My point is that people see “the 10%” and they can’t imagine that if they love in a first world country, chances are that on a global scale they are the 10%, if they’re not they’re the 20% unless they live on the streets. People in third world and developing countries represent the vast majority of the world and those in rich countries live like freaking royalty in comparison to them and it reflects on their environmental impact as well.
I don’t think anybody’s disputing that. That’s kind of the whole point of the post, right? Everybody here gets that.
What everybody here DOESN’T get is that this kind of poverty is also present right here in the USA. I’ve encountered quite a few people who seem to believe that if you live in the U.S. AT ALL, then you’re automatically lumped into that 10%, when that isn’t actually the case.
My point is that people see “the 10%” and they can’t imagine that if they love in a first world country, chances are that on a global scale they are the 10%, if they’re not they’re the 20% unless they live on the streets. People in third world and developing countries represent the vast majority of the world and those in rich countries live like freaking royalty in comparison to them and it reflects on their environmental impact as well.
I don’t think anybody’s disputing that. That’s kind of the whole point of the post, right? Everybody here gets that.
What everybody here DOESN’T get is that this kind of poverty is also present right here in the USA. I’ve encountered quite a few people who seem to believe that if you live in the U.S. AT ALL, then you’re automatically lumped into that 10%, when that isn’t actually the case.