Here's A Solution To Your Money Problems and Our Filipino Hunger Problems
Problem: Why Feed The Children When I Can Buy More Stuff For Myself?
It's Christmas Time, and you have more money from your savings than you can imagine. The new iPhone has to be bought. You have to have the new shoes because you are a proud self-confessed social climber, and you have the right to be that.
Society rewards the honest, and you are honest to yourself that you are fake, so you are safe from judgment and so there's nothing in your lifestyle to change. But suddenly you catch yourself feeling numb after your next iPhone purchase.
You used to feel the thrill of retail therapy every time you buy a Zalora dress online. You go to parties but you suddenly see no point in eating gourmet food every day when the rest of the world out there is happily being hungry. You wake up and stare at your millions in your bank accounts but now you feel what you would never thought you would: empty
You no longer feel joy from buying things you don't need.
What do you do?
Society rewards the honest, and you are honest to yourself that you are fake, so you are safe from judgment and so there's nothing in your lifestyle to change. But suddenly you catch yourself feeling numb after your next iPhone purchase.
You used to feel the thrill of retail therapy every time you buy a Zalora dress online. You go to parties but you suddenly see no point in eating gourmet food every day when the rest of the world out there is happily being hungry. You wake up and stare at your millions in your bank accounts but now you feel what you would never thought you would: empty
You no longer feel joy from buying things you don't need.
What do you do?
Solution: Join The SimplyShare Foundation
This Filipino Non-Government organization headed by people from the business and government sector had claimed that they started the movement because they didn't find any organization that did what they wanted and they're unsatisfied with the government and current non-government groups.
There should be a Bisaya Short Film documentary following and calculating the traction and progress of Simply Share foundation so people can judge for themselves whether the NGO is not something that contributes to the division of people, instead of unity.
There are gullible, tired and discontented angst-ridden individuals willing to help the poor because they lived a life of avarice and excess, and SimplyShare is another group that wants their help.
There are gullible, tired and discontented angst-ridden individuals willing to help the poor because they lived a life of avarice and excess, and SimplyShare is another group that wants their help.
Many could point out that the founders of SimplyShare could have just started or added energy, money and time to, say, Red Cross, Tsinelas Organization or Habitat For Humanity, and not start on their own and start from scratch where there are greater chances of failure, but when the Bisaya Short Films Force asked this question to them, the answer basically seems to be, and this is not a direct quote:
They Don't Trust Anyone Else But Themselves
Fair enough. Now be vigilant, Cebuano, and follow their path, and report to your social media what's their real score because it's just embarrassing to experience another Napoles.