ristovirtanen639610 ай бұрын

    Another explanation for name Suomi… Suo = swamp, marsh in English and considering that after ice age the country must have looked very much like a big swamp and as land kept rising and the weight of ice melted away creating the land of thousand lakes as it’s known today.

  • @noobvelho
    @noobvelho6 ай бұрын

    we do have tests in the first grade (at 7 years old), but techers don't have to give us grade for it they do tell us how many poits we get out of these tests and give them for us to see and check what we did get right and what we didn't and tell us to study more if we don't get any points.

  • @MauriMahtava
    @MauriMahtava6 ай бұрын

    Kalevala was also a big inspiration for the lord of the rings. The story bases follow stories which are in Kalevala. Of course it is not straight 1:1, but there is studies that the Kalevala stories heavily inspired multiple scenes in the LOTR. Tolkien studied Kalevala when he was young.

  • @Dertyast5
    @Dertyast510 ай бұрын

    In Finnish schools they teach us Swedish because it our "second" language

  • @m.cfender4183
    @m.cfender41836 ай бұрын

    Knowledge of the Swedish language is very regional. Southern and Western Finland are mostly the areas where Swedish is spoken. Especially in Southern Finland, many people are bilingual, e.g. because there are members of the family who speak one of the two languages ​​as their first language. Among my parents, my father is Finnish-speaking and my mother is Swedish-speaking.. very common. I speak and understand both well.

  • @strange_person1
    @strange_person110 ай бұрын

    oh I live in Finland.. I didn't know I was lucky :0

  • @samil5601

    @samil5601

    6 ай бұрын

    It is like winning the lottery to be born in Finland!

  • @Haxx0rZ-
    @Haxx0rZ-10 ай бұрын

    As a finnish person i dont know what i can say in here

  • @Era-Core
    @Era-Core9 ай бұрын

    Depends on the rye bread, but there's this rye bread, Reissumies Tosi Tumma, which has a sweet taste to it, but is actually very healthy and delicious as rye bread, in my personal opinion. Put on some ham, cheese and tomato slices, and it will taste even more delicious.

  • @SK-nw4ig
    @SK-nw4ig10 ай бұрын

    Swedish was never the main language spoken in finland. it was only spoken by the upper class, who were swedish. Common folk only spoke finnish and they didnt read swedish. Totally depended on the upper class. There was no education or books for finns. Finnish became into written language in 1500's, and it took naturally a long time to anyone to learn to read it. Not everyone could read a hundred years ago, though most obviously could to an extent. Finnish school system was created 1866, when children were taught to read. Swedish is mandatory in schools here today. So most finns understand some swedish, though only a smaller portion actually speak it. Yes, Russia is the reason we joined NATO. Though, isnt Russia the reason for everyone to join NATO? I you didnt know Russia had that much involvement in finland, I suggest you check out few videos for example about the Winterwar, second world war in Finland and karelian refugees of finland. I actually think that one very good point which is rarely mentioned when talking about finnish education systemin is that finnish schools serve a hot meal for every student every single day. It was made a law after the world war. Brain needs food! Legal right for broad band means you should be legally obliged to get it anywhere in finland. Not free, though it is super cheap most of the time. Definately check out "sauna culture in finland".

  • @susannebrunberg4174

    @susannebrunberg4174

    10 ай бұрын

    It's strange that every single person with Finnish as mother tongue, always always has to criticize everyone who has Swedish as their mother tongue. Maybe because Finnish speakers find it so difficult to learn other languages? Or?

  • @SK-nw4ig

    @SK-nw4ig

    10 ай бұрын

    @@susannebrunberg4174 A bit agressive accusation of you. Swedish jokes are definately a thing in finland, former years much more than now. I guess all the things that i wrote in my answer contribute to that, swedish being originally upper, ruling class language. The mandatory swedish we have to learn in schools adds to that recentment for some. I think languages are good to learn. I regret my swedish vocabulary is forgotten largely, it would be nice to be able to speak it more fluently.

  • @susannebrunberg4174

    @susannebrunberg4174

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SK-nw4ig No, it was not aggressiv from my point of view. Four of my relatives are teachers, (tree in Finland, one in Sweden), and is was more what they have told me. I lived in Finland as a child, had only Swedish talking friends, went to a Swedish school etc etc... You see, my parents are from Finland and Sweden, I have, either two home countries, or none. My relatives in Finland have never been any nobilities, just ordinary people. I do know many of the finns think the Swedish language was only for the upper class, but it's simple not true. It's more nuanced than that.

  • @SK-nw4ig

    @SK-nw4ig

    10 ай бұрын

    Obviously it was and is more nuanced than that. Swedes also came to work in finland, especially to coastal cities. We also got many germans working here in certain traits. Swedish language was necessarily not only for upper class (though huge amount of it sure was), but upper class was only for swedish. Historically nobles here were swedish speaking. Among the noble families of finland none have finnish last name, then or now. All the paper work was done in swedish (and then of course we add russian to the mix, as some papers had to be done in russian too when under russian rule). So all this easily leads people wanting to emphasize their own native tongue. Obviously people should not speak ill of others just based on their language. I am old, and i have seen the change in my life time already. The amount of swedish jokes was much larger when i was a kid. Towards a better world, we finns are not lesser anymore by any metric, so no need for malice.

  • @Mr_Ladderhorns_Gaming
    @Mr_Ladderhorns_Gaming7 ай бұрын

    Kalevalas started from multiple Rocks egs. But there are multiple versions of the begining

  • @hennahallikainen711
    @hennahallikainen7119 ай бұрын

    As a Finn I speak also fluent swedish, English, german, russian and spanish.

  • @viljavuorela4442
    @viljavuorela44426 ай бұрын

    As a Finn, I'm just laughing at the way that the video's guy says Finnish words!😂😂😂

  • @Juisou
    @Juisou10 ай бұрын

    the internet is just that everywhere you are in finland there have to be 1mbps network available but to use it you still have to pay for it

  • @turbojuuso8257
    @turbojuuso825710 ай бұрын

    Suomi has word in it which is suo which means swamps and we have much swamp's

  • @bandit4690
    @bandit469010 ай бұрын

    I don’t really understand the part of ”grading is not compulsory until 8th grade” part. Since the first grade i’ve been graded and done tests. And everyone i’ve met has too. So i definitely relate to the anxieties regarding that, from a very young age. But maybe i’m just misunderstanding the point.

  • @thrashrat5481

    @thrashrat5481

    10 ай бұрын

    I think there was a small misunderstanding. Tests in this case references standardized tests; which first one is held on 8th grade I believe. With the grading however, it's normal to do normal tests and get the points tell you how you did in the test, for example 22/30 points. The normal 4-10 grading is also not usually done in 1st-6th grade (unless they have changed it); so instead of numeral grades they use "Excellent" "Good" and so on, where as the 4 to 10 grading usually happens 7th grade onward.

  • @bandit4690

    @bandit4690

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thrashrat5481 the 4-10 scale was used from 3rd or 4th grade onwards iirc (am now 21). But you might be correct about the standardized tests. Can’t remember what the finnish term for that was. But i think i remember what you’re referring to

  • @XGD5layer

    @XGD5layer

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@thrashrat5481I'm pretty sure that it literally only meant that schools can decide not to give grades until 8th grade. Of course they can also decide to give them. As for tests, that is also up to the teacher, but tests are used later so getting used to them is probably included in the recommendations.

  • @ironjavs1182
    @ironjavs118210 ай бұрын

    You should maje a reaction video of Kalevala or old Kalevala (which is more authentic to Finnish myths/lores and runes)

  • @fudeboii
    @fudeboii10 ай бұрын

    and since Finland is a bilingual country, you have to get service in Swedish as well. for example, if you go to a hospital or a police station, you must receive service in Swedish

  • @xJdog

    @xJdog

    10 ай бұрын

    Sweden should be wiped away from finlands society systems

  • @rinoahh4694
    @rinoahh469410 ай бұрын

    Yup there are still some places that prioritize Swedish over Finnish language wise

  • @oivaaho6932
    @oivaaho693210 ай бұрын

    8:20 Finland had already had its own Senate, though it was fully subordinate to the tšar of Russia, and we had Russian general-gobrenor leading the politics and administration of Finland. I have also to note that Tšar could, whenever he felt appropriate, dissolve the Parliament, too, if things went in a way he didn't like. That happened very often. (Nearly every year) 9:43 The Red (labourers) wanted to stay with Russia, whereas the White wanted independence. Many war crimes happened (prison camps, executions without trial, a lot) mostly by the White, although I'm pretty sure the Red would have committed a lot more of them, but they were too busy losing the war.

  • @Emppu-st9pq
    @Emppu-st9pq10 ай бұрын

    Yes we like rye Bream and have many kinds of rye bread. I have never tasted rye bread anywhere else before but I’m pretty sure ours is the best

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz10 ай бұрын

    Suomi probably means swamp land (suomaa), most of Finland is made of marshes and swamps and lakes, so its watery and wet.

  • @jonasfermefors
    @jonasfermefors10 ай бұрын

    Regarding the lakes.. Finland counts very small bodies of water as lakes. Using a common definition of lakes over 0.1 square kilometers (that is more about making it easier to count than accuracy) Finland is not even in the top 10. Still, look at a good map of Finland and you will see that there is a lot of water - whether we define them as lakes or not.

  • @marimajaranta2591
    @marimajaranta259110 ай бұрын

    Sauna, terva & viina 😍 happiest just after sauna when their asked❤ I wouldnt move anywhere else 😅

  • @content...9934
    @content...99344 ай бұрын

    Every Finn speaks Swedish. Our second language, mandatory in school. Suomi is commonly believed to come from "suo-maa" or "swamp-land".

  • @artokojo
    @artokojo9 ай бұрын

    Good observations. You were always 10 seconds ahead of video.

  • @moonliteX
    @moonliteX6 ай бұрын

    we try to eat lots of dark bread because we percieve it to be healthier. the standard is rye bread.

  • @XGD5layer
    @XGD5layer10 ай бұрын

    8:25 The Grand Duchy of Finland had it's own Parliament (or similar) and laws before 1906, but it was only infrequently convened and was based in the class system. The year 1906 was when we got a modern Parliament with equal voting rights.

  • @282sleeper
    @282sleeper10 ай бұрын

    mainly southern coastal areas speak swedish, I think. As main language. Correct me if im wrong

  • @finnaviation5875
    @finnaviation587510 ай бұрын

    i am from finland and i was given grades since 4-5th grade

  • @juliuspalttala
    @juliuspalttala10 ай бұрын

    People don't usually speak swedish in finland these days, the most swedish is spoken on the west coast in cities like Vaasa and Turku. Swedish also is the second official language of Finland, so studying swedish is mandatory for finnish children.

  • @EpicBurritto

    @EpicBurritto

    10 ай бұрын

    I would say that people who speak swedish as their first language in finland would be our version of the posh upper class in the UK.

  • @Draugo
    @Draugo6 ай бұрын

    The legal right to broadband is not about giving everyone free access to broadband internet but rather a requirement for ISP:s to guarantee coverage with either cable or wireless internet. Basically the whole of Finland is covered with a 4G network at this point excluding some truly remote areas. Also all of our normal internet connections have uncapped data. There might be some sort of cap in the fine print but you really need to work to exceed those. So no matter where you live you have access to a pretty cheap and uncapped broadband connection which these days tends to be at least 50Mbs

  • @akaittou
    @akaittou9 ай бұрын

    Broadband being a legal right means that anyone who wants to get broadband must be able to get it, and it can't be so expensive as to be completely unviable. As in, if a finn wants to get a broadband connection to their tiny cabin in the middle of the woods somewhere, an internet provider has to by law be willing to set it up. It doesn't mean it's free or that everyone has to have it, only that everyone has to be able to get it if they want.

  • @zeos62
    @zeos6210 ай бұрын

    Im finn but sweden is one of three languages ​​we have to learn at school (others are finland and english)

  • @oivaaho6932
    @oivaaho693210 ай бұрын

    15:41 The world happiness report doesn't tell about emotional happiness and personal positivity. It tells about economical and political stability, safety&security, education and health, trustworthy administration and so on. 17:34 this is partially misleading, if you ask me. Firstly, not getting grades means in this case that typical Finnish grading system from 4 to 10 is not necessarily applied, and that in their resumes in the end of the year there are things like 'goals partially reached', goals exceeded' but teachers use tests and exams, and grade them, also giving out number grades (the 4-10) begins at last the 7th grade, though for other things than resume, like exams it is applied a lot earlier.