Educator wrote: ↑11 Aug 2023, 20:05
Should I continue or stop here to spare you any more depression?
Yes, spare me the depression of reading too much stupidity.
The fact that the entry to the park could cost you around 300 ETB means there are people who can afford it (if your income increase then so is also your consumption of goods and services).
Ethiopian farmers deal in a transaction worth of millions today, a small private farmer can afford today to have his rural house and another one in the cities or nearby towns. He can consume more.
If you are talking about the people who can't afford a decent daily meal for themselves, then yes there are plenty of them, which is unfortunate for them primarily. And those people can't afford to visit the parks, they have more pressing needs for themselves of earning their living.
I live in one of the countries considered relatively rich on the global level and there are many people who can afford to spend their holidays in the remote parts of the world, in some sort of exotic beaches, and even recently thriving to spend their time on the ISS. They can afford it, but I can't. Just because of me and many others in my condition the country itself can't be called poor. Yes, spare me from reading too much idiotism in your own scribbling and that of temari's equation of population growth is equated to GDP growth, an embarrassment to yourself.
Is there shortage of basic services in the capital? Yes, definetly. Why? Simply because the service infrastructure couldn't cope with the over-population in the city today.
When you were young the number of residents in the city was perhaps around 2 Million, today it is at over 7 Million and still rising, because there are many of your fara Gojjames flocking into the city in their Debalos and overcrowding it, expanding the shantytowns to other parts of the city.
The government can't keep the expansion of the basic service infrastucture with the rate of the influx.
Is that not enough to spare me from your stupid scribbling here?
Please engage temari, he should be in your club, I am not!
