tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2532313388110978122.post3777885279523258666..comments2023-10-28T00:47:18.069-07:00Comments on Weeks Population: UN Seeks to End Poverty by 2015John Weekshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04069566137451684355noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2532313388110978122.post-92165848496446395062010-09-13T11:10:19.209-07:002010-09-13T11:10:19.209-07:00Although the intentions of this goal are admirable...Although the intentions of this goal are admirable, a goal without concrete and specific plans is difficult to put into action. Making this claim, that we will end poverty in 2015, certainly grabs people’s attention; however, it does not hold their attention. Without offering ways that people could help solve this crisis, people’s interest wanes, and this goal will fall short. With only 5 years left to reach this goal, speculation and broad outlines of a plan are not very helpful or practical. I think that, because many people want to help this cause, a specific program in which people could donate their time or money should be set up to help create jobs in poverty-ridden areas. Although it is true that a few people with the most money do control what happens, if enough people speak up about this and show their true desire to help with this cause, anything is possible. Compassion and a sincere willingness to help will outweigh the few in power if enough people illustrate their desire for change.<br /><br />-Brielle MartellAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2532313388110978122.post-19783436283653808392010-09-12T20:28:51.529-07:002010-09-12T20:28:51.529-07:00I dont believe its impossible. The capabilities of...I dont believe its impossible. The capabilities of man are limitless. It simply comes down to whether people want it to happen or not. And the problem is not the masses. If you asked the billions of people throughout the world living in poverty if they'd like it to end and had the will to work toward change, they'd jump aboard in a heartbeat. If you asked the select few in control of most of the worlds wealth the same questions, you'd see a much weaker sense of urgency. And that is really the only hold up. Money is power in the system we've designed, and people's lives revolve around it. The greedy people of the world unfortunately come to power in capitalistic society, and regardless of what the masses really want, these people will invest their money and power in the most efficient way possible to keep the masses fooled into thinking that they are getting what they want, all while keeping things as close to the same as possible. This results in no real effort for change. The problem is rooted in the capitalistic system, and untill we modify and regulate that, any form of change unbeneficial to the wealthy will always be slow to develope.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2532313388110978122.post-88791340916850022642010-09-10T12:53:50.613-07:002010-09-10T12:53:50.613-07:00I think it's great that there is an effort to ...I think it's great that there is an effort to end poverty in 2015! Goals are great to have to motivate people to work for a cause, but they must be attainable. I read Jeffery Sachs' End of Poverty and he seems to suggest that there is enough wealth in the world to do it, it is just a matter of the wealthy nations caring enough to invest in developing or underdeveloped nations. It is hard for me to see this occurring because we do not have the motivation to change our consumption or divert our investments to help others in places we have no connection to.<br /> <br />At least in the U.S., we are taught to consume. It's good for the economy, and you aren't that important if you don't have that new car or the new Iphone or Droid. The focus is consuming for ourselves, not on improving life for the common good. We could barely get health care reform passed, and when it was, it was not in its most progressive form that would have provided a public option. Does one really think that people in the world's wealthiest nation who cannot work together for something as simple as widening access to health care, will work to eliminate poverty on a global scale. To improve someone's life on the other side of the world? Especially when we are having difficulty recovering our own economy. <br /> As far as development in creating jobs abroad, the U.S. had a hard time adhering to the KYOTO protocol even though I am quite sure we could have easily done it. Building factories for cheap labor in India is one thing, doing it in an environmentally or socially sustainable manner is quite another. <br />It will take a major change in attitude, and usually changing thought of the masses takes more than 5 years. Or perhaps we need another catastrophe to motivate change.worldtravellovehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03643935392930866003noreply@blogger.com