Someone once told me that memos are not to inform the reader, but to protect the writer.
Quilotoa
I don't know of any.
It would be nice to know what country this is.
I left Haiti with no solutions. Many Haitians looked at us (middle class of the developed world) as the cause of their problems - that the stuff we consume and the stuff we waste and the energy we consume results in shortages there. They have no social safety net, bad health care, little food, rampant disease. I don't know what the answers are, but often when I go to bed without hunger pangs, or enter my huge house (in some places, they took turns sleeping because there wasn't enough room on the floor for the whole family to lie down), or walk into a doctor's office, I think of them.
I worked in a hospital in Central Haiti for three years. Children died regularly because they didn't have enough to eat. A visit to the hospital (which included seeing a doctor, any lab tests, medicine, or x-rays) was $10, a price that many people couldn't afford. They looked on us middle class like we look at billionaires.
Technically, silicone does not rot. It breaks down into smaller materials but does not decompose into its base components like organic material.
Bones do rot, just more slowly than flesh.
Taking it a step further, why don't we take the top 1% of the wealthy worldwide and share it with the people. The top 1% would be anyone who makes over $82,640 Cdn. (depending on which metric you use). The top 5% of earners in the world would be anything over $48,000 Cdn.
Hey, thanks. That makes sense.
Yeah, I did the same thing.
That would be the wurst.
I probably use my driver and table saw most, but my cordless multitool is climbing up there.