There were two camps in the founding father days. One camp wanted to be a industrialized global super power and have free trade. The other party wanted to have small local farms feeding the local people and they wanted to keep it simple. Trade locally if you can. I wish we would have kept it country and simple and not industrialized like we did.I thought thats what you were getting at but i wanted you to say it. Electricity or lack of it doesnt make your life better or worse. Your value system and the worth you put on something like electricity is different for different people.If they don't have electricity, A LOT of them can't be living better lives than African Americans. Oh never mind. Now it's not funny anymore. I think it went over your head.I dont get the correlation between electricity in Kenya and what i said about Africans. Can you explain?You said "there are a lot of Black Africans that live better than a lot of Black americans." and just as I was reading you saying that, Good Morning America ran this story about how only 23% of the population even uses electricity. So define "a lot"I did but like some of your other posts I dont see the relevance in regard to my post?Did you hear a monkey in Kenya got into a power station and the entire country lost power? I forgot the number but something like only 20% of the people were affected because 80% doesn't even have electricity.
There are only 44 million Kenyans. There are 308 million African Americans. I bet the poorest 44 million black Americans live better than the poor in Kenya. They certainly have more opportunity to make something of themselves, no?
Again it depends on who is defining "better". However you have tried and failed to move the goal posts. There was never a country specified and since you have never been to Kenya you cant have any clue if what you believe is true is actually true.
Instead of this
We got this
Clearly I would like African villages