Wasted talent: Greece's young unemployed majority
followed this in series to other related articles.
The sad reality of economic falter at times is those caught in the wake of such seem to have less self sustaining resources to aid with respect to basic necessities in life: access to shelter, access to food. Particularly disturbed reading of parents potentially giving up their children on the inability to provide basic adequate care here. Where potentially, at least for now, being able to produce abundant grain harvests have generally worldwide led to the significant declines of starvation generally speaking, it seems inequity and the possibility of malnutrition has re emerged somewhat at least if trends are accurate(?), neither by way of insufficient technology or resources to grow food, but merely happen stance to economic conditions which has made in accessible economic sustainability. Its seems the abstract and over abundant complexity of economies illustrate the nature of divorce of practical life to that of modern life in recent times ironically, or at least this seems to be on a trending rise. I've said this before...I could understand malnutrition on the rise because of disease, war, plague, water shortages, and any other natural condition having emerged to create conditions effecting significant agricultural production and/or distribution. I don't understand conditions of famine when the food can be produced and is available.
Friday, March 23, 2012
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