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Or focus on the real problems. But I see that as a problem that is not exclusive to the poor.
So the current brazilian protests aren't for real problems?
Or focus on the real problems. But I see that as a problem that is not exclusive to the poor.
So the current brazilian protests aren't for real problems?
So what was you point then? Having a little trouble trying to figure it out. Sounded like you just wanted to troll Thriller, but now you're saying poor people complain about petty things when they should focus on education?
It took a petty problem to get them in the street didn't it?
"cidade de dues"(city of god)
and "tropa elite" heck even modern warfare 2 the favellas are portrayed better then in hulk and fast five
I was being sarcastic and then it went on a tangent. Bowing out now.
I endorse everything that "The Thriller" wrote above. That's what's going on here, people got tired and since the world press is here, we're telling our government and the rest of the world that we're not satisfied with spending 1 billion reais(brazilian currency) on a stadium and see public hospitals and public schools get worse and worse, we're tired to pay R$3,20 on a single bus fare while the minimum wage is only R$678,00, so if you take the bus to work everyday and gets paid the minimum wage, 20% of your salary goes to the bus!
Most of the people that are protesting are not the poorest in Brazil, on the contrary, yesterday, there were famous actors and actress, singers etc. Many cities already took the bus fares down a bit, but this is only the beggining, I hope!
Oftentimes, it takes "petty" problems to people to get involved.
When you look at the context of history, just how important was the price of tea to folks living in Boston?
Ultimately, it wasn't (just) the cost of tea that they were protesting.
To be honest... Stoked and I even talked about this before. How much is that $300 million dollar aid to Syria ultimately? Meh, it's basically what the Yankees pay per game to their players. But it's the message being sent. Here we are, trillions in debt, economy still a mess, infrastructure falling apart, higher taxes, cut benefits, and yet we still are giving away money to other countries?
How much does a $.20 increase in public transportation hurt? Well... Actually... Come to think of it, more than you'd think. When I was there we'd see increases of half that every 6 months or year and it was surprisingly expensive...
But ultimately, Brazilians aren't merely protesting this increase in public transportation. It's a problem that is much much MUCH bigger. It's the message that is being sent from the government/ruling class/special interest groups. "Forget yourselves and your interests. We are going to build whatever we want." And the people standing up and saying, "Enough is enough! We've been content before. But not anymore!"
Oftentimes, it takes "petty" problems to people to get involved.
When you look at the context of history, just how important was the price of tea to folks living in Boston?
Ultimately, it wasn't (just) the cost of tea that they were protesting.
To be honest... Stoked and I even talked about this before. How much is that $300 million dollar aid to Syria ultimately? Meh, it's basically what the Yankees pay per game to their players. But it's the message being sent. Here we are, trillions in debt, economy still a mess, infrastructure falling apart, higher taxes, cut benefits, and yet we still are giving away money to other countries?
How much does a $.20 increase in public transportation hurt? Well... Actually... Come to think of it, more than you'd think. When I was there we'd see increases of half that every 6 months or year and it was surprisingly expensive...
But ultimately, Brazilians aren't merely protesting this increase in public transportation. It's a problem that is much much MUCH bigger. It's the message that is being sent from the government/ruling class/special interest groups. "Forget yourselves and your interests. We are going to build whatever we want." And the people standing up and saying, "Enough is enough! We've been content before. But not anymore!"
On foreign aid I am right there with you. I say immediately suspend it all and review it line by line for worthiness of the aid in the first place then for accountability of the program itself.
If it does not meet both then cancel it.