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Thread ID: 106958 2010-01-29 16:25:00 Bill Gates Donates - Big Time! SurferJoe46 (51) PC World Chat
Post ID Timestamp Content User
853493 2010-01-31 06:07:00 Speaking of fish, European trawlers have depleted their fish stocks anyway. pkm (13527)
853494 2010-01-31 07:07:00 Educate them?

They know that in order to have any support once they get too old to support themselves they need a few surviving children, The best way to do this is have as many children as nature gives them knowing full well that most of them may die.

What do you plan to educate them in?

Exactly.

If you examine the Third World countries you will find that large families are the norm. We have that happening in NZ with groups living in poverty - they have large families too. Its a natural survival mechanism.
Winston001 (3612)
853495 2010-01-31 21:26:00 Exactly .

If you examine the Third World countries you will find that large families are the norm . We have that happening in NZ with groups living in poverty - they have large families too . Its a natural survival mechanism .

If I remember correctly NZ of old had some cannibals - so maybe having a large family is a hedge against starvation .

:eek::eek::eek::eek:
SurferJoe46 (51)
853496 2010-01-31 23:45:00 I'm surprised no one thought of that before.

Oh wait, They laugh at sex education, They believe in breeding, They need kids.

Farming?, You do realise their country and environment are nothing like NZ? The land is not fertile and they only work small plots, when the rain doesn't come the crops fail and they starve. Then they become reliant on aid. If you can make ten billion acres of land into productive soil and fix drought then sure, problem solved, Im betting you can't even with modern farming techniques.

If you can, let me invest, It will be worth trillions.

Lack of food and die back of population is a natural cycle, Its how nature brings things back into balance, Now we have broken the cycle, made them reliant on hand outs and given them conditions to continue breeding more people to suffer.

Preaching sex education has been tried.

Thats what world vision did to ethiopia twenty years ago, they were almost self reliant but then it all turned to custard. Not sure if it was the weather and environment or they gave up? But probably the latter
Gobe1 (6290)
853497 2010-01-31 23:49:00 Exactly .

If you examine the Third World countries you will find that large families are the norm . We have that happening in NZ with groups living in poverty - they have large families too . Its a natural survival mechanism .

Its just being ignorant and not using birth control .
prefect (6291)
853498 2010-02-01 00:04:00 Farming?, You do realise their country and environment are nothing like NZ? The land is not fertile and they only work small plots, when the rain doesn't come the crops fail and they starve . Then they become reliant on aid . If you can make ten billion acres of land into productive soil and fix drought then sure, problem solved, Im betting you can't even with modern farming techniques .






Nip over to Israel and see how it is done .

They seem to do it in a desert!
Cicero (40)
853499 2010-02-01 00:33:00 Nip over to Israel and see how it is done.

They seem to do it in a desert!

Just nip over to Wikipedia, much easier.

50 percent of their land is desert, 30 percent usable and 20 percent is prime for cultivation, more then enough to feed themselves on, And they have the assets in place to see them through a drought if they were hit so severely that the crops failed.
Metla (12)
853500 2010-02-01 00:40:00 Thats what world vision did to ethiopia twenty years ago, they were almost self reliant but then it all turned to custard. Not sure if it was the weather and environment or they gave up? But probably the latter

Lets put this into perspective.


Ethiopia , a landlocked state in the Horn of Africa, is one of the most ancient countries in the world. Officially known as the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, it is the second most populous nation in Africa with over 79.2 million people[5] and the tenth largest by area. The capital is Addis Ababa.

Though most African countries are far less than a century old, Ethiopia has been an independent country since ancient times. A monarchical state for most of its history, the Ethiopian dynasty traces its roots to the 10th century BC.[6] Besides being an ancient country, Ethiopia is one of the oldest sites of human existence known to scientists today—having yielded some of humanity's oldest traces,[7] it might be the place where Homo sapiens first set out for the Middle East and points beyond.[8][9][10] When Africa was divided up by European powers at the Berlin Conference, Ethiopia was one of only two countries that retained its independence. It was one of only three African members of the League of Nations, and after a brief period of Italian occupation, Ethiopia became a charter member of the United Nations. When other African nations received their independence following World War II, many of them adopted the colors of Ethiopia's flag, and Addis Ababa became the location of several international organizations focused on Africa.

The Modern Ethiopian state, and its current borders, are a result of significant territorial reduction in the north and expansion in the south, toward its present borders, owing to several migrations and commercial integration as well as conquests, particularly by Emperor Menelik II and Ras Gobena. In 1974, the dynasty led by Haile Selassie was overthrown as civil wars intensified. Since then, Ethiopia has been a secular state with a variety of governmental systems. Today, Addis Ababa is still the site of the headquarters of the African Union and [11] UNECA. The country has one of the most powerful militaries in Africa. Ethiopia is the only African country with its own alphabet.[12] Ethiopia also has its own time system and unique calendar, seven to eight years behind the Gregorian Calendar. It has the largest number of UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Africa.[13]

The country is a land of natural contrasts, with spectacular waterfalls and volcanic hot springs. Ethiopia has some of Africa's highest mountains as well as some of the world's lowest points below sea level. The largest cave in Africa is located in Ethiopia at Sof Omar, and the country's northernmost area at Dallol is one of the hottest places year-round anywhere on Earth. There are altogether around 80 different ethnic groups in Ethiopia today, with the two largest being the Oromo and the Amhara, both of which speak Afro-Asiatic languages. The country is also famous for its Olympic gold medalists, rock-hewn churches and as the place where the coffee bean originated. Currently, Ethiopia is the top coffee and honey-producing country in Africa, and home to the largest livestock population in Africa.

Ethiopia has close historical ties to all three of the world's major Abrahamic religions. It was one of the first Christian countries in the world, having officially adopted Christianity as the state religion in the 4th century. It still has a Christian majority, but a third of the population is Muslim. Ethiopia is the site of the first hijra in Islamic history and the oldest Muslim settlement in Africa at Negash. Until the 1980s, a substantial population of Ethiopian Jews resided in Ethiopia. The country is also the spiritual homeland of the Rastafari religious movement, which is influenced by Pan-Africanism.
In the period around the overthrow of the monarchy, Ethiopia devolved into one of the poorest countries on earth. Ethiopia is the source of over 85% of the total Nile waters flow but it underwent a series of tragic famines in the 1980s, exacerbated by adverse geopolitics and civil wars, resulting in perhaps a million deaths.

Slowly, however, the country has begun to recover, and today the Ethiopian economy is one of the fastest growing in Africa and it is a regional powerhouse in east Africa.
Metla (12)
853501 2010-02-01 01:44:00 sooo its not the environment or the weather.... i was correct NOT lol Gobe1 (6290)
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