As for comparing our country to others all I can say is having been to and seen real indescribable poverty in other countries, this country, despite its short comings, is a palace to live in, in comparison.
Yes we don't always get it right in what we do, but we do do something........yes I am proud of what we do achieve in comparison to other countries.
Again comparing poverty isn't right. There are people in this country still unable to afford food, heating etc etc. There are still people dying from poverty in this country which shouldn't be happening (400 last year meant to double this year).
We have record amounts of children homeless as well. Also have record amounts of people that go to food banks.
I dare you to go to a mother who only eats one solid meal once a week, so she can afford to send her child to school, that some child in Africa is what you call real poverty.
It's only going to get worse with more and more benefits being cut. But as long as the rich are ok everything is ok.
I just don't get people that compare poverty. At the end of the day poverty is poverty. It doesn't matter what country you are from.
If this doesn't tell you we have a huge problem nothing will:
Although the UK is the seventh richest country in the world, many people struggle to afford food.
- In 2012-13, the Trussell Trust foodbank network, an Oxfam partner, provided over 350,000 people in the UK with food parcels - more than double the year before.
- Oxfam and Church Action on Poverty estimate that over 500,000 people in the UK are now reliant on food parcels.
- Over 2 million people in the UK are estimated to be malnourished, and 3 million are at risk of becoming so.
- 36% of the UK population are just one heating bill or a broken washing machine away from hardship.
- 1 in 6 parents have gone without food themselves to afford to feed their families
"People at the upper end of the income scale have no idea of what's going on down at the bottom of the scale. They don't realise how much people are really hurting."Sir Michael Marmot, health inequality expert and author of Fair Society, Healthy Lives.
http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/our-work/inequality/food-poverty
And this:
More than 8 million in UK struggle to put food on table, survey says
Food Foundation reveals scale of food insecurity, with 4.7 million thought to be regularly going a day without eating
More than 8 million people in Britain live in households that struggle to put enough food on the table, with over half regularly going a whole day without eating, according to
estimates of hunger in the UK.
One in 10 adults suffered moderate levels of food insecurity in 2014, placing the UK in the bottom half of European countries on hunger measures, below Hungary, Estonia, Slovakia and Malta.
Around 17 times the number of people who use Trussell Trust food banks were insecure about getting enough to eat, suggesting hunger in the UK is far more widespread than
rising charity food use indicates, according to the analysis of
UN data by the Food Foundation thinktank.
https://www.theguardian.com/society...-uk-struggle-to-put-food-on-table-survey-says
Doesn't look like a decent country to me..
I have volunteered at a few places and it was a huge eye opener on how bad this country actually is for many. A hell of a lot of people don't see it