by pup55 » Mon 04 Feb 2008, 21:15:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'p')recious pearls of wisdom
Pearl #1, count your blessings. You have no idea how good you have it. You may be temporarily living out of a storage area in the Republic of Arizona, but there is roughly a 5/6 chance you could have been born one of 13 kids of some woman with AIDS in Chad, surviving on a cup of rice per day, living in constant fear of being shot or raped by the latest faction of rebels that came through your village.
If you think about the 300 million or so that were born in the US and most of Canada, the maybe 300 million that were born in Europe, and then maybe another 300 million that were born to the elite classes in Asia and other continents, that's a billion people, the remaining 5 billion people on earth have squat for posessions, live a short, miserable life in a country where no one wants them, and if they are really "lucky" have a few kids that have an excellent chance to live life just as miserable as the current generation.
Even if you are lucky enough to have been born in the so-called modern miracle of China, you have a 1 in 3 chance of being an agricultural worker, which over there means you work like a dog over your little plot of land, and then you do the same thing next year, and then the year after that, and they give you more or less enough money to make it the next year, and that is that. No lights of Shanghai, no working in a snood in a factory in Guangdong. No mercedes. If you are lucky your child (the government used to fine you heavily if you have more than one, maybe they are relaxing this) will be one of the 1% that get an education, otherwise he or she will end up in the plot next to you. You might decide to check out and try to get a job in the city. In the city, there is a good chance you will end up in one of those western sweat shops, making knockoff dog food for $3 per day with hazardous chemicals. If you are female, you will probably never get that far.
I once had a test run to do in a factory in one of the Asian Dragon nations, in an operation of a famous American company. This factory used a local "subcontractor" who was less bound by western-type safety and labor regulations. To make a long story short, amid nasty chemicals, equipment with the safety features removed, and tropical/humid conditions worked the "crew", consisting of basically indentured servants from Bangladesh. They agreed to work for the factory owner for a year, for no wages, in exchange for passage into the country. The "crew" consisted of a dad, a mom, and a roughly 9 year old kid, who ran the plant. At night, they lived in a "nest" in the corner of the factory.
If you are reading this, you have computer access, are more or less literate, and you are in a place where you do not have to worry about someone dragging you into the street, if there is one, and shooting you. Presumably, you have found a source of food sufficient to get you through to the next day. You are surrounded by people who, at the worst are ambivalent toward you, and at the best actually want you to get ahead. You live under a system, such as it is, that wants you to be productive and in which there are plenty of ways to survive if you will only play the game for a little while.
Note: We are not really talking about getting rich, all we are talking about is keeping from being poor. The level of difficulty is not all that high. A substantial number of "mentally challenged" people in this country are self-supporting. True, you might have to work like a dog for awhile, speaking spanish to your co-workers, take crap from some boss with a sixth grade education, doing grunt work, but if you play the game for a little while, chances are you will have a chance to move up to a living wage before too long. For one thing, the bottom, maybe 15% of the labor force these days is so bad, all you have to do is show up for work, every day, and the boss will love you.
Lesson #1, you have no idea how good you have it.