Read this morning on the mailing list of the Learning Organization. Signed ChuckWallace
Speaking of awareness..... To be "net connected" is a privilege......
If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following.
There would be:
_57 Asians
_21 Europeans
_14 from the Western Hemisphere, (both north and South)
__8 Africans
_52 would be female
_48 would be male
_70 would be non-white
_30 would be white
_70 would be non-Christian
_30 would be Christian
_89 would be heterosexual
_11 would be homosexual
__6 people would possess 59% of the entire
world's wealth
and all 6 would be from the United States
_80 would live in substandard housing
_70 would be unable to read
_50 would suffer from malnutrition
__1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth
__1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education
__1 would own a computer
When one considers our world from such a perspective, the need for both acceptance, understanding and education becomes glaringly apparent.
As software developers, the bottom one is the only one that matters.
Hmm, the above formatting presents itself *extremely strangely* in my Netscape 3.0 browser. (I worked around the formatting--it was triggering the numeric list handling.)
1/3 of the people in the US own a computer. So there has to be more than 1% of the world who owns a computer. Perhaps these are old figures.
11% homosexuals is too big. Perhaps that is the percent of people who have performed a homosexual act. Some cultures have almost no homosexuals. Are there any cultures with 11% homosexuals? There must be some bisexuals.
Are we sure it's not that some cultures are so intolerant of homosexuals that they don't reveal themselves rather than be, for example, beheaded? -- KatieLucas
Actually ,statistically, about 10-11% of the world's population is homosexual. If one were to count everybody who had even a single homosexual experience as gay, that figure would move up to 50%.
White/non-white is imprecise. Usually someone who is half European is considered non-white. Or three-quarters. Or seven-eighths. I wonder how they counted South American cultures that are a mixture of Spanish and native american?
I don't believe that 70% of people can't read. China has a good literacy program, and it has one third of the population. Literacy in Africa is poor, but it doesn't have as many people. Literacy in India is poor, and it has more people. But I bet over half of all people over 8 can read. Maybe the literacy rate is so low because they are counting babies.
But this is all beside the point. You can't teach tolerance with statistics. You have to get to know people who are different from yourself. A South African once told me that the biggest force for racial unity in South Africa (during the time of apartheid) was the army, because it forced a lot of white men to work with, depend on, and get to know black men, and so ruined their stereotypes. Better communication and more interaction are what will help us get along better, not statistics. Statistics just make us start to argue about how they were gathered and whether they are accurate.
The world literacy rate, including kids, is probably 70-80%. I think 70 people would be able to read.
See http://www.uis.unesco.org/en/know/know_p/centre3.htm