@elonmusk doesn't have to worry about his money feeding many Black SA children since he killed them by purposely cutting USAID benefits. He's supposedly is a genius but in actuality he's an anti-woke dullard.
Per Google "The Woke" Ai :
The claim that people in Africa are not starving, that food shortages only happen during wars, and that military invasion is the only solution is completely false. While portraying the entire African continent as a monolith of starvation is an inaccurate and outdated stereotype, severe hunger is a harsh reality for millions. According to data from the United Nations, over 282 million people in Africa are undernourished, which accounts for roughly one in five people on the continent. Myth Part 1: "Food shortages only happen when there is a war."Fact: While conflict is a primary driver of acute hunger, it is far from the only cause. Multiple overlapping factors disrupt food security entirely outside of wartime:Climate Shocks: Extreme weather is one of the biggest causes of food shortages. For example, the Horn of Africa recently suffered its longest drought in 40 years, decimating crops and livestock. Conversely, severe flooding across the Sahel and Southern Africa has routinely wiped out entire agricultural seasons.Economic Instability: Rising global inflation, spiraling currencies, and skyrocketing fertilizer costs (which jumped by 300% in recent years) make it impossible for many smallholder farmers to grow food or for poor families to buy it.Infrastructure and Post-Harvest Loss: Many regions produce an abundance of food, but lack the logistical infrastructure. Due to a shortage of cold storage, processing facilities, and reliable transport networks, a vast amount of food rots before it ever reaches local markets.Poverty and Systemic Neglect: Chronic malnutrition frequently occurs in peaceful regions simply due to poverty, lack of clean water, and historical or government under-investment in agricultural development.Myth Part 2: "The only way to solve it would be invasion."Fact: Foreign military invasion does not solve food shortages. In fact, historical evidence proves that military interventions almost always destroy local agricultural systems, displace farming populations, and trigger worse famines.Effective, sustainable solutions focused on long-term resilience are widely utilized by organizations like the World Food Programme (WFP) and local governments:Agricultural Investment: Providing smallholder farmers with drought-resistant seeds, modern irrigation systems, and accessible fertilizers. Supply Chain Development: Building regional food reserves, roads, and storage facilities to prevent food waste and keep local markets stable .Social Safety Nets: Implementing cash-transfer programs and community kitchens so vulnerable families can purchase food locally during lean seasons.Peacebuilding and Diplomacy: Resolving existing conflicts through diplomatic peace accords and enforcing international laws—such as UN Resolution 2417—which outlaws using starvation as a weapon of war. I wonder if @elonmusk will respond to me and thank me for doing something he should've done which was research his asinine thoughts.