Someone made a good point about it's not the numbers, it's where they are.
I do think we need to educate the third world, but in doing so we'd need to supply them with medicines (which could be done dirt f'ing cheap, at cost price, as that supply wouldn't affect sales in Europe/US), as they're not going to stop pumping out eight kids until they can be fairly sure that one or two of them will make to the age of 2.
Education and some medical help would cut down on the problem there.
In my local area, you're looking at around £250,000 to £400,000 for a house. The cheap, small bedsit, sorry, studio flat. I live in was recently valued at around £180,000. That's over a quarter million bucks. The prices are being kept artificially high, the only way to get people housed is to flood the market with cheaper new properties, that would involve relaxing planning laws, and placing limits on sales of the new homes, so people don't just buy them for £100k then instantly slap em on the market for £300K.
The top 400 richest people have more than the 4 billion poorest, combined. That may explain why so many people are struggling. I realise some of these people are using their money to research and develop businesses etc. but damn, once you hit $50 million, how about not bitching about a 3% tax hike?
As for the above guy, as ever it's a minority who get the attention, most people on welfare are there because they need it, and many are working, it's just that minimum wage doesn't keep you in a home, fed, and covered medically, never mind give you enough spare to cover disasters like a freezer breaking. I agree, that if you can work, you should, however, with unemployment as it is, should we spend on hunting down and demonising the sick, or should we help recently unemployed people get back into work? I'd suggest the latter is easier and more viable longterm.
Sure, lets just wipe out the bottom 20% poorest of people in the world. Oh, all the stores are empty, no-one's cleaning the streets or working on utilities, my mansion's getting no water or electricity, all the gas stations are abandoned and where's my cleaning staff?
I swear if everyone under 50K a year just quit work for a week, the working classes may suddenly get some appreciation instead of being seen as a leech on the teat of the rich.