Thursday, September 15, 2011

Why Should it Cost Money to save a Life?: CE

 Saving Life=Great Cost
                       "The number of children under the age five who die annually has plummeted from 12 million in 1990 to 7.6 million in 2010, UNICEF and the World Health Organisation (WHO) have said in a new report. Even so, improvements in child mortality rates will not be enough to meet the UN goal set in 2000 of reducing
child mortality by two-thirds by 2015, and the groups say more money is needed."

                                 The one major obstacle that gets in everyone's way, when it comes to things like charity work,  always seems to be money. There is never enough, and what does that mean, do donators not have enough money? If they did would they continue to do so? People wonder what does it take to convince someone to donate , but there are also other things to consider. People have a hard enough time providing for themselves an/or their families. In today's world you will probably find a lot of people living from pay check to pay check hoping, if they have children, that they will be able to send them to college.
                                That mouthful does not even begin to explain why its hard for people to spare even a dollar. So in a nut shell people can not help each other due to the problems and challenges that face them every day. Ironically these issues often leave a person in debt so bad, that they are also in need of a donation.When a child, around the age of five, says that he or she wants to save the world it makes me wonder will they have the same attitude in ten years. Buying land to preserve forest  or just making simple donations, it requires money, and its definitely not growing on trees.

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