It's an unfair world and it always has been. To look back and say we did this or that is not going to make any difference today. As a country you have to look back and ask whether we have made it fairer over the passage of time, both here and places where we had influence to do so. The world and what was thought to be right 50 years ago, 100 years ago, 200 years ago etc. is completely different to today.We can always make it fairer but is it a case of diminishing returns and should our main efforts be to influence other countries to make their country fairer where they are way behind where this country stands.It is very easy to spend somebody else's money on a very worthy cause and, comparing with football, is similar in a way to how much a club should spend on transfers.
Never has there been less hardship; since Clinton’s day, the share of the population in extreme poverty (surviving on less than $1.25 a day) has halved. Never has there been less violence: the Syrian conflict is an exception in a period of history where war has waned. It might not feel like it, but the world is more prosperous and peaceful than at any time in human history – yet the number of emigrants stands at a record high. But there is no paradox. As more people have the money to move, more are doing so – and at extraordinary personal risk.
Quote from: silhillvilla on September 03, 2015, 08:25:31 PMDing - Dong . Door opens ."Heroes and villains , villa fanzine , latest issue " Yes, you've already said that and it wasn't funny then.
Ding - Dong . Door opens ."Heroes and villains , villa fanzine , latest issue "
In contrast, the Telegraph says that increased migration is due to the poor not being as poor as they used to behttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/immigration/11842760/Prepare-yourselves-The-Great-Migration-will-be-with-us-for-decades.htmlQuoteNever has there been less hardship; since Clinton’s day, the share of the population in extreme poverty (surviving on less than $1.25 a day) has halved. Never has there been less violence: the Syrian conflict is an exception in a period of history where war has waned. It might not feel like it, but the world is more prosperous and peaceful than at any time in human history – yet the number of emigrants stands at a record high. But there is no paradox. As more people have the money to move, more are doing so – and at extraordinary personal risk.
Quote from: Stirchley Villain on September 04, 2015, 07:10:48 AMShouldn't these people be moved to Off Topic?Bastard
Shouldn't these people be moved to Off Topic?
Quote from: ROBBO on September 03, 2015, 10:34:07 PMGovernments are the problem not the people, if the suburb i live in was asked to support twenty families of Syrian refugees i have no doubt that they would be welcomed with open arms, replicate that across developed countries and that would go a long way to solving the problem. With the prime minister we have there is no chance of this happening. Save the children.Australia is a great example of how governments are often the problem.
Governments are the problem not the people, if the suburb i live in was asked to support twenty families of Syrian refugees i have no doubt that they would be welcomed with open arms, replicate that across developed countries and that would go a long way to solving the problem. With the prime minister we have there is no chance of this happening. Save the children.
Brian - things have never been equal and never will be. Even the things you mentioned, the inequalities have always been there and will always be there. They just take a new form through the generations and in the next generation it will just be something else.
Quote from: TheMalandro on September 04, 2015, 12:27:19 PMQuote from: Stirchley Villain on September 04, 2015, 07:10:48 AMShouldn't these people be moved to Off Topic?BastardWho... Me?