Lolsmith
kill all boomers
Over the last few years, I've seen a lot of charitable organisations putting forward that they are educating children in poor countries in order to better serve their standard of living.
Does this actually happen? Is spending money on a child's education in some of the poorest places in the world really doing anything? Are these children merely moving on to being farmers that can read? (like they would have been before, but without being literate) Is educating the poorest of the poor a euro-centric and pointless exercise when you can make the same people healthier or give a community 5km away the ability to drink clean water?
Does this actually happen? Is spending money on a child's education in some of the poorest places in the world really doing anything? Are these children merely moving on to being farmers that can read? (like they would have been before, but without being literate) Is educating the poorest of the poor a euro-centric and pointless exercise when you can make the same people healthier or give a community 5km away the ability to drink clean water?