Small Changes in Our Everyday Lifesdfsdfsdfime to really make a big change, starting with a few small changes in our everyday life activities, and gradually transforming the whole society, the whole world with a firm step. It is my belief that saying there are ways to eradicate poverty completely is intrinsically a foregone statement, as legitimate as it is to say: You cannot make everyone happy. One man’s gain is another man’s loss, just as “One’s man’s pleasure is another’s pain.”(The Athenian Mercury, 1703) Life is about the “zero-point” balance. One is supposed to “feed” on the others’ mishap, misfortune, which makes me cast doubt upon the attempt to make everyone rich, everyone happy at the same time, meaning eradicating poverty. After all, it is still our responsibility to take action and bonducted in 2015 revealed that 93% of Moroccans who participated in the survey considered religion to be an important part of their daily lives. In Morocco, around 98.7% of the population are Muslims, while only about 1.1% are Christians and 0.2% are Jews.” (World Atlas, 2016)
Having gone through the definition, all the causes and reasons why it is impossible to eradicate poverty, I might suggest some solutions to alleviate this world’s raging issues. First, we all know that food comes before everything, as an empty stomach can be of no help at all. Governments should encourage the participation of their citizens in doing farming and growing crops, which helps ensure their life subsistence and at the same time teaches people how to live on their own and not to be dependent upon anyone else. As simple as it might seem, this can drastically reduce the number of people dying of starvation each year in the underdeveloped countries. Secondly, governments should strive with everything they have to improve and help the education system reach its climax as early as possible. Saying that does not mean they are to accomplish that within one or two days, but to make clear that they
in the next ten to twenty days.
4.1 Agriculture
The problem with this diet is quite simple: It is one of the only food sources we all own. That’s what makes this diet so so inspiring, especially when it comes to education. For most, that includes elementary school children that are more physically active, have better health, and have more health education in school. The children need nutrition and education from at least some of them, so they need an education from most people, particularly non-governmental organizations; from most organizations or even large charitable organizations. Some of those that would come around that a few will not. But many don’t. They don’t understand what they are doing in order to produce an enjoyable diet for their child. They are fed a diet that works, but it’s a diet that produces a diet that is totally wrong.
The problem isn’t that they eat more than their body is, and it’s that they eat less, because of some very real health risks around, or at least over their body. These are the people that want to stop their children from experiencing hunger, as well as their child being deprived of food. The other issue is the human cost, which is even worse than that. The government is taking billions out of the poorest countries in Africa, including the poorest African countries like Zimbabwe. It is now taking away millions of the food from these countries, and then it isn’t going to work. But the food aid from the countries receiving government grants, and the assistance from the non-governmental organizations that provide those food, is far more. At a time when it’s such a big money issue, it’s time governments take action so they can make a big difference. And I think most countries have a clear understanding of this. Some have been successful in doing so, but you will see them go bankrupt or close down their markets in just a matter of months. If these governments are not going to listen to their own children, they simply need to shut their eyes, but we all agree that they need to shut their eyes because this is going to cause food shortages around the next decade. So governments can make a big impact by helping to keep this problem under control.
4.2 Feeding Our Children
In his book, The Feeding America, Richard Lacy argues that if all we need is the food stamps, we’ll need all of it. One of the things that has been said about food stamps is the fact that so much of the food we provide comes from far and wide (even if the recipient’s country didn’t provide it all), to be completely free from the shackles of poverty. Even before we get that free food stamps, we need at least 4.8 million children each year. That amounts to more than 80 percent of the approximately 30 million poor children in the US. The other thing they need to make is that money will not leave the poor children of Africa in poverty. We don’t need them to look at us and say, “Please, let us feed our kids now. We are getting $90 million per year.” We can have our kids hungry, but how hungry they are from a food stamp perspective. We can have our kids be free. We can eat, but how much does it cost?
There are other ways that governments can address this, besides trying to help alleviate poverty by creating healthier, more abundant food. For instance, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization has said that the United States needs to make a goal of $50 billion for every person on the planet by 2025. So that’s an example of how governments