Mark Horvath knows all of the homeless: he lost his job and home during the economic crisis in 2008. But for him, the crisis turned into an opportunity: convinced that social media can help isolated people to build a support network that would not otherwise have. He started helping the homeless across the United States to find a voice on the web. Horvath began the project InvisiblePeople.tv the blog on which to post short videos, interviews with dozens of people homeless in the United States. His goal: to allow each person to tell his story, tell readers and web users that every homeless person is different, has a unique background and an interesting story to tell. He asks his interviewees the same three questions: How do you survive? What is your future? If you had three wishes, what would? Phase two of the draft Horvath goes even further: his latest site, WeAreVisible.com, is designed to teach the homeless how to use social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter to reach out to others and to communicate with each other.
Many companies also had roles in a high level. The step towards the abyss is often very close to us. The loss of job, illness, abandonment. If the Company does not assist you at that stage is the end. We, in Europe, we are losing our ancient wisdom and support those who hope every day that we will fall into the abyss. There are elements of political and social general we can not lose. E 'duty to stop does not find a good cultural level, to support the short-lived example of the general statement, not to the continuous questions and not to reject any approach that seeks to reduce the social safety net. Anyone out there waiting to feed our carrion.
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