Jadi; seperati biasa, Teddy yang bertabiat nista lagi menjijikkan ini tidak 
peduli aja.....

Dan menyalahkan orang yang peduli..

Tabiat Teddy ini sungguh nista.

Kerak kenistaan.


--- In [email protected], "Teddy S." <teddyr@...> wrote:
>
> Itu khan tanggung jawab penduduk lokal untuk memperjuangkan perbaikan nasib 
> mereka yang tentunya bisa lu lakukan dengan sedikitnya memberi masukan pada 
> wakil lu lewat tetangga lu si anggota DPR. 
> 
> Tapi sebenarnya lu ini cuma tong kosong yang nyaring bunyinya, orang yang 
> sangat menikmati penderitaan orang lain dengan pura-pura prihatin terhadap 
> penderitaan rakyat kecil. Dalam hati lu ini sangat menikmati keadaan tersebut 
> seperti halnya orang Parisi yang berdoa: "Aku bersyukur Tuhan bahwa aku tidak 
> seperti mereka". Lu ini memang bangsat bajingan sadis yang menikmati 
> penderitaan orang lain.
> 
> 
> 
> --- In [email protected], item abu <itemabu@> wrote:
> >
> > Kalo si Teddy sih pasti responsnya "ane kan tinggal di Sidney Australia, 
> > salah mereka knp tinggal di daerah kayak gitu" dan "ane cuma ngomongin 
> > orang kaya doang, termasuk teman ane yg jadi anggota DPR yg terhormat".
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > >________________________________
> > > From: holy uncle <holyuncle@>
> > >To: NATIONAL <[email protected]>; MEDIACARE 
> > ><[email protected]>; PROLETAR <[email protected]> 
> > >Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2012 11:48 PM
> > >Subject: [proletar] Jakarta ‘slum tourism’ treads between aid and 
> > >exploitation
> > > 
> > >
> > >  
> > >Jakarta ‘slum tourism’ treads between aid and exploitation
> > >
> > >By: Loic Vennin
> > >Agence France-Presse 
> > >8:27 pm | Thursday, May 31st, 2012 
> > >
> > >JAKARTAâ€"”I decided to experience the real Jakarta,” said a tourist, 
> > >stepping gingerly between puddles of putrid water and a scurrying rat in a 
> > >scene that would never make a postcard.
> > >
> > >Rohaizad Abu Bakar, 28, a bank employee from Singapore, said he could not 
> > >believe his eyes as he wandered around the slum in the Indonesian capital, 
> > >a jumble of hundreds of shacks, some less than a meter from a railway line.
> > >
> > >Nearby, a small girl picked up a discarded juice bottle in search of a sip 
> > >while a man wearing tattered shorts lay slumped on a dirty old mattress. 
> > >Only a blue plastic tarpaulin offered shelter from tropical downpours.
> > >
> > >So-called “poverty tourism” is on the rise in Jakarta.
> > >
> > >Organizers say it raises awareness and brings aid to the destitute of the 
> > >city, but accusations of exploitation are never far away and critics say 
> > >poverty should not be a tourist attraction.
> > >
> > >A few hundred families cram into the slum in the Tanah Abang neighborhood, 
> > >minutes from gleaming shopping malls where the likes of Gucci and Louis 
> > >Vuitton compete to lure the newly minted beneficiaries of Indonesia’s 
> > >economic miracle.
> > >
> > >Abu Bakar opted against the picturesque landscapes of other parts of the 
> > >country to instead join a “Jakarta Hidden Tours” trip, which aims to 
> > >show visitors the squalid conditions of the nation’s poor.
> > >
> > >“Tourists stay in their ghetto. We show what is really Jakarta,” said 
> > >Ronny Poluan, 59, an Indonesian documentary maker who created the 
> > >non-profit organization in 2008.
> > >
> > >Recent years have seen “poverty tourism” mushroom globally, from the 
> > >favelas of Brazil to the slums of Dharavi in Mumbai, popularized by the 
> > >film “Slumdog Millionaire.”
> > >
> > >“We have about 10 tours per month, with two to four tourists each time. 
> > >More and more people are coming, some now even come just for my tour,” 
> > >Poluan said.
> > >
> > >“I’ve had tourists from as far away as Washington. They’re not only 
> > >backpackers, but also businessmen, bankers,” he added before being cut 
> > >short by shouting reverberating around the slum.
> > >
> > >“Kereta! Kereta!” (“A train, a train”) cried mothers rushing to 
> > >grab children playing on the track as a roaring locomotive approached, 
> > >whipping up clouds of dust and garbage as it surged toward the 
> > >flimsy-looking shacks.
> > >
> > >The train recently claimed the life of one little girl who died as she ran 
> > >after her cat.
> > >
> > >Poverty as a tourist attraction 
> > >
> > >The slum dwellers, like half of Indonesia, live on less than $2 per day. 
> > >Each tourist pays 500,000 rupiah ($54) to visit, with half of that going 
> > >to the tour company, and the rest funding doctor visits, microfinance 
> > >projects or community projects such as school building.
> > >
> > >“I don’t give cash. I pay the doctors directly, for example,” said 
> > >Poluan.
> > >
> > >But that does not reassure some critics.
> > >
> > >“I’m against slums being turned into tourist spots,” Wardah Hafidz, 
> > >an activist with the Urban Poor Consortium, told AFP. “It’s not about 
> > >shame. People should not be exhibited like monkeys in the zoo.
> > >
> > >“What residents get from these tours, in cash or whatever form, only 
> > >strips them of their dignity and self-respect, turning them into mere 
> > >beggars.
> > >
> > >“They not only become dependent on handouts, but come to expect them. It 
> > >doesn’t help them to believe they are capable of standing on their own 
> > >two feet or getting them out of the spiral of poverty,” she added.
> > >
> > >Nonetheless, residents say they look forward to the daily influx of 
> > >foreigners witnessing their lifestyles.
> > >
> > >“I like that foreigners want to know about us. It’s good they want to 
> > >know about us,” said Djoko, a father in his 50s, as he removed labels 
> > >from a pile of glass and plastic bottles before selling them for recycling.
> > >
> > >Tourists deny voyeurism, instead saying that what they witness inspires 
> > >them to action.
> > >
> > >“If I had not seen it, I would not have done anything about it,” said 
> > >Caroline Bourget.
> > >
> > >A teacher at Jakarta’s French school, she is now discussing setting up a 
> > >mobile school in the slum to give disadvantaged children a better chance 
> > >in life.
> > >
> > >“Here we are at the heart of reality,” she said.
> > >
> > >http://business.inquirer.net/62515/jaka ... ploitation 
> > >
> > >[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> > >
> > >
> > > 
> > >
> > >
> > 
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
>




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