onsdag 12 juni 2013

The source of my topic to write about
 http://www.upworthy.com/when-facebook-likes-meet-real-life-things-get-complicated

What happend: In the video there was two young brothers. The main borther (the one who talked) is Rahim and he's ten years old and he says that he is afraid of getting ill as their mother. For who will take care my little brother if he gets ill. But that's okay, Sweden UNICEF page has 177,000 likes on Facebook, and maybe this summer we 
 have been up to 200,000. Then a text fades and it says "Likes do not save lives ... Money does"


  


I think this is totally wrong. today's society has become so ignorent that people really think likes is helping the UNICEF orginisation. And i also think that they would earn so much money that it couldn't be used only for this children, but maybe to buy a porsche as official car to the boss of the foundation. It's sad but true, I will give money when i'll be sure that more than 50% of this money will be used only for this children.
But in this case I'd rather "like" something then to send money knowing it's only going in some fat mans pockets then to help needy children, I'm sick of people using poor children as a way to make wealth and fame!
Second, after the film was over, I did a little research and went into the unicef ​​website and i figure this out. UNICEF Sweden has 260 workers. They use 6.600.000€ in salaries per year. If you do 6.600.000 / 260, you have that each unicef worker recieves 25.400€ per year aprox, which is 2115€ per month aprox.
The usual Swedish salary atm is 1.000€/month.
Pretty moral for a charity group if you ask me, giving themselves salaries that more than double the average.

Source unicef.se