Sunday, July 17, 2011

A discussion about honesty in the humanities ? the cause and ...

The Americans are great people, and want to help the rest of the world. In fact, they want to do things right, even if they are outside their control. There is no such thing as an American, that makes them different and more cautious. We hate to see people in need, and we want to help in any way, but too often do the wrong thing, it happens too often in fact.

Not long ago I spoke with the head of the Committee of a major project under way in a very poor area ofWorld in collaboration with one of the most important NGOs. He explained the problems they had with the delivery of food to the poor. He often said that the government stop shipments and demand that they are the ones able to distribute the food was. They did this so that people can see how powerful and important, allowing them to continue ruling.

Other times I said anti-government guerrillas and factions of the militia, would divert supplies of food, and then to sellFood for the same people that his group would deliver the shipment. The bad guys would be all the money and profits from the food they sell (which pays nothing, because they have stolen) and then they would go to machine guns, AK-47 to buy, to arm their group.

Then the villain would use these groups to terrorize weapons to the people who were poor and needed food. They would often slaughtered in their villages. Of course, the guerrillas would neverbeen able to do this if they are not the money from hijacking food shipments. In a sense, and its NGO Group, wanted to feed the poor, were the bad guys to create a humanitarian disaster.

When I spoke with him, his voice was shaky and a tear came out of his eye, and I could sell that we need a debate on honesty in the humanities, and the cause and the effect of our humanitarian efforts in the Third World. We recommend this.

Source: http://entertainment-humanities.chailit.com/a-discussion-about-honesty-in-the-humanities-the-cause-and-impact-of-humanitarian-efforts-in-the-third-world.html

gerber daniel radcliffe cincinnati consumer reports consumer reports rush limbaugh rush limbaugh

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