$15 can make a difference

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Have you ever stopped and wondered how $15 could feed 10 people for a week? That's 70 days of food. Over two months, for $15.

I need to find where they're shopping.
 
Have you ever stopped and wondered how $15 could feed 10 people for a week? That's 70 days of food. Over two months, for $15.

I need to find where they're shopping.

here's my theory:
ramen noodles at costco is $.15 per bag (you buy it in bulk). so $15 buys 100 bags of ramen. if you feed each person 1.42 bags of ramen per day, then you'll have 10 marginally less hungry people at the end of the week.
 
Have you ever stopped and wondered how $15 could feed 10 people for a week? That's 70 days of food. Over two months, for $15.

I need to find where they're shopping.
It is possible for the fact it is for children and most probably for poor countries where one $ equals to a couple of tens of bucks. It's not like they buy the food from top Fast food restaurants.

Will donate them now, seems like a real one, although I gonna weep for a couple of days for parting with the 15 bucks :uhoh2:.
 
Have you ever stopped and wondered how $15 could feed 10 people for a week? That's 70 days of food. Over two months, for $15.

I need to find where they're shopping.

Because of local farming, food is relatively cheap in the 3rd world, the problem is that some countries can't grow their own food.

I don't think that the 3rd world should be feeding (or sending food to) the 3rd world, I think these countries need to learn to feed themselves. Where I see a benefit of 1st world aid is teaching countries how to become prosperous through education, building a manufacturing base, healthcare, etc.
 
Problem is they get given the seeds to plant but the poor souls are that hungry they fuckin eat em before they hit teh ground!
 
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I don't think that the 3rd world should be feeding (or sending food to) the 3rd world, I think these countries need to learn to feed themselves. ....

No one should go hungry in this day and age. Try telling a starving infant to hang around until the education or farming or whatever system improves.

Yes, help improve the "system" for them, but in the meantime give from our surplus. How often do you read of the mountains of butter, lakes of milk stockpiled in the western countries, rotting in the warehouses. Or of farmers being paid by the government to cut down their orchards, plow their crops into the ground because prices are too low. Yet and at the same time our media floods us with images of little children with swollen bellies & eyes full of despair.
 
We have it so easy,

In the Asian, African and Latin American countries, well over 500 million people are living in what the World Bank has called "absolute poverty"

Every year 15 million children die of hunger

For the price of one missile, a school full of hungry children could eat lunch every day for 5 years

Throughout the 1990's more than 100 million children will die from illness and starvation. Those 100 million deaths could be prevented for the price of ten Stealth bombers, or what the world spends on its military in two days!

The World Health Organization estimates that one-third of the world is well-fed, one-third is under-fed one-third is starving- Since you've entered this site at least 200 people have died of starvation. Over 4 million will die this year.

One in twelve people worldwide is malnourished, including 160 million children under the age of 5. United Nations Food and Agriculture

The Indian subcontinent has nearly half the world's hungry people. Africa and the rest of Asia together have approximately 40%, and the remaining hungry people are found in Latin America and other parts of the world. Hunger in Global Economy

Nearly one in four people, 1.3 billion - a majority of humanity - live on less than $1 per day, while the world's 358 billionaires have assets exceeding the combined annual incomes of countries with 45 percent of the world's people. UNICEF

3 billion people in the world today struggle to survive on US$2/day.

In 1994 the Urban Institute in Washington DC estimated that one out of 6 elderly people in the U.S. has an inadequate diet.

In the U.S. hunger and race are related. In 1991 46% of African-American children were chronically hungry, and 40% of Latino children were chronically hungry compared to 16% of white children.

The infant mortality rate is closely linked to inadequate nutrition among pregnant women. The U.S. ranks 23rd among industrial nations in infant mortality. African-American infants die at nearly twice the rate of white infants.

One out of every eight children under the age of twelve in the U.S. goes to bed hungry every night.

Half of all children under five years of age in South Asia and one third of those in sub-Saharan Africa are malnourished.

In 1997 alone, the lives of at least 300,000 young children were saved by vitamin A supplementation programmes in developing countries.

Malnutrition is implicated in more than half of all child deaths worldwide - a proportion unmatched by any infectious disease since the Black Death

About 183 million children weigh less than they should for their age

To satisfy the world's sanitation and food requirements would cost only US$13 billion- what the people of the United States and the European Union spend on perfume each year.

The assets of the world's three richest men are more than the combined GNP of all the least developed countries on the planet.

Every 3.6 seconds someone dies of hunger

It is estimated that some 800 million people in the world suffer from hunger and malnutrition, about 100 times as many as those who actually die from it each year.

SOURCE
 
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