FFD Blog
Can we end poverty?
by Ruth Aine - 28 October 2013
 We all want to make this world a better place. Our aim is to see us leave behind a life that is better than what we had for our children, that is why we work so hard.  We want to achieve financial independence for ourselves, yet we also want to see a world free of poverty. Poverty is a source of pain to some and to the majority of us: it is a fact that we are shameful about. What is interesting though is that we can live with it. We can ‘stomach it’. We congratulate ourselves with our success at ‘winning the competition’.  But is it really a competition? We are happy to talk about it and not do much about it because after all: it is not us that are living below the $2 mark every day.
 We all want to make this world a better place. Our aim is to see us leave behind a life that is better than what we had for our children, that is why we work so hard.  We want to achieve financial independence for ourselves, yet we also want to see a world free of poverty. Poverty is a source of pain to some and to the majority of us: it is a fact that we are shameful about. What is interesting though is that we can live with it. We can ‘stomach it’. We congratulate ourselves with our success at ‘winning the competition’.  But is it really a competition? We are happy to talk about it and not do much about it because after all: it is not us that are living below the $2 mark every day.

Ruth Aine Tindyebwa
Blogger/Online Communications
Read her personal blog; IN DEPTH which is at www.ruthaine.com
Read more about the author and her view on being a futurist.
Blog Archive
- Africa’s Complex Travel - Trust Issues
- Juicing as a healthy alternative
- Global Work/Technology 2050
- Women and Girls in STEM Education
- The Future of Financial Systems is Digital
- Droneports & Detector Rats Hold Africa’s Mantle High
- The South Africa Water Situation and Many More Musings
- The Future of renewable energy on the continent is undecided
- The Future of Sustainability
- The family is under attack - I am afraid for its future
- Imprisonment with reformation of inmates: A 2nd chance to live
- Millennials leading the change in work – conventional doesn’t cut it anymore.
- The Forum for Civil Society Organizations (CSOs)
- Bringing health care to our doorsteps with the use of technology
- Africa is rising but we are yet to prosper
- Collective Struggle and Solidarity is Africa Unity
- Africa Day - Retrospect and Celebration
- Rethinking Regional Security through Africa's Economic Integration
- Women at the center of Africa’s future
- Uganda’s first ever car – an indication its youth can change the world.
- Interview with Nkiruka Nnaemego about a Green Economy
- Why 2015 should be key to gender equality and women’s rights
- Morocco between the African and Arab Identity:
- Youth unemployment in Africa, whom to blame?
- Green economy yet? – No, let us feed first.
- Our minds not made for saving the climate
- Interview with Rose Wachuka
- The Oldest in civilization, The Youngest in population: The future lies in Africa
- Who sets the narrative?
- Youth -- beyond “Unemployment”
- Technology and the Future
- Africa's Youth are the Future: Engage Them
- Gaps in Uganda's Youth Policy
- Migrants – A Hunger for Belonging
- Future of Pan Africanism
- Game Changers
- Tribe as a way of identity
- The Future of Gender Inequality
- Waste Management
- Some news headlines for Africa in the year 2020
- Who will tell Africa's story? - lessons from the All Futures Forum
- Young philanthropists lead the way:
- Renewable Energy for women
- Mukuru Slum: An Informal City
- Why mobile?
- Musings on security in East Africa
- The young people of Africa can be part of the solution
- Why are we hungry?
- The two sides of technology
- All our futures and Africa
 
           READ
READ 

 

 





