Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Why Ben Affleck’s One-Day Diet Won’t Save Africa
Why Ben Affleck’s One-Day Diet Won’t Save Africa
Aug 24, 2025 9:09 AM

In the summer of 2005 hundreds of thousands of people gathered in ten spots around the globe for a series of free concerts meant to persuade world leaders to give more money to fight poverty in Africa. The idea for the concerts was conceived in May and hastily organized by Bob Geldof. Within two months the former Boomtown Rat was able to convince dozens of actors, musicians, and politicians to join in forming LIVE8, “the largest mandate for action in history.”

Unlike most benefit concerts, though, Live8 didn’t raise a dime to actually end poverty. As the web site noted at the time, “LIVE 8 is calling for people across the world to unite in one call—in 2005 it is your voice we are after, not your money.” Geldolf said the event was intended to raise consciousness and exert political pressure on the G8 summiteers.

The concerts included more than 200 musical acts scheduled to play more than 69 hours of music. Organizers said 5.5 billion people(!) would be able to watch or listen on the Internet and more than 182 television stations and 2,000 radio networks and stations. Coldplay’s Chris Martin called the concerts “the greatest thing that’s ever been organized, probably, in the history of the world.”

So what did the greatest thing that’s ever been organized (probably) in the history of the world plish?

Not much. On the “Latest News” section of Live8’s website (last updated in 2006), it records the history of nothing happening. Soon after the concert it notes, “In 2005 G8 leaders promised to ‘make trade work for Africa’, but this year, just weeks after instructing their negotiators to reach an agreement within one month, talks have again collapsed with no progress for Africa.”

Eight years later, we still have silly consciousness-raising pseudo events—though they are much more modest. The latest example is the Global Poverty Project’s “Live Below the Poverty Line” campaign. Several celebrities, most notably Ben Affleck, are vowing to feed themselves on $1.50 a day for one day. Yes, they will make the great dietary sacrifice for an entire 24-hour period. Affleck will do for one day what I did every Sunday during my freshman year in college—survive on Ramen noodles, iced tea, and Snickers.

Like a lot of people, Abby W. Schachter wonders what’s the point of the stunt:

[W]ill his fake sacrifice really result in more people giving money to help people in Eastern Congo, which is where Affleck says he wants his efforts to go? Why would it? I fail to see the connection between Affleck’s crash diet and caring for the troubles of millions of poor souls living on another continent thousands of miles away.

We could cut Affleck and his fellow actors who are doing the same thing a bit of slack since they can’t sing and dance to raise money. So maybe Affleck and Hugh Jackman are ill-informed enough to think that the very suggestion of ing from their lips is going to motivate others to change their behavior and e more charitable. Such a belief might be mistaken but at least they could be respectful of their fans by making a meaningful suggestion, rather than doing something so obviously shallow and publicity-focused.

Schachter thinks Affleck should tithe 10 percent of his earnings to relief and development efforts in Africa. That would be more useful, but I think an even better solution would be for Affleck to ask Africans what they need to help themselves. He could learn from efforts like PovertyCure how to “encourage solutions that foster opportunity and unleash the entrepreneurial spirit that already fills the developing world.”

Affleck’s heart is the right place. But so was Geldolf’s eight years ago. Neither one-day diets nor one-day rock concerts are going to change the course of impoverished countries. What is needed is less awareness raising among Americans (is anyone still unaware that Africa is a poor continent?) and more passion that equips Africans to raise themselves out of poverty.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Audio: Samuel Gregg on the universal basic income
Last week, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg endorsed the idea of a universal basic e during mencement address at Harvard University. Samuel Gregg, Acton Institute Director of Research, joined host Drew Mariani on Relevant Radio yesterday to discuss the arguments for and against the idea, and whether it would even work as advertised. You can listen to the interview via the audio player below. ...
EU funds ‘the largest source of corruption in Central and Eastern Europe’
A significant fact lies buried inside MEP Richard Sulik’s report on how subsidiarity could save the European Union: EU programs are reinforcing the very Communist-era behaviors they are intended to eradicate. Taxpayer-funded grants from the European Union are fueling cronyism and corruption, especially in its newest and most vulnerable member states. EU funds inflict the worst corrupting of the political process in former Communist countries, Sulik, an MEP from Slovakia, writes: Despite the good intention, European funds have e the...
6 Quotes: Peter Augustine Lawler on virtue
Peter Augustine Lawler died last week at the age of 65. Lawler, who referred to himself as a “postmodern conservative”, was a distinguished political philosopher and public intellectual who frequently wrote about the role of virtue in the modern (or postmodern) world. In honor of his passing, here are six quotes by Lawler on virtue: On virtue and knowing: “Virtue is the action that flows from knowing: 1. Who we are. 2. What we’re supposed to do. Doing, as Aristotle...
Audio: The Populist push against globalization
KangZeLiu, Globalization, CC BY-SA 4.0 Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg recently spoke on the Library of Law and Liberty’s podcast Liberty Law Talk to answer the question, “Is globalization in retreat?” You can listen to the discussion here. For more from Acton on globalization, see other PowerBlog posts. ...
What caused the Great Depression?
Almost 90 years have passed since the beginning of the Great Depression and yet most of us are still unclear on what caused America’s greatest economic collapse. The causes and precursors plex, of course, but there are a few factors that we should know about. In this brief video, economist Alex Tabbarok provides one of the best overviews of what exactly occurred during this troubling period in economic history. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d...
The DeVos budget: Toward a new paradigm of public education
“If school choice effectively functions as a standing critique of public education as well as being a potential solution to problems evident in the current system,” asks Hunter Baker in this week’s Acton Commentary, “how can public school advocates ever approve of an appointee like Betsy DeVos?” That question leads to others. What is the mission of the Department of Education? And if that mission is defined as advancing public education in the United States in a particular way, then...
The Importance of Incompetence
An illustration of the Peter Principle. Source: Wikimedia Commons. Public Domain. Today at Public Discourse, I argue that in addition to idealism and self-interest, petence needs to be recognized as a more important factor in politics: [U]nless we add petence as a category of analysis, we will tend to view every victory for our own team as a triumph of justice or freedom or equality (idealism), and every failure the result of deep and convoluted corruption (self-interest). This is not...
Bad economic policies create moral problems
In Europe, the answer to one bad economic policy seems to be another bad economic policy. However, if such failures intersect in the right way, the problem goes from being a fiscal to a moral problem. Take the issue of“eurobonds,”a concept wholeheartedly supported by newly elected French President Emmanuel Macron. Think of eurobondsas the redistribution of debt. The mechanism essentiallypools the collective debt of itsremaining 27 members at the EU level. Eurobondswould allow nations like Greece to borrow more money...
Video: Lawrence Reed on real heroes
On May 18th, the spring 2017 Acton Lecture Series wrapped up with an address from Lawrence Reed, president of the Foundation for Economic Education. Reed’s talk was based on his recently released book,Real Heroes: Inspiring True Stories of Courage, Character, and Conviction. We’re pleased to share the video of his lecture below. ...
Every man is the architect of his own fortune
Boys’ Latin students hard at work. Black and Latino young men from munities show statistically low high school graduation and attendance rates. One group of young men, however, is proving that that academic underperformance doesn’t have to be the norm. These e from a poor black neighborhood, but they’ve been taught a special skills most American students lack: learning the Latin language. They’re students at Boys’ Latin of Philadelphia Charter School where they’re required to study a language many would...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved