Originally posted by DraganOfStip
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How did I present it? People aren't starving, kids are happy, and the quality of life is good.
Sure, life is hard. It's hard everywhere. When I went to Macedonia last summer, the cafes and beaches were packed with 20-30 year olds all day and all night. I asked so many about working conditions: there's no jobs. What can you do about it? "Wait until the government makes more jobs." Default: blame the government. Most the unemployed village youth refuse to work the fields and their parents land but still go out nearly every day and night. "There are no jobs for me." Yes, same thing in the US. 70% of Americans are unhappy or depressed with the jobs they do and aren't working in their field. My uncle who lives in Resen was explaining to me why you only see the Roma sweeping the streets: because Macedonians are too "embarrassed" to take jobs like that...it's beneath them. So they'd rather be out of work than be looked at as a street-sweeper. That doesn't seem like a hard life to me. I sympathize with those who work hard and are struggling. I don't sympathize with those who mope around all day complaining and waiting for other people to mend their woes while not taking initiative to improve their conditions. It goes for Macedonians and Americans and everyone.
And you're saying a country isn't poor until the population starts selling their kidneys to survive?Is that the red line that defines poverty?Not last time I checked.
Kid's biggest consern is whether he'll be on time for his favorite cartoon or whether his friend will have a better toy than him.
For Christ's sake just look at the stats man,71% of employees earn less than the average paycheck (21500 denars equals 350 EUR,392 USD or 500 AUD depending on the currency you use),while the minimum means for a decent life are 32000 denars (520 EUR,583 USD or 750 AUD,take your pick).Meaning,all those people can barely make their ends meet every month and you're telling me macedonians are happy?!Are you listening to yourself?
I didn't say Macedonians are happy because they're poor. I didn't equate the two. I'm saying that despite their poverty, most Macedonians have a better quality of life than most Americans. And it's quite obvious I'm not basing quality of life on the number of dollars in your pockets or the amount of "goods" the people consume.
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