Fast Learner
First Post
The silliness level is certainly a matter of perspective, but I say the same thing about those purchases, too.Umbran said:Yeah. But if you think spending $30 million on a season of Enterprise makes little sense, think about how much Americans spend per day on a mediocre drink like coffee (IIRC, annual retail coffee sales are something over $6.7 billion annually). There's far sillier expenditures to catch your wonder and astonishment.
And to be clear, I'm (a) not saying that people shouldn't spend their money however they want to, and (b) not saying that people are somehow "bad" for not donating their discretionary income. I'm just suggesting that every time you consider donating money to some cause, weigh its value in your mind and heart against other places you could donate to. No big sermon or anything, just suggesting that it's something to consider.
Who are you talking to? I was complaining?jasper said:Why are you complaining how others spend/donate their money?
The children are already there. These are children who exist, who play, who sing, who cry, who laugh, and who die horribly of malaria. Can the continent support 1 million more adults? Most certainly, though there's plenty of help needed to make that an easy reality, too.Teflon Billy said:Can Africa handle 1 million more children?
Lastly, to reiterate, I'm certainly not trying to make anyone spend their money any specific way: y'all should spend it however you want. If you didn't know about, say, the mosquito net issue, though, you're making your decision in ignorance. (Not stupidity, for heaven's sake, just ignorance.) Informed decisions are always better decisions, imo.