I am thirteen years old and I do not understand the world. In terms of world hunger, how can one possibly find happiness in their lives when such tragedies exist? Approximately 24,000 thousand people starved to death today, and three billion people live with under two dollars every day. For one to continue their lives as normal, or even not give any care, would this be the equivalence of starving someone yourself since you have the power to make a difference, yet you are choosing not to? And is the root cause of poverty a lack of equality within the world, or are specific governments not running thing effectively? For people that are not actively practicing compassion, would that make you a horrible person for not wanting to aleviate the extent of pain and suffering that so many have to endure day after day?
We live in a world that contains much tragedy and it is difficult to determine the scope of an individual's responsibility for these events, especially in the case of preventable deaths (death due to starvation when there is surplus agriculture). I suggest that the cause and cure for such tragic loss involves both indivudual and collective action. Often war, greed and corruption are at the roots of poverty, which can be accentuated due to drought, flooding, and other natural dissasters, especially when relief is in short supply. According to some philosophers, not to go to the aid of someone whom you could save (from starvation, for example) would be the moral equivalent of killing them. For a very throrough case that current world poverty calls for radical action (lest we turn out to be moral monsters) you might look at Peter Unger's Living High, And Letting Die. But probably most philosophers think there is a moral difference between an act (killing) and an omission (letting die) in many...
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