Yardoz
Yardoz
Yardoz

Uh, I'm not sure you saw the movie but he did put Israel in it.

I guess I need my woman card revoked then, I think Frozen is overrated, Maleficent looked like a pile of crap similar to that Snow White movie and I hate rom coms. The dawn of the planet of the apes however was a damn good movie as was x-men.

I wouldn't mind her doing a Bollywood performance, I think she might be good given how over the top they both are. I would really like to see her interpretation of a Bollywood themed video.

It's 41% Asian and 53% white.

Facebook is 41% Asian and 53% White, no wonder you had to cheat and combine those numbers to make it seem discriminatory.

I come from a country where English is compulsory until high school, you do realize that most people don't make it to that, right? They fail their English classes? Bangladesh is a country where 9 year olds work in factories, they don't fucking go to school.

Uh, no, not really. Bangladesh has one of the lowest literacy rates in Asia. And we don't know that of the 60%, they can all write in English, most of them probably write in Bengali. The number of English speakers is estimated at 20%.

Are we talking about Bangladesh or the US? Because Bangladesh has a literacy rate of 60%. That means that 40% of their population cannot read or write in English. 4% of the 17-23 age range have access to higher education, so the only place you would see Bangladeshi degree holders working as cab drivers is outside of

There are a lot of useless degrees, most of them ending in "studies". And you do need more than the ability to speak English, you need to be able to write it, which is what I specified in my original comment.

While it would be nice if the employer decided to fix it, that isn't going to happen. The biggest change is when those countries decide to pass labor laws and that isn't going to happen by you boycotting the industry. You are free to shop where you will, that won't change the conditions of workers in Bangladesh.

And what's the alternative in their case? Prostitution? You should read the article, she did some intensive research on it. You should also let the Bangladeshi fix their own country. The US and the UK used to have child labor and poor working conditions, once people in those countries became wealthier, people demanded

Of course I'm not saying it's a gift, but the world isn't black and white, sweatshops have a lot of bad as well as some good. They give women financial security, they prevent people from selling their kids into slavery. If the sweatshop won't employ them, the parents will just sell them to someone for domestic and

While the idea of working in a sweatshop is abhorent for most people living in developed countries, what you don't realize is that the alternative is very often worse. There is very little western countries or customers can do to stop it. I suggest you read this article by Nidhi Khosla on women working in factories in

Attempted cover? Fuck off, you jackass and get some better reading comprehension skills while you're at it. 'I'm not sure where you see, "poor people deserve to be poor".' is one sentence. '20% of the Bengali population can speak English, even fewer can write it.' is another.

Yes, and I'm also certain the earth is round and that we share a common ancestor with apes, what's your point? Are we not allowed to be certain of things now?

I lived in a previous British colony, that means nothing, India still has large swarths of population that are illiterate as do most former African colonies. It's not o.20%, it's 20%, the "." is a period. And I got the number from wikipedia who got it from Euromonitor International report 2009, they said 18%, I

And common sense is right most of the time, what's your point?

I'm not sure where you see, "poor people deserve to be poor". 20% of the Bengali population can speak English, even fewer can write it. If you can write English, it means you had more opportunities that most people there, and as a non-native English speaker and someone who grew up with people learning English as a

I see, so you are a doctor who has had exposure to Bangladeshi who were wealthy enough to afford to get out of Bangladesh and you think that you know more about them than people who have actually met factory workers working in factories that would qualify as sweat shops? Speaking English is very different from being