From: Mylee Bonham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thursday, 14 January 1999 01:53
Subject: If The World Were A Village



What a wonderful world!
               -Louis Armstrong
 then later by Joey Vindictive...

 If The World Were A Village
 
 If the world were a village of 1,000 people it would include:
 
  * 584 Asians
  * 124 Africans
  * 95 Eastern and Western Europeans
  * 84 Latin Americans
  * 55 former Soviets (this includes Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians,
      and other national groups)
  * 52 North Americans
  * 6 Australians and New Zealanders
 
  The people of the village would speak:
 
  * 165 Mandarin
  * 86 English
  * 83 Hindu/Urdi
  * 64 Spanish
  * 58 Russian
  * 37 Arabic
 
  The list accounts for the mother tongues of only half
 the village. The other half speak (in descending order of frequency)
  Bengali,
  Portuguese,
  Indonesian,
  Japanese,
  German,
  French,
  and 200 other languages.
 
  In this village of 1,000 there are:
 
  * 329 Christians (among them 187 Catholics, 84 Protestants, and 31
 Orthodox)
  * 178 Muslims
  * 167 "Non religious"
  * 60 Buddhists
  * 45 Atheists
  * 32 Hindus
  * 3 Jews
  * 86 of other religions
 
 One-third of the 1,000 people in the world village are children,
 and only 60 are over the age of 65. Half the children are immunized
 against preventable diseases such as measles and polio.
 
 Just under half of the married women in the village have access
 to and use modern contraceptives.
 
 This year 28 babies will be born. Ten people will die, 3 of them
 for lack of food, 1 from cancer. Two of the deaths will be of babies
 born within the year. One person of that 1,000 in the village is
 infected with HIV; that person most likely has not yet developed
 a full-blown case of AIDS.
 
 With the 28 births and 10 deaths, the population of the village
 next year  will be 1,018.
 
 In this 1,000 person community, 200 people receive 75 percent
 of the income; another 200 receive only 2 percent of the income.
 
 Only 70 people of the 1,000 own an automobile (although some
 of the 70 own more than one car).
 
 About one-third have access to clean, safe drinking water.
 
 Of the 670 adults in the village, half are illiterate.
 
 The village has 6 acres of land per person
 6000 acres in all-of which:
 
  * 700 acres are cropland,
  * 1,400 acres are pasture,
  * 1,900 acres are woodland,
  * 2,000 acres desert, tundra, pavement, and other wasteland.
 
 The woodland is declining rapidly; the wasteland is increasing.
 The other land categories are roughly stable. The village allocates
 83 percent of its fertilizer to 40 percent of its cropland-that owned
 by the richest and best fed 270 people. Excess fertilizer running off
 this land causes pollution in lakes and wells. The remaining 60
 percent of the land, with its 17 percent
 of the fertilizer, produces only 28 percent of the food but feeds 73
 percent of the people. The average grain yield on that land is
 one-third the harvest achieved by the richer villagers.
 
 In the village of 1,000 people, there are:
 
  * 5 soldiers
  * 7 teachers
  * 1 doctor
  * 3 refugees driven from home by war or drought
 
 The village has a total yearly budget, public and private,
 of over $3 million-$3,000 per person if it is distributed evenly
 (which, as we have already seen, it isn't). Of the total $3 million:
 
  * $181,000 goes to weapons and warfare
  * $159,000 to education
  * $132,000 to health care
 
 The village has buried beneath it enough explosive power in nuclear
 weapons to blow itself to smithereens many times over. These weapons
 are under the control of just 100 of the people. The other 900 are
 watching them with deep anxiety, wondering whether they can learn
 to get along together; and if they do, whether they might set off the
 weapons anyway through inattention or technical bungling; and if
 they ever decide to dismantle the weapons, where in the world village
 will they dispose of the radioactive materials of which the weapons
 are made?


          Leftlink - Australia's Broad Left Mailing List
       
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       The Year 2000 Bug - An Urgent Sustainability Issue
          http://www.peg.apc.org/~psutton/grin-y2k.htm      


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