I know the solution, but it's too harsh for Americans.Command and Conquer. We need to go in there and be strict.We build architecture. Everyone gets to use it.We teach to respect the architecture and to maintain it. We teach agriculture. Everyone gets to use it.We teach to respect the agriculture and to maintain it.Everyone who can work, will work.The more work you put in, the more you get back.You don't work you don't get nothing.Everyone has the right to pursue happiness. Tolerance and respect of race, religion, age, and disability will be taught and enforced.Respect will be taught and enforced.Stealing, Killing, Lying should not be tolerated.Governments will be banned from giving AID.AID can come in the form of personal donations. Resistance from rebels must be met with deadly force. They are a disease.Once a society is established, then we can THINK about an unenforced society. This is the quickest way to get Africa up to the rest of the world's standards. You're just wasting your time with anything else. Even America has laws and rules and police to enforce laws that promote the well being of humanity. It's only been the Bush Administration that's repealed many of the laws that promote society and replaced them with toxic policies. Teenagers kick and cry when they're forced to obey household rules, but it's tough love. It's completely necessary to maintain order in an otherwise chaotic system without rules.[Edited on July 29, 2011 at 7:28 PM. Reason : .]
7/29/2011 7:24:25 PM
^ i agree with that, but we all know it will never happen like that, for several reasons.(it *could* happen like that if the somali alqaeda rebels attack the US and the US goes in)
7/29/2011 7:35:13 PM
^^ Welcome to imperialism.Guess what? It doesn't work either. At least not in a term that is economically sustainable. The British and Spanish did this over centuries, and as soon as they left, everything went back to the way it had been before.And I fucking hate people like GoldenGirl. Saying "I'm just spreading awareness, I'm not saying to donate money" is just bullshit. The ONLY reason people bring awareness to causes, is to get support (aka resources, aka money) donated towards said cause.For once GeniusBoy is right here. The phenomenon is called imperialism. We think "oh we have it so good, we should make everyone else like us, and they'll be happy then". Except it never works, and the people end up worse than they started.The best monetary contribution you can give to any ailing civilization is micro-finance for domestic business. The best volunteer effort is to embed, embrace and effect micro-change in local communities. Large scale efforts end in large scale clusterfucks.I think it's the natural inclination of women to think empathetically, my fiance and I have fought over this same issue. Even after showing her the data, she still doesn't get that donating money to all these causes does much more to alleviate her own guilt than it does some poor person's condition.
7/29/2011 10:52:37 PM
donating money isn't the only thing you can do. there are lots of others. and yes its only a short term solution but I've been working with NGOs that support long term infrastructure building including micro financing. So before you start to judge me and make this about me its not. I made this thread b/c its an emerging problem that people don't yet know much about and isn't getting the needed media attention because things like our debt crisis. Yes we do have a responsibility for those living in poverty in the states but as a human being we also do have a call to help those outside our own borders ( Heaven Forbid!) Once again no where did i say donate money or agree with my beliefs. We can agree to disagree.[Edited on July 29, 2011 at 11:12 PM. Reason : s]
7/29/2011 11:12:19 PM
7/29/2011 11:19:29 PM
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/157/can-this-man-save-this-girlgood read on water shortage in Africa (as well as clean water shortage around the globe), why some of the project did not yield the expected results, and the proposed approaches that involve local community which may be sustainable
7/29/2011 11:26:16 PM
^ No system, no matter how simple, can be sustained by poor people. The only solution that can ever work is to end their poverty, however you do it. Maybe China can pull it off through the rebirth of colonialism they have engendered. But I'm not hopeful. The only thing we know for sure that will work is to move the people out of Africa onto some other Continent. Even South America would be an improvement. [Edited on July 30, 2011 at 12:16 AM. Reason : .,.]
7/30/2011 12:15:58 AM
7/30/2011 2:59:08 AM
To reply here to GoldenGirl's PM accusing me of trolling:1) I don't troll2) This is the lounge3) Don't get butthurt because you don't know what you're talking aboutI'm not cold hearted. I'm just not stupid. If I'm going to commit time/energy/anything to helping someone, I want to make sure it's worthwhile.I do plenty of volunteer work and support charitable organizations. Just not the ones that throw away money with colonialist white-guilt "save the primitives" bullshit.Unlike Genius, I care. Unlike you, I actually use my brain WITH my heart.
7/30/2011 3:23:23 AM
^He's right. I don't care. I can't think of anything that could make me care either. It's kinda like dealing with turmoil in the middle east. It's reason for fighting is retarded and the answer to peace is right under everyone's noses.[Edited on July 30, 2011 at 4:56 AM. Reason : .]
7/30/2011 4:55:13 AM
7/30/2011 5:44:51 AM
Nice
7/30/2011 12:21:04 PM
You girls are always tell us guys to stop thinking with our dicks and use our brains.Well here is us guys telling you girls to stop thinking with your heart and use your brains.Your hearts get you into as much pointless, needless drama as our penises.
7/30/2011 12:47:53 PM
just shut the fuck up, man
7/30/2011 1:14:59 PM
7/30/2011 1:36:20 PM
East africa is more or less caught in a Malthusian trap and will be so as long as economic development is abysmal. Famine has occurred in the region in '72/72, 84/85, 91/92, 98-00, 03, 06-08, 10/11. Yet the population keeps on exploding. Most foreign aid just ensures millions more will be at risk for famine during the next drought in a few years. It's a pretty hopeless situation.
7/30/2011 3:02:49 PM
they should have sterilization drugs included in their UN food rations.
7/30/2011 3:30:23 PM
From the thread (http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=614203) I linked I earlier:
7/30/2011 3:53:20 PM
i was planning on donating... but maybe i won't anymore.don't know, i am torn and confused.
7/30/2011 4:02:55 PM
7/30/2011 4:12:14 PM
7/30/2011 4:12:29 PM
Or does it?
7/30/2011 4:18:46 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vN7ehccspao
7/30/2011 4:21:14 PM
everyone in america is smarteveryone in africa is stupid
7/30/2011 4:21:43 PM
85% of Doctors Without Borders expenditures go directly into their charitable operations so yeah, it does depend on the charity
7/30/2011 4:29:30 PM
^ only 85% that's kinda low. I know of a few that 93-95% goes directly to who they serve and not admin or fundraising.
7/30/2011 5:21:36 PM
My charity's better than your charity contest 2011
7/30/2011 7:42:39 PM
First off, I think a lot of the negative comments in here are ultimately unhelpful. If people who are actually not supportive of certain efforts to change things in Africa are really concerned about efficiency, then they say their piece and then don't feel the need to keep telling those who are attempting to raise awareness or donate how stupid they are. If you don't want to be part of it, that's cool, and I think everyone can at the very least respect your decision, but there isn't any logic to shitting all over someone else for how they choose to get involved.If you provide some evidence about how they can do so in a way that has a more direct result on achieving their goals, that's fine, but no need to stick around in a thread just to keep saying how worthless the goal is just to be an ass.Secondly, sometimes helping others is partially about helping them, and partially about making sure that you are doing things to try and make the world a better place. Even if the results aren't going to eliminate the large scale problems, there is something to be said for being a person who wants to make the world a better place, even incrementally. Trying to make change so we feel better about who we are as people is not a bad thing, it can often be part of what it means to lead a fulfilled life.Thirdly, saying if we can't solve the entire problem then it's pointless to try at all is the wrong mentality, in my opinion. While not every dollar will be properly spent, there are programs that will take off and be successful. It's like saying no one should start a small business because half of them fail in the first year (if that stat is actually correct but for argument's sake let's say it is). If there are larger programs that are sustaining the problem even though they appear to be charities, then fine, donate your time, money, energy, and awareness to others that aren't. There's a great piece about an NCSU grad who is doing great things in Africa, and he started by doing something as simple as raising money while he was here. There's really no telling what the seed of awareness can grow into. http://www.alumniblog.ncsu.edu/2011/06/17/video-highlights-push-for-clean-water-by-nc-state-alumnus/Lastly, most of us had the good fortune of being born into a time and place where our efforts towards success could pay off. We were born in a society with stable institutions created through no work of our own...none of you created the government, or road system, or developed the modern educational environment allowing you to learn. YOU didn't establish any of the major societal institutions upon which your success ultimately rests. While you likely did contribute a lot of hard work to create whatever success you've had, we have huge advantages as Americans that many other countries don't have. It's easy to blame the Somalis for their own problems, given the warlords over there, or the Ugandans for theirs, given a history of military dictatorships, but there are a fair number of average people there who have little ability to move beyond their station because of the structures that were in place when they were born. If a little bit of charity allows a few to go to school, or avoid starvation and dysentery, or a micro loan lets them start up a business, that may be all they need to eventually pay it forward and help change the society they're in from the ground up.
7/30/2011 9:46:08 PM
carry on, goldengirl.I want to see you in the history books.[Edited on July 30, 2011 at 10:11 PM. Reason : .]
7/30/2011 10:02:23 PM
NOTE to readers: my post is based on the post above before he edited it.this is not a math problem. this is a complex real life problem with thousands of variables and hundreds of 'solutions' of varying goodness.while donating money might not bring about the best solution ever, it IS a solution for the crying frail mother who watching her 6 year old (the size of a 2 y.o.) slowly die in front of her. that child receiving some food and tomorrow IS a solution for that mother and child, even though it perpetuates the overall problem further.the best solution would take decades to bring about, as it involves educating the masses and teaching them to respect each other and let people live instead of killing and raping and plundering their own brethren. it also entails teaching the adult population skills so they can make money instead of beg for it, and teaching the child population science and math and languages and business and plumbing and carpentry and and and... so they can become professionals and then pass the skills and knowledge onto their offspring. that's not something you can do now and see the results in your lifetime.[Edited on July 30, 2011 at 10:16 PM. Reason : ]
7/30/2011 10:15:25 PM
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/01/10/132803684/the-microfinance-backlashThe bottom line metric -- whether a country gets out of poverty or not -- is not affected by microfinance. It's nice to think that something completely bottom up will work, but history does not show this to be the case. All the countries that have recently come out of poverty (Asian countries) have done so with strong, top-down efforts to organize a country's resources.Microfinance doesn't build roads, ports, industry with economies of scale, applied technical skills skills, a sufficient amount of peace. That's what takes a country out of poverty. You cannot make big changes without big money. Small changes do nothing to change the fundamental situation.Until these African countries have that, they are going nowhere.(The other reason why microfinance doesn't work is because it puts money in the hands of poor people, who are either too dumb or too ignorant to know how to make that money generate a return. If you are going to make an investment, you don't give money to your least talented people. You give money to your most talented people -- those people who have proven capable of building larger businesses in shitty countries. The microfinance approach takes a low-probability approach to finding people with the talent to make a big change.On average, people with limited skills, experience, and history of success will prove to be poor performers who are unable to handle anything but the simplest tasks. We all know this in our day-to-day lives. Why expect any different in the 3rd world?)Large-scale foreign aid doesn't help a country get out of poverty. Micro-finance doesn't help a country get out of poverty. FDI doesn't help. The right kind of strong, local governance does.[Edited on July 30, 2011 at 10:49 PM. Reason : .]
7/30/2011 10:38:34 PM
Another good article on why MFI is doomedhttp://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/faculty/chang/pubs/Microfinance.pdf
7/31/2011 12:01:08 AM
7/31/2011 12:35:02 AM
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-africa-famine-camp-20110803,0,4486407.storyLA Times ran a huge 2 pager on it in the paper today for anyone who is interested.
8/3/2011 12:32:08 PM
8/3/2011 12:48:56 PM
^ yes it is good to know about any non profit you are involved with. Some standard organizations that rank and monitor them are:http://www.charitywatch.org/http://www.thenonprofittimes.com/http://www.charitynavigator.org/
8/3/2011 12:52:34 PM