NYIntensity wrote:
Squanto wrote:
In my opinion, it shouldn't be about what you get out of it.
Then why don't you work for free? Show up for work, but don't bill your hours, do it out of the kindness of your heart. And don't do it for a day or two. do it over then next, oh, 100 years.
Money makes the world go 'round; it puts food in bellies and roofs over heads. There's going to be a silver lining to this disaster, we just have to wait for it.
Maybe I'm so polarized because I'm sick of hearing "Why aren't you here to help me? Where is our help? Where are you?" I'm a firm believer in if you need help, you need to be willing to help yourself, and put in 10x more work than anyone helping you.
If you re-read my post (and I'm not trying to be argumentative with you personally Squanto), you'll see (at least their statement says)
Quote:
100% of the company's net revenue from the destination will be contributed to the relief effort
Regarding circumstances in which American citizens and the US government donate monetary funds and bodily help to other nations and areas needing it after natural disasters, the amount of work that those who live in those areas do does not make a difference. They
do work, and they work
hard, but their work is simply to survive, not to afford houses and vehicles and other large purchases that would aid their economies to the point where their nations would be able to help us if ever we were to need it. The nations that we bring aid to in these circumstances do not help us when we are in need because they
cannot (and this country has
never experienced anything of that scope, anyway, not anything even close to it, to say the absolute least).
Haiti does not have any of the resources necessary to even begin "recovering" from this on its own, regardless of how hard its citizens work. We do. Our homeless eat. They are routinely given food, places to sleep, blankets, hats, gloves, etc. by people who desire to help them. Theirs don't, and they receive nothing, because there
isn't anyone who has the ability to help them. To compare the circumstances in Haiti and other nations with the circumstances in America and not desire to help those people because, "hey, we have homeless, too, and we're in debt to top it off" does not make any sense to me.
Edit:
I think we just look at it from fundamentally different viewpoints, though. You see barriers, acknowledge nations and self-interest. I see just human beings helping other human beings, without impediment and without care for self.
Still, even acknowledging that, I still find that comparing the situation in Haiti and past circumstances in other devastated areas that we have aided to our national debt and our own poverty just doesn't make any sense, because the things are in completely different universes.